Lusus Naturae is about a young girl, who around when she was seven, began morphing into a beastly freak of nature. The condition left her with yellow eyes, pink teeth, red fingernails, and long dark fur. She drank blood and her voice translated words to growls. Being a freak, she became a burden to her family who was doing well before she underwent these changes. To protect her and to clear their name from being the household with the beast girl, they faked her death but kept her locked in her room.
She “died” in a saintly way, covered in white and praised for dying a virgin. After her death, her sister was able to get married and her mother stayed home to take care of her.
Being thought of as dead, she found peace and solitude especially at night when she was able to roam freely. She found excitement in scaring children and people in windows.
She was not bitter about being an embarrassment or “curse” on her family. She was very cooperative and gracefully followed through with the plans so far. Eventually, her father and grandmother died and her mother moved in with her sister’s family. A new family moved into her house, but she quickly scared them out and lived there on her own.
Her secret life came to an end when she witnessed a couple having an affair in a meadow. Ignorant to what was happening, she became curious and wanted to join in.
After the girl had left, she approached the sleeping man and bit him on the neck. She had meant for it to be a kiss. The village heard about it, inspected her empty coffin, and came after her. She decided to kill herself before they could get their hands on her. She planned to put on her white veils and throw herself off of her burning rooftop. While on the run she fantasizes about what she’ll be thought of as after she dies and what she’ll look like in heaven. She thinks of how great it would be if she and the angels looked the same.
This story well illustrates what it is like to b…
Lusus Naturae Margaret Atwood Analysis. (2019, Nov 27). Retrieved from https://paperap.com/paper-on-lusus-naturae-by-margaret-atwood/