Preview

silas marner

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
897 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
silas marner
SILAS MARNER
George Eliot

←Analysis of Major Characters→
Silas Marner

The title character, Silas is a solitary weaver who, at the time we meet him, is about thirty-nine years old and has been living in the English countryside village of Raveloe for fifteen years. Silas is reclusive and his neighbors in Raveloe regard him with a mixture of suspicion and curiosity. He spends all day working at his loom and has never made an effort to get to know any of the villagers. Silas’s physical appearance is odd: he is bent from his work at the loom, has strange and frightening eyes, and generally looks much older than his years. Because Silas has knowledge of medicinal herbs and is subject to occasional cataleptic fits, many of his neighbors speculate that he has otherworldly powers.

Despite his antisocial behavior, however, Silas is at heart a deeply kind and honest person. At no point in the novel does Silas do or say anything remotely malicious and, strangely for a miser, he is not even particularly selfish. Silas’s love of money is merely the product of spiritual desolation, and his hidden capacity for love and sacrifice manifests itself when he takes in and raises Eppie.
Silas’s outsider status makes him the focal point for the themes of community, religion, and family that Eliot explores in the novel. As an outcast who eventually becomes Raveloe’s most exemplary citizen, Silas serves as a study in the relationship between the individual and the community. His loss and subsequent rediscovery of faith demonstrate both the difficulty and the solace that religious belief can bring. Additionally, the unlikely domestic life that Silas creates with Eppie presents an unconventional but powerful portrait of family and the home.
Though he is the title character of the novel, Silas is by and large passive, acted upon rather than acting on others. Almost all of the major events in the novel demonstrate this passivity. Silas is framed for theft in his old town and,

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Silas Deane was a man of promise, he came from humble origins, but he rose to great heights. However, he did fall from respect, and lived out his life thought to be a traitor and a cheat. He died in an unusual manner, however. On the deck of the ship that would bring him back to America for the first time in over a decade, he fell extremely ill and died. Silas Deane was murdered by a certain Dr. Bancroft. This is not definite by any means, but it is the most probable cause of his death. The murder of Silas Deane protected Bancroft, and so shows the motive of the murderer, and his circumstances show his ability to perform the act.…

    • 751 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Rise of Silas Lapham

    • 717 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Mr. Sewell, in The Rise of Silas Lapham, is created by the author as a man of wisdom; he is a Unitarian minister whom Lapham viewed as a man with great knowledge, and understanding of how things worked, and how they should have been such as marriage, and politics. Mr. Sewell’s advice about” the economy of pain” is related to realism, by the triangle between Irene, Tom, and Penelope. His advice to Lapham, and his wife was “to let one suffer instead of three, if none is to blame?” (Howells, 226). He suggested that Tom and Penelope should not have to give up their love for each other for the sake of Irene. Irene will just have to endure the heartbreak of losing one’s first love, and face the reality about taking time to fall in love more maturely, and wisely.…

    • 717 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Silas House’s, A Parchment of Leaves plays through the life of one of House’s most vivid and compassionate characters, Vine, a full blood Cherokee raised in the rural mountains of Kentucky. House’s use of spiritual surroundings displays the beauty and wonder that structures the novel. As the reader sees Vine grow from young adult, into motherhood, they can see that growth not only can be in wisdom and maturity but by making bonds that will last a lifetime. The people that she meets and lives around impact her morals as the reader sees Vine’s life unfold. The novel is divided into sections of Vine’s life that entail obsession, love, unspoken forgiveness, and loyalty as themes, all the while teaching vine precious morals that she later comes to appreciate as she realizes that all she needs is right where it all started. The conflict comes when she finds herself attached spiritually to the ones that made her life significant.…

    • 692 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Analysis of Barefoot Heart

    • 1879 Words
    • 8 Pages

    Hart draws a childhood picture of endurance, inconsistency, and wants on many levels as well as the struggle to escape and the compulsion to remain in her migrant society. Elva had to struggle with living in the different societies as her family travelled each year to Minnesota from Texas so the adults and older children could work in the beet fields as manual laborers. Elva also didn’t have the sense of belonging or the security of her siblings of belonging to that community of the other families working together in the fields. Her father (Apa) did require that his family return early each year to Pearsall, Texas so his children could receive a proper education. He was very adamant about all of his kids graduating from school. In her own family, she had a sense of isolation since she was the youngest child and was unable to work the fields; she could only stay on the sidelines and watch. The first summer, Elva and her sister were separated from their family and had to live in a place supervised by nuns. The following summers while on the side of the fields watching for Apa’s signal to bring them water, she passed most of her time in virtual solitude. Elva remembers her birthday being celebrated only once during her…

    • 1879 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the play, The Crucible, there are many protagonist that were distinguished throughout the play. The meaning behind the word, protagonist, is more or less around the context of being the main character, champion, or an advocate. John Proctor was the one that stood out the most. He was a protagonist behind the reasons of one; he learns to forgive himself, two; he was one of the many reasons that the Salem court stopped the witchcraft trials, and three; he is a well respected man throughout the town of Salem and respects the people in this town.…

    • 433 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Prufrock Analysis Essay

    • 899 Words
    • 4 Pages

    This familiarity with the city is developed further in ‘Preludes’. In the third stanza Eliot writes that the sordid images of the night that are revealed constituted the soul. These images that the night reveal would be shadows caused by the world outside, and the use of the word “sordid” makes the reader recall Eliot’s earlier descriptions in the first stanza of “smoky days” and “grimy scraps” and the second stanza’s “faint stale smells of beer” and “sawdust-trampled streets” as these would all constitute a sordid setting of a modern city.” And yet despite this distasteful description of the city Eliot still writes that the soul of the person addresses as “you” in the third stanza is formed by these images of a squalid, degenerate city. The city is a part of this person and this shows that there is a very intense bond between the two. It is as if the failure to make meaningful connections with other people mean that the people in Eliot’s poetry have to turn to the only other presence that they are familiar with in their lives and that is the city that they…

    • 899 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    She epitomizes religious devotion and Christian principles to Jane. She never passes judgment nor rebels even against Miss Scatcherd whom constantly punishes her. She suffers from neglect, much as Jesus suffered from persecution. But like Him she holds no grudges, yet she loves her enemies. She dies young, affirming to Jane in her last moments her firm faith in God and Heaven. Her values and beliefs leave a lasting impression on Jane, who remembers her friends example and words for the rest of her life.…

    • 3120 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Womack chooses to reflect on the state of future inner cities and current ones by exploring their impact on the youth, specifically an adolescent girl. As Lola begins to assimilate into the culture of the poverty stricken inner city, her narrative dialect changes too. What Womack does here is show that with the depreciation of society, so comes the loss of innocence and youth. In order to survive her new surroundings, Lola must abandon childhood naïveté for subsistence. The loss of structure within society in turn leads to the loss of purity and adolescence, replaced by adrenaline and fear.…

    • 765 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the village of Salem there is man, Goodman Brown, who is a Christian. He meets a man in the woods, who eerily seems to be expecting Goodman. When the two encounter a woman in the woods, the man is identified by her to be the Devil himself, and her a witch. He also hears the minister and deacon of his church going to the Devil’s ceremony, along with the witch. Goodman thinks that while everyone else is turning to the Devil, he must stay true to God. As the story progresses more, Goodman hears his wife Faith’s voice at the ceremony, which pushes him over the edge and he uses the Devil’s staff to go to the ceremony. Throughout this story, Hawthorne wraps pieces of Romanticism into the plot. There are elements of nature, solitude, and innocence. They help the overall theme of the story emerge because they build up the setting and path for Goodman’s loss of his innocence.…

