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Recommended: Narrative essays on love stories
Love is deep, intense, true and passionate, but all too often ends tragically seemingly to always leaving one person behind who carries the burden of the love. The stories I am comparing all have tragic love as a common theme. When exploring the relationship of young lovers Veronica and JD in Heathers, the passionate love of Ludmila and Theodor in Worthy, or follow the love story of John Keats and Fanny Brawne we get a glimpse of how each of these love stories ends in tragedy and how our survivors of those relationships deal with the aftermath.
In the book/musical Heather’s, Veronica is attracted to the mysterious new boy at school J.D. Their attraction is evident to all and you can feel the raw chemistry between the two. During their first
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However, her greatest love was Theodore, and this is also her ultimate loss of love. Ludmila meets Theodore on her way to America. He is much older than her, but their attraction to each other and their love of exploring life brings them together. Ludmila describes Theodore to us as “light as a breeze, and he loves women like she is a goddess.” page 5 making the passionate Ludmila love him regardless of the age difference. Throughout the story that Ludmila give us a detailed description of their deep love affair that is a combination of sexual attraction, adventure, and playing theater games (con-games). While traveling through Mexico, Ludmila is offered some pesos from a kind woman who obviously thinks Ludmila is in need since her dress is old-fashioned and their broken down truck is in need of new paint. Ludmila tries to tell them she has pesos but they insist, “I can recognize that the woman would like to be the kindest hero and, is telling the husband to give again.” An important moment in their relationship because it is where Ludmila discovers she enjoys the con-game that they call the game of theater. Ludmile prefers not to lie, but she knows that Theodore like the puzzle of the con and he has said, “truth blinds, and lies are beautiful twilight” page 118. This is something like the The Fall, one of the four books that Theodore lectures on …show more content…
Initially, John just befriends Fanny, but their love grew when they began spending more and more time together reading poetry in the garden. Many of Keat’s friends were not found of this relationship with Fanny and expressed their concern with, “absence from the poor idle thing of a woman-kind, to whom he has not unaccountable attached himself, will not be an ill thing.” But Keat’s was taken with Fanny and Keat’s knew that due to his lack of financial resources he could not marry. Therefore, he made the difficult choice to move to the Isle of Wight so he could concentrate on his writing and poetry in hopes of earning enough money to ask for Fanny’s hand in marriage. While away Keat’s suffered lonesomeness and wrote to Fanny frequently expressing his love of her. On July 1, 1819, Keat’s writes to Fanny, “This morning is the only proper time for me to write to a beautiful Girl whom I love so much; for at night, when the lonely day has closed.” Keat’s returns to Fanny in October of 1819 and they become engaged but decide to keep it secret because he still had not earned enough money to go through with the marriage. By this time Keat’s was also showing signs of being ill and continued to get worse, in fact, he asked for Fanny to break off the engagement but she refused affirming her love for him. Keat’s for a second time moves away from
If someone is going to ask me, explain what love and tragedy are, I will tell them to read the novel ‘Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet’ the book was written by New York Times bestselling author Jamie Ford. I enjoyed reading the story it taught me the meaning of true friendship and never lose hope on the special things.
Romantic love stories are often ended with a tragedy, because of loss of passion or a loved one. These tragedies are often the result of one person’s actions that ended someone’s life or love. In the Romeo and Juliet play written by William Shakespeare, two citizens of Verona come together and fall deeply in love. Unfortunately their love comes to an end, along with their lives, because of a misunderstanding and a persistent feud between their families. Although there are many characters in this play that have contributed to Romeo and Juliet’s death, Friar Laurence is the person most to blame.
Romeo and Juliet is arguably the most famous story about love in literature. This is in part because of the tension caused by the look the different characters have towards what love means and its role in life. These views were very important for the progression of the story. Their different views collided and caused much grief and sorrow for the characters throughout play. Many important events that propelled the story forward would not have happened without the various feelings towards love the characters have and how they felt of and reacted to the other characters’ view on love.
Most people have fallen in love at least once in their lives. I too fall in this category. Just like any Disney movie that you watch, people fall in love with each other, and they get married and live happily ever after right? Wrong! In real life, there are some strange things that can happen, including death, divorce, or other weird things that you never see in Disney movies. Robert Browning’s literary works are great examples of “Non-Fairytale Endings.” Not only does Browning have endings in his stories that aren’t the norm in children movies, but he also has some twisted and interesting things happen in the story of lovers. In Robert Browning’s works, Porphyria’s Lover, and My Last Duchess, the speakers can be both compared and contrasted.
Throughout the lives of most people on the planet, there comes a time when there may be a loss of love, hope or remembrance in our lives. These troublesome times in our lives can be the hardest things we go through. Without love or hope, what is there to live for? Some see that the loss of hope and love means the end, these people being pessimistic, while others can see that even though they feel at a loss of love and hope that one day again they will feel love and have that sense of hope, these people are optimistic. These feelings that all of us had, have been around since the dawn of many. Throughout the centuries, the expression of these feelings has made their ways into literature, novels, plays, poems, and recently movies. The qualities of love, hope, and remembrance can be seen in Emily Bronte’s and Thomas Hardy’s poems of “Remembrance” “Darkling Thrush” and “Ah, Are you Digging on my Grave?”
Shakespeare’s play, The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet, depicts an ancient feud ended by a pair of star-crossed lovers’ deaths. A lord and lady from warring families seek a forbidden love with guidance from a friar and nurse. Due to a tragic course of mischances and fateful errors, their attempt of eloping led the lovers to a tragic end. Because of rash decisions, the four characters are torn apart by miscalculating events and misunderstandings. Ultimately, the four characters encounter a heartbreaking ending, as a result of their hastiness.
This emphasises that their love faces an almost impossible task, and that the play will result in a tragedy. What should have been a story about love turns out to be a story about tragedy, loss and disast... ... middle of paper ... ... s a tragedy about love! It does not follow the pattern of any other love story.
William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet is perhaps one of the most well-recognized love stories of all time. However, it is more than just a classic love story, it is a tale of desperation and obsession. While developing these themes, Shakespeare contrasts Romeo and Juliet’s obsession with the concept of real love; he also demonstrates the danger of obsession-Romeo and Juliet do not heed Friar Laurence’s ominously omniscient warning “[t]hese violent delights have violent ends/ and in their triumph die, like fire and powder,/ which, as they kiss, consume”(II vi 9-11), and obsession with honor is likewise dangerous. He probes the theme of despair; the suicidal impulses that become reality for Romeo and Juliet are grounded in the dynamic and
The Lais of Marie de France is a compilation of short stories that delineate situations where love is just. Love is presented as a complex emotion and is portrayed as positive, while at other times, it is portrayed as negative. The author varies on whether or not love is favorable as is expressed by the outcomes of the characters in the story, such as lovers dying or being banished from the city. To demonstrate, the author weaves stories that exhibit binaries of love. Two distinct types of love are described: selfish and selfless. Love is selfish when a person leaves their current partner for another due to covetous reasons. Contrarily, selfless love occurs when a lover leaves to be in a superior relationship. The stark contrast between the types of love can be analyzed to derive a universal truth about love.
When Wyatt Martin was fourteen years old he, thought that he found his true love. Much like Juliet, he was young and crazy, the first time he saw her, his heart started beating rapidly like he just drank one thousand energy drinks. My view was blurred and all he saw was this beautiful girl. It was like he was on cloud nine, flying high above the world. As dozens of baby unicorns pulling me as he stared down in awe. The following essay is about the story of Romeo and Juliet relates greatly to a love tragedy that resembles my life. In both cases each couple wants to do all they can to be together. Both of the lovenirds that thought they were in true love, Romeo and Juliet and Wyatt and his Princess were blinded by each other’s love thinking they found their true love. Sadly, both relationships failed because of their immaturity and their hormones going crazy at such a young age. Therefore, Romeo and Juliet’s relationship failed due to their outraging hormones.
In one of the best classics of all time, Romeo and Juliet, love has no bounds; it bypasses many generations of family history. But in reality, often relationships aren’t as perfect as it seems. In “My Last Duchess” by Robert Browning and “Havisham” by Carol Ann Duffy, relationships, mainly marriage, are a destructive force. While in “La Belle Dame Merci” and “Sonnet 116” by William Shakespeare, love is only found within dreams.
Love has been expressed since the beginning of time; since Adam and Eve. Each culture expresses its love in its own special way. Though out history, though, it’s aspect has always been the same. Love has been a major characteristic of literature also. One of the most famous works in literary history is, Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare. This story deals with the love of a man and a woman who’s families have been sworn enemies. There love surpassed the hatred in which the families endured for generations. In the end they both ended up killing their selves, for one could not live without the other. This story is a perfect example of true love.
Reactions to Setbacks Every couple experiences difficult bumps down the road, but how they handle those adversities determines whether their relationships will last in the long run. In John Green’s The Fault in Our Stars and William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, both sets of characters go through different emotions when going through certain situations. The reactions to setbacks that Gus and Hazel have are more positive and hopeful while the reactions that Romeo and Juliet possess are more reckless and dangerous, conveying to the reader that resilient relationships with optimistic choices towards complications are unbreakable.
Hemingway synthesizes the theory that because of the pain that is brought about, love is not able to survive. The feeling of love is felt by both Henry and Catherine, but it is hard to realize that when pain always surrounds the couple. Hemingway’s creative mind creates a frustrating love story for the reader – one in which ends in devastation. Love is present but will not last. Human nature is to be attracted to love, but humanity may be destined for pain because of the tragedy brought about by love.
In Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe’s Faust (Part One) as well as in Gotthold Ephraim Lessing’s Nathan the Wise, love plays a vital role. Love is the reason that an individual strays from the path to enlightenment and begins to act in strange, unpredictable ways. It decreases an individual’s ability to reason and takes away any incentive he might have to seek enlightenment. Since love is based on faith, it goes against the ideals of enlightenment which stress individual thinking. Love brings about a sense of fulfillment, which also works against the ideals of enlightenment which advocate a constant struggle within the individual to find truth or reach a higher plain of thought. In the Age of Enlightenment, love is a temptation man must overcome to reach enlightenment.