YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Loneliness Faulkner and Hemingway
Essays 91 - 120
a sense of belief and stability. However, one is never really sure if the priest is really that devoted due to the general nature ...
In all honesty it is not really a poem about abuse but a poem about life and the love that exists between the narrator and the fat...
While this may be one way of looking at the story, and the character of Emily, it seems to lack strength in light of the fact that...
judge asks if he can produce the black man, Harris said no, he was a stranger; then he says "Get that boy up here. He knows" (Faul...
had been older, he would have wondered why his father, would have witnessed the "waste and extravagance of war" and who "burned ev...
he will bring the excitement back into her life. When she gives him a cutting from her prized mums to give to another woman (its a...
coming of age and seeking an enlightened path, in the Freudian lens the boy is clearly trying to somehow come to terms with himsel...
women: "During the early 20th century the term new woman came to be used in the popular press. More young women than ever were goi...
child, which is further emphasized by his stiff nature. All of these symbolic descriptions lay the foundation for understanding th...
who suffered a serious ax wound and is lying on the top bunk, above his laboring wife. When he heard this comment he "rolled over ...
It was Fitzgerald who is credited with coining the phrase Jazz Age to describe the 1920s. During this time, the spectre of war an...
flowing calligraphy in faded ink, to the effect that she no longer went out at all" (Faulkner). This is a clear indication that Em...
necessarily as depressing as one could envision in relationship to the process of dying and the construction of a coffin outside h...
later in the story, Montressor relates that his family was once "great and numerous" (Poe 146). The use of the past tense indicate...
conversation between the bartenders as they speak of how he had tried to commit suicide. The older bartender indicates that it mus...
as devoted as Ms. Emily thinks, goes out with another woman. When he returns, Emily poisons him with arsenic. Finally, she closes ...
her life caring for her mother" (McCarthy 34). She has quite obviously had no life of her own. While we do not necessarily know th...
did not allow her to be an individual. This offers us a subtle vulnerability that all people possess to some extent. And that vuln...
living with Emily, which is certainly not proper but the town accepts this because there is sympathy for Emily who is a sad and lo...
South in some way" (William Faulkner). For example, "If he is talking about a child, it is a child in the South. If Faulkner is w...
story is told in a way that is anything but straightforward" for "the novel has no single narrator" but rather "has 15 narrators- ...
fighter due to the story regarding her missing teeth. In that incident she was demanding that an individual pay her for the work s...
like herself. From their initial conversation in the garden, Beatrice reassures him that she is sincere by stating that "Forget wh...
their lives and their emotions. However, she did have control over Jake, Robert, and Mike because they were lost, part of that los...
some of the local women, but he does not follow through on this desires because - above all else - he wishes to avoid consequences...
the characters talk and interact creates a very different setting for the story. It also limits how we envision the story that unf...
their lives and their emotions. These men did not need a woman to encourage them or to make them feel like they were men. Inter...
those standards of conduct which generations before World War I appeared to accept as adequate and perfectly satisfactory" (Meyers...
a feeling that his ferocious conviction in the rightness of his own actions would be of advantage to all whose interest lies with ...
he presents. There is pain and violence and death in Hemingways world, and he struggles to show his readers this aspect of life....