11. Tom Walker’s wife disappears; what does she take with her, and what is the only thing Tom…
After Rip Van Winkle awakes from his twenty-year long slumber, he realizes that his dog and his gun are unable to be found. He is determined to revisit the spot that he was at the night before to demand his gun and dog back. Due to the forests long years of growing, he could not again find where he was before, so he decides to walk back to his village, fearing what Dame Van Winkle would say to him. As Rip approaches his village, he sees many people, none of which he recognizes. They were all pointing at his face, and Rip discovers that his beard had grown a foot. He sees many dogs, none of which are his. The town looks very different to him, and there are many new houses and people. Rip Van Winkle blames his confusion to the flagon he had.…
In the story of “The Devil and Tom Walker” by Washington Irving, tells about three characters that portrays human behavior in the real world. Tom is a greedy, selfish, and foolish character that wants everything without working for it. Walker’s wife is also selfish, greedy, and foolish in her own way, by not caring about her husband and wanting everything for herself. Old Scratch is smart, evil and he always keeps his promises.…
They all present unreliable first person views of experiences filled with regrets, mistakes, contradictions, lies, and fear. Readers pity Stevens for his blindness to the subtleness of communication, but Jack is also blind to much of life’s realities, without the lovableness to pity him. Contrastingly, the unnamed narrator is hyper observant of his surroundings; hence, he uses situations to his advantage or cleverly retaliates, like when he plays along with the racist head of Oriental Studies. Unlike Stevens, the unmanned narrator and Jack have more at stake if their identities falter, due to Stevens lack of connections and his profession; additionally, the unnamed man’s life is literally always at risk in some capacity, and Jack faces a toxic spill and tries to kill a man. Plus, the unnamed man and Jack have people they love that they need to consider. Mainly, betrayal of self results from the three protagonists’ fabricated personas. Each novel closes with the narrator existing in a liminal space, where the path they will follow is unclear; correspondingly, the novels’ ends are ambiguous because life is not just black or white, but each man has the choice to change their role in life. Still, the protagonists…
Tom Walker makes a deal with the devil, turning him from rags to riches. He quickly becomes rich after opening a bank with the fortune he gathered from the devil. Tom buys everything he wants and before long “began to feel anxious about those of the next. He thought with regret on the bargain he had made with his black friend, and set his wits to work to cheat him out of the conditions. He became, therefore, all of the sudden, a violent churchgoer”(Irving 13). Tom no longer was content with his deal of selling his soul to the devil. He began to see that his freedom and his life was more important than his big house and money. The fact that Irving included this shows how his quality of life really did not improve as he was trying to. The romantic value of freedom over goods shines through with Tom’s realization that he wanted his life back. This trend of regret continues after Stephen Benet’s Jabez Stone gets fed up with all of the things that happen to him. He feels he is the most unlucky person in the world and makes a deal with the devil so that he can have good luck for (ultimately) ten years before the devil takes him. The deal makes Jabez have good crop turnout, strong horses, and good luck, but also extreme apprehensiveness “For every day, when he gets up, he thinks, ‘There’s one more night gone,’ and every night he lies down he thinks of the black pocketbook and the soul of Miser Stevens, and it makes him sick at heart”(Benet 310). Stone cannot bear the fact the he can count down the days until his death. The benefits of the deal with the devil no longer help Jabez and he realizes that his freedom is more important than having nice. He cannot enjoy his life no matter what while he knows his fate, showing romanticism’s emphasis on freedom for self realization. Jabez’s good luck is quickly overshadowed when he realizes he doesn’t have his life anymore,…
(T) In the story “Rip Van Winkle,” by Washington Irving, the author's portrayal of Dame Van Winkle is unfair because she has the right to be raged at Rip, he never works at his house, and he helps the town but not his wife.(D1) Dame Van Winkle is always raged at Rip but one may think she has the right to be raged.(S1) Dame does a lot of work at her house and when she is the only doing work she can get raged.(S2) She does the outdoor and the indoor work and when she does one may think she has the right to be raged.(D2) Rip never wants to work at his own house which is very unfair for the wife, Dame Van Winkle. (S1) Rip likes to make up many excuses to Dame Van Winkle so he doesn’t have to do work at his house.(S2) Rip makes up the excuse that…
the main characters relationship to each other and their responses to things around them help…
In both of the stories there is someone who is going to get killed, and the reason is not a very big one. But…
When Rip woke up and went back to the town which he used to live in, he felt puzzled and despairing facing the sudden changes of his home and friends. His house was ruined, the vallage inn turned into a large wooden building, he knew none of the people, and even the dogs barked at him – All these changes made Rip feel sad and worried and even caused doubt about his identity. After Rip settled down, he “went back to his old ways” and soon became an admirable person in the town. The changes of states made little impression on him and the only thing he could understood is just “independence from a sharp-tongued wife”. I think Rip’s reaction to the changes stands for…
Rip doesn't change his disposition after he has slept through the revolutionary war. Before the war, he can be seen as typical Americans. He s a lazy and obedient hen-pecked husband. "In a word, Rip was ready to attend to anybody's business but his own; but as to doing family duty, keeping his farm in order, he found it impossible." His idleness to his responsibility can be seen as American's unwillingness to be a servant of England. "There is phlegm and drowsy tranquility" around the town before the revolution…
“Rip Van Winkle” is set at a isolated place during the control of George the Third. It’s set in a small town, near the Kaatskill Mountains. There was a little bit of smoke coming up from the village and at the foot of the mountains, lingering among the trees. It was noticed and founded by a few of the Dutch colonists, who settled during that time. This was also during the unite of old England. The setting impacted this story greatly, it puts a person’s mind in the place of the story and into a very mythical place.…
Thirdly, Irving shows Rip as a hen-pecked husbend through words describing his strong willing to escape from his home, into clubs and woods. It is interesting to mention that his easy feeling at the news of his wife's death, which is somewhat against common sense, successfully revealed his fear of his wife. Though these words show Rip pitiful as a oppressed husband, the description of the laughable behaviours of his termagant wife adds to the comic effect of this fiction.…
which was the first of his mature stories to appear in an American periodical. His…
Two main characters that I choose in this book is Richard and Tom because went I read this book until the end there are many thing that Richard and Tom doing together. Richard is an aboriginal descent. His father died when he was two years, now Richard staying in McDonalds’ family as an adopted son. Meanwhile, Tom is a Joe’s daughter and older than Richard. The relationship between Richard and Tom is very closely because they spent a lot of time together.…
Both men are propelled into acts of vengeance that it ultimately destroyed both of their fortunes. This derived from a primitive need for the characters to compete against each other.…