Preview

Religious Figures in 5th Business

Better Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1619 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Religious Figures in 5th Business
Religious Practitioner's Assignment
Lea Zimmerman

1. Amasa Dempster

From his professional career to his personal life, religion consumes every aspect of Amasa Dempster's life. He is known by the citizens of Deptford to impose his view of religion on everyone and everything he encounters. When Mary was sick in bed after Paul's birth his actions reveal that his feelings and religious beliefs often overtake reason. He knelt on the floor next to the bed where Mary laid and prayed feverously that it would be easier for Paul if his mother were to accompany him to heaven. Mrs. Dempster seemed unaffected by his ignorance and narrow-mindedness, but these character traits were large factors in his ostracism from the community. Amasa had tendency to drop at any time and pray with "intense passion"; Dunstan thought this was indecent and found him spooky because he was believed to walk with god.
After discovering that he had been teaching Paul about cards, illusions, and worst of all, the Catholic saints, Amasa forbade Dunstan to talk to Paul or enter their home. Dunstan was angry because he demeaned his talents to mere cheating and gambling. He also seemed to hold a grudge towards Amasa because of the way he treated Mary.

I think that Amasa Dempster is the strangest character in the novel. His actions prove he is neither intelligent nor articulate, further confirming the contrast of Baptist feeling to Presbyterian good sense. I agree with Dunstan that his sporadic praying is spooky, but I also think that his disposition is generally eerie; he is quiet and soft spoken, but every experience that the reader is exposed to conveys his creepy nature. The fact that his wife is so much younger than himself makes him seem that much creepier. He acts as though he loves his wife; even when he found her in the pits with a tramp he did not question her, only helped her. Tying your wife to a rope is inhumane and appalling, and makes her seem like a domestic animal instead of his

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Religion in the workplace

    • 703 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Imagine growing up in a home where religion is the basis for everything you do. For instance, your father is a minister which means that you are in church 5 days a week. As you are embossed in this culture, you begin to take on the traits, beliefs and practices associated with it. You are fully immersed into your religion which now becomes second nature to you. You are taught that God helps people in need and looks out for all those who worship him. As you grow older, you believe more and more that your religious practice is what gets you through. You are now an adult and finally have the opportunity to live on your own. You’ve just been hired by a fortune 500 company and you are ecstatic because, it is your belief that God is the reason you were put in that position. As you report in to your first day of work, you realize that it is all you have ever wanted and you pray to thank God for the opportunity that he has provided you. You feel a tap on the shoulder and there is your supervisor telling you that you cannot pray in the office as it is prohibited by company rules. Many of your co-workers see this and they approach you at lunch time. They all feel your pain because they too have been told that due to company policy they also could not practice their religion at work. This is a problem. You realize that growing up in a Utilitarian environment urges you to fix this problem for the greater good of all the people working in this office. Religion should be allowed in the workplace to ensure that all people are afforded the opportunity to worship as they choose, within guidelines. Happier employees make for a better, more productive work environment.…

    • 703 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    After being told he can no longer see her, Dunstan's brother Willie falls ill to the point of death, Dunstan rushes over to call Mary where she then prays over Willie's body, in which Dunstan's claims she brought him back to life. "... finding him just as I had left him, white and cold and stiff. Mrs Dempster looked at him solemnly, but not sadly, then she knelt by the bed and took his hands in hers and prayed..."Willie", said she in a low, infinitely kind, and indeed almost cheerful tone... Willie sighed and moved his legs a little. I fainted" (53-54). This is one of the three miracles Mary performs which lead to Dunstan believing that Mary is, in fact, a saint. Dunstan is familiarised with two of the three miracles throughout his childhood leading him to, later on, study more about hagiology, where he also changes his name from Dunstable to Dunstan, solidifying the change in…

    • 692 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    A Brief Summary Of Dustan

    • 364 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Dunstan continues his study of saints and has established himself to be a scholar and author. He has doubts about his life and decides to visit the Jesuit Bollandists on his next trip to Europe, a group of people who specialize in the study of saints. He then meets a priest named Padre Ignacio Blazon and opens up about his theory of Mary Dempster becoming a saint. The priest rejects the idea, but mentions that meeting Mary Dempster has a lesson in itself that Dustan needs to discover or he may go mad.…

    • 364 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Personally, I believe people have morals and values ... and they are very important parts of a person's makeup. As in the military, we hold integrity as one of our core values ... it makes us dependable and trustworthy. I think it is very important to operate truthfully to one's self ... because if you can't be true to yourself, can you be true to a partner? 

But it sounds like…

    • 617 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Explain briefly each of the three biblical concepts in Hill “that have a direct bearing on ethical decision-making” and are “repeatedly emphasized in the Bible.”…

    • 691 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A psychological truth Dunstan Ramsay posses in the novel is the belief that Mary Dempster is a saint. Even at a young age, Dunstan believed that “She lived by a light that arose from within.” (46). As a result of this belief Dunstan had, he then got interested in saints and continued to study it until he became an expert in hagiology. But his efforts are futile, because later on he learns that Mary Dempster is merely a fool-saint. A fool-saint is someone who seems to have all the qualities of a saint, except for Prudence. But Dunstan chooses to ignore this fact and continued on with believing that she is…

    • 962 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Authur Dimmesdale, a puritan reverend in Boston, fell in love with Hester Prynne, a young woman married to Roger Chillingworth. His inability to control his feelings led to an adulterous relationship between himself and Hester, resulting in the birth of Pearl. Both Hester and Authur lived guiltily, and Dimmesdale punished himself for the sin he committed. When Chillingworth arrived in America and realized his wife’s affair, he sought to discover Pearl’s father and take vengeance. Since Dimmesdale felt ill, Chillingworth utilized this opportunity to disguise himself as Dimmesdale’s physician since he has knowledge about medicine. Suspecting Dimmesdale as the father of Pearl, Chillingworth, with a maleficent personality, exploited Dimmesdale and tortured him psychologically. Critics argue about who committed the greater sin since Hester and Dimmesdale committed adultery while Chillingworth took revenge and tortured Dimmesdale.…

    • 552 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Firstly, Paul Dempster grows up as an outcast in Deptford. Through his mother's ?simpleness' leading the tight social world of the town, to cast out his whole family and force's Paul to leave the town and create a new image for himself. Paul runs away to the circus in his early teens because of the mental abuse he took from the town because of his mothers incident with the tramp. Dunstable comment's, "Paul was not a village favourite, and the dislike so many people felt for his mother - dislike for the queer and persistently unfortunate - they attached to the unoffending son," (Davies' 40) illustrates how the town treated Paul because of his mother's actions. With the way that they did treat Paul and his entire family, it?s no wonder why he wanted to change his identity. Paul leaves his past because of the actions by his mother and the guilt he feels because his "birth was what robbed her of her…

    • 1069 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Dempster not only separates him from society, but greatly damages his social life. From the beginning of the novel, Dunstan’s role of the Dempster family’s caretaker affects his popularity. He says, “Being unofficial watchdog to the Dempster family was often a nuisance to me and did nothing for my popularity" (Davies 22). This reveals that Dunstan willingly chooses to be separated from society due to his obsession with Mrs Dempster, seeing that he can easily criticize and shun her family like everyone else. Also, after realizing that he is falling in love with her, Dunstan focuses all his attention Mrs. Dempster. Liesl tells him, “You despise almost everybody except Paul’s mother. No wonder she seems like a saint to you; you have made her carry the affection you should have spread among fifty people” (Davies 221). This explains why Dunstan cannot form a meaningful relationship with other women in his life because he fills Mrs. Dempster with the love that is intended for fifty people, leaving no room for others in his life. This leads Dunstan to be unable to connect with anyone except Mrs Dempster and it commences his exclusion from…

    • 1255 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Fifth Business Patriarchy

    • 1529 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Throughout all of history, examples of a domineering male are significantly prevalent and easily identifiable. In Arthur Millers Death of a Salesman and Robertson Davies Fifth Business, plots, subplots and the relationships between characters, both major and minor, work to establish the motif of male supremacy and patriarchy. In Fifth Business, Dunstable Ramsay and his childhood friend, Percy Boyd Staunton, each approached relationships differently. However, each approach was aimed at the maintenance of independence and control over ones own life. Quite similarly, in Death of a Salesman, the men of the Loman family, Happy, Biff and William, treated the women in their lives with little to no respect, objectifying them and treating them as a…

    • 1529 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Dimmesdale, the personification of "human frailty and sorrow," is young, pale, and physically delicate. An ordained Puritan minister, he is well educated, and he has a philosophical turn of mind. There is no doubt that he is devoted to God, passionate in his religion, and effective in the pulpit. He also has the principal conflict in the novel, and his agonized suffering is the direct result of his inability to disclose his sin. In Puritan terms, Dimmesdale's predicament is that he is unsure of his soul's status: He is exemplary in performing his duties as a Puritan minister, an indicator that he is one of the elect; however, he knows he has sinned and considers himself a hypocrite, a sign he is not chosen.…

    • 778 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    When Dimmesdale stands upon the pulpit, trying to fess up, he begins to worry, “Would not the people start up in their seats… and tear him down from the pulpit which he defiled… They heard it all, and but did reverence him more” (P.99). Dimmesdale half-heartedly tries to confess, never fully willing to commit to revealing his secret but receives no input from the town who loves him. Thus, he creates an excuse for himself and denies his sin. Though there is an attempt at confession, he ultimately does not profess his crime, thus continuing his denial. When sat in front of the town, “Mr. Dimmesdale was thinking of his grave, he questioned himself whether the grass would ever grow on it, because in a cursed thing must there be buried” (P.98). Dimmesdale’s guilt shows as he ponders upon his grave, he feels massive guilt that causes him pain, yet he does not disclose his mistakes. He battles himself with immense shame, but faithfully chooses to harbor pain within himself over facing the consequences of his adultery. With Dimmesdale’s reluctance to divulge his misdeed, he contrasts with…

    • 755 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the novel Fifth Business, guilt is a plague that has spread throughout the lives of Dunstan Ramsay, and Paul Dempster; both characters are drenched with guilt that was a result of a tragic incident caused by Percy Staunton Boyd when he threw the snowball and it “hit Mrs. Dempster on the back of the head.” (Davies, 2). Dunstan experiences guilt early on in his childhood, realizing it is him who ultimately caused the premature labour of Paul, “Nevertheless this conversation reheated my strong sense of guilt and responsibility about Paul.” (Davies, 136). As the guilt overtakes his life, Dunny compares what he is feeling to what dying feels like and questions whether that would be better than dealing with this overwhelming guilt: “Ah, if dying were all there was to it! Hell and torment at once, but at least you know where you stand. It is living with these guilty secrets that exacts the price” (Davies, 19). Born prematurely, Paul Dempster was convicted of being guilty as he was responsible for robbing his mother of her sanity, as explained to him by his father, Amasa Dempster, “My father always told me it was my birth that…

    • 941 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Physically, his sin caused him to look like “an emaciated figure, his thin cheek, his white, heavy, pain-wrinkled brow” (149); he had become so physically pathetic from the guilt which tore at him internally. Dimmesdale’s method of repentance was much worse than Hester’s, both emotionally and physically. Emotionally, Dimmesdale was deeply torn over his moral responsibilities to himself and his responsibility to the community, ultimately refusing to confront his sin and redeem himself. Instead, he attempts to justify and convince himself that he is refusing to “display [himself] black and filthy in the view of men...because, thenceforward...no evil of the past be redeemed by better service” (91). Dimmesdale refuses to expose his secret in fear of losing the his role and respect in the Puritan community. He laments the relief that he has seen in “sinful brethren...who at last draw free air, after long stifling with his own polluted breath” (90), as he is both physically and emotionally pained by the stifling of his guilt. However, contradicting his own morals--based in the Puritan religion--and those that vest right action and right thought in Hester, Dimmesdale continues to suppress his guilt in an attempt to maintain his prestigious standing within the…

    • 971 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Why is it important for an organization to have a clear definition of diversity? What organizations can you identify that exemplify each of the diversity management paradigms: resistance, discrimination-and-fairness, access-and-legitimacy, and integration-and-learning?…

    • 290 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays