Fiend Essays

  • Macbeth And Lady Macbeth, A "dealike Butcher" And A "fiend"?

    1717 Words  | 4 Pages

    "This dead like butcher and his fiend like queen" is this a fair description of Macbeth and Lady Macbeth? Malcolm made the remark "This dead like butcher and his fiend like queen," when he was crowned as the king of Scotland, after Macbeth's reign of terror. It becomes questionable upon the fairness of this justification, whether or not Macbeth was really a "butcher" and whether or not Lady Macbeth was a "fiend." In some ways, Macbeth would have fit the description of being a "butcher," after all

  • Macbeth Is A Butcher And Lady Macbeth Is A Fiend-like Queen

    1491 Words  | 3 Pages

    “Macbeth is a butcher and Lady Macbeth is a fiend-like queen.” This is a true statement as many occurrences involving Macbeth and Lady Macbeth portray them in this way. A butcher can be defined as someone who kills or has people killed needlessly or brutally. The term butcher used in this way describes Macbeth to some extent. During the play, Macbeth is involved in the murder of many people, including King Duncan, Banquo, and Macduff’s wife and children. A fiend can be described as a very wicked or cruel

  • essay on beowulf

    582 Words  | 2 Pages

    evil. The greatest of these is the descendent of Cain’s evil against his brother Abel. After Cain killed Abel God punished him by exiling him from the kingdom of God. From Cain’s soul came evil monsters, one in particular, Grendel. He was a demon; a fiend who haunted the moors, the wild marshes and made his home in “hell” (actually earth). King Hrothgar finished a great mead hall for his warriors to relax and reside in when away from war. Grendel, amused by the sound of drunkenness coming from the hall

  • soliloquies in the merchant of venice

    726 Words  | 2 Pages

    Lancelot (Shylock’s jester) is having alot of troubles trying to decide whether to run away or not. It must have alot to do with how Shylock treats him since he calls Shylock “a kind of devil” and also says that he can’t handle being “ruled by the fiend.” He must have really been mistreated under Shylock’s care to go as so far as to run away from him. It creates the mood of sadness and hatred in Lancelot, and a dark evil kind of feeling towards Shylock for what he has done. It develops the character

  • Symbolic Characters in Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter

    960 Words  | 2 Pages

    He himself sins as he tries to destroy Arthur's soul. Roger soon comes to resemble the devil. He even notices this similarity in himself. He says, "I have already told thee what I am! A fiend!" (p. 158) Hester also says that she pities him, "...for the hatred that has transformed a wise and just man to a fiend." (p. 159) Each of them recognize that Roger's life centered around hatred and revenge have made him like the devil. The symbol working in Roger, living to destroy, shows that tearing down

  • Essay on Edgar's role in King Lear, Act 3, Scene 4

    798 Words  | 2 Pages

    deceived by his half brother, and King Lear is deceived by two of his daughters. Edgar babbles about how Edmund deceived him: "Who gives anything to Poor Tom? whom the foul fiend hath led through fire and through flame" (3.4.51-52), and reveals his plan "to kill [the] vermin" (3.4.51-52). And by calling Edmund a "foul fiend" who had "course[d] his own shadow for a traitor" (3.4.57-58), he parallels Edmund with a devil, which is trying to make him commit suicide by laying "knives under his pillow"

  • The Fall Of Satan

    552 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Arch-Fiend The Arch-Fiend, in 'The fall of Satan'; by John Milton, is a minded firm person who gets his word across to others. His stubborn attitude and arrogance shows that he is the strongest and smartest. The pride that made him believe he 'equaled the Most High,'; meaning he felt equal to God. The story, describes Satan's appearance, his action, his words, and his effect on others. In the story Milton describes Satan in many different manner. He first talks about him as a form of a snake

  • The Role of the Great Mother in Beowulf

    1989 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Role of the Great Mother in Beowulf Grendel's dam is not simply a "wandering fiend" (1621), a "swamp thing from hell" (1518), or a "troll-dam" (1391). She is an example of what Erich Neuhmann in his book, The Great Mother, calls an embodiment of the Great Mother in her "negative elementary character" (147). Her realms are the underworld, a cave below a lake, both symbols of the unconscious. She is begetter and child bearer, creator and destroyer of life; she nourishes and ensures the

  • Lucifer in Starlight by George Meredith

    792 Words  | 2 Pages

    the underworld is summed up in the first line. It is later explained that he is doing so because he is tired of his 'dark dominion." Ironically, the first line refers to Lucifer honorably, as a "Prince", while in the second line he is tagged as a fiend. This leaves the reader feeling perplexed, yet still thinking of Lucifer as the enemy. At first it may seem as Lucifer has risen to the Earth, but it is further clarified that he has elevated himself above the "rolling ball". However, god imagined

  • The Downfall of Lady Macbeth

    583 Words  | 2 Pages

    intentions would have been less serious if his wife was not more anxious than he was.  She, more than her husband, is to blame for the death of King Duncan, due to her relentless pursuit of power and authority. Lady Macbeth is a heartless fiend with an savage disregard for life. This is evident in the manner in which she downplays the murder of Duncan to her husband: "A little water clears us of this deed; How easy is it, then!  Your constancy Hath left you unattended.

  • Frankenstein

    939 Words  | 2 Pages

    doctor for making him live with his ugliness and being rejecting by people because of it. Even the doctor was frightened and ran away when he first saw his creation’s hideous looks and monstrous body. Right off the bat, the doctor could have killed the fiend and rid himself of it forever, but he didn’t. He knew that for him to kill this thing, it would be like killing his own beloved child. Seeing the reaction of Frankenstein and the other humans, the creature vowed to hunt down and destroy Victor for

  • The Silver Kiss by Annette Curtis Klause

    1193 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Silver Kiss by Annette Curtis Klause This Book seems to be quite current; however I would say that it more than likely took place during the 90's. There are many facts supporting my conclusion such as their knowledge of Cancer, the type of cars driven, the public transportation, and the descriptions of the buildings and stores in their town! The setting is important because Simon is from a different time. So the differences in their characteristics and manners are really what give this book

  • Character Changes in Shakespeare's Macbeth

    1342 Words  | 3 Pages

    Macbeth:  Character Changes "This dead butcher and his fiend like queen"(V.viii.80) is the way Malcolm describes Macbeth and Lady Macbeth.  The characters of Macbeth and Lady Macbeth changed considerably during the course of the play, Macbeth, written by William Shakespeare.  In the beginning of the play, Macbeth is seen as a courageous soldier who is loyal to the King.  As the play progresses, Macbeth is corrupted by the witches’ prophecies and by his and Lady Macbeth’s ambition. Because of

  • Frankenstein-value for modern readers

    925 Words  | 2 Pages

    an audience purely relied on a story, which would indulge them with exhilaration or apprehension. In the case of Frankenstein the audience was introduced to the horror thesis. The story told delved piquantly into the tragic ordeals of Victor as his fiend wreaked destruction and devastation to all those, who were close to Victor. This story line is symptomatic of a popular audience, as they craved a story, which would invigorate passion and tragedy. Vast arrays of appropriations have sprung from Shelley’s

  • Sympathy for Lady Macbeth

    952 Words  | 2 Pages

    through different parts in the play. After reading parts of the play and watching the video I don’t’ feel very much sympathy for lady Macbeth, although I do feel some sympathy for her in some parts in the play. Over all I think that lady Macbeth is a fiend as she says stuff that’s not very nice to make Macbeth do the things that she is too scared to do herself. I also think that she is a caring person really but she needed to be made evil by witchcraft, as she would not be able to do what she does through

  • John Hale from the Crucible

    878 Words  | 2 Pages

    John Hale, from the Crucible Dynamic, Reverend John Hale needs only this one word to describe him. That is what separates Hale from any other character in the Crucible, while most characters are entirely static, with the exception of Elizabeth. That is why I consider him to be the best, and most flushed out character in the Crucible. In this report I will describe and analyze the character of John Hale and try show why his is the best character in the Crucible. In the first paragraph I will analyze

  • The Adventures Of Tom Sawyer – Tribulations

    1034 Words  | 3 Pages

    the story about life in a boys' world and it discloses feelings of Mark Twain concerning his boyhood, his town and the people there. Tom Sawyer was a boy but not a genus that would describe good children as the protagonists. Tom Sawyer was a fiend yet he was never malicious, but always up to a trick or a practical joke of some kind. During the years that we view Tom Sawyer, a multitude of events had occurred. All of which are recorded in Mark Twain's style. Mark Twain composes in a picaresque

  • Universal Truth in Shakespeare's King Lear

    576 Words  | 2 Pages

    Universal Truth in King Lear The warm, comforting sun has broken through the clouds, melting the ice that chokes the ground and bathing the world in its healing light. Likewise, King Lear has finally rid himself of his emotional shrouds and melted the ice that covers his heart. In Act 5, scene 3 lines 9-20, Lear explains how he and Cordelia will spend their time while imprisoned by Edmund - not burning with vitriolic hatred, but enveloped in an almost joyous sense of calm. He and his daughter

  • Free Essay on Milton's Paradise Lost - Paradise Lost as an Epic

    1720 Words  | 4 Pages

    most encompassing heroism seems that of Milton himself, as a manifestation of this most supreme of creations: the wholesome mind. An instance in which Milton's views on the sovereignty of the Spirit appear in some of the conversations of the Arch Fiend himself with his fellows-which is quite ironic, considering that the story is an extrapolation upon Christian Scripture. One of Satan's "compeers" says, during a discussion after their exile from Heaven: Too well I see and rue the dire event

  • Potential for Evil in Shakespeare's Macbeth

    719 Words  | 2 Pages

    of mysterious evil.  The Witches cause Macbeth to respond in ways that along with the Witches predictions, fuel his ambition.  When Macbeth finally recognizes that their predictions were not what they seemed, he denounces “ ‘th’ equivocation of the fiend, that lies like the truth’”  As the words roll off his tongue Macbeth touches on the Witches most important quality, that they deform the lives they interfere with because they disturb a nec... ... middle of paper ... ...ower of evil.  Macbeth