Preview

The Hound Of The Baskervilles Research Paper

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
206 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Hound Of The Baskervilles Research Paper
The poorest residents of nineteenth century England have taken the name of third-class. In The Hound of the Baskervilles, a character in which has this type of lifestyle is Selden the criminal. When Mrs. Barrymore was being interrogated by Watson and Sir Henry, she revealed, “When he dragged himself here one night, weary and starving, with the warders at his heels, what could we do? We took him in and fed him and cared for him,” (Doyle 137). Selden’s only way to survive whilst living homeless out on the moor was to acquire help by his sister and brother-in-law to provide him with food. Another struggling third-classman, or better yet third-class woman is the esteemed Emily Brent. The sixty-five year old was not living the sweet life of retirement,

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Chapter 27 in The Norton Introduction to Literature talks about Paraphrase, summary, and description. This chapter explains how to practice writing an essay and even completing an essay using three different key points. This chapter helps you to understand paraphrasing, summarizing, and even describing someone’s work. This chapter also talks about the different forms of writing and an essay is just one way. Learning how to paraphrase, summarize, and how to use description will help produce an essay worthy of the original piece of work.…

    • 466 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    After Montag is betrayed by his wife, he is made to burn his own house and then is arrested. While Beatty is scolding Montag, Montag grabs the flamethrower and burns Beatty to ashes. He then knocks out the other firemen and runs. The Hound tries to stop him by biting his leg and injecting him with anesthetic, but Montag destroys it with the flamethrower and walks to another fireman’s house to place books in it and calls an alarm. He then runs to Faber’s for help. Faber tells him that another Hound has been put on his trail as well as a helicopter and television crew. Faber talks to him about a guy who might help them print books. Montag takes some of Faber’s clothes to disguise himself and runs to the river. He then floats down the river and…

    • 183 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Finding true love can be one of the most difficult yet most satisfying things in the world. In Tess of the D’Urbervilles, fate proved to be the determining factor when finding true love. Over the course of Tess’s life, she was taken advantage of and swindled until the happy times with Angel when her life turned around. Marrying Angel was a difficult step for Tess due to her haunted past, and when Angel learns of Tess’s past, he decides to leave her. Angel proved through sleepwalking with Tess in his arms that he truly did love her, illuminating his true feeling and foreshadowing what would later occur in the novel.…

    • 679 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Many speculations have been made trying to determine who is the modern day King Arthur, his reincarnate self. King Arthur, if he existed, was thought to be one of the greatest leaders of all time. There have been many legends about King Arthur, including that King Arthur would come back in the future during a dark era and bring the society back to the way it was. As for Doctor Ben Carson I believe that he is the reincarnate King Arthur. King Arthur and Doctor Ben Carson have many similar traits.…

    • 820 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    An eye for and eye is the Count Of Monte Cristo concept for revenge toward Caderousse. Caderousse was a tailor. He was also the Count's father's landlord and neighbor. While Count was at sea, Caderousse demanded the return of his loan the Count from the Count’s father who by complying deprived himself of sufficient money and nearly starved to death. Caderousse Later watches two men mail a letter that accuses the Count of supporting Napoleon. The letter causes the count to get arrested. Caderousse says nothing in the Counts defense when he is arrested. These events are the cause for the Counts revenge plot. The Count of Monte Cristo is responsible for Caderousse’s downfall.…

    • 348 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Prompt: What role should literature play in defining social values? What place does Huckleberry Finn play in modern American society? Use the novel and any literary criticism as support.…

    • 501 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    squire, "one of his neighbors, a country laborer, and good honest fellow, for he was poor indeed:…

    • 514 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Class stratification is one of the issues Austen raises, through Lady Catherine’s disapproval of Elizabeth marrying Mr. Darcy. The reason lady Catherine is so against the match is that she does not want the money of her family being spread among other families, and she does not want one of lower classes fouling her bloodlines, “The upstart pretensions of a young woman without family, connections, or fortune.” Lady Catherine comments on Elizabeth’s lack of class, and good connections, using these as weapons against Elizabeth, when trying to convince from marrying her nephew. This unwillingness to blur the lines of the clear class structure was a common issue of Austin’s time, coming against the newfound money, and supposed class, coming from people in trade, and the dwindling money coming from the estates of the time.…

    • 958 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Persuasion Social Class

    • 1354 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Helmer, M. (n.d.). 19th Century England: Society, Social Classes, & Culture. Study. Retrieved February 15, 2017, from…

    • 1354 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Emily Bronte also convey’s aspects of the class system within Victorian society through the use of imagery. Bronte depicts two English households which both resemble slightly different classes but for which could not be further apart. The heights is described as “narrow windows being deeply set in the wall” and then Thrushcross Grange as “the large, half curtain windows allowing the sun to come in from the outside” - these two pictures painted by Bronte show the contrast between the two households. Thrushcross Grange is a place of pure sophistication, calmness and complete comfort and relaxation and the Heights is seen as a place of violence, despair and complete and utter chaos. Because the Grange’s occupants are of a higher class then of that of the Heights, Bronte suggests that higher classes lived in far more comfort and peace then the lower classes; this further suggesting that the idea of equal opportunities (especially that related to education) was complete rubbish and a false portrayal of what Victorian society actually was. The fact that the occupants of the Height’s are of a lower social standing and the connotations related to them are of that of dirt, hard work and chaos suggests that the Lower classes compared to the higher classes were less comfortable and found it much harder to succeed within a completely class ridden society. The fact that the two households are virtually parallel to each other further suggests that poverty and wealth lived so close beside one another, but the wealthy were reluctant (either out of ignorance or pure selfishness) to act and demand change, because it would have not been beneficial to them. This further suggests that the wealthy victorians who saw themselves as being religious, good human beings were actually people who lived off the fear and vulnerability of the poor and therefore were everything they so claimed to despise.…

    • 1704 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In The Canterbury Tales The General Prologue there is three social classes there's upper class which is king's, priest, rich people, and knights. Middle class which is really all the king’s men who are not really wealthy like first class people but not poor like the lower class who is mainly peasants. A knight is in the upper class because they are honest, loyal, brave, and trustworthy they protect and serve the king they are real respected by everyone. In the lower class there is someone named parson he is a holy man who is every poor but always wants to give and give to anyone in need even though he doesn't really have anything to give his brother was plowman he was also a godly man and a very hard worker. The monk in the story was upper…

    • 183 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    |genre. Yet at an early stage the theatrical levels begin to blur, as Moon claims to have seen Birdboot out on the town with |…

    • 1388 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The current movement of absurdism, however, emerged in France after World War II, as a rebellion against the traditional values and beliefs of Western culture and literature. It began with the existentialist writers like Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus and eventually included other writers such as Eugene Ionesco, James Joyce, Samuel Beckett, Jean Genet, Edward Albee, and Harold Pinter, to name a few. Its rules are fairly simple: 1.) There is often no real story line; instead there is a series of "free floating images" which influence the way in which an audience interprets a play. 2.) There is a focus on the incomprehensibility of the world, or an attempt to rationalize an irrational, disorderly world. 3.) Language acts as a barrier to communication, which in turn isolates the individual even more, thus making speech almost futile. In other words, absurdist drama creates an environment where people are isolated, clown-like characters blundering their way through life because they don 't know what else to do. Oftentimes, characters stay together simply because they are afraid to be alone in such an incomprehensible world. Despite this negativity, however, absurdism is not completely nihilistic. Martin Esslin explains: the recognition that there is no simple explanation for all the mysteries of the world, that all previous systems have been oversimplified and therefore bound to fail, will appear to be a source of despair only to those who still feel that such a simplified system can provide an answer. The moment we realize that we may have to live without any final truths the situation changes; we may have to readjust ourselves to living with less exulted aims and by doing so become more humble, more receptive, less exposed to violent disappointments and crises of conscious - and therefore in the last resort happier and better adjusted people, simply because we then live in closer accord with reality. (Kepos 384)…

    • 2734 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    “The General Prologue” are genuinely and full-dimensionally presented. The first time I read the text, it was like watching a “black and white” picture, probably due to the many unfamiliar words in the text, although the copy was in Modern English. After looking up the words, the picture became like of a “high definition” screen, but after mastering the glossary and re-reading the text several times, it turned into 3D visualization plus Dolby surround sound. The images came into life! I could see the meek noble Knight in his “clothes…a bit drab…cotton tunic stained with mud and gore” and also his young handsome son, the Squire, in “his clothes all embroidered like a bed planted full of fresh flowers white and red”. The bridles of the monk’s horses were “jingling on the wind as clear and quite as loudly as did the chapel bell” and the resounding Pardoner’s voice was flowing so smoothly during the offertory.…

    • 1168 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Victorian age was the time of great, economical, social and political change as it was the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. Hence, it was a time of great prosperity for some but an object of poverty for others. The determining factor of which category society these people fell under was, unfortunately, left up to colour and class. Rural life was governed by street societal hierarchy which Bronte accurately depicted in ‘Wuthering Heights’. In addition to the revolution, Victorian England was also fascinated by gypsies; objects of discrimination, partly because their travelling lifestyle made them people without a nation or land and partly because they looked so different from the typical Anglo- Saxon.…

    • 1779 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays