Friday, April 24, 2020
Portrait Of Artist Essays - Saint Stephen, Religion, 1st Millennium
  Portrait Of Artist    In chapter one, a significant event was when Stephen went up to the reactor's  office to tell of Father Dolan's pandying him. He felt that he had been  falsely punished and did not want it to happen again. This seems to be a turning  point for Stephen because it took courage for a small boy to travel to travel  through the gloom of a strange building by himself to speak with such a  highly-honored man. Stephen is praised and cheered for by the other boys  afterward which delights him and actually makes him feel included. The entire  mood of the chapter is changed from one of seriousness to one of joy for    Stephen's accomplishment of this event. The second chapter brings about  maturity in Stephen. At the very end, he is kissed by a prostitute which is very  significant because it brings about confusion and frustration about life,  church, and family. Stephen is pulled between doing what he has been taught is  right, and what his body is telling him to do. The inner conflict makes him  angry and bitter as he does not know how to handle it. He becomes a hypocrite in  his own world by saying the right things and doing the wrong ones. The question  of how he should live is one of the first critical decisions Stephen has to make  which shows that he is growing up. Chapter three contains a very significant  event. After constant struggle between right and wrong, Stephen finally  confesses all of his sins to a priest. Stephen turns his life around and makes  each day become filled only with what is good and holy. He exercises immense  self-discipline through prayer and exemplary behavior. This change in behavior  was important because he was no longer disgusted with himself or hateful towards  others who do right as well. In chapter four Stephen takes a long walk to think.    During this walk, he decides that he does not want to be a priest, but wants to  be a writer instead. Words and phrases are floating around in his head and he  realizes that writing might actually be his calling. This decision will shape  and form the rest of his life, not to mention decide his future. Chapter five  presents the resolution to Stephen's story. He decides to leave Ireland and  the home he grew up in. This decision is important because it is the turning  point in Stephen's life-the event that is the beginning of his adult life.    Stephen is going to expose himself to a whole new world as he ventures away from  his family and the familiar surroundings of his hometown. 2.) I. Apologise, Pull  out his eyes, Pull out his eyes, Apologise. (pg. 20) II. The clouds were  drifting above him silently and silently the seatangle was drifting below him;  (pg. 175) III. The preacher took a chainless watch from a pocket within his  soutane and, having considered its dial for a moment in silence, placed it  silently before him on the table. IV. Her bosom was as a bird's, soft and  slight, slight and soft as the breast of a darkplumaged dove. (pg. 176) V. Once  upon a time and a very good time it was there was a moocow coming down along the  road and this moocow that was coming down along the road met a nicens little boy  named baby tuckoo.... (pg. 19)    
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