What Is The Woebegoneness In Minerva Jones

84 Words1 Pages
In the epitaph from Minerva Jones the village poetess appears to be unattractive but yet still gets ravished by a man who hunted her down. She later ends up enceinte with the ravisher 's baby and peregrinates to a medico designated Dr. Meyers and becomes dispirited. She expresses her woebegoneness by the cessation of the poem where she verbalizes, "I hungered so for love! I hungered so for life!" The poetess must 've done something to get ravished or the ravisher himself was either sexually