Preview

The End of the Affair

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1500 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The End of the Affair
ABC
DFG
English 1B
March 12 2013
A Man’s Love
Graham Green wrote the beautiful love story The End of the Affair. The content is about the four characters the novelist, Maurice Bendrix; the couple Henry and Sarah Miles; and the priest Richard Smythe. Maurice meets Sarah and they fall in love deeply. The more Maurice loves Sarah, the more he realizes that there is an indestructible obstacle, which prevents him possessing all Sarah’s love. Maurice’s love affair ends, he lives in hatred and torment because Sarah staying away from him. Maurice has no more doubt when he finds out Sarah’s thought after reading her journal. The time he comes to her again, it is too late; Sarah can no longer enjoy true love with Maurice; she dies. After Sarah’s death, Maurice lives in regret and sorrow. Maurice considers himself a master of love in The End of the Affair because he shows desire to possess all of Sarah’s love and throughout the story he acts like a love starving person that seeks for it. Maurice’s personality has a big impact on his very own decision that drives his life in chaos. He wants to have the superiority in relationship, especially with women. Maurice stays “ I had no idea whatever or falling in love with her. For one thing, she was beautiful, and beautiful women, especially if they are intelligent also, stir some seep feeling of inferiority in my […] but I have always found it hard to feel sexual desire without some sense of superiority, mental or physical.” (17) . Maurice really shows us he is the man of desire, the desire to possess. When we take a look at a group of gorillas, there is one leader. The white-back-mature gorilla is always the leader of the group which he has the right to mate to all the others females. Maurice feels superior because he knows that if he could own Sarah, that where he feel the power of the top male. Maurice feels jealous with Henry who officially gets married to Sarah. When a man has something, he wants to completely possess



Cited: Greene, Graham. The End of the Affair. U.S: Penguin books, 2004. Print.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    “Ethan Frome” by Edith Wharton, is a tale of morality, sorrow, and a broken relationship. The arrival of Mattie Silver, Zeena’s cousin, goes to show that temptations can often get the best of a dying relationship. When given the option of choosing between his spouse, whom he married out of loneliness and a new girl, that shows him affection, does Ethan do what is morally right, or does he give in to his longing for a loving companion. This obstacle along with others of the same nature helped me to determine that the theme of “Ethan Frome”, is ethicality vs. desire. Ethan married his wife, not out of love, but because he felt he owed it to her due to all she had done for his mother.…

    • 422 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The purpose behind John Marszalek’s book, The Petticoat Affair: Manners, Mutiny, and Sex in Andrew Jackson's White House, is to thoroughly examine the Petticoat Affair, the notorious political sex scandal that plagued Andrew Jackson’s first term, and which historians claim led directly to the dissolution of President Jackson’s cabinet in 1831 and, “the worst split between a president and vice president in American history.”…

    • 64 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In A.B Yehoshua’s novel,The Lover, a chain of first person monologues are described. These monologues are set up in a mixture of flashbacks and conflicts that the characters undergo. This unique structure gives the novel a special meaning towards its description of the characters, and the story itself. For example, the character Asya is described to be a very hardworking independent woman. But, she has a odd relationship with her husband, Adam, who is a diligent man in charge of a successful mechanics garage. Throughout the story Adam and Asya never, hug never kiss, and they barley speak to one another. Meaning that this structure lets The Lover symbolize the loneliness and insufficient amount of recognition towards each of the characters.For instance, Daffi, the daughter of Asya and Adam, is a teenage girl in lack of attention. So, because of her parents barely paying any type of attention to her, she spends her time wandering the streets most of the day trying to keep herself productive by either stalking people or just walking around. After awhile,she then begins to connect with her fathers worker, Na’im, who also is alone and has no attention from anyone, and in the end they both fall in love. This basically shows how this novel details the meaning of loneliness and the importance of love.…

    • 2306 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    At one stage in the novel, the main character Patrick is said to have "come across a love story. This is only a love story. He does not wish for plot and all its consequences." One senses that this is actually Ondaatje himself speaking, and that he is voicing the feelings of the reader at this particular stage. The love story intrigues and attracts the audience, who are to become as involved in these relationships as the characters themselves. The vivid representation is one of entangled passion, romantic obsession and heartache surrounding Patrick, Clara and Alice, as they become involved in the exploration of love, in its many forms. Ondaatje presents the reader with this universal theme and yet still manages to make it seem as though he is introducing us to a new world, one containing lust, sexual passion, and spiritual, friendship and parental love.…

    • 738 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The power of love causes individuals to react in many different ways. In the Lais of Marie de France, each story of love produces a different outcome. For a story’s relationship, whether it involves lovers, siblings, or parents and children, there is one similarity hidden beneath the facades that make up each story; love. The characters involved make drastic changes to their lives in order for their relationship to survive. Throughout many of the tales, the protagonists succumb to the pain of love and the disappointments that may come along with it. In the “Lai of Milun”, the characters suffer greatly in hopes of one day achieving a fulfilled relationship, but their perseverance is rewarded in the end. Although Milun and his mistress…

    • 835 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Middle English love is that of abiding the rules of chivalry and the subservience to God. Within Sir Gawain and The Green Knight, love is emanated within this form of a romantic poem. This fifteenth century poem was written with all the characteristics of love and its challenges that so often come with it. The story of the intrusive Green knight ends up having a twist that confronts the norms that knights have adopted. Sir Gawain, a model for knights in the Arthurian kingdom, ultimately redefines himself and his love for all codes of his kingdom manner. Through this romantic journey the model knight will rediscover the truth through deception. The many forms of love including chivalry, spiritual and courtly love will become strengthened through the Green knight challenge.…

    • 753 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A myriad of novels claim they are the greatest love story of all time. It is only in the case of this novel that that statement can be applied and be true. The Great Gatsby is narrated by Nick Carraway in the roaring 1920's in America. Nick moves to East egg, the smaller area in comparison to west egg but also where the mega-rich live.…

    • 620 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    With his allegorical novel The Great Divorce, C.S. Lewis intends to educate his readers on the idea that “if we insist on keeping Hell (or even earth) we shall not see Heaven: if we accept Heaven we shall not be able to retain even the smallest and most intimate souvenirs of Hell.” His Great Divorce refers to the absolutely irreconcilable differences, as well as the insurmountable distance, between Heaven and Hell and between good and evil. He carries out this education by taking his readers on a journey from Hell (or purgatory, depending on the visitor) to Heaven. Throughout the journey, Lewis’s narrator interacts with and overhears a number of fellow travelers as they converse with him, with each other, or with the “Bright People,” those beings inhabiting the heavenly land.…

    • 1356 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Ballad of the Sad Café, by Carson McCullers (1951) advocates that there are two types of people in the world, which are: the "lover" and the "beloved". The "lover" is a pathetic character so infatuated by the "beloved" that it totally changes his/her attitude or character completely. The feeling is so strong that although it causes the "lover" severe pain, he/she continue to love. The two main characters in the book fall under the mysterious spell which changes their lives forever. McCullers also seems to suggest that the feelings of love and attraction are not fundamentally reasonable or logical to others, and if they are left unanswered it can cause the "lover" to return back to his/her true self. McCullers says: "love is a joint experience between two persons- However; the fact that it is a joint experience does not mean that it is a similar experience to the two people involved. There is the lover and the beloved, but these two come from different places." (26).…

    • 977 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Cathedral Essay Example

    • 868 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The introduction of the story explains the relationship between narrator’s wife and the blind man, detailing how it evolved to its present status. It is in this part that I as a reader I see an example of the figurative blindness from which the narrator suffers because of his knowledge of the relationship between the two which seem to stem from his own troubled relationship with his wife. Is here when his wife gave him an ultimatum to accept Robert, stating that if her husband loves her, he would “do this for me if you don’t love okay.”(83) Throughout the story the narrator show his jealousies toward the relationship his wife and the blind man share. Insecurity gives a way to a troubled relationship with his wife. The narrator revaluates his…

    • 868 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Great Divorce

    • 1282 Words
    • 6 Pages

    The Great Divorce by C.S. Lewis suggests that choices made on earth have a consequential effect towards our acceptance into heaven or our plummet into hell. In this book pride manifests itself in a hundred subtle ways as souls whine about perceived injustices or irrational motives. Thankfully, a few tourists do humble themselves, become transformed into marvelously real beings, and remain in heaven. But most don't, about which the great Scottish author George MacDonald, Lewis' heavenly guide, says, "They may not be rejecting the truth of heaven now. They may be reenacting the rejection they made while on earth".…

    • 1282 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Betrayal and Juliet

    • 418 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Imagine being betrayed by the ones you care about. In Shakespeare’s play, Roemo and Juliet, The play faces many types of betrayal such as families betraying lover,lovers betraying families wishes, and lovers betraying each other. Shakespeare points out his views on many people being betrayed.…

    • 418 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    A Farewell to Arms 3

    • 1463 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Catherine and Henry’s relationship, in its early stages, may be considered as only a shallow diversion and quick escape from the horrors of war. Indeed Henry reflects that ‘By God, I did not want to fall in love with her. I didn’t want to fall in love with anyone’. Both Catherine and Henry initially consider their affair as ‘a game, like bridge in which you said things instead of playing cards’. However, it is in the hospital in Milan where the couple truly fall in love. In falling for Henry, Catherine may be seen to sacrifice her identity to Henry, telling him that, ‘There isn’t any me anymore, only you’. However, by marking Catherine’s changes and progressions throughout the novel, we learn that she is not a submissive, subservient character, and it is in fact through her purposeful and meaningful devotion to Henry that her anti-heroism comes to life. Self-denial becomes self-transcendence as the love they have willed becomes authentic. Their initially escape from the war into each other, treated merely as a ‘game’, develops into mutual devotion and refuge from the dour, dark and difficult struggle of war around them. Love…

    • 1463 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Great Divorce

    • 901 Words
    • 4 Pages

    In The Great Divorce, the narrator suddenly, and inexplicably, finds himself in a grim and joyless city (the "grey town", representative of hell). He eventually finds a bus for those who desire an excursion to some other place (and which eventually turns out to be the foothills of heaven). He enters the bus and converses with his fellow passengers as they travel. When the bus reaches its destination, the "people" on the bus — including the narrator — gradually realize that they are ghosts. Although the country is the most beautiful they have ever seen, every feature of the landscape (including streams of water and blades of grass) is unbearably solid compared to themselves: it causes them immense pain to walk on the grass, and even a single leaf is far too heavy for any of them to lift.…

    • 901 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Another reason, why Maurice and Laura relationship was good is because Laura cared about him. For example, one day, Maurice showed up at her lobby because he did not have food for two days (87). It broke Laura’s heart when she heard that he did not eat food for days, so she took him to McDonald’s. While they were at McDonald’s, Laura come up with a plan that she can make him food at beginning of each week (88). Maurice accepted the offer, but he requested that she put his lunch in brown paper bag. At first, Laura did not know why he wanted his lunch in brown paper bag. When she asked him why he wanted his lunch in a brown paper bag:, he said “ because when [he sees] kids come to school with their lunch in a paper bag, that means someone cares about them.”(88). When he said that Laura got so emotional that she couldn’t even look at him. She did not know much that the paper bag meant to him because Laura “it meant nothing” but Maurice “it meant everything” (88). In my opinion…

    • 861 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics