The Possibility of Evil

by

Shirley Jackson

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Miss Adela Strangeworth Character Analysis

Miss Strangeworth is an old woman who has lived in the same house her entire life. She feels protective of her community and regularly worries about the possibility of evil things happening in it. In particular, she prizes her roses and worries about strangers stealing them. At the start of the story, Miss Strangeworth heads into town to run errands. She starts with a trip to the grocer and then heads over to the library. During and between errands, she has mundane conversations with a number of people including Mr. Lewis, Helen Crane, and Miss Chandler. None of her conversations are too out of the ordinary, but she does think that her interlocuters look distracted and possibly distressed. However, when Mis Strangeworth arrives back at home, she becomes a much more sinister figure. It is revealed that she often spends her evenings writing nasty letters to the people she interacted with throughout the day. She keeps these letters anonymous, and their contents are based in gossip rather than fact. After writing her letters, Miss Strangeworth feels a sense of satisfaction because she believes that she is helping to purge evil from her community. Unfortunately for her, one of her letters falls to the ground as she is mailing it and her anonymity is exposed. At the end of the story, it is implied that her roses are destroyed as a form of retaliation carried out by Don or Helen Crane. Miss Strangeworth weeps at the fate of her roses and bemoans the presence of evil in the world. However, she never thinks of herself as part of that evil.

Miss Adela Strangeworth Quotes in The Possibility of Evil

The The Possibility of Evil quotes below are all either spoken by Miss Adela Strangeworth or refer to Miss Adela Strangeworth. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Everyday Evil Theme Icon
).
The Possibility of Evil Quotes

Miss Adela Strangeworth stepped daintily along Main Street on her way to the grocery. The sun was shining, the air was fresh and clear after the night’s heavy rain, and everything in Miss Strangeworth’s little town looked washed and bright. Miss Strangeworth took deep breaths and thought that there was nothing in the world like a fragrant summer day.

Related Characters: Miss Adela Strangeworth
Page Number: 1
Explanation and Analysis:

She knew everyone in town, of course; she was fond of telling strangers—tourists who sometimes passed through the town and stopped to admire Miss Strangeworth’s roses—that she had never spent more than a day outside this town in all her long life.

Related Characters: Miss Adela Strangeworth
Related Symbols: Roses
Page Number: 1
Explanation and Analysis:

Miss Strangeworth never gave away any of her roses, although the tourists often asked her. The roses belonged on Pleasant Street, and it bothered Miss Strangeworth to think of people wanting to carry them away, to take them into strange towns and down strange streets.

Related Characters: Miss Adela Strangeworth
Related Symbols: Roses
Page Number: 2
Explanation and Analysis:

Carrying her little bag of groceries, Miss Strangeworth came out of the store into the bright sunlight and stopped to smile down on the Crane baby. Don and Helen Crane were really the two most infatuated young parents she had ever known, she thought indulgently, looking at the delicately embroidered baby cap and the lace-edged carriage cover.

“That little girl is going to grow up expecting luxury all her life,” she said to Helen Crane.

Related Characters: Miss Adela Strangeworth (speaker), Helen Crane, The Crane Baby
Page Number: 3
Explanation and Analysis:

Miss Strangeworth never concerned herself with facts; her letters all dealt with the more negotiable stuff of suspicion. Mr. Lewis would never have imagined for a minute that his grandson might be lifting petty cash from the store register if he had not had one of Miss Strangeworth’s letters. Miss Chandler, the librarian, and Linda Stewart’s parents would have gone unsuspectingly ahead with their lives, never aware of the possible evil lurking nearby, if Miss Strangeworth had not sent letters to open their eyes.

Related Characters: Miss Adela Strangeworth
Page Number: 6-7
Explanation and Analysis:

She had been writing her letters – sometimes two or three a day, sometimes no more than one in a month – for the past year. She never got any answers, of course, because she never signed her name. If she had been asked, she would have said that her name, Adela Strangeworth, a named honored in the town for so many years, did not belong on such trash.

Related Characters: Miss Adela Strangeworth
Page Number: 7
Explanation and Analysis:

There was so much evil in people. Even in a charming little town like this one, there was still so much evil in people.

Related Characters: Miss Adela Strangeworth, Dave Harris, Linda Stewart
Page Number: 10
Explanation and Analysis:

“Catch old lady Strangeworth sending anybody a check,” Linda said. “Throw it in the post office. Why do anyone a favor?” She sniffed. “Doesn’t seem to me anybody around here cares about us,” she said. “Why should we care about them?”

“I’ll take it over, anyway,” the Harris boy said. “Maybe it’s good news for them. Maybe they need something happy tonight, too. Like us.”

Related Characters: Dave Harris (speaker), Linda Stewart (speaker), Miss Adela Strangeworth
Page Number: 10
Explanation and Analysis:

Miss Strangeworth awakened the next morning with a feeling of intense happiness and, for a minute, wondered why, and then remembered that this morning three people would open her letters. Harsh, perhaps, at first, but wickedness was never easily banished, and a clean heart was a scoured heart.

Related Characters: Miss Adela Strangeworth
Page Number: 11
Explanation and Analysis:

Miss Strangeworth was a Strangeworth of Pleasant Street. Her hand did not shake as she opened the envelope and unfolded the sheet of green paper inside. She began to cry silently for the wickedness of the world when she read the words: Look out at what used to be your roses.

Related Characters: Miss Adela Strangeworth
Related Symbols: Roses
Page Number: 11
Explanation and Analysis:
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Miss Adela Strangeworth Quotes in The Possibility of Evil

The The Possibility of Evil quotes below are all either spoken by Miss Adela Strangeworth or refer to Miss Adela Strangeworth. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Everyday Evil Theme Icon
).
The Possibility of Evil Quotes

Miss Adela Strangeworth stepped daintily along Main Street on her way to the grocery. The sun was shining, the air was fresh and clear after the night’s heavy rain, and everything in Miss Strangeworth’s little town looked washed and bright. Miss Strangeworth took deep breaths and thought that there was nothing in the world like a fragrant summer day.

Related Characters: Miss Adela Strangeworth
Page Number: 1
Explanation and Analysis:

She knew everyone in town, of course; she was fond of telling strangers—tourists who sometimes passed through the town and stopped to admire Miss Strangeworth’s roses—that she had never spent more than a day outside this town in all her long life.

Related Characters: Miss Adela Strangeworth
Related Symbols: Roses
Page Number: 1
Explanation and Analysis:

Miss Strangeworth never gave away any of her roses, although the tourists often asked her. The roses belonged on Pleasant Street, and it bothered Miss Strangeworth to think of people wanting to carry them away, to take them into strange towns and down strange streets.

Related Characters: Miss Adela Strangeworth
Related Symbols: Roses
Page Number: 2
Explanation and Analysis:

Carrying her little bag of groceries, Miss Strangeworth came out of the store into the bright sunlight and stopped to smile down on the Crane baby. Don and Helen Crane were really the two most infatuated young parents she had ever known, she thought indulgently, looking at the delicately embroidered baby cap and the lace-edged carriage cover.

“That little girl is going to grow up expecting luxury all her life,” she said to Helen Crane.

Related Characters: Miss Adela Strangeworth (speaker), Helen Crane, The Crane Baby
Page Number: 3
Explanation and Analysis:

Miss Strangeworth never concerned herself with facts; her letters all dealt with the more negotiable stuff of suspicion. Mr. Lewis would never have imagined for a minute that his grandson might be lifting petty cash from the store register if he had not had one of Miss Strangeworth’s letters. Miss Chandler, the librarian, and Linda Stewart’s parents would have gone unsuspectingly ahead with their lives, never aware of the possible evil lurking nearby, if Miss Strangeworth had not sent letters to open their eyes.

Related Characters: Miss Adela Strangeworth
Page Number: 6-7
Explanation and Analysis:

She had been writing her letters – sometimes two or three a day, sometimes no more than one in a month – for the past year. She never got any answers, of course, because she never signed her name. If she had been asked, she would have said that her name, Adela Strangeworth, a named honored in the town for so many years, did not belong on such trash.

Related Characters: Miss Adela Strangeworth
Page Number: 7
Explanation and Analysis:

There was so much evil in people. Even in a charming little town like this one, there was still so much evil in people.

Related Characters: Miss Adela Strangeworth, Dave Harris, Linda Stewart
Page Number: 10
Explanation and Analysis:

“Catch old lady Strangeworth sending anybody a check,” Linda said. “Throw it in the post office. Why do anyone a favor?” She sniffed. “Doesn’t seem to me anybody around here cares about us,” she said. “Why should we care about them?”

“I’ll take it over, anyway,” the Harris boy said. “Maybe it’s good news for them. Maybe they need something happy tonight, too. Like us.”

Related Characters: Dave Harris (speaker), Linda Stewart (speaker), Miss Adela Strangeworth
Page Number: 10
Explanation and Analysis:

Miss Strangeworth awakened the next morning with a feeling of intense happiness and, for a minute, wondered why, and then remembered that this morning three people would open her letters. Harsh, perhaps, at first, but wickedness was never easily banished, and a clean heart was a scoured heart.

Related Characters: Miss Adela Strangeworth
Page Number: 11
Explanation and Analysis:

Miss Strangeworth was a Strangeworth of Pleasant Street. Her hand did not shake as she opened the envelope and unfolded the sheet of green paper inside. She began to cry silently for the wickedness of the world when she read the words: Look out at what used to be your roses.

Related Characters: Miss Adela Strangeworth
Related Symbols: Roses
Page Number: 11
Explanation and Analysis: