YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Moby Dick by Herman Melville
Essays 31 - 60
In five pages Billy Budd's transcendental nature is examined in terms of the protagonist's exemplification of peacemaking, honesty...
In five pages this paper analyzes Captain Delano in terms of his abilities to reason and his denial in a consideration of the igno...
that part covered). Even in her disconcerted and distracted mental state after the birth of her child, Charlotte is able to pray f...
In five pages Hemingway's Harold Krebs is compared with Melville's story narrator in an argument that asserts that confrontation f...
In one page this essay discusses how this novel could be interpretated as a story involving moral liability that results from raci...
composition. Among her miscellaneous multitude, the Indomitable mustered several individuals who, however inferior in grade, were...
In eight pages this paper examines the evil that manifests itself in the predatory characters of Roger Chillingworth in The Scarle...
Romantic tradition, of which Melville was a nominal or part-time member, of the innocence and moral superiority of a pastoral moti...
This paper examines these three important characters featured in Herman Melville's novel in five pages. There are no sources list...
(Melville 2435). The crew were drawn to Billy Budd like a moth to a flame, and Melville wrote, "They all love him... Anybody will...
the end are shown to have empty, meaningless lives. "It was the very perfection of quiet absorption of good living, good drinking,...
served to deflect and in part falsify them" (Melville). Now at first look these lines appear to be nothing that would indicate ...
personal morality were simply accepted, not questioned during their lives. Because American society as a whole had become better...
Melville: "he was ... a gentleman adventurer in the barbarous outposts of human experience" (147). Melvilles Bartleby the Scriven...
of the lives and social customs of the Marquesas people. The story itself is not just an example of Herman Melvilles fertile imag...
worthy. With the ideals of Enlightenment we are given a much more complex train of thought as one must also examine the good of a ...
freely expressing their sinful temptations to the minister. The cause of Reverend Hoopers alienation, it would appear, was not an...
integrity of the individual that makes man worthy. With the ideals of Enlightenment we are given a much more complex train of thou...
trouble from the start. Upon seeing another ship which he believes is in trouble, he decides he must go and offer his help. Inst...
of this, decides to hire him on the spot (Herman Melvilles Bartleby the Scrivener). Essentially, he figures that if he looks well...
In five pages this paper examines the strange behavior exhibited by Bartleby throughout the course of Melville's story. There are...
political and social ideals integrated into Melvilles stories and pushed the author to reconsider his religious dedication and his...
(Melville The Piazza). In this one sees that the narrator values her life perhaps, but not his own, while she values much. This na...
critic notes that, "Whether in a brief novella or in an epic tome, one common technique utilized by many writers is a framing of a...
Claggarts psychological make-up, because he himself has never had to struggle between good and evil as personal motivators. Billy ...
- he refuses to take nourishment or leave his place of business. Instead of taking a sympathetic view of his employee, the narrat...
why he engaged in such long sentences. Anyone who has read "Moby Dick," as well as "Billy Budd," will quickly recognize how Melvil...
In twenty five pages this paper discusses how Captain Ahab in Moby Dick by Herman Melville embodies all the dualities of the life ...
as being mostly unforgiving of mans shortcomings, inasmuch as he implies that humanity has turned into a selfish, egotistical and ...
This essay presents four quotes taken from Moby-Dick by Herman Melville. The writer discusses the meaning of each quote in relatio...