Preview

Gold Bug and Other Tales Study Guide

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
7348 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Gold Bug and Other Tales Study Guide
LIGEIA An unnamed narrator opens the story by claiming not to remember the circumstances in which he met his beloved, the lady Ligeia. Although he fixates on her rare learning, her unusual beauty, and her love of language, the narrator cannot specifically recall how Ligeia became his love object. He does speculate, however, that he first encountered her in Germany, where her family lived in an ancient city on the Rhine. He is confident that Ligeia spoke frequently about her family, but he does not believe he ever knew her last name. The narrator counteracts this ignorance of Ligeia’s origins with a faithful memory of her person. According to the narrator, Ligeia is tall, slender, and, in her later days, emaciated. She treads lightly, moving like a shadow. Though fiercely beautiful, Ligeia does not conform to a traditional mold of beauty: the narrator identifies a “strangeness” in her features. Ligeia’s most distinctive feature is her hair—black as a raven and naturally curly. Among her physical features, only her brilliant black eyes rival her hair. They conceal the great knowledge and understanding Ligeia possesses and shares with the narrator. The narrator relishes his memory of her beauty but loves her learned mind even more passionately. She has guided him, during the early years of their marriage, through the chaotic world of his metaphysical studies. As time passes, Ligeia becomes mysteriously ill. On the day of her death, she begs the narrator to read a poem she has composed about the natural tragedy of life. The poem describes a theater where angels have gathered to watch the mysterious actions of mimes, which are controlled by formless, outside presences. Suddenly, amid the drama, a creature intrudes and feeds on the mimes. With the fall of the curtain, the angels reveal that the tragedy is entitled “Man,” and the hero is the creature, the Conqueror Worm. With the close of the poem, Ligeia shrieks a prayer

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    human mind and soul. A beautiful woman is carried off by evil, a play on the…

    • 495 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    When Montag meets Clarisse he realizes there is something different about her. Clarisse's personality is something Montag has never seen before. After going on a walk with Clarisse, Montag has many thoughts. On page 9 it says, “ What incredible power of identification the girl had; she was like the eager watcher of a marionette show, anticipating each flicker of an eyelid, each gesture of his hand, each flick of a finger, the moment before it began. How long had they walked together? Three minutes? Five? Yet how large that time seemed now. How immense a figure she was on the stage before him; what a shadow she threw on the wall with her slender body!” Montag thinks this in his head when he gets home from the walk with Clarisse. This is the very beginning of Montag’s realization that there is more to life than what his society is telling him.…

    • 509 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Many metaphors are employed within Gascoigne's poem, relating the speaker's troubles to understandable situations that allow readers to imagine and empathize with the speaker's situation. With a metaphor consisting of the mouse and bait (lines 5-6), the mouse has been able to escape a trap and fears of being trapped again. This compares to the speaker’s relationship because it implies that his relationship with the woman is toxic, relating the woman to the trap and himself to the mouse, the woman effectively trapping him into the toxic relationship. A second metaphor consists of a fly…

    • 317 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Cecelia Everhart was a raven haired beauty who was quite dull and vain. Seated next to her was her husband, Charles, a rather tiny fellow. Weak and unintimidating, he gave off the feeling of a rather poor man; however he was rather malapert and therefore quite rude. Their daughter was an exact replica of her mother, sitting on the edge of her chair and drinking tea with her pinky extended.…

    • 1088 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Now these two people are both everyday citizens in society however one’s knowledge supersedes the other. Bradbury uses these two people as substitutes for Clarisse and Montag when first meeting. Clarisse’s knowledge overshadows Montag’s with simple things such as dew on the grass. Clarisse addresses this when on a stroll with Montag when Montag starts being frustrated with such an observation “He suddenly couldn’t remember if he had known this or not and it made him quite irritable”(7). This shows how Clarisse’s knowledge is victorious to Montag’s ignorance, making him frustrated about such a simple aspect in everyday life. This is not the only time Clarisse has changed Montag with her knowledge, when finished with the walk Clarisse changes Montag’s whole perspective when asking him if he’s happy “Of course I’m happy. What does she think I’m not”(18)? This shows Clarisse’s knowledge now changing Montag in…

    • 892 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Jennie Dixianna

    • 1120 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Jennie Dixiannas’ act starts when she ascends the rope to get to the top of the hippodrome, similarly this process shows that from a young age she has had a hard time relating with others in society due to the psychological scaring done from past events. “First, she climbed a rope, which slithered snake like between and around her legs as she rose higher”(28). Ever since her mother bled out while giving birth and passed away it has been a struggle for Jennie to accept it so she just tries to put it in the back of her mind and distract herself from the haunting scene of her mother dying. The rope symbolizes as a snake which slithers between and around her legs. Furthermore, this portion of the act indicates the beginning of the endless raping done by her father after her mother passed away. As a result, she had to adjust to the way things were which was a lot for a 6 year old child. Similarly, “Jennie became a walking phantom, the living receptacle of unlived lives” (33). This example illustrates’ how hard it was for her to deal with the hardships of living in the real world with nobody to help her with her problems.…

