She moves away from Bottom, has numerous affairs with many men, and when she returns, she is recognized as evil. Sula is called a "roach" (112) and a "*****" (112). Her death is a welcome relief in Bottom. Her affair with Nel's husband does make matters any better. All of this makes Nel look almost like an angel in comparison. Sula did not live a nice, neat little life. Unlike Nel, she did not marry and have children and she did not regret it. She was pessimistic and sarcastic while Nel was controlling and composed. However, do these facts make perception real? Barbara Lounsberry does not think so. In fact, she writes that Morrison "uses the lives of the major character in Sula to demonstrate both the variety and futlity of human attempts to order and contain experience" (Lounsberry). As we see, perspective is everything but perspectives can be wrong. It takes death to reveal the truth behind everything. When Nel goes to see Sula on her deathbed, she is lead there from her sense of duty. Sula asks Nel how she knows if she was the good one. The visit with Eva also plants doubt in Nel's mind. When she realizes that she enjoyed watching Chicken Little fall deep into the water more than Sula did (for Sula was terrified), she understands that Sula was the good one. Her psychic break allows the truth to set in. Nel's tears at the end of the novel reinforce her loss and her realization that sometimes good...
Throughout the novel, Sula is the character that is flawed and imperfect. In comparison to Nel, Sula is messed up and there is no hope because Sula herself does not think there is any. While Sula does nothing to counteract her bad label, it becomes apparent that maybe she did not deserve it. Nel found it too easy to blame Sula because she was the one that held the boy's hands. The town found it too easy to hate Sula because she was not like one of them and she defied convention. These behaviors reinforce society's need to find a victim. Sula was the victim her entire life but, in the end, she was more true to herself than Nel because she lived life on her own terms. She lived the best life she could while Nel lived according to what society dictated. Nel's life by all accounts was "good" but as revealed in Sula, "good" and "evil" are terms we should never take for granted.
Quality of Evil in Young Goodman Brown and Ethan Brand When examining the works of Nathaniel Hawthorne, it is interesting to note the role of evil or indeed perceived evil. Evil appears to distort lives and destroy egoistical souls. One such egoistical soul was Young Goodman Brown (Hawthorne 1937). He leaves his wife Faith in complete trust that her name adequately describes her nature. The end of the story however
Frailty of the Human Psyche Explored by Flannery O'Connor Flannery O'Connor's stories remain popular because she creates colorful characters that help her drive her points home. In many ways, O'Connor delivers readers a different reality, which allows them to look upon characters in a different way, thus forcing them to look at humanity in a different way as well. In "A Good Man is Hard to Find" and "Everything that Rises
While most of the poem centers around this face, there are a few stanzas where the poet breaks away and discovers what he knows to be himself after this tragedy. The dreadful aspect of life and even his own early demise surface in the emotions revealed in this poem. It is deeply personal and intense. On the other hand, "Don Juan" is less personal. While the poem may feel
The poet writes with an intent, but very still, voice illustrating how meaningless the event was. Readers are presented with the image of a mother only wanting to protect her child but falling short thanks to the ruthlessness of her fellow men. The child, as in Hughes' poem, represents a type of innocence that will not last long in this world. "Ballad of Birmingham," is also like "Dream Boogie" in
The characters of God, Stan, and Jesus are also significant in this epic and because they are considered valuable in their roles in the poem, we can assume that Milton found similar value with these characters in life itself. Through these characters, Milton is presenting not only a hierarchy but also a way in which things should operate. God's supremacy is unquestionable in this realm and demonstrated early in
Bad Beginning The Good Beginning in the Bad Beginning Lemony Snicket's monumentally successful An Unfortunate Series of Events is a set of books that follow the misadventures of the Baudelaire children. The series initiates with 1999's The Bad Beginning, which presents the series' primary heroes, villains and supporting characters. Likewise, it sets in motion one of the primary conflicts that will drive the story collection. The first installment climaxes with Olaf's elaborately staged
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