I will try to demonstrate what the public?s reaction was to the angel in ? The very old man with Enormous wings ? and Kafka?s ? hunger artist ? from what the authors wrote in the stories and the characters point of view. I will also try illustrate how the public has more of a meaning in both stories. In ? A very old man with Enormous Wings ? the public goes to see the old man because they wanted to see what he was. The owner?s of the house where the old man was at, thought that he was a lonely castaway from some foreign ship wrecked by the storm. They thought this because they spoke to him and he answered in a incomprehensible dialect with a strong sailor?s voice. The public tossed him things to eat as if he weren?t a supernatural creature but a circus animal. When Father Gonzaga went to see the old man there was less frivolous onlookers than those who had arrived earlier. The simplest among them thought that he should be named mayor of the world. Others of sterner mind felt that he should be promoted to the rank of five-star general in order to win all wars. There were other people that hoped he would be put to reproduce, so there would be a race of winged wise man who could take charge of the universe. Father Gonzaga suspected that he was an impostor because he did not understand the language of God and did not know how to greet his minister. He did not think that the old man was an angel, he instead felt that it could of been a trick of the devil. Curious people came from far away because they thought that he could cure
The Essay on Judge Pyncheon Hawthorne Man Public
Kryptonite. Even Superman had a weakness that could lead to his death in a matter of minutes. Why No man is all-powerful or has no flaws. Does true character always shine through one's public persona The answer is no. In the House of the Seven Gables, Nathaniel Hawthorne effectively shows his disgust towards Judge Pyncheon whose later exposed as someone different from his public image. What ...
them and change their misfortunes. During all this time, the old man was the only one who did not take part in his own act. During those days a carnival attraction arrived with a woman who had been changed to a spider. The old man?s reputation was already ruined by this time. After this people stopped going to see the old man. Months had past when the old man got new wings and just flew away. I think that the angel in ? The very old man with Enormous wings ? might have actually stayed. He left because no one treated him right. They did not believe in him just because he did not give them what they wanted, so they did not have faith in him. The public could of just believe in him and treated him well maybe he would have gotten well and then he would have gaven them what they wanted. In the ?hunger Artist ?, the artist wanted the public to appreciate his fasting abilities by watching him and giving him fame. We know this by the following passage; ? Why stop fasting… ?, … why should he be cheated of the fame he would Professional fasting had diminished remarkably the last decade. For elders he was often a joke, while for children he was a special treat. There were different kinds of watchers that watched the artist.
There were groups of watchers who would huddle to together in a corner to play cards. They intended to give the artist Some space, because they thought he would appreciate to be alone. He did not, instead it made him miserable and made his fast seem unendurable. Then there are the watchers more to his taste. The watchers that would sit close up to the bars because they were not content with the dim night lighting on the hall. The artist would not sleep, he was happy at spending sleepless nights with such watchers. People began to get uninterested in watching the ? Hunger Artist ? because no one could produce evidence that the fast had really been continuos; only the artist knew that, therefore he was his only satisfied spectator of his own fast. Years past and still no one took his trouble seriously. People felt that his depression was do to the fasting. They also felt that fasting made him react with an outburst of fury; he would shake the bars of his cage like a wild animal. More years past, suddenly the hunger artist found himself deserted by the amusement seekers and In the ? Hunger Artist ? the public could not have just been content in knowing that he was fasting.
The Essay on Hunger Artist Fasting Cage People
'y"U"u Synopsis Kafka's short "A Hunger Artist" tells the story of a once well known professional hunger artist. During the time before "the interest in professional fasting [had] markedly diminished," the hunger artist was a great source of excitement for people. Kafka describes the way people once used to gather around the hunger artist's cage and watch him as "he sat there pallid in black ...
They saw how skinny he was and they still thought that he could have had been eating on the side. This shows the lack of trust people The two stories should be compared because of their similarities in the way the public treats the main characters. The public was just interested in the ? Hunger Artist ? because he was an entertainment for them. They watched him for a couple of years, but it then got to a point when people started saying, ? that they would not watch him anymore because they were not with him all day, so how could they be sure that he was not eating anything on the side. ? The public in ? The very old man with Enormous wings ? were interested in the old man because they thought he was an angel. They stopped being interested in him when they saw that he could not do miracles for them. With this we can see that the public in both stories were only enticed by the two characters as long as they thought that they were getting something from them. The public tried to use the characters for their own benefits. I think that the two writers are focusing on how the public reacts to the characters in ? The very old man with Enormous wings ? and the ? Hunger Artist ? because they are trying to show how the world has changed when it comes to having faith in other people or in a religious matter.