![]() ![]() Polly’s absence leaves Eleanor without an external object onto which to project her grief and guilt, and she realizes that she is woefully ill-equipped to internalize and take ownership of her pain. As Eleanor becomes increasingly consumed by social obligations, she neglects to take care of Polly, and Polly dies. ![]() Marianne is too painful a subject for Eleanor to acknowledge on a conscious level, so Eleanor denies her existence, projecting Marianne and her own guilt onto Polly as a way of lessening her pain. ![]() Keeping Polly alive enables Eleanor to maintain some semblance of self-worth in the face of her other lingering insecurities.īut Polly also symbolizes Eleanor’s tendency to project her insecurities onto external objects as a means of denying her traumatic past. Eleanor’s failure to protect her sister from the fire and from Mummy’s abuse induces feelings of shame and guilt within Eleanor, who sees Marianne’s death as proof that she is cannot be trusted to love other people because she will only harm and disappoint them. ![]() Caring for Polly is Eleanor’s way of proving to herself that she is capable of protecting another living thing. To Eleanor, Polly the Plant symbolizes her dead younger sister, Marianne, who died in the house fire that Mummy started in an attempt to kill her two daughters. ![]()
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