The story titled Gilead by Marilynne Robinson is written from the perspective of a father named John Adams. John Adams is writing letters to his son because he is dying. “ I mention this because it seems to me transformations just that abrupt do occur in this life, and they occur unsought and unawaited, and they beggar your hopes and your deserving. This came to my mind as I was reflecting on the day I first saw your mother, that blessed, rainy Pentecost.”(Robinson 203). The way that John talks about the first time he saw his wife shows the effect she had on him at first sight. The sudden way that the feeling comes to someone is shown when John had for his wife when he first laid his eyes on her. The uses the words abrupt, unsought and unawaited.It …show more content…
was a sudden and unexpected feeling that he had for her when he saw her that he never felt before. This says that love at first sight is a jolt to the human emotion that you feel without even knowing the person's name or anything about them you just love them and have to have them. “That morning something began that felt to me as if my soul were being teased out of my body, and that’s a fact.”(Robinson 203).
In this quote John Adams talks about the emotions that he had followed first seeing his future wife. We see this with the words used morning,soul,teased. The emotion that he felt when he saw her that day wasn’t just a feeling of lust he didn’t just have a sexual attraction to her the feeling he had remained with him. That morning when he woke up, he had such a feeling of love that he felt like his soul was being teased out of his body. When someone experiences the feeling of love at first sight that feeling stays with them because they know that the person that has caused this emotion is the one for them and that they are their soul …show more content…
mate. “So I couldn’t admit to myself that I simply wanted to see her, to hear her voice again.”(Robinson 203). In this quote John Adams has become so taken with her that it is like she is the only person in the world. This is shown when he talks about how he just wanted the see and hear her. He has her on his mind and he can’t get her out of it. The passion he feels for her will never go away no matter how hard he tries to act like the feelings don’t exist. This connects to the feeling of love at first sight because it shows that the feeling that that person caused inside of you will never go away and you have to chase after it because if you don’t you will always wonder what if that was the person in my life that would have been my love forever. The feeling that out of everyone in a room or in the world the only person you want to see and hear is that one person. They have overtaken your emotions and you are infatuated with them and infatuated with everything about them. In the Song of Solomon is a story about two people in love.
It is a biblical text that talks about the step of a relationship with the first meeting, then marriage and the growing of the marriage. In the Song of Solomon in Cant.4 line 3 we see “Thy lips are like a thread of scarlet, and thy speech is comely: thy temples are like a piece of a pomegranate within thy locks.” ( Song of Solomon 4.3). In this text it is not as in your face when it comes to love at first sight as in Gilead but still contains the concept. In this Solomon is talking about how he longs for her and the sight of her and the beauty of her presence. He uses nature references to describe her beauty. The use of words like a thread of scarlet to describe her lips. Thy speech is comely is used to describe her voice and the way she talks. Thy temples are like a piece of a pomegranate within thy locks. He uses to describe her head within the beautiful locks of her hair. This is a great representation of love at first sight because it talks about how the beauty that someone has when looked at can only be described by the other person as elegant and positive
words. In Song of Solomon in Cant.4 line 9 “Thou hast ravished my heart, my sister, my spouse; thou hast ravished my heart with one of thine eyes, with one chain of thy neck.” ( Song of Solomon 4). In this the narrator is talking about the girl he loves.He uses the word ravished. Which he is describing the intense delight that has taken him by force and has captivated him. This says that when someone feels love at first sight the raw emotion that they feel is like no other. He talks about how her love has captivated him and the delight it has had on his life. In Song of Solomon in Cant.4 line 1 “ Behold, thou art fair, my love; thou hast doves’ eyes within thy locks: thy hair is as a flock of goats, that appear from mount Gilead.” ( Song of Solomon 4). In this Solomon is wooing her with passionate compliments and praises her absolute beauty that is like no other that he has seen. Solomon says my love which he is saying she is his only love and the praise is only directed towards her. He compares her eyes to what is considered the most beautiful bird a dove. Solomon says that the locks of her hair is as a flock of goats that appear from mount gilead. Her hair is beautiful and stunning. Solomon is praising her with these analogies because he is overtaken with her and has been taken over by the power of love at first sight.
"You're a human being, not an animal. You have the right to be loved" (262). "Son of the Revolution" by Liang Heng and Judith Shapiro was a book that showed how inhumane many of the aspects of Chinese life were during the Cultural Revolution. The book followed Liang Heng through many of his childhood memories to his departure from China in his twenties. The book applied a real face to the important movements during the Cultural Revolution, the effects that "the cult of Mao" had on society and Heng, and the way the period affected Heng's personal family life.
Manifest Destiny, defined by the letter written by John O'Sullivan in 1839, is "for this blessed mission to the nations of the world, which are shut out from the life-giving light of truth, has America been chosen; and her high example... where myriads now endure an existence scarcely more enviable than that of the beasts of the field". In this also shared what I believe is his view on the purpose of western expansion. He discusses the " beasts of the field", meaning the animals the Native Americans follow, are slightly less enviable than a large number of the people already residing in America. Therefore, the mission of the United States is to spread their ways and the word of God to those who live a "savage" lifestyle.
True love is like a precious black pearl, it is so rare that many believe it to be a myth, but Hermia and Lysander found true love according to the following excerpt said by Lysander from A Midsummer Night's Dream.
Joseph J. Ellis is an American historian, and professor on the founding period of the United States. He is also the author of seven books including, “American Sphinx” and “Founding Brothers”. Both of which have won him a National Book Award and a Pulitzer Prize, in respecting order. His book, Founding Brothers, was written for the general audience, more so students, scholars and anyone else interested in learning about how this country was constructed by our Founding Fathers. Ellis explores the great efforts each and every one of them put forth into this country. This book is a monographed oral history, because it is about one subject (the post-revolutionary time period of the United States) and it is of a sequence of events that occur in that certain time period. Ellis’ book is about a series of history events
Perhaps no other event in modern history has left us so perplexed and dumbfounded than the atrocities committed by Nazi Germany, an entire population was simply robbed of their existence. In “Our Secret,” Susan Griffin tries to explain what could possibly lead an individual to execute such inhumane acts to a large group of people. She delves into Heinrich Himmler’s life and investigates all the events leading up to him joining the Nazi party. In“Panopticism,” Michel Foucault argues that modern society has been shaped by disciplinary mechanisms deriving from the plague as well as Jeremy Bentham’s Panopticon, a structure with a tower in the middle meant for surveillance. Susan Griffin tries to explain what happened in Germany through Himmler’s childhood while Foucault better explains these events by describing how society as a whole operates.
"Battleground America," written by Jill Lepore, provides a strong history of guns and the way they have changed in the eyes of the American through the years. She proves her point with strong evidence throughout her article, sprinkling it with opinion and argument that is strongly supported. She presents her argument to convince her audience that the open availability of guns allows citizens to undeservingly purchase them by displaying the credibility in her sources, using negative connotations in her speech, and the strength and objectivity only a strong logos appeal can provide.
A true war story blurs the line between fact and fiction, where it is neither true nor false at the same time. What is true and what is not depends on how much you believe it to be. In the chapter “How to Tell a True War Story” from the novel “The Things They Carried” by Tim O’Brien, the author provides various definitions to how the validity of a war story can be judged. The entire chapter is a collection of definitions that describe the various truths to what a true war story is. Unlike O’Brien, who is a novelist and storyteller, David Finkel, the author of “The Good Soldiers”, is a journalist whose job is to report the facts. Yet in the selection that we read, chapter nine, Finkel uses the convention of storytelling, which relies heavily on the stories the combat troops tell each other or him personally. Finkel attempts to give an unbiased view of the Iraq war through the stories of the soldiers but in doing so, Finkel forfeits the use of his own experiences and his own opinions. From O’Brien’s views on what a true war story is combined with my own definitions, I believe that Finkel provides a certain truth to his war stories but not the entire truth.
In "Our Secret" by Susan Griffin, the essay uses fragments throughout the essay to symbolize all the topics and people that are involved. The fragments in the essay tie together insides and outsides, human nature, everything affected by past, secrets, cause and effect, and development with the content. These subjects and the fragments are also similar with her life stories and her interviewees that all go together. The author also uses her own memories mixed in with what she heard from the interviewees. Her recollection of her memory is not fully told, but with missing parts and added feelings. Her interviewee's words are told to her and brought to the paper with added information. She tells throughout the book about these recollections.
Susan Griffin's "Our Secret" is a study in psychology. It is a look into the human mind to see what makes people do the things they do and in particular what makes people commit acts of violence. She isolates the first half of the twentieth century and in particular the era of the Second World War as a basis for her study. The essay discusses a number of people but they all tie in to Heinrich Himmler. He is the extreme case, he who can be linked directly to every single death in the concentration camps. Griffin seeks to examine Himmler because if she can discern a monster like Himmler than everyone else simply falls into place. The essay also tries to deduce why something like the Holocaust, although never mentioned directly, can take place. How can so many people be involved and yet so few people try to end it.
The cowboy hero, The Virginian, as portrayed in Owen Wister’s novel was the first of his kind and today is known as the stereotypical mythic cowboy figure which our view of the western frontier are based from. The Virginian was the first full length western novel apart from the short dime novels which marked the final stage in the evolution of the cowboy hero to a national icon. The Virginian was published in 1902 and at that time was wildly popular because of the settlement of the west. The story of the cowboy who had the skill and courage to take control of the untamed frontier enthralled people. The cowboy hero had a few distinguished qualities, he was a self-appointed vigilante, he had a very strict moral code, he had exceptional perception skills and he had the ability to adapt. Owen Wister’s The Virginian was the first to portray these qualities and really created a deeper cowboy character.
The novel is written in the form of letters from a dying father. Although he knows death is inevitable, death is an idea presented with optimism. Literary critic, Susan Petit’s argues that Ames even looks at death like “going home”(Gilead 4) and that “only at the end of his life does he feel at home in the world”
In this short story of "The Jilting of Granny Weatherall" by Katherine Anne Porter, there is a powerful symbolic meaning through out the entire narrative. Although the symbols are not obvious in some paragraphs, they are in hidden text in others, which has to be, examined thoroughly by the reader. Granny is an eighty-year-old woman on her deathbed. She is in a state of confusion drifting in and out of consciences; she is reminiscing and blurring the past with the present. Although she comes to her senses every now and then, she is still perplexing some important details of her life. Through this story, all the symbols help define Granny's character, provide greater understanding of her life, and reinforces the important parts of the story.
The nineteenth century was a time of economic, technologic, and population growth. These changes created problems in everyone’s daily lives. Two examples of things that affected the lives of many were disease and sanitation. Disease and sanitation led to high mortality rates in Nineteenth- Century England. This relates to North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell as it takes place during nineteenth century England and multiple characters died presumably due to disease.
Have you ever seen some one for the first time and felt like they were the one? Did you know if they were really “the one”? Do you know what “love” is? Was it love at first sight? Some people may claim it was love at first sight and some may claim it was not. There are many arguments against love at first sight, which most do not believe in it. Love at first sight has been known as an instantaneous attraction to someone or something. That definition sounds a lot like lust, does it not? Lust is having a very strong sexual desire for someone. Now, love at first sight is more instant than lust, but they both have a similar definition. After reading, “Evidence”, “The Loss of the Creature”, “Like, Love, Lust”, and “Masters and Johnson on Sex
Well I use to believe that love couldn't be made at first sight. But yet now today I do think it happens. I will now share what I think love means.