A man's suspicions can lead him to make questionable decisions. In Kent Meyers, “The Work of Wolves”, Magnus Yarborough’s respect for his wife changes after he suspects Carson Fielding and his wife Rebecca Yarborough of having a romantic relationship. Magnus becomes violent towards Rebbecca. He unleashes his anger on Rebecca's horses and his own animals. Magnus also takes a different view of land and uses it as weapon when he takes Carson's home away from him. Jealousy leads Magnus to become deranged after suspecting his wife Rebecca to be unfaithful. As can be seen, Carson and Rebecca's relationship causes Magnus Yarborough to act out in jealousy by mistreating his wife Rebecca. After Magnus realizes Rebecca and Carson have taking a strong interest in each other, the horses disappear, because Magnus took Rebecca's horses from her. He stopped her riding lessons with Carson and demanded she stay inside. Shortly after Magnus took the horses Rebecca told Carson, “He slapped me. No fists. but it was hard. I’m bruised. My face.” (Meyers 184). Magnus’s jealousy causes him to physically hurt his wife. In the past he had never harmed abused her until this point in their marriage. Kent Meyers uses this event to demonstrate how Magnus has changed into a harmful person. Rebecca is now scared of Magnus and feels trapped in the house. Carson insisted Rebecca leave Magnus after, “She'd called it a prison with nice fixtures.”(183). Magnus shows that he is worried Rebecca will leave him
In Farley Mowat’s, “Observing Wolves”, Never Cry Wolf, 1963 story he writes about his trip to the Keewatin Barren Land in the Northwest Territories. He was sent there by the Canadian government to prove or disprove that the wolves were eating the caribou. Before Mowat went on his journey he would have planned what equipment he needed to bring, how to prove or dis-prove to the Canadian government that the wolves are eating the caribou, and how Mowat would have prevented the wolves from attacking him.
Gene Forrester- The main character, from whom we get a first person account from in much of the book. Gene is best friends with Finny, whom he admires and envies for being an amazing athlete and a smooth talker. Gene is very intelligent and gets one of the highest grades at the Devon school. He is very adventurous and is often breaking every rule possible with Finny. One day Finny and Gene decide to climb a tall tree and jump into the river. When Finny is about to jump off of the branch, Gene wiggles the branch, causing Finny to fall and shatters his leg. When Finny is told that he may never be able to play sports again, Gene feels responsible and tries to convince Finny that it was his fault.
In the novel, A Separate Peace by John Knowles, the protagonist Gene Forrester constantly battles within himself to find the true emotion towards his friend Phineas and to find out who he really is. Gene and Phineas formed an illusion of companionship, but there was always a silent rivalry between them in Gene’s mind. In the beginning, Gene thought his feeling towards Phineas was completely normal and it will go away in time. However, as the time went on and Gene matured he found out that his feeling was much more than little jealousy but it has turned into hate. Gene Forrester develops into a mature adult when he finally accepts his feeling and faces reality.
In “Scared to Death” by Ed Yong and Sharon Levy’s “Wolf Family Values,” we read about the need to protect the population of wolves in North America. These two articles have very different ways to go about this. Ed Yong talks about the wolf effects on elk as well as the rest of the environment. Levy’s approach is about wolf social structure and how it is impacted by hunting. Both of these make some valid points on why more conservation efforts should be made; however, I believe Ed Yong made the stronger case.
Though it may sound like a myth, the green-eyed monster is as real as the person sitting next to you. Its prevalence is unsettling and so is its ability to make you feel pain unlike you’ve ever felt before. It is envy, raw and unavoidable; just like its counterpart, jealousy. These feelings are an everyday occurrence that everyone must cope with. It is the yearning for what someone else has that can shake us all to the core. Along with envy and jealousy come many physical, mental and emotional side effects. Relationships can become extremely strained and even fall apart under the sheer power of these emotions. How we understand ourselves can also become a very tainted vision. The main characters from John Knowles’ A Separate Peace, Gene and Finny, are a great example of how envy and jealousy can affect our lives. Gene, Finny and everyday people show how envy and jealousy can negatively impact our relationships and distort our understanding of ourselves.
Human nature is notorious for its trait of jealousy. One may grow hostile when he desperately seeks another’s possession or talent. This statement is evident in the character of Gene from John Knowles’ A Separate Peace. Throughout the story, he is jealous because his friend, Finny, has exceptional athletic ability. After one regretful action from Gene, Finny starts facing tough circumstances, eventually separating them. A Separate Peace by John Knowles, Gene demonstrates how envy can tear friendships apart.
Long before the settlers started to make the United States their home, “American Indians lived long beside the Gray Wolf before settlers started to come here.” (Rowe, Mark) The wolf is native to the North American continent and has been inhabiting its land for centuries. It is a canid species, or member of the canine family and is a cunning, smart, fast, and sly animal. Gray wolves range in color from black, brown, gray, and white and also look like a grown German Shepherd. They are well known for traveling in family sizes from 7-9 wolves, led by the alpha male and have a mate. They are a fierce animal that has been researched extensively because of their unique qualities and that they are near extinction.
We could assume that every wolf was once a man. At the beginning Carter explains how wolves are “carnivore incarnate and he’s cunning and ferocious”, but yet she also explains how “melancholy” a wolf can be because “the beasts would love to be less beastly if only they knew how” (110, 112).
Jealousy is a powerful emotion that can blind oneself from identifying the truth. Shakespeare heavily emphasizes this theme throughout the drama Othello, especially through the actions of characters. In the play the heinous antagonist, Iago, uses each character’s jealousy to deceive that person and manipulate the truth. His false promises and deceitfulness bring to the demise of many of the main characters in the play, including the protagonist, Othello. Othello could not have been deceived if it were not for his powerful jealousy. Therefore, Shakespeare is telling us that jealousy is an ugly trait that can hide the truth, which in turn causes many problems between characters in the play.
first of all the characters in the play to be attacked by the "green -
In the play, Othello, jealousy and envy are prominent themes from the beginning to the end. As the play starts to unwind, you can see jealousy is the major cause of all the drama in the play. Jealousy or envy is a feeling of discontented or resentful longing by someone else’s possessions , qualities or luck. Iago becomes engulfed by jealousy and it causes him to corrupt Othello. They are two men that cause similar crimes but we sympathize for Othello and hate Iago because they have different attitudes towards their crime.
Shakespeare’s Othello is a play consistently based on jealously and the way it can destroy lives. One is quick to think this jealously is based on Othello’s lack of belief in Desdemona’s faithfulness to him or his suspensions over Desdemona’s affair with Cassio, Othello’s honorable lieutenant. Upon closer inspection of the jealously that exists throughout the play it becomes clear that his jealously is not the sole start and reason for all of the destruction that occurs. Iago, a good friend of Othello, is not who he appears to be. Iago’s own jealously of those around him pushes him over the edge. He begins to deceive all those who believe he is a true, honorable, and faithful man. Throughout Othello, Iago incites his own jealously in
Jealousy is a powerful drug. When someone is jealous, one can only imagine how far someone would go because of it. In the play Othello by William Shakespeare, there were several characters that went through different ways of processing their jealousy. Iago’s jealousy provokes his idea to get back at the people he felt was not deserving enough of the things they had or their happiness. His plans succeeds but by the end, no one wins. Iago’s jealousy forms at the beginning of the play which causes Othello’s jealousy towards the end and because of it, it results in people hurt mentally and physically.
When a person first thinks of murder, envy probably is not their second thought, but it should be their third. Statistically speaking, jealousy ranks number three in the most common motives for manslaughter. So although it may seem like a simple enough emotion, many feelings coincide. To most, it is a stressful and unwanted inner conflict that can cause or further aggravate thoughts of insecurity and inadequacy. Also, apparently, violence-inducing rage.
Even so, the domestic system the men have set up for their wives and their disregard for them after the rules and boundaries have been laid down prove to be the men's downfall. The evidence that Mrs. Wright killed her husband is woven into Mrs. Hale's and Mrs. Peters's conversations about Mrs. Wright's sawing and her pet bird. The knots in her quilt match those in the rope used to strangle Mr. Wright, and the bird, the last symbol of Mrs. Wright's vitality to be taken by her husband, is found dead. Unable to play the role of subservient wife anymore, Mrs. Wright is foreign to herself and therefore lives a lie. As Mrs. Hale proclaims, "It looks as if she didn't know what she was about!" (1177).