Preview

Triumph By Stevens Analysis

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
523 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Triumph By Stevens Analysis
Stevens's "Triumph"

Although Stevens claims to recall the evening of his father's passing "with a large sense of triumph" due to his professional duties, various hints throughout the night suggest that Stevens feels much more sadness than triumph. Stevens may honestly believe that the most professional and dignified analysis of his actions that night would be that he accomplished a great success, but his own actions indicate that is not how he truly feels. From all of the hints, the reader can indirectly understand the deep pain and sorrow that Stevens felt at the passing of his father, his mentor. After his father first fell ill, Stevens was truly troubled about his father's well being despite his insistence that he must be professional.
…show more content…
When Stevens visits his father, Stevens clearly seems to be in denial of the true emotional strain that his father's weakening state is taking on him. He barely can manage any words other than "I'm so glad you're feeling better now" (97). As it becomes increasingly obvious that father will not live for much longer, Stevens will not acknowledge this fact and does not make any attempt to comfort his father. He repeats the same phrase in order to he tries to block out the reality of the situation. Later, when Stevens returns to his work, both Mr. Cardinal and Lord Darlington can see the emotions apparent on his normally composed face. The reader realizes the extent of Stevens's distress, from Darlington's revealing comment "You look as though you're crying" (105). Stevens has not ever allowed his emotions to take control when in a professional situation. When Stevens returns to work even after hearing his father has died, he again shows his inner vulnerability. Instead of continuing with his professional duty, Stevens stops to explain to Miss Kenton why he continues with his work, " ‘ Miss Kenton, please don't think me unduly improper…You see, I know my father would have wished me to carry on just now…to do otherwise, I

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the review of Dana Stevens, "The Help. A feel-good movie that feels kind of icky", she describes some of the strongest and weakest characteristics of the movie, she doesn't hate the film but I am sure that it is not in her favorites movies list. Stevens argues that the public wanted to watch the story in big screen and she declares that it is a good melodrama that contains some funny moments: “It's hard to actively hate The Help, a movie so solicitous of the audience's favor that it can't help but win it some of the time" (775). "There are several solid laughs, and at least two instances when I had to scramble for a tissue"(776).…

    • 360 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In my story ¨The Fight¨ by Adam Bagdasarian the theme/claim is that he is determined. He is scared,nerves,and brave. Have you ever ment someone determined? Well, Will is one of those people. He has never been in a fight and now he has to fight.…

    • 313 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Vincent Stevens was an architect and the representative CEO in an agency in Berlin. Putting his dark past behind, he started to build a new life. He thought, he had everything under control now and nothing could happen until a fresh graduate architect started to work in the same company...Will he make the same mistakes? Will the past come back to haunt him?…

    • 107 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    An analysis of Robert Schwartz “Autonomy, Futility, and the Limits of Medicine” reveals that physicians are not required to give patients treatment that has been proven to be effective, and they are not morally obligated to provide treatment that is not in-line with practice of medicine. Schwartz explains although our autonomy is respected, there are limitations on our request.…

    • 818 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Banneker unmasks his views on slavery by dispensing his thoughts onto a letter to Thomas Jefferson. Banneker refutes Thomas Jefferson's published ideas about the inferiority of blacks by quoting Jefferson's Declaration of Independence: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal". Banneker reveals that the crude treatment to slaves is immoral by using parallelism and appeals.…

    • 353 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The need to consume has become a habit that is endless the desire to own superficial materials to demonstrate social economic status by what car, the brand of clothing a person is wearing and the size of a house has become the reality to display our wealth and power. This is a taught behaviour by our social environment that we have to consume has to lead us to think of water, food and other luxuries are in abundance and unlimited, but the problem is more is never enough.…

    • 340 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In this essay I am going to discuss the issue of individual responsibility for criminal behavior, for this, I will focus my attention on different essays. The first essay “Our Time” written by John Edgar Wideman where he attempts to communicate the emotion that he felt and what his brother Robby went through. In this essay, he focused on explaining what happened to his brother. He writes about the forces that contributed to his brother's bad behavior that automatically lead him to do bad things and ended up in the jail for the rest of his life. Also, Wideman writes about how the pressures of his community and culture that was rooted in the history of oppression and racism affected Robby. The second essay “Our Secret” written by Susan Griffin,…

    • 351 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    However, Stevens displays his own sense of auctoritas as well. There is a point in which Darlington puts together a gathering of influential people from around the world to discuss the situation in Germany, after the Great War. Lord Darlington instructs Stevens to attend to all the visitors’s needs, and so Stevens prepares himself and his team to receive the visitors. During one of the final dinner preparations of the conference, Stevens descends to the kitchen to witness “the brink of pandemonium…[and] an extremely tense atmosphere among all levels of staff” (p.97, Remains). He also recalls that an hour later, there was “nothing but efficiency and professional calm” (p.98, Remains) exhibited among his staff. It is implied that Stevens directed and eased the panic that the staff was feeling, to the point where in just an hour, the staff were back to their usual orderliness. That is no small feat, especially because of the graveness and importance of the conference in question. Even the behind-the-scenes work that Stevens and his staff…

    • 750 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    all over but the shoutin

    • 270 Words
    • 2 Pages

    After reading All Over but the Shoutin’, there was a lack of acknowledgement father to son. Although his father was fragile, Bragg wanted so badly to question his manhood; make him feel the pain he once felt because of him. He wanted his father to say he was sorry and admit to his wrongdoings. Braggs needed his father to acknowledge his mistakes. I sensed Bragg knew a coward could and would never do so.…

    • 270 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Furthermore, Stevens uses many stories based on his father’s experiences to define the notion of dignity because he believes his father has achieved this virtue. However, dignity is a component of greatness, and as he said: ‘The great butlers are great by virtue of their ability to inhabit their professional role and inhabit it to the utmost, they will not be shaken out by external events’. Stevens refers to two episodes during his father career to justify this belief: firstly, his father was driving around some guests who were insulting his employer so he stopped the car and opened the passenger door without saying a word, and then the guests promptly made silence. Another story was that he had a son called Leonard, who was killed…

    • 229 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Emerson first starts out by highlighting how we come to perceive those who are civilized and those who are not. He says we do this by negation. In other words, our civility is better defined by showing what we are not. For example, “savages” do not have religion, liberty, sense of honor, etc. “A nation with no clothing, no alphabet, no iron, no marriage, no arts of peace, no abstract thought, we call barbarous” (Emerson, 502). He goes on to say that each nation’s civility grows independent from other nations. His view of a civilized America has a lot to do with slavery. He claims the north to be civilized and the south where slavery is to be uncivilized. He claims morality to…

    • 460 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    One of the strongest things in this world is the love that forms between a father and his son. Many boys grow up with the desire to be just like their fathers but for Frank McCourt having an alcoholic father causes him to grow up with the mentality of being the opposite of him. In Angela’s Ashes the interesting relationship between Frank and Malachy creates positive and negative impacts on Frank’s life. At times, Frank despised his father for drinking the dole money but he knew that in the morning he would have his father to himself. Sitting on his father’s lap and hearing stories about Cuchulain was what made Frank feel loved. Although Malachy managed to make his son feel special, the sufferings that were caused by him made negative impacts on Frank’s life.…

    • 855 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In his short story “Victory Lap”, George Saunders used characterization to draw attention to how some people find it easier to cover up reality instead of facing it. He first emphasizes on that covering things up habit near the beginning of the story when Alison Pope’s imagination bring her to recreate a situation where a hunter kills a deer. Alison then asks the hunter to, “lay her out in a field of clover, with roses strewn about her.” With that particular act of putting flowers around the body to make this untimely end seem more beautiful than it really is, Saunders introduce that idea that for some people, closing your eyes to the atrocities of life makes it so much easier to live happily afterwards. Moreover, the author then brought to…

    • 306 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Robert Frank, who has been called as one of the most important photographer in twentieth century for more than forty years (A. Powell, 2009), it is a special performance of photography history in twentieth century. His book caused the new trend of photography after World War II: more sincere and more individual. Also, Robert Frank present a new way of photography that is "The non decisive moment", this theory is against "The decisive moment" of Henri Cartier-Bresson, which gave a brand new approach for other photographers (S. Greenough, 2009). When just published, there are query and vituperation everywhere. Some people who believe technique is decisive element think that Robert Frank’s picture not qualified yet in technically;…

    • 1381 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Lion, a text written by Saroo Brierley is based on his story and experiences on his journey from his home country in India to his now home, Australia. The story shows how Brierley belonged to various places in life including his first home in India until he was 5, and then eventually moving to his new home in Australia where he lived and is living the rest of his life. Brierley also belonged to a range of people and had two families, both his real Indian family, Kamla, Kallu, Gudu and Shekila, as well as his adoptive parents, John and Sue Brierley. Lastly Brierley shows us how he belongs and fits in with different communities throughout the text.…

    • 1210 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays