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Theme Of Greed In The Devil And Tom Walker

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My favorite story to read was, "The Devil and Tom Walker." This story is about a man named Tom Walker who took a shortcut home one day and ended up at an abandoned Indian fort, or at least he thought it was abandoned. He sat down on one of the stumps and found a skull from what seemed to be a war. He kicked the skull and awoke the Devil. The Devil offered Tom the buried treasure if he sold his soul. Time goes on and Tom makes the decision to sell his soul in return for the treasure. He talks to the Devil and they make the decision that Tom will become an ursurer, or a man who lends money at a very high interest rate. Tom lives his life and ends up making a lot of money. Near the end of his life, he realizes that his time is coming soon …show more content…

I think Irvings ability to bring the characters to life was very well portrayed in this novel. When Tom was at the fort he saw the tree stump that was representing Deacon Peabody. The stump was used because it was an uncanny resemblance to how Peabody was in life; rotten on the inside, yet flourishing on the outside. This particular story was harder to believe could really happy because the Devil is said to be portrayed differently in the real world with the use of demons and other supernatural beings. The characters were very plausible, but the situation with the Devil wasn't as easy to believe. The Devil could be thought of as a mafia leader or gang leader in order to relate to today's society. The unrealistic didn't affect the quality of the writing at all. It was the whole point of the story that Tom met with the Devil. The greatest strength of this story was the attention to detail. One of the best described passages in the story was, "They lived in a forlorn looking house, that stood alone and had an air of starvation. A few straggling savin trees, emblems of sterility, grew near it; no smoke ever curled from its chimney; no traveller stopped at its door. A miserable horse, whose ribs were as articulate as the bars of a gridiron, stalked about a field where a thin carpet of moss, scarcely covering the ragged beds of pudding stone..." This paragraph makes it so you can actually imagine the house. You can put yourself on the dirt road looking at the

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