    • 1120 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Annie seemed unaffected by this routine until one fateful night a moth flew right into her candle and a struggle between life and death unfolded before her eyes. Though she relived what she witnessed in graphic detail, she managed to find the significance in this experience to discover the writer within herself. Through the sacrificial death of this moth she realizes the need for sacrifice on the part of the writer in order to be worthy of compare to her inspirational poet Arthur…

    • 703 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Midge Essay

    • 700 Words
    • 3 Pages

    “Midge” by Edwin Morgan is a dramatic monologue which tells an exciting story of a swarm of midges being rallied as they prepare to ambush a group of rambling humans in order to feed their eggs with human blood. This is a humorous poem about a seemingly unimportant event but which is rich in military ideas, told through an extensive use of word choice and humour.…

    • 700 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    this remark recalls Montag’s description of Clarisse as a mirror in “The Hearth and the…

    • 373 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Liriope, a fair nymph long coveted by mortal and immortal alike, was the victim of rape by the hands of Cephisus, the river god. The result of the ugly abuse was a beautiful boy, Narcissus. Liriope inquired Tiresias, a seer, about the longevity of her new son. Tiresias replied, "If e'er he knows himself he surely dies." The worried mother watched as her son grew older and more enchanting each day.…

    • 520 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    For this exam, I decided to memorize the description of Lamia’s snake-woman appearance to force myself into a very careful close reading that would help me with the term paper for this class. This passage is the first visual impression the reader gets of Lamia, and Keats depicts her as a creature whose appearance overflows with striking sensual detail that ultimately cannot be sufficiently described in language. I began memorizing the poem two lines at a time whenever I found a few minutes to spare—the five minutes before a class began, my morning bus ride, etc. I even posted each day’s lines as my status on Facebook, so even my leisure time was inflected with Lamia for about a week. My memorization process was stolen from my childhood days of piano lessons. As a child, I would learn a piece of music by breaking it into sections, mastering a section at a time and after each section returning to top to do the whole piece as far as I had learned.…

    • 1167 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    CHIGNON BY CHI CHUN

    • 2050 Words
    • 6 Pages

    3 So on that day, all the women in the village let their hair hang loose to dry over their shoulders. Some of the women with flowering hair were as beautiful as vineyard fairies, others as hideous as monsters. Take my fifth uncle's wife for example-a squat, withered old hag. On her nearly-bald head she used black ash to draw in square hairline, and then painted her scalp pitch black. Thus when shampooing her hair, the charcoal was completely washed away, and out shone the half-bald, shiny crown of her head, fringed with thin wisps of hair fluttering down her back. She would hobble to and fro helping my mother fix dinner. I never dared glance her way.…

    • 2050 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A Friend in Need

    • 795 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The text is written by William Somerset Maugham, an English writer. He achieved a great success as a novelist with such novels as “Of Human Bondage”, “The Razor’s Edge” and others, as a dramatist, but he is best known by his short stories. His novels and short stories are characterized by great narrative facility, simplicity of style, and ironic point of view. Maugham says that a writer can’t change life, he must only try to amuse his reader, stir his imagination. And this is where Maugham achieves perfection: his stories are cool and pessimistic but always fascinating.…

    • 795 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The integument of the upper part of his head has lost most of his shiny hair like the leaves of an old tree succumbing by the pass of the years. Nevertheless he uses a black and scurfy comb, the one that has taken the life of his keratinous filaments. In addition, his mature and porous nose takes deep heavy breaths identical to the giant from the ´´Jim Henson's the Storyteller`` series. Their so powerful that you can hear how the endless air fills his aged lungs giving him the ability to stay alive. In fact, his capacity to pay attention is much vanish from his knowledgeable hears. They are rounded with extended curves, full of potholes like an old street from the past century. Although his exhaust eyes are overshadow by the years, they still show a lighten soul. Surrounding the white membrane there is a small circular portion colored of an enduring green almost incapable of receiving light. His wrinkle face plenty of kindness reveals just in moments what kind of person he is. Also, it is crowded of lines like a landscape from an old map that belonged to pirate marked by his deadly fights on the sea. The desire to kiss the most loved woman by the experience of his lips is not possible due to the cruel reality of the downfall. His rough hands enriched with intelligence accumulate the deep scars of all life hard work. The lines in it are well stated revealing that he is a define man.…

    • 730 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    the selfish giant

    • 1538 Words
    • 4 Pages

    - At the beginning, all of us was fascinated with the perfect orchestra that exqusitely gathers sound, colors. The giant’s garden is as a glamorous nature picture and it was such a beautiful garden that everyone wanted to live in. As the giant came back, he set the board to prevent the child from playing there and built a high wall all around the garden, the garden after that became unrecognized. All creature simultaneously boycotted the giant. The were waving a silent revolt his selfishness. The garden was dominted by brutal and destructive forces with color of dead, gloominess, lonliness and the sound of fears “the birds didn’t care to sing…”. So it was always Winter there, and the North Wind, and the Hail, and the Frost, and the Snow danced throufh the trees because he was too selfish. It seemed that the selfishness and unkindness of the Giant discouraged to open the gate way for evil. When the giante changed his attitude and behavior, the garden changed accordingly. The gaden became a heavenly place with color of vitality, happiness and enjoyment. It was such a lovely scene. We can see that the giant’s…

    • 1538 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics