Finny is an example of an imperfect perfection in the eyes of Gene. In the eyes of Gene, he uses to see Finny as his best friend but overtime saw him as a competition; but towards the end saw him as a friend that was better. Finny is a distinctive character because he is someone who sees beyond the barriers of what society at the time. During the time of the book, people’s mentality was based off what the war was going to be like and where they would end up. But Finny was the type of person who towards the end of the book didn’t believe that there really was a war. It wasn’t because he was delusional or that he was stupid. He saw that there was no enemy and that in society there was never an enemy to fight. But this was never clear to Gene…
What can thy silence do for him, except it tempt him--yea, compel him, as it were--to add hypocrisy to sin?"(46) Chillingworth’s name in this text is a metaphor for how cold his heart has become due to his feeling of betrayal. He has become a cold and unfeeling…
Almost every story has an antagonist. The Scarlet Letter and Moby Dick are no exception. The characters that allow evil to manifest itself in these stories are Captain Ahab and Roger Chillingworth. There are many differences in Mr. Ahab and Mr. Chillingworth and how they become evil.…
People have been trying to put a face to evil for many years. Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, does exactly that with the character Roger Chillingworth. Roger Chillingworth is the embodiment of evil. Throughout the story the reader sees embodiment of evil through his thoughts, actions, and appearance. Once this things are taken into account then one will see how Roger Chillingworth is the symbol of pure evil.…
Martin Luther King, Jr.’s, “Letter from Birmingham Jail,” was written in 1963; during the time African Americans were fighting for equality among races. We can tell this by the vocabulary used in his writing such as “Negro,” which was used at one time, and is no longer considered, “politically correct. “ The purpose for the letter is that Martin Luther King Jr. was trying to convince the white clergymen that him and his “People’s” actions were completely unnecessary for the situation. When doing this, he uses critical and persuasive tones to try to influence the reader to agree with him. Martin Luther King Jr. provides a valid argument using logos, pathos, and ethos throughout his letter.…
First, Roger Chillingworth is unaware. He doesn't think punishing someone for himself is wrong. He doesn't know how much the devil has taken over his body. "There came a glare of red light out of his eyes; as if the old man's soul were on fire, and kept on…
No one has a personality that doesn’t change. This change in personality can cause people to have two sides to their personality. “People have two sides, a good side and a bad side.” (The Tourist) The two sides are: one bursting of goodness and one filled with evil. This difference in a personality is either helping or hurting themselves and their peers. Many stories contain characters that exhibit these bipolar, two-sided personalities. This inconsistency is part of what makes them interesting. The reader expects a character to act in a certain way, but the double-sided personality causes them to do something unexpected. Many authors use this to grasp the reader. In his book, Fifth Business, Robertson Davies demonstrates that Dunstan Ramsay, Boy Staunton, and Mary Dempster each have a good side, and an evil side to their personalities.…
Both Ms. Strangeworth from “The Possibility of Evil” and Captain Torres from “Lather and Nothing Else” represent the villain archetype; however, Miss Strangeworth better represents it because she enjoys the evil she causes, whereas Captain Torres does not. First of all, the roles of the characters are shown as villains throughout both of the stories. In the case of Miss Strangeworth, it is when she sends her malicious messages to the town without regard for their feelings (Jackson 5). Meanwhile, Captain Torres is revealed as the villain when the barber remembers “...the sight of the mutilated bodies kept me from noticing the man who had directed it all” (Tellez 1) about the captain. The two of them do horrible things to their respective towns; Miss Strangeworth, by sending her…
The first point is about Chillingworth’s main conflict in the story. His wife Hester Prynne, a main character is an adulterer. Upon finding this Chillingworth goes to the colony where Hester lives. She believes he has come to kill her and her child of sin but he truly intends to torture her partner in crime. This conflict occurs in The Scarlet Letter…
In Nathaniel Hawthorne's, The Scarlet Letter, he describes the story as a "tale of human frailty and sorrow. This is most likely due to the fact that all the main characters go through some sort of sorrow and hardship throughout the novel. Each is unique in it's own way and has a different effect on the character. Furthermore, each character has his/her own major flaw or sin. Roger Chillingworth, for example, had the flaw of seeking revenge. This completely consumed his life, and as you will soon see, he was unable to live without it. As his name suggests he is devoid of human sentiment. He is referred to as a leech because he feeds on the lives of others in order to accomplish his goals. Ultimately Roger Chillingworth comes to represent true evil. Roger Chillingworth's outlook throughout the story and his actions were very dependant upon his need for revenge. His vow to seek revenge had a negative affect on his life and the lives of others around him. Lastly, his fatal flaw led him to suffer dire consequences at the end of the novel.…
Recognizing Walter’s transition from protagonist to “antagonist” becomes difficult to understand through the content and storyline due to a flood of information and the lack of common knowledge about the process of cooking and selling methamphetamine. Furthermore, Vince Gilligan’s portrayal of the protagonist, Walter White, takes on the role of being an “antagonist” being perceived as a character that gets lost in greed, but Gilligan throws in phrases in episode 6 like “I am doing this for my family” or in episode seven when Walter states how “he only needed enough for his family.” But while nothing seems to go on plan, an antagonist rises out of Walter White as his initial goals derail from his initial moral values. Typically, films and television shows in the 20th and 21st century give a clear depiction of good and evil that provides the audience with a side to choose from. However, in Breaking Bad, the story’s sympathetic portrayal of Walter White uses the audience’s knowledge of his tragic situation in the beginning of the series to influence the pardoning of his crimes. This shows that our moral compass can become secondary towards our initial moral and social benchmark, and going on our own path to accomplish a goal, whether we have to become the antagonist…
Evil is shown when Hyde in the film tortures and murders Ivy she screams for help but no one came, in the book Hyde tramples a girl and no one helps her, In the nutty professor kelp got bulllied but no one cared. Society was truely evil as no one wanted to be involved in scandals as it would ruin their reputation which may be considered as selfish and evil. Society doing these things means that everyone is vulrenable to bad things as no one will help for their own good. The society of all these characters are all truly rancorous as all the actions the society has done has significantly altered the lives of Dr Jekyll and Prof. Kelp. Dr Jekyll might not be addicted to his alternate personality if society had assisted and Kelp could have not been bullied if society had helped. It is percieved that no one wanted to help and were very selfish. Evil is represented on the grizzly actions that society takes by not deciding to change things, everything may have been avoided if all three societies accepted this…
New York: Little, Brown, 2012. Print. This is showing that most [people have a reason or motivation behind their wrong doing whether it be revenge or insecurities. A villain is still a person who hasn’t been able to explain themselves.…
Roger Chillingworth has a strong, well-rooted want for revenge for the crimes the injustices done to him, and he goes to such a magnificent extent to fulfill that revenge that his soul was filled with evil. Chillingworth, who initially was a calm and decent man, consumed by his revenge, had "a kind of fierce thought [that] seized the man" (Hawthorne, 120), that completely controlled all of his actions. This fierceness and determination for evil doings is a very strong sin. This lust for revenge also transformed Chillingworth's natural human nature that "loves more readily than it hates" (Hawthorne, 149) into one of only hatred and…
antagonist; whether to act according to his feelings and instincts, or to try to follow the…