The ongoing conflict between good and evil in Steinbeck’s East of Eden novel is very apparent. Between brothers, there is a balance between good and evil controlling and influencing their lives. Aron and Caleb, two brothers, find themselves battling against their predestination. Caleb, a cruel, sneaky…
In the largest book of Steinbecks, East of Eden, he shows one of the most famous of themes in the majority of books. Being the struggle between good and evil. He states that its his opinion that this theme is a recurring object in human history. He even makes the statement that “there is no other story.”(East of Eden, XV) The story being written of the Christian tradition gave representatives of Adam and Eve from the bible. The representors were Cain and Abel. The characters showed how every individual has struggled with the choice between good and evil. Steinbeck stated that when looking back on his or her life they, “will have only the hard good questions: Was it good or was it evil? Have I done well or ill?”(East of Eden, 413). And Steinbeck goes on to explain how every generation will make to progress due to the fact that each person has to relive the same ancient history. East of Eden represented this struggle extremely well because each family portrayed in the four parts of this book had to choose between one of the two. From Cyrus, in the beginning of the book, stealing money during his office as the US Army administrator to Cal, at the end of the book, who worried that he had inherited a legacy of sin from his mother. But when Cal accepts the possibility and responsibilty of free will, or the choice between good and evil. This positive ending is corrupted when the reader realizes that the future generations with helplessly replay the same struggles over many years to come.…
Two stories “Battle Royal “(1947) by Ralph Ellison’s and Training Day (2001) by Antoine Fuqua’s. In both story main characters who have the goal and both of them try to achieve that goal but each of them is going to achieve that goal by different way. In Training Day the main character Alonzo tries to achieve his goal by brutal, cruel way, he is portrayed as a wolf in this story. The other character in “Battle Royal” portrayed as shy, intelligent, young man who wants to achieve his goal by his own struggle, he is shown in this story as a ship. "To protect the sheep you gotta catch the wolf, and it takes a wolf to catch a wolf.”…
1. Walls opens with the story of burning herself because it shows how she has been dealing with struggles ever since she can remember. The incident when cooking hotdogs showed how Jannette was independent at such a young age and got things done even with no help form others. It reads on page 14 “He pushed open an emergency exit door and sprinted down the stairs and out to the street…’You don’t have to worry anymore baby, ‘dad said ‘you’re safe now’.” By Rex doing this, taking her away from the hospital, is showing that the Wall don’t need help and handouts form anyone will they will do everything to help themselves.…
Overall, the poem has an enlightened and realization tone that places necessary perspective on the human traits affected by good and evil. Various rhyme schemes in the poem help convey the topic flow and message while guiding the reader to the central point of the significance of good and evil in life. Particularly, this poem contrasts opposites like “black and white” (2) and “right and wrong” (15) to draw examples of how good and evil lay in opposite spectrums on the world. These parallel opposites show the reader how good and evil “fuel” human aspects like “greed and selfishness” (9) but also teaching how to “live righteous lives” (14). Spencer creates this depiction of how fundamentally critical the nature of good and evil affect conscious decisions like stated in the fourth stanza the “struggle of right and wrong” (15) and “determining who survives” (16). Following the fifth and sixth stanzas, Spencer again underscores the morals and importance of the two adverse qualities and without them “there will be no light” (21). Here his contemplative tone illustrates once more how good and evil in the world develops human ambitions and character. Ultimately, the last stanza contains the focal point by comparing good and evil to “the roots of a tree” (26) that make…
The brutality and utter wildness of the dog represents the ferocity and unforgivable power of nature that trounces the miniscule thoughts of the mere man. Nature shapes the fate of humanity,…
The conflicts in this story are human vs human, human vs animal, and human vs self.…
The clash between good and evil has been a prominent theme in literature. The Bible presents the conflict between good and evil in the story of Adam and Eve. Many authors use the scene in the Bible in which the snake taunts and tempts Adam and Eve to take a bite of the apple of knowledge to demonstrate the frailty of humankind. John Gardner provides these same biblical allusions of good and evil in his novel, Grendel.…
Every time the going got rough, they would just leave behind the life they had created in their temporary town and start anew in a new town. Jeannette loved the running, because it meant more time with her family and being in the desert; also it meant they were closer to building the “Glass Castle”. The Walls’ father, Rex, always promised his children that all of this running was just a temporary measure, “All we had to do was find gold, Dad said… he’d start work on our Glass Castle.” (Walls 25) This dream represented Rex’s hope to be something to his children, but his drinking keeps on prolonging their dreams by keeping him unmotivated. However, Jeannette ignores her father’s drinking as a child, and thinks “...Dad was perfect, although he did have what Mom called a little bit of a drinking situation.” (Walls 23) During one Christmas, the Walls had no money at since Rex had lost his job; so Rex decided to take each of his children out into the desert and have them pick out their own star. Jeannette accidentally picked out Venus instead of a star, but Rex decided that she can have Venus, even if it was a planet. This memory shows how Rex wishes he could give more to his family. When he had nothing, he managed to give his children one of the best Christmas presents they could have…
“Wolves are the dogs that stayed behind.” The world is a cruel place. A thing that can be treasured in one instance can be a threat in the next. For many people, we stare at the natural world and see its rugged beauty and wish that we could captivate it for ourselves. The case is no different for our modern dogs. Bred from the “empty canvas” of a wolf, we’ve modified, altered, formed, transformed, reformed, and remodified wolves to be one of the closest companions we have still today: dogs. But through all of our perfecting and reshaping that we’ve done to our best friends’ closest ancestors, wolves have prevailed, echoing their famous legacy still throughout the world. Wolves, now in danger of extinction, are one of the greatest controversies…
Good vs. evil is a classic theme often found in literature. In “A Good Man is Hard to Find” by O’Connor and “Young Goodman Brown” by Hawthorne, the authors focus on this theme to unravel their plots. O’Connor uses the grandmother and a thief, The Misfit, to compare and contrast the good and evil in people. On the other hand, Hawthorne’s, “Young Goodman Brown,” uses the main character, Young Goodman Brown, and his journey from being a respected man to being summoned by the devil. Both authors use their main characters as a comparison of what being good means, however the evil of the story is presented differently.…
One of the most distinct themes of the Lord of the Flies is savagery versus civilization. The group of boys, alone on this island, are forced to push themselves both mentally and physically to stay in order; or in some cases, go insane. This quote represents the specific theme of civilization versus savagery because the loss of a civilized mental state is clear as this group of boys nearly beat…
[He] did not understand women. It wasn’t the way bartenders or comedians didn’t understand women, it was the way poor people didn’t understand the economy. You could stand outside the Girard Bank Building every day of your life and never guess anything about what went on in there. That’s why, in their hearts, they’d always rather stick up a 7-Eleven.…
In the image “New York, ca. 1962”, from the second I lay my eyes on the image the first thing that I see is the sense of being trapped in a prison from all of the bars and fences that just surrounds the image. This sense of being trapped and not being able to roam or act freely to most people is a huge compromise of their happiness. That they can no longer pursue their happiness or anything for that matter besides their own survival behind the bars. It is also shown that the wolf that is trapped behind the bars is clearly showing his compromised happiness by his pose. His head slightly bowed, and his tail down between his legs. Just staring out at all the people who pass by with their freedom to still pursue their happiness. Being trapped behind bars in a jail is almost always caused by someone’s pursuit of happiness. Someone tries to pursue their happiness in the wrong ways and ends up getting themselves into trouble that they cannot get themselves out of, and in…
“I heard something, I think,” said Ulrich “I hear nothing but the pestilential wind,” said Georg (Saki 6). These quotes created suspense, it made you wonder what was going to happen when the men got out? How were they going to settle the feud? “Are they your men?” asked Georg “No,” said Ulrich “Who are they?” asked Georg “Wolves” replied Ulrich (Saki 7). The last couple sentences of the story were very ironic, on the same land the men had fought over for generations and the same land they had decided the feud to be over, was the same land both men had died…