Journey Prize Essays

  • Journey Theme in Whitman’s O Captain! My Captain! and Tennyson’s Crossing the Bar

    1167 Words  | 3 Pages

    Journey Theme in Whitman’s O Captain! My Captain! and Tennyson’s Crossing the Bar A man’s journey at sea has always been romanticized as an individualistic struggle against the backdrop of the cruel elements of nature. Paradoxically, though, within that same journey, the sea possesses an innate sense of timelessness that can become a man’s quest for God. In “O Captain! My Captain!” Walt Whitman describes the narrator’s sense of aimlessness at sea after his beloved Captain dies. In Lord Alfred

  • Journey to a New Land

    615 Words  | 2 Pages

    A Journey to a New Land My parents immigrated to Canada in 1990 to escape the tyranny of the Chinese government and to build a better life in Canada. After listening to their stories of hardships and frustrations, I realized how fortunate I was to be living in the country I now called home. When the day came to revisit my homeland, I felt uncertain and nervous. Would I fit in? Would I like it there? These were some of the concerns that were racing through my mind. But as the trip progressed, I

  • Daffyd's Journey

    748 Words  | 2 Pages

    Daffyd's Journey His feet weren't going where he told them too!!! It was cold, so cold, and even though he knew where he was going, an advantage over most, he couldn't shake off the morbid feeling of doom, no matter how hard he tried. Guns were sounding in the distance, and although he was well away from the fighting, he was panicking. Amidst the feelings of doom and panic, he was confused. It wasn't even this bad on the front line!! Why was he feelign this way? Was his gut telling him the

  • Everyman's Journey

    1550 Words  | 4 Pages

    Everyman's Journey Everyman, a short play of around 900 lines, portrays the best surviving example of the Medieval Drama known as the morality play, which evolved side by side with the mystery plays, although written individually and not in cycles like the mystery play or ritual play. The morality play was a form of drama that was developed in the late 14th century and flourished through the 16th century in British Literature. The characterizations used in the works were typically based on the

  • Journey To Self-Destruction in Ken Kesey's One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest

    561 Words  | 2 Pages

    Journey To Self-Destruction in One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest In One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest, the character of Randle P. McMurphy undergoes a gradual journey towards self-destruction. His actions go from the minuscule, such as changing minor ward policies, to the act of trying to strangle Nurse Ratched. All of his actions, minor and major, lead to his self-destruction. He continues this behavior even after he discovers he's only hurting himself with his actions. McMurphy begins by protesting

  • The Empiricist Journey of Young Goodman Brown

    1607 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Empiricist Journey of Young Goodman Brown In the late 17th century, John Locke was one of the most influential people of his age. He was a renowned philosopher who established radical ideas about the political, social, and psychological ideals of mankind. One of his philosophical ideas, which he is said to be the founder of, is British Empiricism. This idea holds that "all knowledge is derived from experience whether of the mind or the senses" ("Empiricism" 480). In any man’s life, there

  • The Journey Through The Differences In Relationships in Cold Sassy Tree

    1659 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Journey Through The Differences In Relationships in Cold Sassy Tree Dating back to the early 1900’s and all the way through to the present, romantic relationships have been viewed differently. From strict unwritten dating regulations to not having regulations at all, recent generations have become more liberated in making their own decisions. The progressing times have made us become a more accepting society and have caused a decrease in the strong practice of religion and class. Even

  • Jourody Free Essay Importance of the Journey in Homer's Odyssey

    1057 Words  | 3 Pages

    Importance of the Journey in Homer's Odyssey In the Odyssey, by Homer, Odysseus's main goal was to reach home. Even though all of his thoughts were turned towards his home and family, he learned many lessons along the way. Odysseus's greatest learning experiences were in his journey, not his destination. One of Odysseus's biggest challenges was to resist temptation. The first temptation Odysseus and his men encountered was the sweet lotos plant, "They fell in, soon enough, with Lotos

  • Personal Narrative- Life as a Journey

    813 Words  | 2 Pages

    Personal Narrative- Life as a Journey The journey of life follows a predetermined pattern; we evolve from needing influence and guidance to finally reaching that point where our lives are up to us. I consider myself very lucky up to this point in my journey. Some people become sidetracked and wind up on a far different course than initially planned, but the detours I made have only assisted in embellishing the individual instead of devouring it. According to Freud a person's most important

  • The Painful and Lonely Journey in Margaret Atwood’s Surfacing

    2876 Words  | 6 Pages

    The Painful and Lonely Journey in Margaret Atwood’s Surfacing Not all journeys are delightful undertakings. In Margaret Atwood’s Surfacing, the nameless narrator underwent a painful process of shedding the false skins she had acquired in the city, in order to obtain a psychic cleansing towards an authentic self. By recognizing the superficial qualities of her friends, uncovering the meaning of love, and rediscovering her childhood, the narrator was prepared for change. She was ready to take

  • Dante's Inferno: Dante's Journey Toward Enlightenment

    851 Words  | 2 Pages

    Dante's Inferno: Dante's Journey Toward Enlightenment While reading Dante’s Inferno I couldn’t help but draw parallels between the journey of the protagonist and the belief system of the Buddhist religion. Dante believed we must understand sin before we can reject it, and Buddha believed that before we can reject sin, we must suffer also. Examining these two tenets side by side makes the similarities undeniably apparent; they both seem to be purporting the message that there cannot be pain without

  • journeyhod Journey into Hell in Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness

    942 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Journey into Hell in Heart of Darkness In Joseph Conrad's novel, Heart of Darkness the environment is often symbolic as well as literal. The novel contains both the "frame" narrator, an anonymous member of the "Nellie", representing the dominant society, and more importantly the primary narrator, Marlow, who too, is a product of the dominant society. For the novel's narrator, Marlow, the journey up the Congo River to the 'heart of darkness' is reminiscent of Guido's journey into hell in

  • A Journey into the Soul in Heart of Darkness

    1544 Words  | 4 Pages

    A Journey into the Soul in Heart of Darkness A picture is an abstract idea, brought into context to form something concrete.  They are made up and created to give off some sort of feeling or mood, that one can relate too.  The atmosphere helps determine what kind of mood the picture will take.  Any author, of either a painting or piece of literature will set the mood by using their atmosphere to enhance the theme of their creation.  In Heart of Darkness, Joseph Conrad uses mood and

  • Officer Class in Journey's End by RC Sheriff

    868 Words  | 2 Pages

    Officer Class in Journey’s End During the World War many people found themselves in mid filled trenches eating rations and living with a host of creatures including rats, mice and many insects. There was however a group of people who did not sleep so rough, the officers, no matter what rank of officer you were you would sleep in a quarters with other officers and not with the men and you would have your own personal cook. Although the living conditions were not up to standards with even

  • The Maze in the Heart of the Castle

    666 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Grand Odlum tells Colin that comes from a land far away, and that the only way to get to this land is to travel a long journey, which begins in a huge maze in the heart of a castle. The Odum tells Colin that this trip is not for everyone, and that there is only a possibility that it will answer any of Colin’s questions regarding life itself. Colin decides to take the journey, and enters the castle. Colin soon finds that the maze is much larger than he ever thought. It takes him a good 3 days just

  • What Is The Mood Of The Poem Storm Warnings By Adrienne Rich

    748 Words  | 2 Pages

    It was a late Indian summer afternoon in late August, just after school had started. I was driving my sister and I home from school, with the windows down and music blaring without a care in the world. I drove slowly down my street, and as I rounded the curve, an ambulance and fire truck slowly came into view, parked in front of my house. I parked my car halfway down the street and sprinted up to my front door, where I was promptly informed by an EMT that my dad had had a minor heart attack. Now

  • An Insightful Journey in Virginia Woolf's To The Lighthouse

    1185 Words  | 3 Pages

    An Insightful Journey in Woolf’s To The Lighthouse The lighthouse stands in the distance. It signifies a far off place that takes planning and work to reach. Depending on your perspective, the lighthouse may look different. It may appear large or small, short or tall, it may be dark and musty or bright and clear. Perspective is defined by Random House dictionary as "a broad view of events or ideas in their true nature and relationships". Virginia Woolf, in To The Lighthouse, takes an insightful

  • Cold Mountain: Frasiers Archetypal Journey

    1230 Words  | 3 Pages

    The archetype of the journey is seen in Charles Frazier’s novel Cold Mountain, most clearly through the experience Inman has wandering back to Cold Mountain. The journey archetype sends the hero in search of some truth to restore order and harmony to the land. The journey often includes a series of trials and tribulations the hero faces along the way. Usually, the hero descends into a real or psychological hell and is forced to discover the blackest truths. Once the hero is at his lowest level, he

  • Essay On A Sense Of Pathos In Journey's End By RC Sheriff

    685 Words  | 2 Pages

    A Sense of Pathos in Journey's End How Does Sherriff Create a Sense of Pathos in Act Three Scene Three of the Play? Act Three Scene Three in the play is ultimately the point in which all of the dramatic tension comes to a tragic climax. This sense of pathos is achieved by a number of different factors. The first is that the scene begins with an emotive description of the atmosphere, describing the ‘intense darkness of the dugout is softened by the glow of the Very lights’ and the ‘distant

  • The Harsh Journey of Self-realization in Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man

    783 Words  | 2 Pages

    more like a true self explaining to himself, "After tonight I wouldn't ever look the same, or feel the same." Bledsoe and Jack matured the narrator and made him have a better understanding of himself and his surroundings.  Through his harsh journey of self-realization, the narrator realized that Bledsoe and Jack, who he admired and respected, were really his enemies.  They never saw, or thought of the narrator as the intelligent, gifted and dedicated person who he was.  At the conclusion of