The Unfaithful Essays

  • Unfaithful

    1290 Words  | 3 Pages

    Friday afternoon Mike Webster called me out of the blue and simply implored that I accompany him at Blue Lounge’s happy hour. I obliged, for I had no plans for that night, not for lack of alternatives, but for a recent lack of enthusiasm for the usual frivolity of LA’s nightlife. Mike sounded so determined over the phone, which was wholly unlike the Mike I knew from University, that I simply had to take his invitation seriously. So, while Jay and Izzy were getting complimentary lap dances at the

  • The Bride: A Short Story: Unfaithful Bride

    2592 Words  | 6 Pages

    Unfaithful Bride Now Maribell fearfully clutched her dress, trying the calm her voilent shaking. No one was going to help her. There was no prison in the village, instead, she had spent the last 7 months locked in her fathers basement. However, she knew it wasn 't his fault, he had given her a chance to escape, which she had foolishly refused. Listening to the crowd in front of her, she felt a deep sorrow over come her. People she had once called family were shouting for the push. Friends were

  • The Unfaithful John Proctor In The Crucible By Arthur Miller

    609 Words  | 2 Pages

    John Proctor had a very great life till Abigail came along. He is proof that if someone is unfaithful it can cost them everything, maybe even life. In the beginning of “The Crucible” John Proctor is angry, cold-hearted, and unfaithful. This eventually turns into faithfulness to his wife. In the first act John Proctor is cold hearted. “Abby, I may think of you softly from time to time but I will cutoff my hand before I’ll ever touch you again. Wipe it out of mind. We never touched Abby.” (Miller

  • Analysis Of Before He Cheats

    842 Words  | 2 Pages

    Synthesis essay: “Before he cheats” & “Perfect” Although the danger and adrenaline an unfaithful acquaintance may feel to being unfaithful to their loved one; it can cause the other person in the relationship to feel damage physically and mentally; leaving a mess of words of feeling unworthy. Both the songs: “before he cheats” and “perfect” show a women’s perspective of what it felt like to being cheated on, However “Before He Cheats” uses her betrayal of trust to good use in contrast to “perfect’s”

  • Lying And Irony In Shakespeare's Othello

    661 Words  | 2 Pages

    Lying affects the characters in a way that Iago convinces Othello that Desdemona is unfaithful, Othello thinks that Desdemona gave the handkerchief to Cassio, and Cassio is in a relationship while being married. Lying affects Othello when Iago convinces Othello that Desdemona is unfaithful. Othello is confused by Iago because Iago is playing games with him. Othello believes that his wife, Desdemona is not unfaithful “By the world, I think my wife be honest and think she is not...” (III. iii. 438-439)

  • John Madden Proof Essay

    1183 Words  | 3 Pages

    is both faithful and unfaithful to mise-en-scène in the beginning, middle, and end of the selected scene. The mise-en-scène in the beginning of the scene suggests Madden’s faithfulness to Auburn’s play, Proof. The

  • Analysis Of Baz Luhrmann's Romeo And Juliet

    913 Words  | 2 Pages

    had hatred for each other for so long that the reason for how their hatred began is forgotten. Romeo and Juliet were the ones who had to pay the consequences for their families’ feud. Baz Luhrmann’s Romeo and Juliet adaptation is both faithful and unfaithful to mise-en-scène in the beginning, middle, and end of the scene. The mise-en-scène in this scene suggests Luhrmann’s both faithfulness and unfaithfulness to Shakespeare’s play. In the beginning of the scene, it starts off with a group of women

  • Anti Hero In The Odyssey

    655 Words  | 2 Pages

    While Penelope on the other hand waited 20 years and didn’t ever cheat on him with any other guy. As he advanced on his journey into book 12, he then became unfaithful to his crew. He became unfaithful to them when they were on their way to the six-headed monster named Scylla, Odysseus withheld important information from them and he thinks, “but as I sent them towards Scylla, I told them nothing” (12.161-162). As they went forward

  • Essay on Jealousy in Much Ado About Nothing, Othello, and Winter's Tale

    875 Words  | 2 Pages

    both Othello and Cassio. Iago channels the jealousy that Othello and Cassio have made him feel, and uses it against them in a hateful plan. Iago starts the process by planting the seeds of jealousy in Othello's mind, telling him Desdemona has been unfaithful. He then proceeds to cultivate the growing jealousy by feeding it with more lies, and twisting innocent events into situations which would serve his needs (his telling Othello that Cassio and Desdemona met in secret, and convincing him that Desdemona

  • Daisy Buchanan Is The Worst Character In The Great Gatsby

    617 Words  | 2 Pages

    F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby is his statement of lifestyle in America in the 20’s. The author develops unlikable characters like Tom Buchanan an Old Money racist and Daisy a vapid spoilt individual to show the greediness and wealth in the 20’s. Overall, the worst character in this novel is Daisy Buchanan because she is careless, insensitive, and disloyal. Initially, Daisy Buchanan is the worst character in this novel because she is very cruel. Since she leads Gatsby into thinking

  • Chapter 8

    563 Words  | 2 Pages

    “The Lady with the Dog” was written by Anton Chekhov and depicts the story of Dmitri Dmitritch Gurov who accidently falls in love with a woman named Anna Sergeyevna. Dmitri had been unfaithful to his wife for many years, and believed that women were considered as “the lower race” and viewed as an object that men can toy with and manipulate. One day he notices Anna, the woman with the small Pomeranian, and begins to have an affair with her. This continues until she was called back home. Dmitri felt

  • Doctor Dobson Divorce

    1433 Words  | 3 Pages

    be put forth to stop a divorce from taking place even if one of the spouses has admitted to being unfaithful. Doctor Dobson first looks at the reactions of a spouse when they find out that their marriage is beginning to slip away because their mate is involved in an affair. Across the board in all the cases he has studied or personally

  • Analysis Of Medea On Euripides

    1101 Words  | 3 Pages

    Euripides had two disastrous marriages to unfaithful wives (Monogan). Thus, his general descriptions of destructive women, as in Medea and Phaedra, could be attributed to this. In the specific case of Medea, where there is a clear theme of adultery, there is a projection of his wives onto Jason and himself onto Medea. However, rather than writing a play about a male protagonist who had unfaithful wives, like a literal project of his life would be, Euripides inverts the

  • The Importance Of Infidelity

    1131 Words  | 3 Pages

    with fidelity; some people may be married but still commit unfaithful actions. When it comes to religion, findings showed that religious people tend to be more faithful compared to the nonreligious. For religious people, fidelity is an important moral value that must be respected, thus religious people are more likely “to disapprove deviant behaviours, such as infidelity” (Jackman, 2014, p.81). Furthermore, “persons who have been unfaithful in the past hold more favourable attitudes towards cheating

  • The Great Gatsby Identity Quotes

    519 Words  | 2 Pages

    Throughout the course of the novel, it becomes easy to infer Tom’s true identity; Tom is an unfaithful spouse, consumed with wealth, and a narcissist. First off, Tom thinks because he loves Daisy it is okay for him to have sexual interactions with other females. Tom thinks he is in a league of his own and that his actions do not have consequences. Even during Tom and Daisy’s honeymoon, Tom was unfaithful to Daisy by “being with” another individual. Tom had no business being with a chambermaid in

  • Archetypes In Le Morte D´arthur

    572 Words  | 2 Pages

    reader could chose the unfaithful wife. The queen Gwynevere and Lancelot have an adulterous relationship with each other. The queen being married is being unfaithful. The queen and Lancelot have slept together under the noses of the king and his court he is supposed to be a pure knight but instead he is sleeping with his kings wife. Malory states ¨Disregardful of the blood on his hands Sir Lancelot lay down with the queen and they made love.¨(483) This quote shows the unfaithful wife because Lancelot

  • Morality in The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

    545 Words  | 2 Pages

    Tom was the most immoral character because his lack of honesty and devotion for those around him led to Gatsby’s death. Tom Buchanan’s unfaithful characteristics led to weak interpersonal relationships which can be attributed to his arrogance. The first essential trait which is found in all moral people is devotion to their friends and family. By developing unfaithful characteristics, one quickly becomes forgetful and disregards the ones they had once cared for. Despite his claimed love for Dai...

  • Odysseus

    867 Words  | 2 Pages

    Odysseus In homer's Odyssey the main character Odysseus is a person who only tries to help himself. Although he earns the trust of his men while in Troy, he loses it on his perilous journey home. Many times in the epic he manipulates others, commits foolish acts and is full of hubris. He tries to take shortcuts and as a result of this is men are killed and his boats destroyed. He plays with the lives of his men and he is punished for it. Odysseus is not a hero because, he is foolish, lacks

  • Comparing Anton Chekhov's and Joyce Oates' The Lady with the Dog

    940 Words  | 2 Pages

    it wouldn't be a bad thing to make her acquaintance" (Chekhov, 170). He was a married man, yet he was on a vacation by himself like a single man. His intentions to meet Anna displayed acts of unfaithfulness. "He had begun being unfaithful to her long ago- had been unfaithful to [his wife] often and, probably for that reason, almost always spoke ill of women, and when they were talked of in his presence used to call them 'the inf... ... middle of paper ... ...emale experience and the male lover

  • Comparing Emelia And Desdemona In Shakespeare's Othello

    930 Words  | 2 Pages

    There are many similarities and differences between Emelia and Desdemona. The status of the men they have married and their faithful and duteous love to their spouses throughout the story. Contrasting their views on marriage and the men that are in their lives. The major similarity is how well the one man that seemed to have snakelike mind and silver tongue played them both. Emelia and Desdemona are similar and indifferent in their blind love for their husbands, the type of man they have married