- Letter II from Letters of Jonathan Oldstyle, Gent.
When I first read this excerpt from the letter, I believed that the narrator was wise and trying to convey a problem that existed (and still does) in society. As the letter progresses, though,I realized that Oldstyle is a symbol of the average person today. The letter first foucuses on his family and the `Squire having very elaborate and rich things. The diction describing these things supports this idea- Barbara's possessions are described with words such as high, enormous, long, etc. All of these words are accepted to have a positive connotation (the bigger, the better). The `Squire has a relatively similiar situation. Although Oldstyle desires for a simplistic life, he also gets caught up in the progression and change of time. This passage as a whole displays the irony Oldstyle faces in the letters. His ironic (Oldstyle, although he has adapted to the new styles quite easily,) and generic (Jonathan- as typical as a name can be,) name symbolizes his desire to keep old custom, but how society's quick pace to advance to bigger and better things stops him. The "tree cut down" symbolizes how society no longer protects him from things being the same. Because of society, Oldstyle has allowed his greedy desires to possess him, just like everyone else. And he doesn't even realize it.
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