Tragic End Essays

  • How Blind Devotion Leads to the Tragic End of Character Heros

    640 Words  | 2 Pages

    (Better Grabber) In the Harry Potter Series, the character Snape is a tragic hero. Just like Oedipus, he has too much pride in himself when he only helps Harry because his true love was Lily Potter, Harry’s mother. This later leads to his downfall when he ends up dying. Despite their good intentions, the two characters are blinded from the impact of their actions as they unknowingly harm their families. In the play All My Sons by Arthur Miller, Joe Keller’s blindness of the larger society and In

  • Use of Time in William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet

    537 Words  | 2 Pages

    This movement of time results in tragic ends, in which we learn that time and fate go hand in hand: neither one is meant to be tampered with. In act I, Romeo and Juliet meet at a feast where they immediately fall in love without hesitation. This feast is held by Lord Capulet's feast. Capulet, Juliet's father, announces, "This night I hold an old accustom'd feast (1/2/20)." This hastily made decision is the beginning of Romeo and Juliet's tragic end. In act II, things begin to

  • The Strong Character and Unavoidable Destiny of Oedipus Rex

    945 Words  | 2 Pages

    doomed by his fate. Like most tragedies, Oedipus the King contains a tragic hero, a heroic figure unable to escape his own doom. This tragic hero usually has a hamartia, a tragic flaw, which causes his downfall. The tragic flaw that Sophocles gives Oedipus is hubris (exaggerated pride or self-confidence), which is what caused Oedipus to walk right into the fate he sought to escape. Oedipus' pride pushes him toward his tragic end in the initial journey, when he kills his father, in the episode of the

  • Hamlet's Burden

    1122 Words  | 3 Pages

    woman," (Hamlet 5.2.198-199) that Hamlet possesses a premonition of the tragic end to his plans. Thus, Hamlet desires not only to be absolved from the blame of murdering Polonius, but also from the disorder Denmark will experience in the complete loss of its royalty and Hamlet's failure to fulfill his father's revenge. The obvious purpose of Hamlet's pre-duel speech is to ask Laertes to pardon him for killing Polonius. At the end of the speech, Hamlet says, "That I have shot my arrow o'er the house/And

  • Romeo And Juliet Film Review

    669 Words  | 2 Pages

    future nor past, ruled by two rival families, the Montagues and the Capulets... So begins Baz Luhrmann’s production of Shakespeare's beloved play, "Romeo and Juliet," from the famous opening line of "Two Households both alike in dignity.." to the tragic end, the viewer is whisked away into the ‘depths’ of heightened realism in the world of Verona Beach. Casting includes Claire Danes and Leonardo DiCaprio as Romeo and Juliet as well as great performances by John Leguizamo (Tybalt) and, Harold Perrineau

  • Huckleberry Finn

    532 Words  | 2 Pages

    is difficult when one experiences doubt in one’s mind or when one’s upbringing goes against it. In “Huck Finn'; by Mark Twain , the main character Huck has to first confront doubts and then form plans to surmount an impossibly tragic end. These efforts demonstrate that one’s upbringing and morals are sometimes insufficient to cope with the immense problems that arise along a journey, and that the decisions one must make must come from the heart. During this story Huck solves

  • Macbeths Downfall

    652 Words  | 2 Pages

    begins to change drastically. Evil and unnatural powers, as well as his own passion to become king, take over his better half and eventually lead to his downfall. The three main factors that intertwine with one another that contribute to Macbeth’s tragic end are the prophecies told by the three witches, Lady Macbeth’s influence, and finally, Macbeth’s excessive passion and ambition which drove his desire to become king to the utmost extreme. The prophecy told by the three witches was what triggers the

  • Aphra Behn's Oroonoko – Slaughter of the Human Spirit

    1157 Words  | 3 Pages

    beautiful people who possess a pure, innocent love.  Behn does this in an effort to make her readers feel and question.  Her poetic description of their emotions magnify the horror of the final scene.  Behn's romantic love story is brought to a tragic end through brutality and death.  Why did she choose such an ending?  Her decision to have Oroonoko take the life of his wife and unborn child leaves her audience questioning.  Was what they had love?  If not, what was it?  What had killed their innocence

  • aunt jennifer tigers

    1236 Words  | 3 Pages

    weight that rests “heavily” on her hand is not something she enjoys and is oppressing her from doing what she really wants to. • The third stanza gives us a truthful look at the reality and end of Aunt Jennifer. It re-emphasizes the impact living in this patriarchal society had had on her. Despite the tragic end of Aunt Jennifer’s life these tigers and the ideas of an oppressed free life for women carry on. What does Rich say about this poem? •“I’m startled because beneath the conscious craft

  • Use of Aviary Symbolism in The Awakening

    815 Words  | 2 Pages

    husband and her ordinary children, she longs for something more exciting. Ironically, Edna probably should have taken the parrot's advice and escaped from her hellish world immediately. Yet, she did not, and because of this, she was forced to meet her tragic end. Plus, in addition to the words of warning, the image of this hostile, shrieking bird is a symbol in and of itself. For like the parrot, Edna is also trapped, not within a metal cage, but by the standards and traditions of society. The next demonstration

