In the tales " Little Red Riding Hood" and "Goldilocks and the Three Bears", the main characters both went through situations involving their curiosity. Both events led to an interesting turn of events towards the end. The protagonists of both stories had wild imaginations and vigorous attitude, but were still active characters (despite moral attributes). In one way or another, the main characters learned an important lesson. Moral Attributes are commonly used to mark the protagonist of a story. Between these two girls, their moral aspects were very different. LRRH had a giving heart in the act of going to give cakes to her sick grandmother. This shows that LRRH had some good morals when it comes to thinking of others. Goldilocks, on the other hand, was only thinking of herself and continued on to go find something to do. …show more content…
Throughout the story LRRH showed kindness when thinking of her grandmother and determination when traveling to her home, fully aware of the big bad wolf. Her actions may have led to the wolf eating her grandmother, but in the end, help was found and her grandmother was saved. Goldilocks' outcome on the other hand, due to her actions, was not as celebratory. As we know, Goldilocks had no intention but to have some fun and in the act, stumbled upon an abandoned home. She broke in and ate their food, broke their furniture and in the mean time, slept in their beds. The outcome, The bears coming home to find their home in a mess and as well as their beds. In my opinion, that girl is really lucky because any bear I know wouldn't have taken the time to announce a human in their bed, it would've just eaten
One character that displays the traits of the hero archetype is Atticus Finch. He first acts as a hero archetype when he accepts Tom’s case, he says, “The only thing we’ve got is a black man’s word against the Ewells. The evidence boils down to you-did-I-didn’t”(Lee 117). In this situation, Atticus displays his sense of morality as he accepts this hopeless case because he believes Tom is innocent. In order to uphold his morals he defends Tom despite the risk to him and his family. This makes him a hero as he follows his own morals despite the odds. Another example of Atticus heroism is when he defends his children against a dog, Miss Maudie says, “but shooting is different from playing the piano or the like. I think maybe he put his gun down when he realized God had given him an unfair advantage over most living things”(Lee 130). In this instance Atticus is brave in his diffence of his children against a rabid dog. He sacrifices the
On average, ten thousand hundred people read Goldilocks each year in many different languages. But has anyone ever compared it to life lessons or other books? They’re alike in many ways. Robert Southey, in 1837, wrote the first recorded version of Goldilocks and the Three Bears. In this version, Goldilocks breaks into the bears’ house and tries out all of their of belongings, and she also breaks some things. The bears come home and finds her lying in one of their beds. She wakes up and she quickly runs away. Where the Lilies Bloom is a novel by Bill and Vera Cleaver. The main characters in this book are Kiser Pease, the one who owns the land that the Luthers sharecrop off of, and The Luther family. The Luther family includes Mary Call, the one who takes over when her father dies, Devola, the oldest, Romey, the only boy left in the family, and Ima Dean. In this novel, a poor family of sharecroppers, the Luthers, loses their dad and has to learn to survive and be responsible very quickly. They face many hardships and often need help, but they always keep their promises to their father. These two stories are very similar in
The novel, Where the Lilies Bloom has a striking similarity to the tale of Goldilocks and the Three Bears. When you take a look at Where the Lilies Bloom, by Vera and Bill Cleaver, the comparison becomes eminent very quickly. Within the first couple of chapters, the characters in Where the Lilies Bloom begin to resemble characters in Goldilocks and the Three Bears. Kiser Peace, an uneducated and superstitious man, takes the role of the bear in this story. Mary Call Luther, an intelligent young girl who has become the head of the household after her father's death, and Romey, Mary Call’s 10 year old brother, start to both represent Goldilocks. Goldilocks and the Three Bears is definitely comparable to Where the Lilies Bloom.
Often times, people view individuals by the way they handle situations and their responses to others. Every character in a story can be summed up in about three to four characteristics based on their actions and speech. In the short story “The Scarlet Ibis” by James Hurst, the narrator reveals his true character through the way he treats his younger brother. He possesses characteristics including authority, pride, and cruelty, and readers know these traits through Hurst’s dialogue and actions.
The Heroism in Finding One’s Self Heroic characters that are developed in different media will almost always share very similar traits. However, just like everything else in the world, no two entities are ever exactly alike. Although these traits are what can categorize the characters into certain groups, how each trait is exhibited in their own heroic ways is what separates them.
Goldilocks and the three bears. We have all read the famous fairy tale of Goldilocks and the three bears, but as a kid we did not really look into the book. As a child we all looked at it being an accident that Goldilocks broke the bear’s chair and ate their porridge but when you get older you realize that she was actually breaking the law. She may have not known that she was trespassing but at the end she did not even apologize, so we can all see that Goldilocks is a person. The things she did could have happened to anyone but she could have explained to the bears that it was unintentional.
She knew he was lying but went along with it. One night he again asks if they can meet up and she says yes. He waited thirty minutes then heard rustling in the woods. He assumes its the girl in her bear skin cloak and walks up and puts his arms around the bears neck. The bear stands up and hugs the man.
In world literature, there are two types of archetypal protagonists, the mythic hero and the tragic hero. Mythic heroes, like Homer's Odysseus, represent the combination of superhuman virtues and human imperfections. These traits create a supernatural adventure with a realistic character. The mythic hero is favored by divine powers and eventually achieves a certain goal or completes a certain journey. On the other hand, there is the tragic hero, like Sophocles' Oedipus. The unfortunate tragic hero has a penchant for attempting to escape a doomed fate. The tragic hero lives under the shadow that the gods place. Literature throughout the
It is important to know the history of “The Three Little Pigs.” As Sutcliffe explains, the story started out as a nursery tale, almost identically to the way it is told today. Around the beginning of the 1900, Grimm printed the story The Wolf and the Seven Little Little Kids. This story is not the exact same as “The Three Little Pigs”, however, it has many parallels. The fact that the story was taken away from the german author, explains why it focuses on family and nature. The personification of the pigs would come from Grimm’s aspect of adding nature. The family of the three pigs (although two die) shows the differences that can occur within a family and how one way is can be better. THE TRUE STORY OF THE THREE LITTLE PIGS by A. Wolf published
In Gulliver's Travels, Gulliver got the chance to experience how different cultures act and live their lives. On his many adventures, he was able to see how the creatures, much unlike him and his own people, treat themselves and others. On his final adventure, Gulliver's thinking and attitude was changed greatly by his time with the Houyhnhnms and Yahoos. He favored the way Houyhnhnms lived their lives. They treated one another with kindness and had good manners. The more time he spent with them, the more respect he gained because of how well they thought and their culture alone. By his time spent with them, he realized how his own kind, humans, are much like the Yahoos – beastly, inhumane savages.
In “Goldilocks and the Three Bears,” Goldilocks lets her curiosity and need for comfort get the best of her. She breaks into an inhabited cabin, trying different types of porridge and beds until she finds one of each that is “just right” for her. She does this in spite of the dangers of being caught by bears. Not only is this dangerous, it simply isn’t using common sense.
Red Riding Hood’s decisions are cautious and thoughtful, unlike those of Goldilocks. She was being generous by giving her grandmother some fresh cakes that she made while Goldilocks broke into a home, ate their food, and broke their furniture. Goldilocks ventures into the woods without her parent’s permission while Red Riding Hood’s parents knew her whereabouts. Goldilocks simply doesn’t care about how others feel, and she makes herself the first priority over everything and everyone else.
What do the childhood stories,Red Riding Hood, and Goldilocks and the three bears,what do they have in common or what are the differences of the two? The two stories have less in common than they do different of each other. Both of these stories have a animal as the enemy and problem in the stories.
kindness they may show on the outside. The characters in these stories are shown in
Epic characteristics, conventions, and hero characteristics are what make up the epic, The Wizard of Oz. An epic characteristic seen in the book is how broad the setting is. Throughout Dorothy’s time in Oz, she crosses many different lands that are all unique in their own way; such as The Land of the East, Emerald City, The Land of the West, and more. A common convention in epics seen in the Wizard of Oz is a formal plea or an invocation for help being said by Dorothy. In the Wizard of Oz, Dorothy pleads for either the Wizard or Galinda to take her back home to Kansas. The hero undertaking a quest or journey is an epic hero characteristic seen in The Wizard of Oz. In the book, Dorothy takes on a huge quest to defeat the Wicked Witch so she can return home. Through epic characteristics, conventions, and hero characteristics, the epic The Wizard of Oz follows the epic hero’s journey.