The Selfish Giant - Oscar Wilde (NEB XI)

 The Selfish Giant - Oscar Wilde

The Message of this children's story: Cooperation and the thinning out or inculcating of affection is the story's main takeaways. It communicates the anecdote of a young guy who serves as Deity's envoy in advance turning into a conceited giant. Wee children are no longer authorized to play in the giant's kitchen garden. As a result of his egotism, winter befalls in his garden as usual. Finally, he endorses his consent for the kids to hang out in his garden, and he engages in the play himself. Later on, the giant loses his might, and then the small boy whom the giant helps beforehand arrives at that time and leads him to cloud nine from purgatory in the incarnated form of Christ.

Summary of the Selfish Giant: The Giant carefully watches his garden as the season changes and springtime approaches, hoping that the flowers will bloom there. Due to his self-centered nature, he continues to wait even though the spring has long since disappeared from his garden. Days go by, and the Giant begins to worry and feel depressed about his garden until one morning he wakes up to hear the children laughing and find a hint of spring in his garden because the kids entered and made a tiny hole beneath the wall. He also observes the change in the best season and the flower blooming. The giant is ecstatic as a result, and he rushes outside to play with the children who have come in through a small gap in the fence.

He sees a young youngster on the brink on top of a tree while he plays. The Giant carries the child down very tenderly. When the Giant asks the kids about his identity the following day due to his absenteeism, they are unable to identify him or explain what his name is and where he is from, but they flee from there on account of fear. The Giant has been waiting for his small companion to arrive ever since, but he has never shown up. When the Giant is old and weak, his tiny companion is standing in front of him in the resurrected form of Christ, who has come to take the Giant to paradise with him. The Giant then passes away gently, and God allows his spirit to rest in peace.

An Analysis of The Selfish GiantThe Selfish Giant, one of Oscar Wilde's many brilliant stories, is a well-known demonstration of his creative problem-solving skills. It is mostly aimed at children and includes fantastical living creatures like the Giant and the Ogre. It serves as an illustration of the importance of sharing our deepest feelings with others and how doing so makes both the provider and the receptor happier. The Almighty consistently values and generously rewards good performances. It serves as an illustration of the reciprocity principle because when people transmit happiness, it returns to them numerous times throughout time, whereas when they spread misery, it does the same.

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