  • Impetous Actions And Their Tragic Consequences

    954 Words  | 2 Pages

    The lack of thinking things through and acting solely on one particular emotion can lead to unanticipated results. In William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare shows how impetuous actions combined with the need for lust can lead to a tragic end. It wasn't fate but rather Romeo and Juliet's hasty actions that brought their untimely deaths. Love at first sight ultimately led to the premature deaths of the two lovers. At the Capulet party was where Romeo first sees Juliet: O, she doth teach

  • powmac Macbeth: His Downfall Was Due to His Ambition for Power

    764 Words  | 2 Pages

    Due to His Ambition for Power In the Shakespearean novel Macbeth, the protagonist Macbeth is caught in a down spiral induced by his ambition which in the end, was the cause of his tragic end. Macbeth, once a great hero falls victim of his ambition for power. Although the protagonist initially tries to resist his human urge, he in the end committed crime his country, his friends, and sadly himself. Macbeth's first great crime was the crime against his country. In the beginning, Macbeth was

  • Imperfect Society Depicted in Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman

    547 Words  | 2 Pages

    is due more to societies flaws than to the numerous flaws in his own character. Willy Loman was host to many flaws and deficiencies ranging form suicidal tendencies to psychotic disorders.  However, these shortcomings did not account for his tragic end, not by themselves anyway.  Society is to blame.  It was society who stripped him of his dignity, piece by piece. It was society who stripped him of his lifestyle, and his own sons who stripped him of hope. The most obvious flaw in society is

  • Othello - Honest Iago

    590 Words  | 2 Pages

    thought-out words and actions, Iago is able to manipulate others to do things in a way that benefits and moves him closer to his own goals. He is smart and an expert at judging the characters of others. Because of this, Iago pushes everyone to their tragic end. Iago wants vengeance on Othello so he targets his wife Desdemona. He slowly poisons people’s thoughts so they have distorted perceptions of reality, without them even knowing he did such a thing. In reality, Desdemona is quite an outspoken woman

  • Violence, Hatred, and Pain in Fyodor Dostoevsky's The Idiot

    873 Words  | 2 Pages

    and he ends up staying for a while. While there, he believes he has fallen in love with Nastasya Filippovna and prematurely proposes to her. She first accepts, but then rejects him. Nastasya is the driving force behind the novel and carries the reader, as well as the characters, from scene to scene. The duration of the book consists of Myshkin's quest for happiness and love through which he encounters jealousy for his love and for the love of those who love him. Unfortunately, the tragic end to this

  • A Comparison of the Masks In Cold Blood, Streetcar Named Desire, and Fences

    1877 Words  | 4 Pages

    In life, we all attempt to project some kind of personality to others. We have a mask we wear in different situations, but when times get tough, we eventually discard our masks and become our true selves. We don't live behind our masks until the tragic end, like the characters of In Cold Blood by Truman Capote, Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams, and Fences by August Wilson. The three characters, Perry Smith, Blanche DuBois, and Troy Maxson wore masks to their bitter endings, always trying

  • Leopold Mozart

    3018 Words  | 7 Pages

    headed for St. Marx Cemetery. As it reached the city walls of Vienna, the few friends who had accompanied Mozart on his last journey turned back, due to the unusually bad weather conditions. Such a scene is sadly appropriate in representing the tragic end of Mozart who had begun his life with such immeasurable promise. On January 27, 1756, Leopold Mozart paced up and down the hall of his home in Salzburg, Austria, in anticipation of the arrival of his seventh child. His wife, Anna Maria, had

  • Capulet is to Blame in William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet

    935 Words  | 2 Pages

    forcing her to marry Paris, separating her from her Romeo, and rejecting her. Although Capulet wanted the best for Juliet, he didn't give a thought on how she felt and had forced her to marry Paris which had caused problems that led to her tragic end. She didn't want to marry someone who she did not love and wanted to escape this marriage. Her method of escape was death. Capulet's controlling actions appeared as early as Act I Scene 2, when he was arranging Juliet's marriage to Paris without

  • Julius Caesar Essay: Superstition in Julius Caesar

    738 Words  | 2 Pages

    personal level such as with the sooth-sayers, is an important factor in determining the events and the outcome of Julius Caesar, a significant force throughout the entire course of the play. As the play develops we see a few of signs of Caesar's tragic end. Aside from the sooth-sayer's warning, we also see another sign during Caesar's visit with the Augerers, the latter day "psychics". They find "No heart in the beast", which they interpret as advice to Caesar that he should remain at home. Ceasar

  • The Little Mermaid

    2428 Words  | 5 Pages

    little mermaid adamantly resolves to trade her voice for a pair of legs with the sea-witch, a decision that adversely changes her fate. From here onwards, the story of a mermaid who longs to be human and with the prince she loves heads towards a tragic end: she will transform into wind eventually, bereft of love and overcome by grief. This is no doubt a poignant story about unrequited love; however what makes it striking is also its primary and perhaps conflicting role as a fairytale. In fact, "The