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Faith In A Good Man Is Hard To Find

Decent Essays

In A Good Man is Hard to Find, Flannery O’Connor depicts the story of a family of six: a grandmother, her son Bailey, Bailey’s wife, and the couple’s children--a son, a daughter, and a baby. The family decides to travel to Florida, much to the grandmother’s protests on the basis that the criminal, the Misfit, had escaped from prison and was headed to the same state. Bailey heeds to his mother and children’s insistent demands to visit a plantation, but upon realizing that the plantation had actually been in Tennessee, not Florida, the grandmother jerks her feet and causes the cat, Pitty Sing, to jump onto Bailey’s shoulders. Bailey, consequently, wrecks the car, and three men arrive in another car upon witnessing the accident. The grandmother …show more content…

Throughout O’Connor’s A Good Man is Hard to Find, there is a recurring theme reflected in the characters’ morals and ultimate demise: those who unquestionably and naively trust others, even for the sake of being a “good” person, often suffer.

The consequences of naivete and undying faith in others is demonstrated through the characters’ values and their downfall, especially that of the grandmother. The grandmother repeatedly claims to have high standards and morals, though her definition of a “good” person is always fluctuating and inconsistent. When Red Sammy Butts complains about untrustworthy people and mentions a time he allows two young men to purchase gas on credit, the grandmother responds by claiming, “Because you’re a good man!” (O’Connor 332). The grandmother praises Red Sam’s naivety and believes that he was deceived because of his good nature and willingness to help. Apparently, she perceives a “good” person as one who is amiable to the point of being gullible and credulous. Later on, she lies to the children about a secret panel at the plantation so that they unrelentingly irritate Bailey until he agrees to drive there (333-334).

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