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The Morality Of Satan In Mark Twain's The Mysterious Stranger

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Are we doing things right or wrong? How do we know? When do we know? Those are some questions that we ask ourselves often. Mark Twain has the ability to make our moral senses stagger during his novella The Mysterious Stranger. Doubts can rise while reading his novella, shaking the moral senses of anyone. Satan is part of the wrong moral senses, but during the novella, Twain makes Satan sound right and sensible sometimes. Twain even creates an image of Satan a bit similar in some ways to us. Humans just like Satan want pretty often to impress and be the best of the best. Some of the characteristics that humans have that are alike with the personality of Satan are hypocrisy, sarcasm, irony, and foolishness. Often, we use hypocrisy to get whatever we want. Satan is hypocrite with the boys through the whole novella from my point of view. He usually is “helping” but at end he is just playing with all of them. He changes the cards at the last minute and affects the life of others without remorse. The boys, especially Theodor, think that they have a special and unique bond with Satan. To fill his own evil self, Satan manipulate the boys to think that they are friends and that he is doing well to them. Then, when Satan does badly to others lives, he uses a sarcastic tone and tries to excuse himself for his actions. Satan in a twisted way caused the feeling of being needed and adored by the boys. They were showed a world that was basically nonexistent to them, given

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