Friday, July 19, 2019
Which character do you believe has changed the most, in Silas :: Free Essay Writer
Which character do you believe has changed the most, in Silas  Marner, giving reasons why?    Change can be natural or provoked manually, it is unavoidable, it is  inevitable, it is imperative and it can be both welcome and greeted  with apprehension.    The Concise Oxford Dictionary says change is to,    ââ¬ËMake or become differentââ¬â¢,    and the Oxford Thesaurus offers these alternatives,    ââ¬Ëadapt, adjust, alter, amend, convert, modify and transformââ¬â¢.    Change and its effects is the underlying theme of Silas Marner. The  novel is a fable because it has a strong moral message, which is  change, and based on one fictitious individual and how they should and  should not cope with both positive and negative change. It is a story  ultimately about redemption within oneself due to catastrophic changes  to a lifestyle. In this particular case, the life in question is that  of Silas Marnerââ¬â¢s.    As the title suggests, the main character is Marner and it was  customary of 19th century writers to name their novel on the main  character and from there after, follow the change and development of  that character within their environment. This would infer that Marner  is the main character, and that he is to undertake the most change  throughout the course of the story. A wise assumption perhaps, but  under closer observation there may be more to consider than first  anticipated.    Other characters from whom we can extract good examples of various  types of change from are Aaron Winthrop, Nancy Lammeter, and Eppie.  Yet, the only character to experience change radical enough to rival  Marnerââ¬â¢s is Godfrey Cass.    However, before I can describe in detail what changes these two  characters have experienced we need to know what they were like before  any change, at the beginning of the story. Obviously, in order to  change, the subject needs to change from something to something else;  and to gauge how much change has taken place, there needs to be a  comparison between the past and present. So, what are the two  characters like when we first meet them?    The first mention of Marner is at the beginning of the second  paragraph. At this time, Marner is in Raveloe having already left  Lantern Yard:    ââ¬ËIn the early years of this century such a linen-weaver, named Silas  Marner, worked at his vocation in a stone cottage that stood among the  nutty hedgerows near the village of Raveloe, and not far from the edge  of a deserted stone pit.ââ¬â¢    This does not tell us much about Marnerââ¬â¢s character but a change in  character is not the only thing to attract interest. The text gives us  an insight into his appearance by saying,    ââ¬Ësuch a linen weaver,ââ¬â¢.    To me this is implying Marner is quite a stereotypical linen-weaver,    					    
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