Preview

Ambition In A Worn Path

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
251 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Ambition In A Worn Path
Ever had to face a contrary impulse by the drive of ambition? When confronted with challenging tasks, we intend to endure it with perseverance till the end, whether we have achieved the goal or not. In Welty’s work “A Worn Path” seizes the moments of the protagonist as she overcomes her obstacles from every angle. Poe’s character, Montresor is also someone who entitled to this but does it in a rancorous way. With all opinions aside, these protagonists have attested persistence through strength, endurance, and with meticulous techniques. Both of these characters have performed grit in their own fashions, but for different reasons. Circumspectly, it all comes down to the nature of the soul. Phoenix Jackson, the main character in a “Worn Path,”

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Hope is the very essence of humanity. Without hope, without a “balm in Gilead,” what is the point of life? There is no greater punishment than the total loss of hope; the absence of hope is hell. In Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Raven,” the “ghastly grim and ancient” (46) Raven destroys the narrator in a way far more tortuous than a simple slit to the throat.…

    • 497 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Tension can be defined as mental or emotional strain. In the circumstances of “The Achievement of Desire,” a self-essay written by Robert Rodriguez, tension can be more defined as contrasts within Rodriguez’s life that results in conflicting forces that negatively strain him mentally and emotionally. Rodriguez faces educational and family tensions, which leads him to be an emotionless outcast with an unhappy life and a constant never-ending feeling of being unsatisfied.…

    • 954 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    the worn path

    • 271 Words
    • 1 Page

    Well then story doesn’t tell you what happens when she gets home. But I assume she started her long walk back to her grandson and gave him his medicine.…

    • 271 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Poe’s use of first person point of view gave the audience an insight on Montresor’s perspective, unreliability, and finally his manipulative personality. To begin with, Poe allows the readers to be connected with the thoughts and intentions of Montresor. The text states,”…

    • 862 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    One of the most celebrated American Poets of the nineteenth century is Edgar Allen Poe. As a reader of his poems and short stories, it is evident that his “life had many hardships that inspired his work” (“Edgar Allen Poe’s Inspiration” 1). There is a clear “connection to Poe and the other people in his life to the characters in his poems and stories” (“Edgar Allen Poe’s Inspiration” 1). Specifically, “The Raven”, which was published in 1845, Poe himself considers it to be “the greatest poem that ever was written” (Ackroyd 119). Examining this poem, it is clear, that Poe’s writing of “The Raven” was greatly influenced by the events that took place in his short and tragic life.…

    • 1434 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Eudora Welty A Worn Path

    • 683 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Determination, strength, hope, endurance, perseverance, and love are only a few words to describe the readers feelings while reading this story. The author, Eudora Welty, screams-silently through her gently placed words in story, “A Worn Path”. The inspiring and encouraging phrases spoken to someone, “never give up”, “keep fighting”, “never back down”, are the unspoken feeling through the characters perseverance, determination, and love. The tone in the story is displayed through life of a black, negro-woman, who faces daily obstacles, during a time when black Americans were treated unjustly and unfairly. The traveled path she is traveling parallels the obstacles that African Americans experienced while on their journey for racial equality.…

    • 683 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Through extended metaphor, the poet shows how facing something very difficult—some all encompassing problem—can lead to a triumphant, even exultant outcome, a chance for renewal which defies the enervating effects of time, and the negative, self-fulfilling prophecies of fear and stagnation.…

    • 552 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Of Montresor’s noble family’s honor, pride, and tradition of perfect revenge and Montresor’s fixation of revenge that led to a downward spiral into insanity, neither is greater than the other. To truly find out one would have to ask Edgar Allan Poe himself. Even if one could ask Poe, Professor Amper would say, “In regard to Poe in particular, our understanding has come a long way. Research on Poe tells us that there is a great deal more to Poe than first meets the eye. It certainly provides a picture of Poe's work very different from what most readers conceive. Research has revealed, indeed, a bewildering tangle of contradictions in his work, which leaves us with astonishingly little consensus about what Poe is all about. Most scholars would…