    • 904 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Sometimes circumstances almost force children into growing up and becoming self-sufficient. At the same time adults can lack in maturity, and being proper role models for children. Not all adults are mature and not all children are naive. Lahiri shows us this when Mrs. Sen admits that, “[Eliot is] wiser that[...]. [He] already taste[s] the way things must be.” (Lahiri 123) Eliot has been exposed to the real world and all its ugly, but very real, parts. Eliot represents the majority of children in this modern-day, pushed into the adult world because of parents lack of responsibility. Children can learn from grownups mistakes and strive to do better and become better people. While this is not always negative, it is tragic, the loss of innocence is never a pleasant occurrence, especially at young ages. Lahiri was emphasizing the ugly truth of how the roles of children and adults can switch, how children have to be their own examples and adults struggle to fully grow up and be the role models that children need. I enjoyed reading this story because it shows a reality that is so common yet so easily overlooked. It’s the ugly truth that everyone should…

    • 652 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In all actuality, this book is really all over the place in the sense that it can jump from one scenario focusing on a particular family and their background to the next without warning but recognize the importance later on. I am going to do my best to now summarize the story,…

    • 3178 Words
    • 13 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Nathaniel Hawthorne’s short story is a about determinant beliefs and an epic struggle between good and evil. Young Goodman Brown faces some real evils, but also has to face his own devilish side, his temptations, his anger and his family's history of cruelty. Hawthorne’s character, Young Goodman Brown, leaves the reader with the impression that "GOOD-MAN" is the focal character that symbolizes his will to be the noble person, in the battle between good and evil. Young Goodman Brown’s faith is tested, and only his walk through the woods will tell how he alters his beliefs and makes changes in his life insistently. Within the in short story, Goodman Brown encounters a journey that takes him through the realization between saints and sinners that later leads him into the woods to encounter a man posed as Satan and a journey back home that leads to delusional thoughts about his community.…

    • 942 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Each character in this story is experiencing an emotional battle which they try to find healing but for some it will be too late. The narrator in the story is Sheppard. Sheppard is a widow, his wife died in less than a year before the story began. Sheppard experiences emotional distress by trying hard to change a troubled teen, Rufus, into an honorable young man while teaching his son, Norton, to be selfless. Instead he is actually deceived by his own misconceptions and finds himself in turmoil with Rufus and at disconnect with Norton. Norton, an innocent ten- year old is heartbroken by the fact that his mother died and he misses her very much. He is unknowingly searching for unconditional love which his father does not offer to him. Rufus is a troubled teen but very religious. He believes in God and the ramifications of sin. He believes that if you do bad deeds than you are working under Satan’s power but if you repent and be saved then you can enter into heaven and your sins will be forgiven, “The lame shall enter first”. This very concept is what causes separation between Rufus, Sheppard and Norton.…

    • 1283 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Titus andronicus

    • 350 Words
    • 2 Pages

    He is one of the main characters of the play and is shown as the principal agent of vengeance. Every bad thing that comes out in this act is a direct result of Aaron's planning or initiative. Unlike Titus and Tamora, who actually have many reasons for their actions, Aaron is all action and no motivation.…

    • 350 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Lottery

    • 890 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Young Goodman Brown is a young man who fits his name. He is innocent and believes the community is as harmless as they appear. However his innocence has blinded him to the reality of the dark world. Brown’s family, his wife, and respected members of the community such as Goody Cloyse and Deacon Gookin, have all submitted to the devil. Brown gives in by going to the ceremony, but is permanently scarred and shaken by the experience. He no longer trusts anyone in the community or fully loves his wife again. The beliefs he thought that everyone had were corrupted when he discovered their alliance with the devil. Each of these people followed one another, disregarding their personal morals. This made all the characters seem spineless and unfaithful. This shows Hawthorne’s themes of not all things are as they seem, standing firm in your beliefs, doing what you know to be right and not following the crowd just because of a popular decision.…

    • 890 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics