Saturday, October 12, 2019
Comparing Romantic Opposition in Billy Budd, Bartleby the Scrivener and Artist of the Beautiful :: comparison compare contrast essays
   Ã  Ã  Ã   Herman Melville  wrote some of the most widely read works in the history of literature during the  late nineteenth century.Ã   He has become a writer with whom the romantic era  is associated and a man whose works have become a standard by which modern  literature is judged.Ã   One of his most well-known and widely studied short  pieces of fiction is a story entitled, simply, Billy Budd.Ã   In this short  story, Melville tells the tale of Billy Budd, a somewhat out-of-place stuttering  sailor who is too innocent for his own good.Ã   This enchanting tale, while  inevitably entertaining, holds beneath it many layers of interpretive depth and  among these layers of interpretation, an idea that has been entertained in the  literature of many other romantic writers.Ã   Melville uses a literary  technique of developing two characters that are complete opposites in all  aspects and contrasting them throughout the narrative, thus allowing their own  personalities to adverse   ly compliment each other. Melville also uses this tactic  in another well-known short story, Bartleby the Scrivener.Ã   Much like  Melville's two stories, another romantic writer, Nathaniel Hawthorne, uses this  tactic in his short story, The Artist of the Beautiful when he creates two  completely different characters who vie for the same woman's love.Ã   Both  writers use the contrary characters to represent the different facets of the  human personality.Ã  Ã   Using this idea and many others, these romantic  writers, Melville and Hawthorne, created works with depth of meaning that were  both interesting to read and even more intriguing to interpret.      Ã       Ã  In his short story, Billy Budd, Melville uses this romantically based  idea of characteristic opposites in two of his main characters, Billy Budd and  Claggart.Ã   To give the comparison even more strength, Melville also puts  these two characters in virtually opposing roles in the story.Ã   Billy  represents the good that is present in humans and Claggart represents the  bad.Ã   Similarly, Claggart takes on an intelligent persona while Billy  appears to be a bit innocent and uneducated in the ways of the ship.Ã   These  two men are essentially at odds and appear to represent the dueling facets of  the human conscience, the sort of angel and devil on the shoulder.Ã    Claggart wishes to rid the ship of Billy and eventually, the captain of the ship  is forced to hang Billy because of Claggart's malice.  					    
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