Dr. Armstrong was lured onto the island because he is a doctor and Mr. Owens requested him to check on his wife because of her health but he’s getting paid. “Some little difficulty, it seemed, a husband who was worried about his wife's health and wanted a report on it without her being alarmed”. (pg 12). “The letter he had received had been rather vague in its terms, but there was nothing vague about the accompanying cheque”. (pg 12). We know Dr. Armstrong is a successful doctor and visited by many especially women. We also know he has been sober for over 10 years because he committed an accident because he was drunk. of an plain how Dr. Armstrong was excited about the cheque but he didn't seem to mind getting paid to go to a unique island.…
“But did your reverence hear of the portent that was seen last night? –a great red letter in the sky, -the letter A, which we interpret to stand for Angel. For, as our good Governor Winthrop was made an angel this past night, it was doubtless held fit that there should be some notice thereof!”…
Despite its brief length, Paul D'Angelo's The Step Not Taken is at its essence a monomyth. Monomyths represent a character's transition from innocence to experience by means of a journey. They are comprised of three stages: separation, struggle, and return and reintegration, and are one of the most widely used archetypes in literature. By being able to identify them, a deeper understanding of the author's message can manifest.…
Good Afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. The existence of conflicting perspectives in society can only be enriching. Today, I will present to you how the representation of conflicting perspectives in textual forms creates a mirror to our society. This mirror reflects societal imperfections, the major, on which we will focus today, being obsession. This issue has been particularly documented in the turbulent relationship between poets Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath and the literary works that have been inspired by them.…
Sylvia Plath’s poem “Mirror” and Gwen Harwood’s poem “In the Park” explore the concept of loss diversely. Plath’s poem surrounds the distress regarding the inevitability of aging and its impact while Harwood’s poem explores how the truth cannot be hidden when faced with motherhood.…
Sylvia Plath’s poem, ‘Whiteness I Remember’, and Ted Hughes’s poem, ‘Sam’, are two poems which describe an experience of Plath’s when she was a student at Cambridge. She was out on her first ride when the horse she had hired the normally-placid Sam, bolted. Although Ted Hughes’s is describing the experience he uses insinuations throughout the poem to let out his perception of his marriage with Sylvia Plath, hence infuriating, the conflict in perspective between the two poems. The ideas of ‘conflicting perspective’ suggest that the composers of the texts present an even-handed, unbiased attitude to the events, personalities or situations represented. Conflicting perspectives explore the subjective truth of the individual, which are shaped by the construction of a text by a biased composer. Each person’s version of the truth in events, personalities and situations differs, by viewing separate perspectives an understanding of the motives and purpose of the composer is formed.…
The Old South consisted of many traits that helped sculpted Texas into becoming the state is it now. In The old south, it was common for agriculture to be priority. Cotton, tobacco, etc. just to name a few were considered cash valued crops. In the old south, many citizens had been apart of the military, or have fought in a battle within their lifetime. The old south was an era was citizens were in poverty, and the government was not stabilized with set boundaries and laws. During this era, Discrimination was still an ugly matter that was not even close to being resolved.…
Story, Joseph. Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States: With a Preliminary Review of the Constitutional History of the Colonies and States, Before the Adoption of the Constitution. Union, N.J.: Lawbook Exchange, 2001.…
“Up where they walk, up where they run, up where they stay all day in the sun. Wandering free, wish I could be, part of that world.” Ariel sings this in the beginning of The Little Mermaid after an adventure with Flounder. She wishes to be a human with legs and live the way the humans do. The Little Mermaid is an example of a monomyth, also called a heroic adventure. Ariel may not seem like a so-called-typical-hero throughout the majority of the movie, but she has her own heroic ways. Three characteristics of a hero are a remarkable birth, troubled childhood, and being able to rely on ones natural strength. Ariel grows up with several sisters, no mother and a father who is the king of the sea, King Triton. She was miserable being a mermaid and knew that she had to find her own way to escape the sea.…
Although the Monomyth is what sets up a story, it is not that which allows for these characters to impact the reader: it is the humanity of the characters that allow for a story to come to life. The characters, not the structuring of their journey, are what bring the words out from the pages and into the real world in order to impact the lives of the readers. Humans are social creatures, striving to connect and reconnect with each other constantly. This need manifests itself in art, where even the most lonely have someone. In these stories, they find tranquility. Humans find ways to connect themselves to these imaginary people for the opportunity to feel less lonely in the world. They allow for real life people to develop themselves, to cry,…
Sylvia Plath poetry is unique because of her use of language and the perspective and themes she explores, creating powerful images and original metaphorical ideas to evoke a strong climax of feelings which express the struggles she experienced in her own personal life. Her poems ‘Lady Lazarus’ and ‘Daddy’ are confessional poems that use contemporary form and respectively a childlike and mocking tone to convey the persona’s mixed sense of emotions . Plath’s poetry utilises unique language to express her anger, hope, desire and disappointment. There is a constant suicidal motif in her poems revealing her personal issues and problems which are linked to male domination in the patriarchal society she resided in. It is unusual that Plath’s poetry is written in a strong female perspective contrary to the passive domesticity which women were meant to abide by in her 1950’s and 1960’s context.…
After Plath’s suicide, the feminist movement quickly portrayed her as a martyr who had been driven to suicide by a villainous, unfaithful Hughes. In order to refute these claims, Hughes begins “Fulbright Scholars”, his first poem in his anthology Birthday Letters with a rhetorical question. “When was it, in the strand?” This immediately sets up a honest uncertainty which is reinforced by the repetition of questions throughout the poem: “Were you among them.. With their luggage?” Thus Hughes admits that his perspective is fallible to imperfect memory. Distinct pauses after the words “A display”, “Not” of “American” create a break in rhythm and enjambment, which combined with the repetition of “it” and the “I” alliteration in the first four lines, further reflect Hughes’ desperate attempt at recollection. Thereafter, repeated “maybe” of low modality statements “Maybe I noticed you… For some reason,” further undermine certainty. Thus, by confusing the frailty of his memory, a common human weakness, Hughes portrays an insight into himself as a honest, sincere man even endearing himself to his critics.…
The notion of truth being a defined reasoning and represented as a one sided argument is unmistakably how most audiences visualize it. The concept cannot be interpreted in such close mindedness, as to tell the truth is to speak what appears “truthful” to “you”. Conflicting perspectives arise when the visualization of how feasible or veracious something is differs between individuals. The controversy surrounding Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath, contentious poets of the twenty first century portray their own reality through their semi-confessional poetry. Sylvia Plath frequently extends her cereal obsession with her dead father as well as committing a certain bias declaration about past events to her poetry. If an audience were to read just Plath’s semi-autobiographical work the bell jar or even her late published work, Ariel they would quickly succumb to the confessional ‘finger pointing’ at Hughes and her father that she is notoriously regarded for. Hughes’ work, in contrast often speaks of the good times in their passionate relationship enticing less cynicism and promoting his protagonist-like character. Hughes’ “Fulbright Scholars”, for example has a much lighter tone with a series of guesses and faded recollection of enjoyable excitement confided in his first meeting with Plath. Condescending to Plath’s degenerative works like “the rabbit catcher” or “the jailer”, freckled with darkness and hatred. Without implication of Hughes’ goodness, he frequently took an objective stance in his work; “the minotaur” and “Sam” can both be interpreted as Hughes talking himself out of situation by exaggerating his veracity almost to a level of ‘whininess’. Reading about the two scholars, one would be lead to believe that they communicated to each other more through their poetry, expressing deeper emotions lyrically then they did conversely. The often strongly differing…
Surviving tragedies in a harsh reality is something only the strongest of souls can do. Sylvia Plath was not a strong soul. She sought comfort in the words of her poetry and in her book The Bell Jar, but it was not enough. She had a dark and sad life, and Sylvia was constantly depressed. These warning signs provided Plath with fuel for her poems, but what her family, and society did not realize was that her writings were a desperate cry for help, and help never came. Sylvia Plath, awakened the world to the ideas of suicide awareness, after writing many literary works that pointed to an illness no one knew would take her life.…
Sylvia Plath, a phenomenal author whose book The Bell Jar informed the world about her life as a woman in a man's world while suffering from depression which took her life in the end. Writing a book in such an era, during the twentieth century when it was more common for a woman to stay home instead of going to work or having her own identity. Sylvia Plath managed to publish a book as such however after her death. This paper revolves around the ideas and mentality of the late twentieth century regarding women and depression which many people were not aware of, treating the sufferers with techniques which were not only horrific but inhumane.…