The Loyalty and Loss written by Margaret M. Storey is a well-written and persuasive book studying how the Unionists in Alabama, the Deep South state, confronted the Confederate authorities during the civil war and their life in the Reconstruction. The first interesting thing I found was that the diversity of the Unionists. The author tried to find the similarities among the different Unionists and surprisingly she found out that the Unionists were highly distributed. Some of them could from the infertile hill county and the others could from the rich Tennessee Valley. No matter how different their backgrounds were, all of them undertook great risks on defying the confederate authorities and fight for their belief.…
Loyalty doesn't run in Edmund's blood. In Act 3 scene 3 Gloucester believes by telling Edmund he's been helping Lear is a good thing. The things he doesn't know is that Edmund is a "snake" and will tell Cornwall this information. The audience knows that Edmund is a "snake" but Gloucester is blind in the mind. When an opportunity is there for Edmund he grab this opportunity and betrayed his…
The notion of family loyalty is displayed throughout the film as a driving force to override corruption, the workers on the waterfront can be considered a family as their struggle from corruption forces them to on each other for survival. The loyalty between the shore men’s families grips Edie as her Brother Joey’s murder increases her family loyalty to find his killer, but also Johnny Friendly’s power over the shoremen workers makes sure that their loyalty towards him is kept sacred so his corruption is not caught out.…
Daniel Venegas’ The Adventures of Don Chipote, or When Parrots Breast-Feed argues that loyalty is the most important component to a friendship, while attributing negative traits, such as manipulation and dishonesty, as signs of a faulty friendship. The text juxtaposes Don Chipote’s friendship with Pitacio alongside Don Chipote’s friendship with Policarpo to accentuate the difference between an unhealthy friendship and a healthy friendship. Pitacio’s deceit and manipulation in lying to his friend of the wonders of America in order to receive food, along with his lack of following a promise to Don Chipote, serve as examples of the lack of loyalty Pitacio exhibits towards Don Chipote. On the other hand, Policarpo’s unwavering desires to support…
Orgon feels betrayed because he put enough trust into the friendship he had with Tartuffe to allow him to marry his daughter, but instead he wanted more. Tartuffe wanted to take Elmire away from Orgon. Instead of being satisfied with Dorine, Tartuffe was filled with greed. “Marry my daughter? Lust after my wife?” In this quote, Orgon is confused because he expected his daughter to be enough as any father would. Tartuffe’s betrayal is also unexpected because Orgon held Tartuffe in very high standard. Orgon was so naïve and thought so highly of him the he had given Tartuffe the deed to his house. In a concurring opinion, Orgon is very ignorant for trusting a man that he does not know. Although Tartuffe is said to be righteous and holy, he is still a man and he still can sin.…
In Tartuffe, Elmire character is resourceful and intelligent woman much like Dorine. Elmire is clearly shown to be mentally superior to her husband and becomes frustrated with him, of his gullibility concerning with Tartuffe, saying bluntly that" Orgons blindness take her breath away" (Moliere). When Orgon refuses to acknowledge that Tartuffe could possibly commit treacherous intentions, Elmire takes the initiative and convince her "hard headed" husband to hide while she manipulates Tartuffe into admitting his wicked intentions (Moliere). The fact that Elmire is forced to manipulate her husband decision rather than make her own, however, is a clear illustration of the subordinate status of women in eighteen century. Elmire character is much like Dorin: strong and…
In order to gain loyalty from others, you have to be trust worthy. In Romeo and Juliet, there is a line that says “You’re in love? Out. Out of love?”. (Shakespeare21) Romeo never said why he was so depressed until he talked to his cousin. His cousin gained Romeos’ trust and now they are loyal to each other. Another example is, “Trust affects a leader’s impact…”. (Horsager1) this shows how gaining trust allows you to do more with others because then they find you loyal. On the counter example, some people might say that respect gains loyalty because you need to respect each other. But if you’re not trust worthy then people will not be loyal to…
In Tartuffe, Moliere's use's plot to defend and oppose characters that symbolize and ridicule habitual behavior's that was imposed during the neo-classical time period. His work, known as a comedy of manners, consists of flat characters, with few and similar traits and that always restore some kind of peace in the end. He down plays society as a whole by creating a microseism, where everyone in the family has to be obedient, respectful, and mindful of the head of the home, which is played by the father Orgon. Mariane shows her obedience when she replies "To please you, sir, is what delights me best." (Moliere 324,11) Shortly afterwards, Orgon commands Mariane to take Tartuffe as her husband even though she is not interested in him at all. Orgon's command shows how men are dominate and have control over social order. Mariane's strong obedience to her father (Orgon) supports the Neo-Classical element that the individual is not as important as society. Moliere discusses logic and reasoning by blindfolding Orgon to the reality of Tartuffe's intentions that causes him to make dumb decisions. In the process, Orgon disregard's his family when told of Tartuffe's intentions. After Tartuffe cons Orgon into believing that Damis's accusation is false Orgon replies, "I know your motives, I now you wish him ill:/Yes, all of you - wife, children, servants, all - /Conspire against him and desire his fall." (Moliere 341-342,46-48) Orgon then excommunicates his own son, indicating that his reasoning is deferred due to his ignorance. This in due course challenges the Neo-Classical belief that logic and reasoning is more important than emotion because Orgon acts solely on his emotions. He feels as if his family has turned against his friend so he operates upon his feelings. When Damis returns home and Tartuffe (instead of Orgon) gets locked up, order is restored. At the end, the family commends the officer for apprehending the true criminal by saying, "Heaven be praised! / We're safe.…
In Tartuffe, the matriarch of the family is Madame Pernelle, and she does not hold her tongue when speaking her mind to her family. As she so states,“ You, boy, grow more foolish every day. To think my grandson should be such dunce! I’ve said it a hundred times, if I said it once, that if you keep on the course which you’ve started, you’ll leave your worthy father broken-hearted.” (Norton; Vol. D; 2nd Edition; Pg. 315) The family’s disregard for her decision making does not sway Madame Pernelle from speaking her truths about Tartuffe. Even though she is not the main character, her disposition towards her family reveals an unhealthy dynamic. As she converses with each character, she makes it a point to expose everyone’s faults to justify her stance on revering Tartuffe as a godly man. The father in the play is Orgon, and he too takes a notable stance against his family in regard to criticizing Tartuffe’s integrity. Though he is not as forthcoming as the grandmother, he voices his distaste for his family’s dislike of Tartuffe in a manner in which he shows his dominance over his homestead.…
The tragedy Romeo and Juliet boasts a wide assortment of characters. Many of whom are often at odds with one another. Three characters in particular, Tybalt, Mercutio, and Benvolio, are three very different men, and are driven by impulses and their different characteristics. Tybalt is driven by his rage and craving for violence, Mercutio is driven by his friendship with Romeo, and Benvolio is often driven by his love for peace. But these men do share one common trait, loyalty. Tybalt, Mercutio, and Benvolio are loyal to their families and their friends without question and with great passion.…
“Loyalty and devotion lead to bravery. Bravery leads to the spirit of self-sacrifice. The spirit of self-sacrifice creates trust in the power of love”. (Morihei Ueshiba) Loyalty and devotion are major themes in the play Antigone. Throughout the play, Antigone showed loyalty to her family and the Greek gods, while additionally staying loyal and true to herself. Her brother, Polynices, went against Creon’s laws and wishes by fighting against Thebes. Antigone was strong in her devotion to help her brother which concluded with her death at the end. Throughout the hardships and repercussions she faced, Antigone showed bravery in the face of Creon’s judgment. In Sophocles’ play, Antigone, Antigone’s loyalty and bravery were her greatest attributes,…
It is apparent throughout Tartuffe that Moliere has an admiration for religion, as practiced by genuinely pious and humble individuals. Cleante is a character who personifies rationality throughout the play. His character becomes the active voice and is used by Molier as an instrument to express his own ideas and to present several of the comedy's themes. In Act I, Cleante shares his views with Orgon, who is being fooled by the hypocrisy of Tartuffe, saying, "There is nothing I more revere than a soul whose faith is steadfast and sincere, nothing that I more cherish and admire than honest zeal and true religious fire" (p. 322). In this speech, Moliere's respect for religion is evident. Moliere believed in the value of sincere devoutness. While he felt that hypocrisy and corruption did exist in the Church, he did not advocate the abandonment of faith and religion. This contention is a primary theme in Tartuffe.…
minds as they would a five year old. The mob, like a great many people,…
The king starts killing everyone in his path and shows no mercy for anyone. He kills the first person that asks for mercy, but when the bard comes, Telemachus keeps Odysseus from killing him, as well as the herald. “The inspired Prince Telemachus heard his pleas and quickly said to his father close beside him, “Stop, don’t cut him down! this one’s innocent. So is the herald Medon-the one who always tended to me in the house when I was little-spare him too. Unless he’s dead by now, killed by Philoetius or Eumaeus here- or ran into you rampaging through the halls” (22. 374-381). The imagery displays the panic in Telemachus’ voice when calling out to his father not to kill the two men. When Telemachus says, “So is the herald Medon-the one who always tending to me in the house when I was little-spare him too”, the imagery senses that Medon holds a fatherlike position to Telemachus while he grew up and Odysseus was gone. The way he says “or ran into you rampaging through the halls”, makes it sound as if Telemachus is slightly mad at the amount of people he cared dying to his father’s hands. To Odysseus, they are just servants because he does not have a surviving relationship with them because of his departure for 20 years. But to Telemachus, they are people that care for him and he grew up with their…
Oberon and Titania’s marriage relationship enforces the theme because their marriage relationship centers itself around revenge and conflict. When one thinks of a marriage he imagines two people who love each other and sacrifice for one another. Oberon and Titania are the opposite. Throughout the play the couple are fighting over an Indian boy. Oberon demands Titania to give him the boy, but she says no. He then says “Well go thy way; . . . till I torment thee for this injury.” (2.1.146-147) He gets jealous, so…