The Character of Paul in Cathers “Pauls Case” Paul is the main character in Willa Cathers story Pauls Case, and throughout most of the story we are given only his perspective and feelings. This insight into Pauls mind exposes the reader to Pauls true character as he evolves into the person he has always wanted to be. Other aspects of the story such as Cathers vivid description of the setting, and the settings change from the bleak home on Cordelia Street to the sparkling New York hotel room add more depth to this evolution. Ultimately, the change in Pauls character is manifested in his case before his schoolteachers, his escape journey to New York, and his reaction to the news of his crime being found out.
While there is no definite point of change to be found in Pauls case with his teachers, it is evident that this event marks the beginning of a change in his mentality and direction. Before this small trial Paul is perceived as distractingly imaginative, high strung, and desperate for attention. His teachers think There is something wrong about the fellow (408) that they cannot pinpoint. Their opinions of him do not change, but Pauls opinion of himself begins to ripen and at this point he seems determined to begin rising above their expectations. Concerning that mentality, he wishes that… some of his teachers [were] there to writhe under his light-heartedness (408).
In one instance after his trial of having to seat one of those teachers at a concert, Paul begins to think negatively of her, but then dismisses those thoughts. He even remarks on feeling like the Geni[e] in the bottle, (409) set free. Subsequently, Pauls reckless trip to New York brings about the most evident and significant change in his character. Cather epitomizes this in her description of the view from his train window: The snow was whirling in the curling eddies above the white bottom lands and the drifts lay already deep in the fields and along the fences, while here and there the long dead grass and dried weed stalks protruded black above it. (415) Pauls old habits of fear and self-defecation are much like those dried weed stalks, whereas the snow of his new identity is beginning to cover them up.
The Essay on Mrs Hutchinson Paul Mother Character
The Effects of Circumstances on Characters in Fiction Many different characteristics come together in a story to make the characters who they are. It can be education, family, economic and social status, the direct environment in which they live, and even their actions throughout the story. All of these things make the main character come to life. For a moment, the character is real to the reader. ...
According to Paul, The only thing that at all surprised him was his own courage… (416) in being able to accomplish such a task as running away. That mentality grows from simple self-astonishment to self-acceptance when Paul reaches the point where He had only to glance down at his attire to reassure himself that here it would be impossible for anyone to humiliate him (418).
Pauls new carefree persona regresses slightly when news of his crime reaches New York. His confidence is shaken, allowing some of his old doubts and fears to resurface: It was to be worse than jail, even; the tepid waters of Cordelia Street were to close over him finally and forever.
The gray monotony stretched before him in hopeless, unrelieved years. It all rushed back upon him with a sickening vividness. (419) This news affects him so far as to make him leave his sanctuary in New York, apparently to commit suicide on a railroad track far outside of Pennsylvania. Toward this end of the story, Paul grows somewhat numb to his surroundings, letting severe determination overtake his persona. Cather draws a comparison between Paul and a drooping carnation in his lapel: It was only one splendid breath they had, in spite of their brave mockery at the winter outside the glass, and it was a losing game in the end it seemed… (420).
Paul does not simply accept this loss, however: … he started to his feet, remembering only his resolution, and afraid lest he should be too late (421).
The ending of the story does not mention that Paul evinced any regret or any additional fear; instead it suggests that Paul finally reaches a peace with his surroundings: … and Paul dropped back into the immense design of things (421).
The Essay on Do The Right Thing
The movie Do the Right Thing, a group of people in the district of Brooklyn, have had enough and tensions are growing in this black ghetto area. The only local businesses are a Korean grocery and Sal's Pizzeria. Mookie, Sal's delivery boy, manages to always be at the center of the action. The movie Do the Right Thing is a movie about a neighborhood that suffers from lack of diversity. On a hot ...
This last statement embodies the reasoning for Pauls journey to New York and serves well to sum up the finality of his change of character and the shift in his mentality. He is an unsatisfied, creative young man who wants to be surrounded by the things that make him feel alive, and he ultimately finds that liveliness and that peace, and then pays the price for it consciously and willingly..