    • 279 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In literature, Edgar Allen Poe is widely known for his short stories that all have common dark, non-moralistic theme. Considering, Poe’s “The Black Cat” and “The Tell-Tale Heart,” have no exceptions. Theses works show exemplementry stories of narrators who have gone mad, murdered out of wickedness, and seek redemption from those who’ll listen. Poe’s unique writing styles and plot grabs hold of the reader’s attention and takes them down a dark, spiraling path of the narrators’ minds. From different theories from many acquiring minds, to the simple impressions given form the characters themselves, one can see the war between characterizing them as mad or thriving for deep redemption. However, in both these short stories, Poe’s narrators represent…

    • 1711 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    In Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Cask of Amontillado”, the themes of pride and revenge are deeply intertwined. They say pride comes before the fall, and it is evident that Poe was a firm believer in this concept. In his tale, it is the sin of pride that ultimately leads both characters down the path to ruin. The two main characters embody and express these themes. The protagonist, Montresor embodies revenge, his motives thoughts and actions are driven by it, his every move clearly calculated to “not only punish, but punish with impunity” (Poe). Fortunato, “the fortunate one”, our hapless antagonist, is led to his ultimate resting place because of an inherent weakness, his pride.…

    • 1477 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    A Worn Path

    • 1236 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Cited: Welty, Eudora. “A Worn Path.” American Literature. Vol. 2. Ed. Williams E. Cain. New York:…

    • 1236 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Achievement of Desire

    • 771 Words
    • 3 Pages

    1. What do you think Rodriquez is saying now that you have read his entire essay?…

    • 771 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The achievement of desire

    • 2310 Words
    • 10 Pages

    Richard Rodriguez’s essay “The Achievement of Desire” can be described as an autobiographical text in which the author includes some self analysis in comparison to what he describes as the only description of “myself”(Rodriguez p.547): The Uses of Literacy by Richard Hoggart. What Rodriguez is doing by writing this essay is to add further notion of the “scholarship boy syndrome” for future scholarship boys. His motif for doing this could be to make the reader reflect on the advantages and disadvantages of starting this profound experience as scholarship boy. At the end of his educational career Rodriguez makes it clear that he has suffered too much for the detachment from his family. This separation led him to miss out on a vital part of his life: family and friends. He does not want other people to experience this “loss” and his writing serves that purpose. The incorporation of Hoggart’s views shows us that besides being a good writer, Rodriguez is an excellent and tenacious reader. My personal opinion is that Rodriguez radically changed after having read The Uses of Literacy, his life goal has been to get an education and when he finally gets it he feels like he left something behind.…

    • 2310 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ambition Essay

    • 349 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Ambition is not so much the desire to achieve, but the action or method of getting to that desire, without the action it is merely a dream. When an individual speaks about ambition there is a straight idea of positivity embedded into it. Carol Anne Duffy’s education for leisure and Shakespeare’s Macbeth both have a very strong link to ambition and power, but they are by no means positive ambitions. In this essay I am going to analyse and compare the two piece of text.…

    • 349 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Achievement of Desire

    • 351 Words
    • 2 Pages

    A middle class Spanish boy from Sacramento, who calls himself the “scholarship boy”, overcame a whirlwind of emotions, decision and regrets in trying to become an educated man. He looked to his teachers as his parent figures, mimicking and idolizing them. To him education was imitation. He became very puzzling to his family because he wanted to change who he was by trying to cover all trace of his Spanish heritage and soon even lost his accent. He was teased by his siblings and parents for spending numerous hours with his head buried in different books. Richard was embarrassed by his mothers and fathers lack of grammar and education. He would ignore his parents and isolate himself from the family, but they were still very proud of him and wanted him to have a good education. They sent Richard to parochial schools and to a college they couldn’t afford. For years, reading was a pleasurable activity for him, but soon after grad school he became scared of the silence in his life and grew impatient with books and realized that he wanted something more pleasurable out of life. He was tired of being alone and realized that being who you are is never something you should change or be ashamed of.…

    • 351 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays