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Milton Babbitt And John Cage
Milton Babbitt and John Cage were both composers who played pivotal roles in the post–World War
II Avant Garde music scene and in the pioneering of electronic music. Both composers found their
roots and were greatly influenced by German–Jewish composer Arnold Schoenberg, however they
both adopted different viewpoints on the relationship between a composer and their audience .
Babbitt believed that a composer or creator did not have an obligation to please his or her audience,
and that his pieces were intended mostly for professionals capable of understanding the context and
intention of his music. Cage on the other hand granted his audience more power and influence,
believing that music was a platform on which audiences could utilize their creativity to adopt new
ways of perceiving and being aware of the world around them. These stances, as well as the
different techniques and methodologies of the composers pitted them on somewhat of a spectrum,
with Babbitt and his systematic, modernist ideas that were largely based in the music schools of
academic institutions on one side and Cage, with his uncontrollable, radical combinations of Avant
Garde sounds on the other side. These ideas on audience construction and relations were also visible
in rock music of the 1960's, particularly in compositions of artists such as Jimi Hendrix and Bob
Dylan.
Milton Babbitt is well known today for his contributions to the pioneering of electronic music,
which involved the use of set theory . As
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Tuck Everlasting Book Report
I read the book Tuck Everlasting, by Natalie Babbitt. The book was published on July 2007. In the
book Winnie decided to run away, but meets a boy who's family has a secret, they are immortal. Will
Winnie choose to be immortal or mortal? Natalie Babbitt's book relates to a mystery book where no
one knows what's going to happen next. The genre of the book is mystery. The book gives you some
good questions to ask yourself. Would you run away with another family to leave your own, for a
special potion. Would you leave to get freedom, love, and a new family. Winnie is a girl who thinks
she has a overprotective family, but they just care about her way to much. But she doesn't know that.
Winnie wants to run away but meets a boy with a family
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How Does Tuck Everlasting Affect Our Life
Drinking from the Spring of Immortality in Tuck Everlasting would ruin your life forever, literally.
Drinking from the spring would be a terrible idea. You could never die. If you were to drink from
the Spring of Immortality, you would never have a normal life ever again. First of all, you wouldn't
ever be able to die, even if you really wanted to eventually grow old and die. You would be on the
earth until the end of time. Even if you did something that would kill any other normal person alive,
you would barely feel a thing and it wouldn't even leave a mark. In Tuck Everlasting, the Tuck
family have all had experiences that would kill a person, but were left unharmed.
If this ever happened to you, you'd constantly be worrying about making sure that nobody finds
about about you immortality, and making sure that no one else finds out about any others that are
like you. An example of this, is how the Tuck family live in constant fear of somebody finding out
about them, awaiting the time when it will finally happen. Also, the Tucks rarely go into town,
afraid that someone will notice how they never grow ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
To prevent this, the Tuck family pretty much everything they could. They piled rocks over it to make
it not look like a freshwater spring to thirsty people on hikes. If Miles or Jesse are near the spring,
and see someone try to drink from it, they will make up any excuse that they have to make to keep
the person from drinking the water, and if worst comes to worst, they will physically restrain them.
In Tuck Everlasting, Miles and Jesse are constantly moving different places and touring countries all
around the world to make sure that the town's people don't recognise them. Every ten years, they
also come back to their town and visit their parents and check on the spring, to make sure that it
remains
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Winnie Foster In Tuck Everlasting
Who is Winnie Foster? Winnie Foster is the main character in the story, Tuck Everlasting. In the
beginning of the story, ten–year–old Winnie Foster runs away from her home into the woods.
Winnie in a brave little girl who runs away to face the world and find her true destiny. Along the
way of her journey, she meets a family who drank water from a special pond in the woods and
became immortal. The first couple of day's she spends with the family, she falls absolutely in love
with them and they learn to love her.
In the beginning of the story, Winnie wasn't at the happiest place in her life. Her family life was
stressing her out, which was the reason to her running away. She doesn't think her parents are right
about her future and her well being. In one scene, Winnie talk to a toad and says,
"That's just what I mean. It's like that every minute. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
She basically saying she wants to liver her life by herself without being watched or taken care of.
Winnie has an amazing impact of the other characters in the story and changes their life forever.
Even though Winnie and the family only know each other for a week they feel like they've know
each other forever. Since Winnie has such a bright and light personality, she really has an impact on
people because of her personality.
Winnie feels as though the family she meets in the forested areas are all the more a family then her
genuine birth guardians. In the beginning the story, they offer her water that could drink to make her
live–until the end of time. Rather she gives an amphibian a chance to drink the water so that in the
event that anyone attempted to hurt him he would live until the end of time. This give up was truly
educational in light of the fact that as opposed to needing to live everlastingly, she surrenders it to a
creature. She winds up thinking about existence and demise, and whether everlasting life is justified
regardless of the danger of unceasing
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Tuck Everlasting Analysis
What would you do if you had the chance to be immortal? Well, in our story "Tuck Everlasting"
you'll figure out just that. The lucky Tuck family has drunk from a spring that grants them
immortality. Now they can never die.I'm going to talk about just a couple of character's point of
views on immortality. OK, now Tuck, our first character, is all against immortality, he hates it,
despises it. First off, he thinks it's unnatural, which it is,and it's pretty hard work. I bet if he could
get back to life and grow again, he'd do it in an instant. I'm with him on the fact that if no one died,
the world would be a pretty nasty place. Next, we have Jesse, who absolutely loves immortality!
Jesse is the party–happy–time all night
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Key Elements in Sinclair Lewis', Babbitt Essay
Sinclair Lewis, the author of Babbitt, devised several key literary elements to explain his full effect
and purpose for writing his novel. Babbitt is a satirist look, at not only one man, but an entire society
as well. He exposes the hypocrisy and mechanization of American society in the 1920's. In the story
Lewis focuses on his main character George Babbitt, the protagonist throughout much of the book,
who is a business with lofty aims and a desire to climb the ladder of the social class. To fully
achieve his opinions and beliefs, Lewis used literary effects of irony and theme. The novel begins in
the 1920's, a decade that had started in economic boom and avid consumerism, only to end crash
and depression. This was a parallel used by ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
By these terms George Babbitt, and many of this acquaintances are quite the bigots toward all of
those who appear different than he is, especially immigrants and minorities in America. The blame
should not be placed squarely on these men,s shoulders for processing such hate filled beliefs, but
their own opinion of the matter is generated through the generations, that immigrants and minorities
are far less superior than the "native" white men who have "always: lived in America. The irony of
this subject in the book is that although men of Babbitt's stature openly shared and joked with one
another about their superiority to all other races, not one would ever admit that he was even by a
small degree a bigot. Buying only the very best material items and throwing dinner parties are only a
few of the ways Babbitt tried to accomplish a more noteworthy place in society and impress his
peers. He is more concerned about these items than about his wife and children and to him, "God
was Modern Appliances" (Lewis pg 114). However, at the end of the story, the irony is no more
evident when Babbitt admits to his son that he has wasted life. He confides in his Ted that he has
ruined his whole life shooting for goals which, in Babbitts lifetime, are realistically unattainable. He
tells Ted that hopefully, the new generation (Ted's generation), can recover from Babbitt's ill fated
dreams, and lead their own lives the way
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Ideal Of The American Ideal
The American Ideal
"If approval replaced dedication as creativity's fuel, this world
Would be barren, empty, decidedly less lovely." – Jen Hatmaker In his will, newspaper publisher
Joseph Pulitzer specified that a $1,000 prize be awarded each year "for the American novel;
published during the year which shall best present the whole atmosphere of American life, and the
highest standards of American manners and manhood" (6). However, in 1917, the president of
Columbia University and Pulitzer advisory board leader Nichols Murray Butler changed the
wording of the criteria to read "the wholesome atmosphere of American life" (7); and by so doing,
limited the scope of what literature was deemed acceptable for consideration of the honor.
Subsequently, in 1921, the Pulitzer Prize for fiction was awarded to a novel about New York high
society during the 1870s and controversy soon followed. In a June 22, 1921 article in The New
Republic, one of the judges that year, literary scholar Robert Morse Lovett, wrote that the winner,
Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton, had not been the jury's choice (6). The panel of judges, which
included Lovett as well as a literature professor and a novelist, had instead selected Sinclair Lewis's
Main Street, a novel Lovett described using the words of his fellow juror Stuart Pratt Sherman, as
having "communicated more life to the reading public than any other novel I can recall..." (6). The
judges' decision to award the p0rize to Lewis was overturned by the
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Tuck Everlasting Essay
Tuck Everlasting– Compare and Contrast Essay Is living forever the greatest gift of the ultimate
curse? This is the question that both the ALA notable book, Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbitt, and
the movie based on the book raise. Both explore the exciting possibility of never facing death, the
harsh reality of a never ending life and the greed that it can bring. A look at the similarities and
differences will reveal that the theme, along with the general story line, was one of the few things
that remain the same in the translation from book to movie. The book and the movie are alike in the
portrayal of a young girl, Winnie Foster, on the verge of womanhood, who feels discontent with her
sheltered life. She comes upon the Tuck ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Jesse encourages Winnie to drink the water from the spring and join them, but the end of the story
reveals that she has chosen not to. One of the biggest differences between the movie and the book
was the age of Winnie. In the book she was a young girl of ten and in the movie she was fifteen
years old. This most likely was a choice of the movie makers because it decreased the age gap
between Winnie and Jesse and allowed for a romantic element, which the movie expanded into a
large part of the story. The love scenes did not push the movie into an inappropriate realm, but adults
should be cautioned that kissing and cuddling all night are portrayed and possibly should be
discussed when viewing with pre–teens. Babbitt describes Winnie as, essentially, having a crush on
Jesse, but it was a very innocent relationship. Jesse, too, was taken by Winnie and encouraged her to
drink the water when she was seventeen and they could spend an eternity together. The book
explains that Jesse gives Winnie a bottle of the water, giving a very physical symbol of the
monumental choice that she must make. The movie, inexcusably, omits this. At the conclusion of the
book, Mae and Tuck, not Jesse as portrayed in the movie, return to Tree Gap after many years,
discover the gravestone of Winnie, realize that she never partook of the water and exclaim, "Poor
Jesse". The historical time period was also changed from the book to the movie, as was the time of
summer in which the story
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Tuck Everlasting Theme
This book is about A spring of water by a tree can make you live forever if you drink it and it's also
about a girl think more about life and having to make hard decisions. Tuck Everlasting By: Natalie
Babbitt Analyzes the Circle of life And how not dying isn't living. The main theme of Tuck
everlasting is the circle of life. An example from the text that shows the theme is "dying is part of
the wheel, right there next to being born. You can't pick out pieces you like and leave the rest. Being
it's passing us by,us Tucks living's heavy work, but off to one side, the way we are, its useless, too.It
dont make sense . If I knowed how to climb back on the wheel, I'd do it in a minute. You can't have
living without dying. So you can't call it ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
An example is "Its my toad so you better leave it alone." Said Winnie to the dog She ran up to her
room And grabbed the bottle of the spring water that Jessie gave her. The Dog watched the whole
operation happen. Then the dog got bored and ran away Winnie picked up the toad and held it for a
long time Without the least disgust, in the palm of her hand It sat comely as she poured the the
spring water in the toad until the last drop was gone. She laid the toad in the grass and said "You're
safe forever." This whole part of the book made me think how she have up the water that would
make her live forever on a toad. She probably thought about the circle of life how she wanted to die,
not now but someday. I think the author was trying to show that you should think about a decision
for a long time before you do something and that how Winnie made her mind to give it to the toad
and not just think about
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The Book Of Tuck Everlasting By Natalie Babbitt
Tuck Everlasting Tuck Everlasting is a book written by Natalie Babbitt. The story begins in August
in a place called Treegap with an 11–year–old girl named Winifred Foster Winnie for short whose
parents are very strict, a man in a yellow suit who seems very odd, and the Tuck family who are
immortal and finds out it's not very fun living forever, their names are Angus, Mae, Miles, and Jesse.
In the book, Winnie is sick of being treated like a baby so she decides to run away. She goes to the
wood where she finds a water fountain and 17–year–old Jesse Tuck drinking from it she instantly
falls in love with him. She wants to drink from the water fountain but Jesse wouldn't let her so he
kidnaps her and takes her to Angus and Mae's house where the Tuck family tells Winnie that if she
drinks from the fountain she will become immortal like them. Before Winnie ran away the man in
the yellow suit stopped and talked to Winnie asking her if she knew of a family that lives in the
wood. Turns out that the family he was looking for was the Tucks. Anyways the man in the yellow
suit was watching Winnie the whole time and knew where she was while her parents had no idea so,
the man in the yellow suit goes and tells Winnie's parents that if they give him the wood that he will
go get Winnie and they did. The man in the yellow suit goes to get Winnie with the constable. When
they got to the Tuck's house the man in the yellow suit tries to take Winnie but Mae refuses to let
him take her. He tries to take her so, Mae hits him in the back of the head with a shotgun at that time
the constable shows up. The man in the yellow suit dies, Mae goes to jail, and Winnie makes it
home safely. Later that day Jesse goes to Winnie's house and takes her a small bottle of water from
the fountain for her to drink when she turns 17 he also asks her a favor. His favor was for her to
sneak out and go to the jail and take Mae's spot she agrees and says she'll do it. At 12 o'clock Winnie
sneaks out and goes to the jail. When she gets there she goes through the window and covers herself
up with a blanket and takes Maes spot. Then the Tucks leave Treegap. After that, the book fast
forwards and Jesse comes back looking for Winnie but
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Comparing and Contrasting the Movie and Natalie Babbitt's...
Do you know a book called Tuck Everlasting which is written by Natalie Babbitt existed in this
world? It is a very interesting novel with a very sad ending. It's a story about a girl, who discovered
a very dangerous secret about a particular spring water. When you drink the water, it makes you
immortal. A movie on this book was produced later on. Things change when you have to audition
something that is written. And so, the movie Tuck Everlasting was very different from the book
Tuck Everlasting. Winnie Foster, a ten–year–old girl, discovered a very dangerous secret about the
spring water in the woods her parents owned. She found out that if the spring water is drunk, it
makes one immortal. Winnie didn't understand what it was like being ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Soon, they became deeply in love with each other and they kissed nearby a crackling fire. Winnie
was a little girl in the book so, of course, she didn't kiss Jesse. Even though the two liked each other,
Winnie, unfortunately, didn't want to live forever like Jesse so she chose the right way for her. Jesse
was very sad in both the movie and the book. When Winnie saw Jesse drinking the spring water
(which was the key to immortality) Mae, Miles and Jesse kidnapped her and took her away on their
horse. That was in the book but in the movie; Miles took Winnie away on his horse and left Jesse
behind. That might be because the horse couldn't carry four people and run at the same time.
Sometimes, because of problems like that, some of the parts in the book are changed in the movie.
Miles was very mean in the movie. He's always angry at something and he's very moody. Miles was
a very grumpy person, maybe because he is a married man, when he turned immortal. His wife
sensed something fishy about the Tucks family and moved out of their household. His wife and
children died as time passed by, and he was left behind. He must feel very sad. So he took a role of a
big brother and tried to abandon Jesse from liking Winnie. He didn't want his brother to feel the way
he feels if Winnie died, or maybe it was just plain jealously because Jesse got to be in love with a
girl and he did not. A man in the yellow suit was doing a little research on
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Tuck Everlasting Analysis
"Always coming in new, always growing and changing, and always moving on." This is how Tuck
describes life, an unstoppable change. "Tuck Everlasting" takes the idea of immortality, and poses
the thought of forever not always being desired. Winnie had to make the decision of living eternally
with Jesse, or living a life full of changes that, ultimately, ends in death. The author makes the
reader question their place in life, and uses motifs, symbolism, and analogies to do so. All of these
figuratives of speech encircle the theme of the story, and beget the book to have much deeper
meaning, than the story itself.
There isn't just one theme in "Tuck Everlasting", but several themes that are linked together, instead.
For example, a possible theme ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Wheel is incorporated in book many times, and represents the life cycle. Tuck explained to Winnie
in various situations how life is never–ending cycle, "always coming in new, always growing and
changing, and always moving on". Since this cycle is never ending, it's reasonable to also have
imprisonment as a motif. All living things are in this cycle, which endlessly turning, like a wheel. As
Tuck explains, "Everything's a wheel, turning and turning, never stopping. The frogs is part of it,
and the bugs, and the fish, and the wood thrush, too. And people. But never the same ones."
Additionally, the Tucks are eternally living, never able to experience change, causing them to be
imprisoned in time. Although it might seem desired, life is meant to be experienced through moving,
growing, and changing, not in a stationary position. Likewise, Winnie feels imprisoned to her
family's norms, and even considers running away. These two main motifs are portrayed, and
illustrated numerous times throughout the novel, repeatedly causing the reader to think about their
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Conspicuous Consumption in Sinclair Lewis' Babbit Essay
Conspicuous Consumption in Sinclair Lewis' Babbit
The idea of conspicuous consumption, or buying unnecessary items to show one's wealth, can be
seen in Babbitt by Sinclair Lewis. Lewis describes the main character of the book, George F.
Babbitt, as a person who has his values and priorities all mixed up. Babbitt buys the most expensive
and modern material goods just to make himself happy and make people around his aware of his
status. He is more concerned about these items than about his wife or children and to him, "god was
Modern Appliances" (Lewis 5). Through Babbitt, Lewis is attempting to show how the average
American person will do or buy anything, even if unnecessary, only to show off and make peers
think ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In reality, all one needs in a bathroom is a place to use the restroom, take a shower, and clean up.
But in Babbitt's house "the towel–rack was a rod of clear glass set in nickel" (5). Even the "tooth–
brush holder, shaving–brush holder, soap–dish...resembled an electrical instrument board" (5). The
Babbitt bedroom was full of things deemed valuable, like "toilet–articles of almost solid silver" and
"mattresses which had cost a great deal of money" (13–14). Their house had "the latest
conveniences" such as "three plugs for electric lamps and a dining room with its admirable oak
buffet and leaded–glass cupboard" (14). Babbitt had everything at home and even the "very best of
water–coolers, up–to–date, scientific, and right–thinking" (32) at the office. To him, having all of
this was why his life was worth living. He would buy items of great monetary value, and in return,
his social standing would rise. Lewis wants to show the reader that material possessions are not
everything, and can lead one astray. Babbitt thought he had it all, a nice house, a nice car, all
furnished with the latest objects. What Babbitt did not have, however, was a wife and children who
cared for him and whom he loved with all his heart. His life had no direction and everything
eventually came crashing down on him. Although he had anything and everything a man could want
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Compare And Contrast Tuck Everlasting
"Don't be afraid of death; be afraid of an unlived life. You don't have to live forever, you just have to
live." ("Tuck Everlasting Quotes by Natalie Babbitt.") Tuck Everlasting is a magical story of a
family who is bound to live forever. The story is a story of romance and excitement. The story stars
two families of very different upbringings. The Tucks are a family of four. It includes Angus Tuck,
the father, Mae Tuck, the mother, and two sons Miles and Jesse. They live in a little house in the
woods that is not completely clean all the time and they love it just the way it is. Once on a journey
to find a place to settle, the Tucks took a drink from a spring at the base of a tree. Time passed on
and the family noticed something very strange. Their bodies did not age with time. Winnie Foster,
however, is a wealthy man's daughter who lives in the town of Treegap. She has never been able to
... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Between both the movie and the book, the ending is very different. At the end of the book, only Mae
Tuck is thrown in jail and Winnie Foster meets with Jesse Tuck at the gate to discuss a plan to bust
her out. But, at the end of the movie, both Angus Tuck and Mae Tuck are thrown in jail. Jesse also
comes to Winnie's window of her bedroom to discuss a plan to get them out of jail. Once they get to
the jailhouse in the book, Angus, Miles, and Jesse took of the bars of the window and got Mae out.
Winnie was then lifted through the window and took Mae's spot in the jail. Whereas in the movie,
Miles and Jesse pretend to be kidnappers. Winnie runs to the jailhouse and yells as if she is being
kidnapped again. Once the constable goes outside and sees the "kidnappers", he realizes they cannot
die and runs off. Winnie unlocks the jail cells and frees Mae and Angus. Finally, the Tucks get away
safely! Although the movie and the book differ greatly, they each show a distinct side of the end of
the
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Who Is Sinclair Lewis Babbitt
Coming out of World War I, America became one of the most affluent nations in the world.
Technological advances, automobile industries, and many other industries increased production and
consumer rates; therefore, the 1920s developed into an era of prosperity. This emergence of
immense fortune fancied many business leaders to advertise business as the ideal life for all
Americans. In 1922, Sinclair Lewis wrote a satire called Babbitt that critiqued and defined an ideal
citizen in America. Also in 1925, Bruce Barton wrote a best seller called The Man Nobody Knows
which argued that Jesus Christ was the model of the modern businessman that everyone should
follow. Although Lewis and Barton promoted the business attitude differently in their novels, ...
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Throughout Babbitt's speech his moral integrity diminished; he gloated about his city and insulted
Europe. For instance, he said the one thing that distinguishes Americans from Europeans "is that
they're willing to take a lot of snobs and journalists and politicians, while the modern American
business man knows how to talk right up for himself." Although Lewis judged businessmen to be
shallow and materialistic, he accepted the fact that he was a participant (Lewis, p.1). What makes
this satire note–worthy is that Babbitt is inherently a self–image of Lewis during this era of
prosperity; therefore, providing a much more truthful perspective. On the other hand, Barton was in
a business leader perspective. One viewpoint he had was to generate more businessmen by making
the Christian story more accessible to business. He mentioned that there is no sin but worthy
accomplishments from self–interest. He also says that business benefits not only oneself, but others
as well because business learned to understand the individual and the social community (Barton,
p.2). His work exemplifies how ad agencies and clients invest amounts of time, energy, and money
to discover and shape beliefs (Faragher, p.
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Tuck Everlasting Book Report
Tuck Everlasting is a great book that all readers must read. The book is very suspenseful, magical in
a new type of way, and romantic in a way most readers love. According to Jean Stafford from The
New Yorker, Tuck Everlasting is, "A fearsome and beautifully written book that can't be put down or
forgotten." Some readers may think that Tuck Everlasting doesn't have the ending most fairy tail
readers want, but overall it has the most love in the book than the rest.
The book Tuck Everlasting, is very suspenseful. The main character, 10 year old Winnie Foster, has
always dreamed of leaving the gates of her estate by herself. When she does, her adventure begins
by being "kidnapped" by Angus Tuck, Mae Tuck, Jesse Tuck and Miles Tuck, who end up ... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Many readers can feel a connection with the characters in a way that most people don't normally
feel. For example, this book hides a secret about the characters that makes the story more
suspenseful and more descriptive about the characters. Tuck Everlasting shows the secrets by
sharing that the book has words no one can ever say as a person without being laughed at. For
readers who love a good book with romance, Tuck Everlasting is the right book to read. Jesse and
Winnie share a secretive loving relationship. They hint of this love affair with statements like "But
the thing is, you knowing about the water already... then you could go and drink some, and then you
could go away with me!" as said by Jesse Tuck in chapter 14. Although Winnie Foster is younger
than Jesse it's easy to feel the bond between each of the characters and want it to continue to grow.
Some readers disagree that Tuck Everlasting has a good ending to the book and say that it's not the
ending readers want. The ending of the book may appear sad to some readers, and some might find
it making the book even better. The book shows that people need to live life differently and live it
like its never going to end. Without this Tuck Everlasting would not show the true meaning and
moral to the
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Who Is Babbitt?
Babbitt, a middle aged real estate agent, simply a conventional working class businessperson. He
appreciates all the present day accommodations accessible to a man of his social class, yet he is
disappointed with his life. He has no predictable agreement of qualities, yet trusts that his qualities
are uniform since he has buckled down. Babbitt lives in a world in which everything depends on
material belonging. The general population of Zenith including Babbitt construct their own riches
with respect to the estimation of the belonging they claim. A significant worry of Babbitt and his
wife is what other individuals think of them. All throughout Babbitt adjusts to the social standard.
Pretty much as Babbitt's furniture is the same as his neighbors', his thoughts mirror the accepted
standard. You can never be certain as to who Babbitt truly is on the grounds that he is never certain
of his own identity. As the novel advances, we see Babbitt turn into an essential individual in his
hometown. Babbitt is a satiric take on man and at the whole society. Babbitt speaks to the common
prosperous, moderately aged American agent of the 1920s. Babbitt has a couple of assessments of
his own, rather he only speaks of those in the publication pages of the daily papers. He is a
promoter, noisily advancing his city although when he doesn't realize what he is talking about. He is
stuck in a class that he feels is underneath him. The distinction is great to the point ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
Babbitt is in fact unsuccessful as a person. I think he is unsuccessful because he has to rely on what
other people think about him even when he may not be doing anything wrong. An example can be
found on page 11 of the book when he says "Rats! The rest of them won't dress." Then he has to be
reminded of a time when he didn't dress properly and the everyone else did and he felt embarrassed.
My point here is that he should be able to determine what to wear to a certain place or event by
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Tuck Everlasting Book Report
Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbitt In the book Tuck Everlasting the characters are Winnifred
Foster, her dad mom and grandma. The Tuck family is Angus Tuck, Jesse Tuck, Miles Tuck, and
their mom. Winnifred was "kidnapped" by the tucks because she saw Jesse drink from the fountain
of youth. When the tucks kidnapped her, they treat her like family and does not harm her. The man
in the yellow suit is watching and he knows what is happening to Winne, he tells Winifred's parents
and he tries to trade the information for the wood with the fountain. The Foster family does not
know that the fountain of youth is there in the woods. In the movie Tuck Everlasting Winnifred is
going to be shipped off to a school 300 miles away and she does not
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Concepts Of Love In George's Babbitt
These concepts of love can also be seen in other works of the time. In Babbitt, George has a few
affairs with varying success throughout the novel. His first attempt at having an affair was with Ida,
a young manicurist. After a dinner of awkward conversation, she, rather mechanically, returned the
favor with a kiss. As described by Lewis, "from the standpoint of Miss Ida Putiak, [Babbitt was] an
old bore who had to be endured as the penalty attached to eating a large dinner (242)." Here one can
begin to see a clearer picture of love itself as a consumable commodity, pursued for the same
reasons as purchasing a new good – the instant gratification that can easily be replicated over and
over again with new relationships and things. In these highly consumer driven cases, love and
affection are demonstrated through material possession, and then when selecting a partner, one must
go for the most luxurious option. Because of this, companionship can often be left for only those
with the most wealth and possession. Just as happiness and love were perceived to be commodities
that could be purchased in the 1920s, so was companionship of any nature. This follows the reason
of the era though. If one chose one's lover on the basis of luxury goods, then it is only logical that
one would also choose friends and spouses this way. In Babbitt, he often complained about his wife
and her simple–mindedness. He hated it when she mended her stockings instead of replacing them,
or when she
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Tuck Everlasting Point Of View
Time moves forward, and only forward. It's a circle – we are born, raised, we live, then we die. But
have you ever imagined what would happen if you were endowed with immortality? What if you
could not die no matter how many decades had passed, while the world around you keeps changing
and everyone else keeps aging? Would it be wonderful to live forever like that? Then you should
take a look at Tuck Everlasting, a novel written by Natalie Babbitt in 1975 which focuses on the
negative side of immortality.
The narrative point of view used in the novel is the third person omniscient, like most of the stories
we were told as children. Our narrator, the author, knows everything. She can zoom in and out on all
the characters, jump from place to place, and even read the thoughts of the main characters. The
Prologue tells us all:
"At dawn, Mae Tuck set out on her horse..."
"At noontime, Winnie Foster, whose family owned the Treegap wood,..."
"And at sunset a stranger appeared at the Fosters' gate."
There is no connection among them. But these are the three main storylines, and the narrator knows
them all. This point of view really fits a story with lots of characters, that spans many years and has
different settings like Tuck Everlasting. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The geographical location of Treegap is not specified, perhaps to convey the impression that the
events might happen in any small town. In the woods at the edge of Treegap, the Tucks live a simple
life and want to keep the secret of the eternal–life–giving stream to themselves. The Tucks' cabin is
a "plain, homely house" with a "charming disarray," and its inhabitants are friendly and ostensibly
prioritize human relationships above meticulous property maintenance. In contrast to the
disorganized and messy property of the Tucks, the Fosters' house is guarded by a heavy iron gate
and a sign informing visitors they are unwelcome. Everything is neatly maintained and in its proper
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Babbit by Sinclair Lewis Essays
Babbitt: Conformity
In the Sinclair Lewis novel Babbitt, the character of Babbitt is completely controlled by the power
of conformity. Conformity is so powerful that even after babbitt realizes the stifling nature of the
society in which he lives he is powerless to change his fate as a member of conformist society.
George F. Babbitt is a man who is completely controlled by the conformist society in which he lives.
Pressure to conform lies in all aspects of Babbitt's life. Relationships, family, social life, and
business are all based on his ability to conform to Zenith's preset standards of thought and action.
All of Babbitt's thoughts are controlled by society. Thoughts that are not those of society are ...
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Babbitt does these things in hope of improving his social status. This conformist man is exactly who
Sinclair
Lewis wanted to show the reader, a man who's life is based on the ideals and standards of others.
"Villages–overgrown towns–three –quarters of a million people still dressing, eating, building
houses, attending church, to make an impression on their neighbors." (Lewis). This is what
Lewis thought of American society and he used Babbitt to voice his opinions to his readers. In fact
that passage was intended to be included in the original introduction of Babbitt, which was never
published.
Babbitt does well in conformist society because in the beginning of the novel he accepts all the
standards, goals, ideals, likes, and dislikes of society. Babbitt's though mirrors all those around him
and he is therefore accepted in society. At first Babbitt lives in the illusion of happiness. The
happiness Babbitt experiences is not genuine because he has replaced his desires with those of
society. Since Babbitt is controlled by society his goals are also controlled by it. The goals set by
society are economic and material worth, social standing, and conservative thought.
Since Babbitt has achieved, at least in part, these goals he is in a sense fooled into believing he is
truly happy. Babbitt's true desires however are not those of society he dreams of nature instead of
modernization, young women instead of his
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Living Forever In Tuck Everlasting By Natalie Babbitt
If you had the choice,would you want to live forever? In the book "Tuck Everlasting" by Natalie
Babbitt, a ten–year–old girl had to make a choice of if she would live forever or would she not. She
had to make a choice because when she was wandering around the forest she came across the Tuck
family who knows about a water, called the spring, that can make you younger forever. Life is a
wheel, everyday someone new enters the wheel and someone falls off the wheel; they live forever.
Living forever is a curse because you lose your loved ones, see everything around you change, and
you need to hide, to keep the secret away from everyone. The death of a loved one is an event that
all of us are likely to experience during our lifetimes, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The Tucks secret, being immortal is a secret that has to be kept away from everyone, but there was
one person out of seven–billion–three hundred–twenty– four million–seven hundred–eighty–two
thousand (7,324,782,000) people, who was eager to know the truth from the Tucks, if they were
immortal or not. He was a old man, in the book he was called "The man in the yellow suit." The
Tucks had to keep the secret away from him because everyone in the world would love to be
immortal. Therefore, you can't have a solid relationship, like Miles, he did not have a solid
relationship with his wife nor his children but last but not least you can not stay in one place forever
because everyone around you will find out the secret so you need to hide from everyone, so that the
secret is
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Milton Babbitt
I really enjoyed the two pieces Composition for 12 Instruments and Three Compositions by Milton
Babbitt. At first, I did not expect to enjoy them, since in Composition for 12 Instruments there were
several high notes/squeaks. However, this lessened farther into the piece, and also there was not any
of this in his other piece Three Compositions. When it comes to the type of music Babbitt produces,
I believe that Babbitt's eminence in the musical world is a unique and modern approach on music. In
his two pieces Composition for 12 Instruments and Three Compositions, this is very apparent, as it
sounds less organized and structured than much of the music that came in previous eras. Not only is
this true for just Babbitt, this idea is also true for other similar composers such as Alban Berg. The
main reason why this twelve–tone type of music has a limited audience is that many people are used
to hearing more structured music from previous eras such as the Baroque era. After being used to
structured music and then listening to Babbitt or Berg, the twelve–tone works sound like random ...
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4 and 4' 33" by John Cage to be very interesting and enjoyable in a good way. In 4' 33", I felt that
John Cage was trying to say that anything can be music, whether the music is coming from
instruments, or even the nearly–quiet environment of a performance hall. Going along with this
thought, I believe that 4' 33" is indeed music. 4' 33" is music that differs every place, time, and
performance. It may not fit any certain category of music, but it is a sort of noise that is produced
and then listened to by an audience. When it comes to chance music such as Cage's Imaginary
Landscape No. 4, I think that this type of music is an interesting idea. The fact that the composer
does not have control of whatever noise happens, whether that be a radio or random background
noise during a performance seems kind of scary, but also appealing at the same
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A Catholic Socialist
In Dreadful Conversations: The Making of a Catholic Socialist (2003), John C. Cort quoted Irving
Babbitt saying, "Rousseau abandoned his five children, one after the other, but had, we are told, an
unspeakable affection for his dog."1 Irving Babbitt certainly had no love loss for Jean–Jacques
Rousseau not only because of his abandonment of his children but because Rousseau was the
antithesis of Babbitt. Even though both Babbitt and Rousseau offer revolutionary ideas that affected
their societies, their educational and religious philosophies differed in many ways.
On education, Babbitt and Rousseau exhibited contrasting ideas. Rousseau's views on education
centered upon human liberty in educational pursuits. However, Babbitt was more about structure in
educational pursuits. Babbitt wrote, "[Bacon and thereby Rousseau] do not have the humanist's
passion for wholeness, for the harmonious rounding out of all the faculties."2 In contrast to Babbitt,
Rousseau and Bacon believed that one should "burrow ever more and more deeply into his own
specialty."3 Babbitt continued, "The scientific and sentimental naturalist are sharply at variance on
many points, but in their views on education they often coincide curiously."4
As opposed to Bacon and Rousseau, Babbitt was the opposite of a scientific/sentimental naturalist.
Babbitt believed in the value of a classical education and the foundation that came through those
offerings. He wrote, "Classical literature, at its best, does not so
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Ever After Irwing Summary
Ever After by H.M. Irwing is a romance novel that follows the story of Cindy Marshall and Julian
St. John. Cindy was born to a millionaire father who abandoned her and her terminally ill mother
when she was a child. The story picks up with her fresh out of school with an Economics degree.
However, the only job she is able to get is that of a waitress in an elite night club owned by the self–
made billionaire, Julian St. John. Julian instantly falls for Cindy after rescuing her from attempted
gang rape. However, he needs a creative plan to win the heart of the woman who no longer believes
in love and marriage. I found this book hard to read for a number of reasons, the biggest being the
numerous errors in the book. Many are more common errors such as the confusion between
homophones, while others are much worse such as the repeating of the same phrase in a sentence. ...
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I feel that the storyline lacks ups and downs. Every time a new discovery is made by one of the
characters or conflict arises it feels irrelevant. To me, Julian was a very confusing character. In the
first few meetings between him and Cindy, his motives are very unclear and he only says about 2
sentences. I found this very frustrating; it felt like the story was standing still and had no point. Even
though the story is told from Cindy's point of view, I feel that the author could have made bigger
effort to make Julian more understandable to the reader. Something else that created confusion was
that he was always referred to as The Dark Prince or The Monk, seldomly as Julian. Even though
Julian's character was poorly displayed, I feel that the author put a lot of thought into the characters
of Cindy's step siblings, especially her brothers. Their characters were well described, each one was
unique and their relationships with Cindy were very
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Tuck Everlasting Research Paper
Tuck Everlasting Arg. Essay
Imagine if you had the chance to drink "magical water" from a spring and live forever. Would you
drink the water? I believe that you should drink from the spring in Tuck Everlasting, because you
could explore the world, never get hurt, or have the fear of dying. Thinking it could happen is one
thing, but it actually happening is another, for the Tuck's, living it and believing it happen is their
life.
In Tuck Everlasting, Jesse and Miles come home after 10 years to their small town of Treegap to see
their parents, and Jesse, having gone to Paris, brought Mae a miniature Eiffel Tower. Exploring can
be dangerous and sometimes life threatening, but not in the Tuck's case. Scuba–diving to the deepest
parts of the ocean ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Breaking a bone or injuring any part of your body can be horribly painful and also very stressful. If
you were playing your favorite sport and you gave it everything you had plus that extra 10%, you
break your arm and have to go to the hospital and sit out the rest of the season versus getting back
up perfectly fine and as if it had never even happened. You hear of many books and movies about
many people being afraid to die. That fear is often what some people think about on their death beds
or very close to death. In Tuck Everlasting, the Tuck's aren't afraid to die because they simply can't,
one of the many perks of drinking the magical water. I believe that drinking from the spring would
help you not to live in fear of dying your whole life. If you choose not to drink the water, it can also,
be good for your life. you can live out a normal, natural life without any "magical water" or a
lifespan that lasts forever. Children can be born and prevented from even knowing that this type of
water even exists. Thinking back on the book, Tuck Everlasting, drinking the water is a more
adventurous, and exciting way to live, because of your forever lifespan. If you had that choice,
wouldn't you take
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Tuck Everlasting: Winnie And The Magical Spring
Winnie and the magical spring Have you ever imagined about living forever? In the book Tuck
Everlasting, Winnie foster left her cottage and went to her wood and she met Jesse Tuck. She was
taken to the Tuck's house and was told a secret about the powers of a spring and it's magical powers
in her wood. She was told to drink the water when she is 17, but she never did. In my opinion
Winnie should have drank the water because she can see the future, she can see the world, she won't
have to worry about dying. First of all, she can see the future. "We was going to live for ever" –
Jesse. If Winnie drank the water she can have a lot of time living on earth and she can see the future.
" i'll stay seventeen till the end of the world"– Jesse. Winnie
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Tuck Everlasting Theme
Theme
The Wheel
The main theme of Tuck Everlasting is that life and death should coexist and balance each other.
The cycle of life and death never stops, it keeps going just like a wheel. One wheel would never be
able to do anything on its own, just like life by itself wouldn't make anything progress. It is the
combination of wheels that helps things function, just like it's a combination of life, birth, aging, and
death that help the population change. Without their coexistence, like wheels, everyone would stay
the same forever. This is why I chose the wheel to symbolize the coexistence of life and death. It
properly shows how many aspects working together make things better. Everything is a wheel,
turning and turning, just like the cycle ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In Chapter 12, Pa Tuck himself speaks to Winnie, explaining just why it would be dangerous for
word of the spring's magic properties to get around to the general public. Pa Tuck believes that the
idea of living forever sounds very appealing at first, but that once it is obtained, it is not at all the
wonderful gift it appeared to be at first glance. He describes the despair of being left out of the
natural stream of life, and says that by the time people who take advantage of the water's magic
powers realize the situation they are in, it will be too late to go back and make things right. In
Chapter 14, Jesse presents another side of the dilemma to Winnie. He agrees with his father that the
spring should be kept secret, but adds that as long as they all know about its magic powers, they
might as well take advantage of it. Jesse wants Winnie to wait until she is the same age as he is –
seventeen – and then drink some of the water so that she will be stuck at that age forever. At that
time they could perhaps get married, and enjoy eternal life on earth together.I would use the bottle
of spring water to symbolize her conflict. When Jesse gives her the water she knows that she has to
make a decision. The bottle of water symbolizes that temptation to drink the water that Winnie has.
She is deeply tempted to be free, and drink the water. However, doing so will mean that she will
forever be the same age,
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Babbitt's Deformed Conscience
Babbitt, by Sinclair Lewis, demonstrates a sound heart kept beneath a deformed conscience. Babbitt,
the main character, decides to follow his sound heart, but soon realizes he cannot overcome the
corrupt principles of his middle class culture. The bourgeois conscience influences Babbitt to value
success and a superior reputation, but Babbitt's sound heart begins to refuse conformity through
rebellion. He temporarily abandons this deformed conscience, but he cannot change his lifestyle
completely. Babbitt's tendency to follow the deformed conscience emphasizes his conformity and
desperation to belong. Babbitt's sound heart is faint underneath his compliance because his identity
lies within this system of corrupt morals. Babbitt cares about his good reputation within the Zenith
community. He had the satisfaction of possessing the reputation of a successful real–estate agent.
Babbitt's position gave him integrity and status which he believed he deserved. His reputation was
significant because it became his identity and a source of belonging. Babbitt's status granted him the
proper recognition from his community. Nathaniel Rich, a Novelist and former editor, writes ...
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He decides to stay with his wife because the Zenith community would strip him of his integrity. This
deformed conscience has a major impact in his decisions, because it forces him to maintain the ideal
lifestyle. He stays with his sick wife out of guilt and commendation. Babbitt uses Myra's illness as
an excuse to revert to conformity and staying as a respectable man when he tells her, "Oh honey, I
love you more than anything in the world! I've kind of been worried by business and everything, but
that's all over now, and I'm back again." Babbitt has the same deformed conscience because of his
insincere apology and motives to stay with Myra. Even though Babbitt has characteristics of a sound
heart, it is almost defeated by
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Sinclair Lewis and Babbitt
Sinclair Lewis and Babbitt
The book under analysis herein is Sinclair Lewis' Babbitt. The copy I am using in this research is
published by Harcourt, Brace & World, Inc., New York, 1950. The original version was published in
1922, but there is no information in this book regarding what printing or edition it may be. This
edition encompasses thirty four chapters which span 401 pages in length as they are printed here.
One interesting note is that the novel is dedicated to Edith Wharton.
The author of the work, Sinclair Lewis, was born in Sauk Centre, Minnesota, and holds the
distinction of being the first American ever to be awarded the Nobel Prize for literature. Lewis was
born in the late 19th century and lived ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
If we look at specific passages from the novel, it is easy to see the author's contention as described
above. While he does temporarily decide to fight the limiting influences of a material society that
ostracizes individuality opposed to its established norms, Babbitt does revert back to his
unquestioning superficial self once he recognizes that having original thoughts and acting on them is
isolating, unprofitable and even dangerous. Babbitt is supposed to represent the ordinary human
being, the average businessman and upwardly mobile middle–class America. However, Babbitt
seems more artifice than genuine human being. Like the ads that sell Americans products, Babbitt
has forged an identity that was imposed on him by the dominant forces of democratic capitalism,
"Just as he was an Elk, a Booster, a member of the Chamber of Commerce, just as the priests of the
Presbyterian Church determined his every religious belief, and the senators who controlled the
Republican Part decided in little smoky rooms in Washington what he should think about
disarmament, tariffs, and Germany, so did the large national advertisers fix the surface of his life, fix
what he believed to be his individuality. These standard advertised wares...at first the signs, then the
substitutes, for joy and passion and wisdom" (Lewis 95).
However, for all his satire of Babbitt, Lewis, in keeping with his own character, seems somewhat
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Teen Conformity in Sinclair Lewis' Babbitt and in Society...
Teen Conformity in Babbitt and in Society Today
In society today, people feel the need to belong. They feel as though they have to be a part of
something in order to feel special. At times, they will go so far as to lose their individuality and
submit themselves into complete ignorance just to be able to know that there is someone or
something to which they can always fall back on. Conformity is one of the most common and most
apparent forms of Babbittry in the twenty – first century. First, the question must be answered:
"What is conformity?" The answer, of course, is very simple. Conformity is a person changing their
attitude or behavior on their own in order to fulfill certain social norms (Ferguson). Conforming to
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This part is a perfect representation of how sometimes teenagers like to conform to being rebellious
against their parents and higher institutions. His views are characteristic of the common teenager
that school and our elders can't teach us anything. This point is obvious when Ted says (concerning
college), "Yuh, but Dad, they just teach a lot of old junk that isn't any practical use – except the
manual training and typewriting and basketball and dancing – and in these correspondence courses,
gee, you can get all kinds of stuff that would come in handy." (Lewis 77). Ted speaks about how
frustrated he is with his Dad being content with simply sitting around the house and doing nothing
(Lewis 220). His need to be different and to not go to college is a perfect example of a teenager's
need to rebel against their parents. Ted's assumption that his elders are boring is another form of teen
conformity. Even today, children wish to do things that they think are better as opposed to what their
elder's tell them.
Teen conformity can also be seen with Ted's party for the Senior Class. At this party the Babbitt's
serve alcohol and the teenagers exhibit behavior which George considers to be immoral. Babbitt is
completely against the idea but his wife tells him, "[I]f you get angry because they go out to their
cars to have a drink, they won't come to your
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Tuck Everlasting Conflict
Conflict
In Tuck Everlasting there is a plethora of conflicts throughout the book, but the two main conflicts
are a man vs man (Mr. Tuck vs Man in Yellow Suit) and a man vs self (Winnie vs Winnie).
To start off with, the man vs man is an external struggle between Mr. Tuck and the Man in the
Yellow suit. Throughout the book, Natalie Babbitt slowly shows readers that Mr. Tuck and the Man
in the Yellow suit have completely different viewpoints on the immortal spring. Mr. Tuck thinks that
it should be kept a secret and that people shouldn't live forever. To prove this point, when Mr. Tuck
took Winnie out to the pond he said that "life is like a wheel and we Tucks are like stones, never
moving or changing." This quote represents ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The day when Winnie woke up Miles had ask her if she wanted to go fishing with him and this is
when Miles confessed to Winnie that he had made one of the worst decisions in his life. He
explained to her that when he had married his wife he never knew if he should tell his wife that there
was a magical spring in the woods where they could live forever. He didn't know if it was the right
choice to make so in the end he didn't even have a choice if he still wanted to tell his family or not
because the wife had ran off with the two children. But, after that he had another choice to make and
that was; should he try and find his family and let them drink from the spring or should he just let
them live a natural life and die. Miles decided that he shouldn't for after all he didn't think of this for
some odd years so his wife was already 40 and children were already all grown up so Miles thought
it wasn't worth it. Miles told Winnie that he regrets ever doing this to his family because he misses
them so very
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Essay about George Babbitt of Sinclair Lewis' Babbitt
George Babbitt: Image of a Presbyterian
In Babbitt, Sinclair Lewis portrays religion as a corrupt business. In fact, he emphasizes this by
focusing on his main character George Babbitt. George Babbitt is characterized as a businessman in
Zenith. He is a man preoccupied about his reputation and his image before the main leaders of the
town he lives in. Lewis creates a hypocritical figure for Babbitt through his reasons for being a
Presbyterian. He says that if you were to question Babbitt about his religion he would say, "My
religion is to serve my fellow men, to honor my brother as myself, and to do my bit to make life
happier for one and for all" (199). Of course, if you heard this from Babbitt you would ... Show
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His participation within his religious denomination was his stepping stool. Chum Frink and
Mr.Eathorne accepted Babbitt because of his proposals for the Sunday School. He wanted to divide
the school into four armies with militaristic characteristics. This would help the children feel as if
they were doing something worthy. Secondly, he insisted on improvement of the advertising
committee (Lewis 207). This goes to show you how businesslike the Sunday School was becoming.
Babbitt was only thinking of business morals and forgetting the religious morals.
Lewis also draws an image of George Babbitt's sanctimoniousness through his idea of Hell. We see
Babbitt's hypocrisy when he says, "if one was a Bad Man, that is, if he murdered or committed
burglary or used cocaine or had mistresses or sold non–existent real estate, he would be punished"
(199). Notice how everything Babbitt mentions at the time is something he has not done, however as
he continues to live his life he eventually pulls a crooked real estate deal and begins to cheat on his
wife, Myra. Babbitt's flirtatious character is seen when he dates several women and is careless
because of his wife's absence. Lewis practically points out Babbitt's hypocrisy through his failure to
comply with his own criteria of who does and who does not go to Hell.
Lewis portrays the Presbyterian Church
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Making The Right Choice In Tuck Everlasting By Natalie...
Throughout Tuck Everlasting, by Natalie Babbitt, there were many examples of how making the
right choice isn't always easy. One example is when Winnie told Jesse that she wants to help the
Tucks with the escape plan of Mae from the gallows. Even though Winnie knew that she'll get in
trouble for going out in the middle of the night, she still took the risk. Another example is when
Miles knew about the spring water, but didn't bring his family to the spring. He made a sacrifice for
the Tucks, keeping the secret safe from anyone else. The last example is when Mae killed the man in
the yellow suit when he was trying to take away Winnie. Even though Mae knew about the
consequences, she still did it in order to protect Winnie. Through analyzing the ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
Many of the characters in Tuck Everlasting shows making the right choice, but it wasn't easy for
them, some had to sacrifice a lot of things. One of the characters is Winnie, on page 114 it states, "I
can help! When your mother climbs out of the window, I'll climb in and take her place. I can wrap
myself up in her blanket, and when the constable looks in, he won't be able to tell the difference. Not
in the dark. I can hump up and look a lot bigger. Miles can even put the window back." Even though
Winnie made the right choice, she knew that she might lose the trust of her family members, but she
still took the risk. She knew that Mae got sent to the gallows because Mae was protecting her.
Another character that has been through this is Miles. On page 84 it states, "Winnie looked at his
young, strong face and after a moment she said, "Why didn't you take them to the spring and give
them the special water?" "Well, of course, we didn't realize about the spring while we
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Tuck Everlasting Motifs
Tuck Everlasting The book Tuck Everlasting is a good book. Throughout the book, three continuous
motifs that I found are: the wheel, fence, and fantasy. I chose fantasy as the motif because of the
several reasons that I have listed in this essay. Natalie Babbitt uses motif and analogy in the
development of theme in Tuck Everlasting by using the motif: fantasy and several different
analogies. First off, the concept fantasy is the best concept to use because of the following reasons
included in Tuck Everlasting: the wood had a "pass me by" look, the road knows where to go, and
the Tucks look the same for over 87 years. These are just a few of several reasons to support that
fantasy is the best motif used in the book.
Next, I think the theme in Tuck Everlasting is: time and death. I think that the theme is time and
death because: the Tucks are immortal. They will live forever. A quote that helps support the theme
of time is: "'Everything's a wheel, turning and turning, never stopping. The frogs is part of it, and the
bugs, and the fish, and the wood thrush, too. And people. But never the same ones. Always coming
in new, always growing and changing, and always moving on. That's the way it's supposed to be.
That's the way it is."' Angus Tuck is talking about the wheel of life. That time moves on. People are
growing and changing. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
But this rowboat now, it's stuck. If we didn't move it ourself, it would stay here forever, trying to get
loose, but stuck. That's what us Tucks are, Winnie. Stuck so's we can't move on.We ain't part of the
wheel no more." That's when the motif Fantasy comes in. The Tuck's are immortal now. People can't
actually be immortal. They can't be dropped off of the wheel of life. By introducing the analogies of
the water cycle: "wheel of life"::rowboat:Tucks, she makes a point of saying that the Tucks are
going to stay living forever, making the motif fantasy become more of a supportive
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Tuck Everlasting Research Paper
Life Needs Death
Have you ever dreamed of living forever? Or have you had a fear of dying? Well the Tucks ,(From
the book Tuck Everlasting, by Natalie Babbitt), had discovered a spring with everlasting water; or
water that keeps you alive forever without aging, which they drank. After some time, the man in the
yellow suit, figured there was something fishy about the Tucks, and discovered the Tucks' secret
about the spring water. The man in the yellow suit wants to sell the spring water. The Tucks appose.
Here are a few reasons I oppose as well. First, there is only a limited amount of spring water, and
there will be a fight over who gets it. Next, if everyone lived forever, the world would be
overpopulated. Lastly, if there is no death, there ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
If people kept living, forever, as well as having babies, who would also live forever, there would be
no space for anyone to do what they want to do, so you wouldn't enjoy life. Natalie Babbitt also
mentions in her book in chapter 12, page 49, " You for instance, a child now, but someday a woman.
And after that, moving on to make room for the new children." And in chapter 12, page 49,
"Everything is a wheel, turning and turning, never stopping. Always coming in new, always growing
and changing, and always moving on."
` Lastly, I believe if there is no death, there is no point in life. You know you have forever to do
whatever you want to, you won't live life to the fullest. In my opinion, you will procrastinate on
everything. As Natalie Babbitt tells us in her book in, chapter 12, page 49without dying., "If I'd
known how to climb back on the wheel, I'd do it in a minute. You can't live without dying. " She
also tells us how the Tucks feel about living forever in, chapter 12, page 50. "So you can't call it
living what we got.We just are, we just be like rocks , like rocks beside the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
I Think Tuck Everlasting, By Natalie Babbitt
Is living forever a good thing, or a bad thing? I think Tuck Everlasting, by Natalie Babbitt, has many
messages in it, and can definitely influence people. However, could a book influence decisions in
life? How about your life? This book can change the way you think about some things. Decisions
for school, life, your family, etc. Winnie was faced with a difficult decision, many, actually. The
biggest one would probably be whether to drink the springwater or not. Would you drink something
like that, even if it meant that you could never die, and you had to live forever?
Winnie didn't completely believe the story about the springwater. In the end of the book, you can
somewhat infer that she did, even if it was just a little. She did believe that the springwater could
really make you live forever, and yet she still didn't drink it. I believe that she made the right
decision not to drink the springwater. Before I read this book, I thought that I would want to live
forever, but now I see that I wouldn't want to drink the springwater. Seeing how Angus Tuck had felt
about living forever, I realized that living forever may not be all that great after all, you wouldn't
even get to experience the rest of life, or even know what happens as you get older. I would have
made this choice differently. I would have definitely done what Winnie did, give the water up, and
not drink it. If I were to compare myself to some of the characters, I might be most like Winnie. If I
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Comparing Cordasco's Ranch And The Babbitt Ranch
A writing that I enjoyed was "Just Participate!", an interview with Billy Cordasco about the Babbitt
Ranches he worked on. This piece caught my attention due to its cowboy nature, divulging the
methods and tricks of the trade when it comes to farming cattle.
Having lived in Hawaii my entire life I have been surrounded and involved with farming, hunting,
and ranching. I was subjected to the life of the Paniolo(Hawaiian cowboys) at a very young age, two
of my neighbors and good family friends were involved with Parker ranch, a 250,000 acre ranch in
the mountainous town of Waimea. Parker ranch deals with a generous supply of livestock; primarily
cattle accompanied with smaller herds of sheep and horses. I've been able to ride around the ranch
and observe the Paniolo herd cattle and perform simple daily tasks like refilling troughs and cycling
horses for grazing. Simply reading about Cordasco's lifestyle and duties made me very reminiscent
of the many days I spent on the ranch, one very fond memory of mine was riding on the back of an
atv while my uncle drove to find a herd of cattle and perform a head count. ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Parker ranch is in the middle of often luscious green grass at a high elevation where it is very moist
and fruitful, this being said there was little consideration for drought conditions and what actions
would be taken in such a case but recently conditions have become drier. The Paniolo at Parker
ranch would also hunt wild cattle that graze near the outskirts of the ranch to supply large amounts
of food for friends and family without diminishing the herd that they care for. The Babbitt ranches
were also much larger and mainland ranches have quite a varied lifestyle when compared to those of
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analysis Of Hester Street And Babbitt Essay
Assimilation in Hester Street and Babbitt Identity crises are common problems for immigrants
coming into any country. Deciding whether to stay true to their roots or to assimilate to a new
culture puts pressure on many immigrants and their families. Both Jake and Babbitt, from Hester
Street and Babbitt respectively, define what means to be American on superficial terms, even though
they both believe that being an American does not merely stem from racial identity. They both
become obsessed with being as seen as Americans through their social status, physical appearance,
the pursuit of wealth, and freedom. While both Jake and Babbitt try to assimilate to American
culture, only Babbitt truly succeeds in achieving this goal. Babbitt and Jake both believe that
achieving a higher social status will make them more American. To Jake, social status is very much
tied to the accumulation of wealth. He berates Mr. Bernstein for making less than he does each
week. He prides himself on having more wealth than other in his home country and some of his
fellow workers. Jake, however, never actively tries to climb the proverbial social ladder. To him,
wealth and social status are one and the same, so he tries to achieve both through the pursuit of
wealth. Babbitt, on the other hand, has a much more diverse thought process when considering the
relationship between himself and his social status. He knows the difference between accumulation
of wealth and social status, and while he already
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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Babbitt and Cage: Composer Views on Audience

  • 1. Milton Babbitt And John Cage Milton Babbitt and John Cage were both composers who played pivotal roles in the post–World War II Avant Garde music scene and in the pioneering of electronic music. Both composers found their roots and were greatly influenced by German–Jewish composer Arnold Schoenberg, however they both adopted different viewpoints on the relationship between a composer and their audience . Babbitt believed that a composer or creator did not have an obligation to please his or her audience, and that his pieces were intended mostly for professionals capable of understanding the context and intention of his music. Cage on the other hand granted his audience more power and influence, believing that music was a platform on which audiences could utilize their creativity to adopt new ways of perceiving and being aware of the world around them. These stances, as well as the different techniques and methodologies of the composers pitted them on somewhat of a spectrum, with Babbitt and his systematic, modernist ideas that were largely based in the music schools of academic institutions on one side and Cage, with his uncontrollable, radical combinations of Avant Garde sounds on the other side. These ideas on audience construction and relations were also visible in rock music of the 1960's, particularly in compositions of artists such as Jimi Hendrix and Bob Dylan. Milton Babbitt is well known today for his contributions to the pioneering of electronic music, which involved the use of set theory . As ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2.
  • 3. Tuck Everlasting Book Report I read the book Tuck Everlasting, by Natalie Babbitt. The book was published on July 2007. In the book Winnie decided to run away, but meets a boy who's family has a secret, they are immortal. Will Winnie choose to be immortal or mortal? Natalie Babbitt's book relates to a mystery book where no one knows what's going to happen next. The genre of the book is mystery. The book gives you some good questions to ask yourself. Would you run away with another family to leave your own, for a special potion. Would you leave to get freedom, love, and a new family. Winnie is a girl who thinks she has a overprotective family, but they just care about her way to much. But she doesn't know that. Winnie wants to run away but meets a boy with a family ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4.
  • 5. How Does Tuck Everlasting Affect Our Life Drinking from the Spring of Immortality in Tuck Everlasting would ruin your life forever, literally. Drinking from the spring would be a terrible idea. You could never die. If you were to drink from the Spring of Immortality, you would never have a normal life ever again. First of all, you wouldn't ever be able to die, even if you really wanted to eventually grow old and die. You would be on the earth until the end of time. Even if you did something that would kill any other normal person alive, you would barely feel a thing and it wouldn't even leave a mark. In Tuck Everlasting, the Tuck family have all had experiences that would kill a person, but were left unharmed. If this ever happened to you, you'd constantly be worrying about making sure that nobody finds about about you immortality, and making sure that no one else finds out about any others that are like you. An example of this, is how the Tuck family live in constant fear of somebody finding out about them, awaiting the time when it will finally happen. Also, the Tucks rarely go into town, afraid that someone will notice how they never grow ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... To prevent this, the Tuck family pretty much everything they could. They piled rocks over it to make it not look like a freshwater spring to thirsty people on hikes. If Miles or Jesse are near the spring, and see someone try to drink from it, they will make up any excuse that they have to make to keep the person from drinking the water, and if worst comes to worst, they will physically restrain them. In Tuck Everlasting, Miles and Jesse are constantly moving different places and touring countries all around the world to make sure that the town's people don't recognise them. Every ten years, they also come back to their town and visit their parents and check on the spring, to make sure that it remains ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6.
  • 7. Winnie Foster In Tuck Everlasting Who is Winnie Foster? Winnie Foster is the main character in the story, Tuck Everlasting. In the beginning of the story, ten–year–old Winnie Foster runs away from her home into the woods. Winnie in a brave little girl who runs away to face the world and find her true destiny. Along the way of her journey, she meets a family who drank water from a special pond in the woods and became immortal. The first couple of day's she spends with the family, she falls absolutely in love with them and they learn to love her. In the beginning of the story, Winnie wasn't at the happiest place in her life. Her family life was stressing her out, which was the reason to her running away. She doesn't think her parents are right about her future and her well being. In one scene, Winnie talk to a toad and says, "That's just what I mean. It's like that every minute. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... She basically saying she wants to liver her life by herself without being watched or taken care of. Winnie has an amazing impact of the other characters in the story and changes their life forever. Even though Winnie and the family only know each other for a week they feel like they've know each other forever. Since Winnie has such a bright and light personality, she really has an impact on people because of her personality. Winnie feels as though the family she meets in the forested areas are all the more a family then her genuine birth guardians. In the beginning the story, they offer her water that could drink to make her live–until the end of time. Rather she gives an amphibian a chance to drink the water so that in the event that anyone attempted to hurt him he would live until the end of time. This give up was truly educational in light of the fact that as opposed to needing to live everlastingly, she surrenders it to a creature. She winds up thinking about existence and demise, and whether everlasting life is justified regardless of the danger of unceasing ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8.
  • 9. Tuck Everlasting Analysis What would you do if you had the chance to be immortal? Well, in our story "Tuck Everlasting" you'll figure out just that. The lucky Tuck family has drunk from a spring that grants them immortality. Now they can never die.I'm going to talk about just a couple of character's point of views on immortality. OK, now Tuck, our first character, is all against immortality, he hates it, despises it. First off, he thinks it's unnatural, which it is,and it's pretty hard work. I bet if he could get back to life and grow again, he'd do it in an instant. I'm with him on the fact that if no one died, the world would be a pretty nasty place. Next, we have Jesse, who absolutely loves immortality! Jesse is the party–happy–time all night ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10.
  • 11. Key Elements in Sinclair Lewis', Babbitt Essay Sinclair Lewis, the author of Babbitt, devised several key literary elements to explain his full effect and purpose for writing his novel. Babbitt is a satirist look, at not only one man, but an entire society as well. He exposes the hypocrisy and mechanization of American society in the 1920's. In the story Lewis focuses on his main character George Babbitt, the protagonist throughout much of the book, who is a business with lofty aims and a desire to climb the ladder of the social class. To fully achieve his opinions and beliefs, Lewis used literary effects of irony and theme. The novel begins in the 1920's, a decade that had started in economic boom and avid consumerism, only to end crash and depression. This was a parallel used by ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... By these terms George Babbitt, and many of this acquaintances are quite the bigots toward all of those who appear different than he is, especially immigrants and minorities in America. The blame should not be placed squarely on these men,s shoulders for processing such hate filled beliefs, but their own opinion of the matter is generated through the generations, that immigrants and minorities are far less superior than the "native" white men who have "always: lived in America. The irony of this subject in the book is that although men of Babbitt's stature openly shared and joked with one another about their superiority to all other races, not one would ever admit that he was even by a small degree a bigot. Buying only the very best material items and throwing dinner parties are only a few of the ways Babbitt tried to accomplish a more noteworthy place in society and impress his peers. He is more concerned about these items than about his wife and children and to him, "God was Modern Appliances" (Lewis pg 114). However, at the end of the story, the irony is no more evident when Babbitt admits to his son that he has wasted life. He confides in his Ted that he has ruined his whole life shooting for goals which, in Babbitts lifetime, are realistically unattainable. He tells Ted that hopefully, the new generation (Ted's generation), can recover from Babbitt's ill fated dreams, and lead their own lives the way ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12.
  • 13. Ideal Of The American Ideal The American Ideal "If approval replaced dedication as creativity's fuel, this world Would be barren, empty, decidedly less lovely." – Jen Hatmaker In his will, newspaper publisher Joseph Pulitzer specified that a $1,000 prize be awarded each year "for the American novel; published during the year which shall best present the whole atmosphere of American life, and the highest standards of American manners and manhood" (6). However, in 1917, the president of Columbia University and Pulitzer advisory board leader Nichols Murray Butler changed the wording of the criteria to read "the wholesome atmosphere of American life" (7); and by so doing, limited the scope of what literature was deemed acceptable for consideration of the honor. Subsequently, in 1921, the Pulitzer Prize for fiction was awarded to a novel about New York high society during the 1870s and controversy soon followed. In a June 22, 1921 article in The New Republic, one of the judges that year, literary scholar Robert Morse Lovett, wrote that the winner, Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton, had not been the jury's choice (6). The panel of judges, which included Lovett as well as a literature professor and a novelist, had instead selected Sinclair Lewis's Main Street, a novel Lovett described using the words of his fellow juror Stuart Pratt Sherman, as having "communicated more life to the reading public than any other novel I can recall..." (6). The judges' decision to award the p0rize to Lewis was overturned by the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14.
  • 15. Tuck Everlasting Essay Tuck Everlasting– Compare and Contrast Essay Is living forever the greatest gift of the ultimate curse? This is the question that both the ALA notable book, Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbitt, and the movie based on the book raise. Both explore the exciting possibility of never facing death, the harsh reality of a never ending life and the greed that it can bring. A look at the similarities and differences will reveal that the theme, along with the general story line, was one of the few things that remain the same in the translation from book to movie. The book and the movie are alike in the portrayal of a young girl, Winnie Foster, on the verge of womanhood, who feels discontent with her sheltered life. She comes upon the Tuck ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Jesse encourages Winnie to drink the water from the spring and join them, but the end of the story reveals that she has chosen not to. One of the biggest differences between the movie and the book was the age of Winnie. In the book she was a young girl of ten and in the movie she was fifteen years old. This most likely was a choice of the movie makers because it decreased the age gap between Winnie and Jesse and allowed for a romantic element, which the movie expanded into a large part of the story. The love scenes did not push the movie into an inappropriate realm, but adults should be cautioned that kissing and cuddling all night are portrayed and possibly should be discussed when viewing with pre–teens. Babbitt describes Winnie as, essentially, having a crush on Jesse, but it was a very innocent relationship. Jesse, too, was taken by Winnie and encouraged her to drink the water when she was seventeen and they could spend an eternity together. The book explains that Jesse gives Winnie a bottle of the water, giving a very physical symbol of the monumental choice that she must make. The movie, inexcusably, omits this. At the conclusion of the book, Mae and Tuck, not Jesse as portrayed in the movie, return to Tree Gap after many years, discover the gravestone of Winnie, realize that she never partook of the water and exclaim, "Poor Jesse". The historical time period was also changed from the book to the movie, as was the time of summer in which the story ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16.
  • 17. Tuck Everlasting Theme This book is about A spring of water by a tree can make you live forever if you drink it and it's also about a girl think more about life and having to make hard decisions. Tuck Everlasting By: Natalie Babbitt Analyzes the Circle of life And how not dying isn't living. The main theme of Tuck everlasting is the circle of life. An example from the text that shows the theme is "dying is part of the wheel, right there next to being born. You can't pick out pieces you like and leave the rest. Being it's passing us by,us Tucks living's heavy work, but off to one side, the way we are, its useless, too.It dont make sense . If I knowed how to climb back on the wheel, I'd do it in a minute. You can't have living without dying. So you can't call it ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... An example is "Its my toad so you better leave it alone." Said Winnie to the dog She ran up to her room And grabbed the bottle of the spring water that Jessie gave her. The Dog watched the whole operation happen. Then the dog got bored and ran away Winnie picked up the toad and held it for a long time Without the least disgust, in the palm of her hand It sat comely as she poured the the spring water in the toad until the last drop was gone. She laid the toad in the grass and said "You're safe forever." This whole part of the book made me think how she have up the water that would make her live forever on a toad. She probably thought about the circle of life how she wanted to die, not now but someday. I think the author was trying to show that you should think about a decision for a long time before you do something and that how Winnie made her mind to give it to the toad and not just think about ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18.
  • 19. The Book Of Tuck Everlasting By Natalie Babbitt Tuck Everlasting Tuck Everlasting is a book written by Natalie Babbitt. The story begins in August in a place called Treegap with an 11–year–old girl named Winifred Foster Winnie for short whose parents are very strict, a man in a yellow suit who seems very odd, and the Tuck family who are immortal and finds out it's not very fun living forever, their names are Angus, Mae, Miles, and Jesse. In the book, Winnie is sick of being treated like a baby so she decides to run away. She goes to the wood where she finds a water fountain and 17–year–old Jesse Tuck drinking from it she instantly falls in love with him. She wants to drink from the water fountain but Jesse wouldn't let her so he kidnaps her and takes her to Angus and Mae's house where the Tuck family tells Winnie that if she drinks from the fountain she will become immortal like them. Before Winnie ran away the man in the yellow suit stopped and talked to Winnie asking her if she knew of a family that lives in the wood. Turns out that the family he was looking for was the Tucks. Anyways the man in the yellow suit was watching Winnie the whole time and knew where she was while her parents had no idea so, the man in the yellow suit goes and tells Winnie's parents that if they give him the wood that he will go get Winnie and they did. The man in the yellow suit goes to get Winnie with the constable. When they got to the Tuck's house the man in the yellow suit tries to take Winnie but Mae refuses to let him take her. He tries to take her so, Mae hits him in the back of the head with a shotgun at that time the constable shows up. The man in the yellow suit dies, Mae goes to jail, and Winnie makes it home safely. Later that day Jesse goes to Winnie's house and takes her a small bottle of water from the fountain for her to drink when she turns 17 he also asks her a favor. His favor was for her to sneak out and go to the jail and take Mae's spot she agrees and says she'll do it. At 12 o'clock Winnie sneaks out and goes to the jail. When she gets there she goes through the window and covers herself up with a blanket and takes Maes spot. Then the Tucks leave Treegap. After that, the book fast forwards and Jesse comes back looking for Winnie but ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20.
  • 21. Comparing and Contrasting the Movie and Natalie Babbitt's... Do you know a book called Tuck Everlasting which is written by Natalie Babbitt existed in this world? It is a very interesting novel with a very sad ending. It's a story about a girl, who discovered a very dangerous secret about a particular spring water. When you drink the water, it makes you immortal. A movie on this book was produced later on. Things change when you have to audition something that is written. And so, the movie Tuck Everlasting was very different from the book Tuck Everlasting. Winnie Foster, a ten–year–old girl, discovered a very dangerous secret about the spring water in the woods her parents owned. She found out that if the spring water is drunk, it makes one immortal. Winnie didn't understand what it was like being ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Soon, they became deeply in love with each other and they kissed nearby a crackling fire. Winnie was a little girl in the book so, of course, she didn't kiss Jesse. Even though the two liked each other, Winnie, unfortunately, didn't want to live forever like Jesse so she chose the right way for her. Jesse was very sad in both the movie and the book. When Winnie saw Jesse drinking the spring water (which was the key to immortality) Mae, Miles and Jesse kidnapped her and took her away on their horse. That was in the book but in the movie; Miles took Winnie away on his horse and left Jesse behind. That might be because the horse couldn't carry four people and run at the same time. Sometimes, because of problems like that, some of the parts in the book are changed in the movie. Miles was very mean in the movie. He's always angry at something and he's very moody. Miles was a very grumpy person, maybe because he is a married man, when he turned immortal. His wife sensed something fishy about the Tucks family and moved out of their household. His wife and children died as time passed by, and he was left behind. He must feel very sad. So he took a role of a big brother and tried to abandon Jesse from liking Winnie. He didn't want his brother to feel the way he feels if Winnie died, or maybe it was just plain jealously because Jesse got to be in love with a girl and he did not. A man in the yellow suit was doing a little research on ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22.
  • 23. Tuck Everlasting Analysis "Always coming in new, always growing and changing, and always moving on." This is how Tuck describes life, an unstoppable change. "Tuck Everlasting" takes the idea of immortality, and poses the thought of forever not always being desired. Winnie had to make the decision of living eternally with Jesse, or living a life full of changes that, ultimately, ends in death. The author makes the reader question their place in life, and uses motifs, symbolism, and analogies to do so. All of these figuratives of speech encircle the theme of the story, and beget the book to have much deeper meaning, than the story itself. There isn't just one theme in "Tuck Everlasting", but several themes that are linked together, instead. For example, a possible theme ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Wheel is incorporated in book many times, and represents the life cycle. Tuck explained to Winnie in various situations how life is never–ending cycle, "always coming in new, always growing and changing, and always moving on". Since this cycle is never ending, it's reasonable to also have imprisonment as a motif. All living things are in this cycle, which endlessly turning, like a wheel. As Tuck explains, "Everything's a wheel, turning and turning, never stopping. The frogs is part of it, and the bugs, and the fish, and the wood thrush, too. And people. But never the same ones." Additionally, the Tucks are eternally living, never able to experience change, causing them to be imprisoned in time. Although it might seem desired, life is meant to be experienced through moving, growing, and changing, not in a stationary position. Likewise, Winnie feels imprisoned to her family's norms, and even considers running away. These two main motifs are portrayed, and illustrated numerous times throughout the novel, repeatedly causing the reader to think about their ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24.
  • 25. Conspicuous Consumption in Sinclair Lewis' Babbit Essay Conspicuous Consumption in Sinclair Lewis' Babbit The idea of conspicuous consumption, or buying unnecessary items to show one's wealth, can be seen in Babbitt by Sinclair Lewis. Lewis describes the main character of the book, George F. Babbitt, as a person who has his values and priorities all mixed up. Babbitt buys the most expensive and modern material goods just to make himself happy and make people around his aware of his status. He is more concerned about these items than about his wife or children and to him, "god was Modern Appliances" (Lewis 5). Through Babbitt, Lewis is attempting to show how the average American person will do or buy anything, even if unnecessary, only to show off and make peers think ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In reality, all one needs in a bathroom is a place to use the restroom, take a shower, and clean up. But in Babbitt's house "the towel–rack was a rod of clear glass set in nickel" (5). Even the "tooth– brush holder, shaving–brush holder, soap–dish...resembled an electrical instrument board" (5). The Babbitt bedroom was full of things deemed valuable, like "toilet–articles of almost solid silver" and "mattresses which had cost a great deal of money" (13–14). Their house had "the latest conveniences" such as "three plugs for electric lamps and a dining room with its admirable oak buffet and leaded–glass cupboard" (14). Babbitt had everything at home and even the "very best of water–coolers, up–to–date, scientific, and right–thinking" (32) at the office. To him, having all of this was why his life was worth living. He would buy items of great monetary value, and in return, his social standing would rise. Lewis wants to show the reader that material possessions are not everything, and can lead one astray. Babbitt thought he had it all, a nice house, a nice car, all furnished with the latest objects. What Babbitt did not have, however, was a wife and children who cared for him and whom he loved with all his heart. His life had no direction and everything eventually came crashing down on him. Although he had anything and everything a man could want ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26.
  • 27. Compare And Contrast Tuck Everlasting "Don't be afraid of death; be afraid of an unlived life. You don't have to live forever, you just have to live." ("Tuck Everlasting Quotes by Natalie Babbitt.") Tuck Everlasting is a magical story of a family who is bound to live forever. The story is a story of romance and excitement. The story stars two families of very different upbringings. The Tucks are a family of four. It includes Angus Tuck, the father, Mae Tuck, the mother, and two sons Miles and Jesse. They live in a little house in the woods that is not completely clean all the time and they love it just the way it is. Once on a journey to find a place to settle, the Tucks took a drink from a spring at the base of a tree. Time passed on and the family noticed something very strange. Their bodies did not age with time. Winnie Foster, however, is a wealthy man's daughter who lives in the town of Treegap. She has never been able to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Between both the movie and the book, the ending is very different. At the end of the book, only Mae Tuck is thrown in jail and Winnie Foster meets with Jesse Tuck at the gate to discuss a plan to bust her out. But, at the end of the movie, both Angus Tuck and Mae Tuck are thrown in jail. Jesse also comes to Winnie's window of her bedroom to discuss a plan to get them out of jail. Once they get to the jailhouse in the book, Angus, Miles, and Jesse took of the bars of the window and got Mae out. Winnie was then lifted through the window and took Mae's spot in the jail. Whereas in the movie, Miles and Jesse pretend to be kidnappers. Winnie runs to the jailhouse and yells as if she is being kidnapped again. Once the constable goes outside and sees the "kidnappers", he realizes they cannot die and runs off. Winnie unlocks the jail cells and frees Mae and Angus. Finally, the Tucks get away safely! Although the movie and the book differ greatly, they each show a distinct side of the end of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28.
  • 29. Who Is Sinclair Lewis Babbitt Coming out of World War I, America became one of the most affluent nations in the world. Technological advances, automobile industries, and many other industries increased production and consumer rates; therefore, the 1920s developed into an era of prosperity. This emergence of immense fortune fancied many business leaders to advertise business as the ideal life for all Americans. In 1922, Sinclair Lewis wrote a satire called Babbitt that critiqued and defined an ideal citizen in America. Also in 1925, Bruce Barton wrote a best seller called The Man Nobody Knows which argued that Jesus Christ was the model of the modern businessman that everyone should follow. Although Lewis and Barton promoted the business attitude differently in their novels, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Throughout Babbitt's speech his moral integrity diminished; he gloated about his city and insulted Europe. For instance, he said the one thing that distinguishes Americans from Europeans "is that they're willing to take a lot of snobs and journalists and politicians, while the modern American business man knows how to talk right up for himself." Although Lewis judged businessmen to be shallow and materialistic, he accepted the fact that he was a participant (Lewis, p.1). What makes this satire note–worthy is that Babbitt is inherently a self–image of Lewis during this era of prosperity; therefore, providing a much more truthful perspective. On the other hand, Barton was in a business leader perspective. One viewpoint he had was to generate more businessmen by making the Christian story more accessible to business. He mentioned that there is no sin but worthy accomplishments from self–interest. He also says that business benefits not only oneself, but others as well because business learned to understand the individual and the social community (Barton, p.2). His work exemplifies how ad agencies and clients invest amounts of time, energy, and money to discover and shape beliefs (Faragher, p. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30.
  • 31. Tuck Everlasting Book Report Tuck Everlasting is a great book that all readers must read. The book is very suspenseful, magical in a new type of way, and romantic in a way most readers love. According to Jean Stafford from The New Yorker, Tuck Everlasting is, "A fearsome and beautifully written book that can't be put down or forgotten." Some readers may think that Tuck Everlasting doesn't have the ending most fairy tail readers want, but overall it has the most love in the book than the rest. The book Tuck Everlasting, is very suspenseful. The main character, 10 year old Winnie Foster, has always dreamed of leaving the gates of her estate by herself. When she does, her adventure begins by being "kidnapped" by Angus Tuck, Mae Tuck, Jesse Tuck and Miles Tuck, who end up ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Many readers can feel a connection with the characters in a way that most people don't normally feel. For example, this book hides a secret about the characters that makes the story more suspenseful and more descriptive about the characters. Tuck Everlasting shows the secrets by sharing that the book has words no one can ever say as a person without being laughed at. For readers who love a good book with romance, Tuck Everlasting is the right book to read. Jesse and Winnie share a secretive loving relationship. They hint of this love affair with statements like "But the thing is, you knowing about the water already... then you could go and drink some, and then you could go away with me!" as said by Jesse Tuck in chapter 14. Although Winnie Foster is younger than Jesse it's easy to feel the bond between each of the characters and want it to continue to grow. Some readers disagree that Tuck Everlasting has a good ending to the book and say that it's not the ending readers want. The ending of the book may appear sad to some readers, and some might find it making the book even better. The book shows that people need to live life differently and live it like its never going to end. Without this Tuck Everlasting would not show the true meaning and moral to the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32.
  • 33. Who Is Babbitt? Babbitt, a middle aged real estate agent, simply a conventional working class businessperson. He appreciates all the present day accommodations accessible to a man of his social class, yet he is disappointed with his life. He has no predictable agreement of qualities, yet trusts that his qualities are uniform since he has buckled down. Babbitt lives in a world in which everything depends on material belonging. The general population of Zenith including Babbitt construct their own riches with respect to the estimation of the belonging they claim. A significant worry of Babbitt and his wife is what other individuals think of them. All throughout Babbitt adjusts to the social standard. Pretty much as Babbitt's furniture is the same as his neighbors', his thoughts mirror the accepted standard. You can never be certain as to who Babbitt truly is on the grounds that he is never certain of his own identity. As the novel advances, we see Babbitt turn into an essential individual in his hometown. Babbitt is a satiric take on man and at the whole society. Babbitt speaks to the common prosperous, moderately aged American agent of the 1920s. Babbitt has a couple of assessments of his own, rather he only speaks of those in the publication pages of the daily papers. He is a promoter, noisily advancing his city although when he doesn't realize what he is talking about. He is stuck in a class that he feels is underneath him. The distinction is great to the point ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Babbitt is in fact unsuccessful as a person. I think he is unsuccessful because he has to rely on what other people think about him even when he may not be doing anything wrong. An example can be found on page 11 of the book when he says "Rats! The rest of them won't dress." Then he has to be reminded of a time when he didn't dress properly and the everyone else did and he felt embarrassed. My point here is that he should be able to determine what to wear to a certain place or event by ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34.
  • 35. Tuck Everlasting Book Report Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbitt In the book Tuck Everlasting the characters are Winnifred Foster, her dad mom and grandma. The Tuck family is Angus Tuck, Jesse Tuck, Miles Tuck, and their mom. Winnifred was "kidnapped" by the tucks because she saw Jesse drink from the fountain of youth. When the tucks kidnapped her, they treat her like family and does not harm her. The man in the yellow suit is watching and he knows what is happening to Winne, he tells Winifred's parents and he tries to trade the information for the wood with the fountain. The Foster family does not know that the fountain of youth is there in the woods. In the movie Tuck Everlasting Winnifred is going to be shipped off to a school 300 miles away and she does not ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36.
  • 37. Concepts Of Love In George's Babbitt These concepts of love can also be seen in other works of the time. In Babbitt, George has a few affairs with varying success throughout the novel. His first attempt at having an affair was with Ida, a young manicurist. After a dinner of awkward conversation, she, rather mechanically, returned the favor with a kiss. As described by Lewis, "from the standpoint of Miss Ida Putiak, [Babbitt was] an old bore who had to be endured as the penalty attached to eating a large dinner (242)." Here one can begin to see a clearer picture of love itself as a consumable commodity, pursued for the same reasons as purchasing a new good – the instant gratification that can easily be replicated over and over again with new relationships and things. In these highly consumer driven cases, love and affection are demonstrated through material possession, and then when selecting a partner, one must go for the most luxurious option. Because of this, companionship can often be left for only those with the most wealth and possession. Just as happiness and love were perceived to be commodities that could be purchased in the 1920s, so was companionship of any nature. This follows the reason of the era though. If one chose one's lover on the basis of luxury goods, then it is only logical that one would also choose friends and spouses this way. In Babbitt, he often complained about his wife and her simple–mindedness. He hated it when she mended her stockings instead of replacing them, or when she ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38.
  • 39. Tuck Everlasting Point Of View Time moves forward, and only forward. It's a circle – we are born, raised, we live, then we die. But have you ever imagined what would happen if you were endowed with immortality? What if you could not die no matter how many decades had passed, while the world around you keeps changing and everyone else keeps aging? Would it be wonderful to live forever like that? Then you should take a look at Tuck Everlasting, a novel written by Natalie Babbitt in 1975 which focuses on the negative side of immortality. The narrative point of view used in the novel is the third person omniscient, like most of the stories we were told as children. Our narrator, the author, knows everything. She can zoom in and out on all the characters, jump from place to place, and even read the thoughts of the main characters. The Prologue tells us all: "At dawn, Mae Tuck set out on her horse..." "At noontime, Winnie Foster, whose family owned the Treegap wood,..." "And at sunset a stranger appeared at the Fosters' gate." There is no connection among them. But these are the three main storylines, and the narrator knows them all. This point of view really fits a story with lots of characters, that spans many years and has different settings like Tuck Everlasting. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The geographical location of Treegap is not specified, perhaps to convey the impression that the events might happen in any small town. In the woods at the edge of Treegap, the Tucks live a simple life and want to keep the secret of the eternal–life–giving stream to themselves. The Tucks' cabin is a "plain, homely house" with a "charming disarray," and its inhabitants are friendly and ostensibly prioritize human relationships above meticulous property maintenance. In contrast to the disorganized and messy property of the Tucks, the Fosters' house is guarded by a heavy iron gate and a sign informing visitors they are unwelcome. Everything is neatly maintained and in its proper ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40.
  • 41. Babbit by Sinclair Lewis Essays Babbitt: Conformity In the Sinclair Lewis novel Babbitt, the character of Babbitt is completely controlled by the power of conformity. Conformity is so powerful that even after babbitt realizes the stifling nature of the society in which he lives he is powerless to change his fate as a member of conformist society. George F. Babbitt is a man who is completely controlled by the conformist society in which he lives. Pressure to conform lies in all aspects of Babbitt's life. Relationships, family, social life, and business are all based on his ability to conform to Zenith's preset standards of thought and action. All of Babbitt's thoughts are controlled by society. Thoughts that are not those of society are ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Babbitt does these things in hope of improving his social status. This conformist man is exactly who Sinclair Lewis wanted to show the reader, a man who's life is based on the ideals and standards of others. "Villages–overgrown towns–three –quarters of a million people still dressing, eating, building houses, attending church, to make an impression on their neighbors." (Lewis). This is what Lewis thought of American society and he used Babbitt to voice his opinions to his readers. In fact that passage was intended to be included in the original introduction of Babbitt, which was never published. Babbitt does well in conformist society because in the beginning of the novel he accepts all the standards, goals, ideals, likes, and dislikes of society. Babbitt's though mirrors all those around him and he is therefore accepted in society. At first Babbitt lives in the illusion of happiness. The happiness Babbitt experiences is not genuine because he has replaced his desires with those of society. Since Babbitt is controlled by society his goals are also controlled by it. The goals set by society are economic and material worth, social standing, and conservative thought. Since Babbitt has achieved, at least in part, these goals he is in a sense fooled into believing he is truly happy. Babbitt's true desires however are not those of society he dreams of nature instead of modernization, young women instead of his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 42.
  • 43. Living Forever In Tuck Everlasting By Natalie Babbitt If you had the choice,would you want to live forever? In the book "Tuck Everlasting" by Natalie Babbitt, a ten–year–old girl had to make a choice of if she would live forever or would she not. She had to make a choice because when she was wandering around the forest she came across the Tuck family who knows about a water, called the spring, that can make you younger forever. Life is a wheel, everyday someone new enters the wheel and someone falls off the wheel; they live forever. Living forever is a curse because you lose your loved ones, see everything around you change, and you need to hide, to keep the secret away from everyone. The death of a loved one is an event that all of us are likely to experience during our lifetimes, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The Tucks secret, being immortal is a secret that has to be kept away from everyone, but there was one person out of seven–billion–three hundred–twenty– four million–seven hundred–eighty–two thousand (7,324,782,000) people, who was eager to know the truth from the Tucks, if they were immortal or not. He was a old man, in the book he was called "The man in the yellow suit." The Tucks had to keep the secret away from him because everyone in the world would love to be immortal. Therefore, you can't have a solid relationship, like Miles, he did not have a solid relationship with his wife nor his children but last but not least you can not stay in one place forever because everyone around you will find out the secret so you need to hide from everyone, so that the secret is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 44.
  • 45. Milton Babbitt I really enjoyed the two pieces Composition for 12 Instruments and Three Compositions by Milton Babbitt. At first, I did not expect to enjoy them, since in Composition for 12 Instruments there were several high notes/squeaks. However, this lessened farther into the piece, and also there was not any of this in his other piece Three Compositions. When it comes to the type of music Babbitt produces, I believe that Babbitt's eminence in the musical world is a unique and modern approach on music. In his two pieces Composition for 12 Instruments and Three Compositions, this is very apparent, as it sounds less organized and structured than much of the music that came in previous eras. Not only is this true for just Babbitt, this idea is also true for other similar composers such as Alban Berg. The main reason why this twelve–tone type of music has a limited audience is that many people are used to hearing more structured music from previous eras such as the Baroque era. After being used to structured music and then listening to Babbitt or Berg, the twelve–tone works sound like random ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... 4 and 4' 33" by John Cage to be very interesting and enjoyable in a good way. In 4' 33", I felt that John Cage was trying to say that anything can be music, whether the music is coming from instruments, or even the nearly–quiet environment of a performance hall. Going along with this thought, I believe that 4' 33" is indeed music. 4' 33" is music that differs every place, time, and performance. It may not fit any certain category of music, but it is a sort of noise that is produced and then listened to by an audience. When it comes to chance music such as Cage's Imaginary Landscape No. 4, I think that this type of music is an interesting idea. The fact that the composer does not have control of whatever noise happens, whether that be a radio or random background noise during a performance seems kind of scary, but also appealing at the same ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 46.
  • 47. A Catholic Socialist In Dreadful Conversations: The Making of a Catholic Socialist (2003), John C. Cort quoted Irving Babbitt saying, "Rousseau abandoned his five children, one after the other, but had, we are told, an unspeakable affection for his dog."1 Irving Babbitt certainly had no love loss for Jean–Jacques Rousseau not only because of his abandonment of his children but because Rousseau was the antithesis of Babbitt. Even though both Babbitt and Rousseau offer revolutionary ideas that affected their societies, their educational and religious philosophies differed in many ways. On education, Babbitt and Rousseau exhibited contrasting ideas. Rousseau's views on education centered upon human liberty in educational pursuits. However, Babbitt was more about structure in educational pursuits. Babbitt wrote, "[Bacon and thereby Rousseau] do not have the humanist's passion for wholeness, for the harmonious rounding out of all the faculties."2 In contrast to Babbitt, Rousseau and Bacon believed that one should "burrow ever more and more deeply into his own specialty."3 Babbitt continued, "The scientific and sentimental naturalist are sharply at variance on many points, but in their views on education they often coincide curiously."4 As opposed to Bacon and Rousseau, Babbitt was the opposite of a scientific/sentimental naturalist. Babbitt believed in the value of a classical education and the foundation that came through those offerings. He wrote, "Classical literature, at its best, does not so ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 48.
  • 49. Ever After Irwing Summary Ever After by H.M. Irwing is a romance novel that follows the story of Cindy Marshall and Julian St. John. Cindy was born to a millionaire father who abandoned her and her terminally ill mother when she was a child. The story picks up with her fresh out of school with an Economics degree. However, the only job she is able to get is that of a waitress in an elite night club owned by the self– made billionaire, Julian St. John. Julian instantly falls for Cindy after rescuing her from attempted gang rape. However, he needs a creative plan to win the heart of the woman who no longer believes in love and marriage. I found this book hard to read for a number of reasons, the biggest being the numerous errors in the book. Many are more common errors such as the confusion between homophones, while others are much worse such as the repeating of the same phrase in a sentence. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... I feel that the storyline lacks ups and downs. Every time a new discovery is made by one of the characters or conflict arises it feels irrelevant. To me, Julian was a very confusing character. In the first few meetings between him and Cindy, his motives are very unclear and he only says about 2 sentences. I found this very frustrating; it felt like the story was standing still and had no point. Even though the story is told from Cindy's point of view, I feel that the author could have made bigger effort to make Julian more understandable to the reader. Something else that created confusion was that he was always referred to as The Dark Prince or The Monk, seldomly as Julian. Even though Julian's character was poorly displayed, I feel that the author put a lot of thought into the characters of Cindy's step siblings, especially her brothers. Their characters were well described, each one was unique and their relationships with Cindy were very ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 50.
  • 51. Tuck Everlasting Research Paper Tuck Everlasting Arg. Essay Imagine if you had the chance to drink "magical water" from a spring and live forever. Would you drink the water? I believe that you should drink from the spring in Tuck Everlasting, because you could explore the world, never get hurt, or have the fear of dying. Thinking it could happen is one thing, but it actually happening is another, for the Tuck's, living it and believing it happen is their life. In Tuck Everlasting, Jesse and Miles come home after 10 years to their small town of Treegap to see their parents, and Jesse, having gone to Paris, brought Mae a miniature Eiffel Tower. Exploring can be dangerous and sometimes life threatening, but not in the Tuck's case. Scuba–diving to the deepest parts of the ocean ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Breaking a bone or injuring any part of your body can be horribly painful and also very stressful. If you were playing your favorite sport and you gave it everything you had plus that extra 10%, you break your arm and have to go to the hospital and sit out the rest of the season versus getting back up perfectly fine and as if it had never even happened. You hear of many books and movies about many people being afraid to die. That fear is often what some people think about on their death beds or very close to death. In Tuck Everlasting, the Tuck's aren't afraid to die because they simply can't, one of the many perks of drinking the magical water. I believe that drinking from the spring would help you not to live in fear of dying your whole life. If you choose not to drink the water, it can also, be good for your life. you can live out a normal, natural life without any "magical water" or a lifespan that lasts forever. Children can be born and prevented from even knowing that this type of water even exists. Thinking back on the book, Tuck Everlasting, drinking the water is a more adventurous, and exciting way to live, because of your forever lifespan. If you had that choice, wouldn't you take ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 52.
  • 53. Tuck Everlasting: Winnie And The Magical Spring Winnie and the magical spring Have you ever imagined about living forever? In the book Tuck Everlasting, Winnie foster left her cottage and went to her wood and she met Jesse Tuck. She was taken to the Tuck's house and was told a secret about the powers of a spring and it's magical powers in her wood. She was told to drink the water when she is 17, but she never did. In my opinion Winnie should have drank the water because she can see the future, she can see the world, she won't have to worry about dying. First of all, she can see the future. "We was going to live for ever" – Jesse. If Winnie drank the water she can have a lot of time living on earth and she can see the future. " i'll stay seventeen till the end of the world"– Jesse. Winnie ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 54.
  • 55. Tuck Everlasting Theme Theme The Wheel The main theme of Tuck Everlasting is that life and death should coexist and balance each other. The cycle of life and death never stops, it keeps going just like a wheel. One wheel would never be able to do anything on its own, just like life by itself wouldn't make anything progress. It is the combination of wheels that helps things function, just like it's a combination of life, birth, aging, and death that help the population change. Without their coexistence, like wheels, everyone would stay the same forever. This is why I chose the wheel to symbolize the coexistence of life and death. It properly shows how many aspects working together make things better. Everything is a wheel, turning and turning, just like the cycle ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In Chapter 12, Pa Tuck himself speaks to Winnie, explaining just why it would be dangerous for word of the spring's magic properties to get around to the general public. Pa Tuck believes that the idea of living forever sounds very appealing at first, but that once it is obtained, it is not at all the wonderful gift it appeared to be at first glance. He describes the despair of being left out of the natural stream of life, and says that by the time people who take advantage of the water's magic powers realize the situation they are in, it will be too late to go back and make things right. In Chapter 14, Jesse presents another side of the dilemma to Winnie. He agrees with his father that the spring should be kept secret, but adds that as long as they all know about its magic powers, they might as well take advantage of it. Jesse wants Winnie to wait until she is the same age as he is – seventeen – and then drink some of the water so that she will be stuck at that age forever. At that time they could perhaps get married, and enjoy eternal life on earth together.I would use the bottle of spring water to symbolize her conflict. When Jesse gives her the water she knows that she has to make a decision. The bottle of water symbolizes that temptation to drink the water that Winnie has. She is deeply tempted to be free, and drink the water. However, doing so will mean that she will forever be the same age, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 56.
  • 57. Babbitt's Deformed Conscience Babbitt, by Sinclair Lewis, demonstrates a sound heart kept beneath a deformed conscience. Babbitt, the main character, decides to follow his sound heart, but soon realizes he cannot overcome the corrupt principles of his middle class culture. The bourgeois conscience influences Babbitt to value success and a superior reputation, but Babbitt's sound heart begins to refuse conformity through rebellion. He temporarily abandons this deformed conscience, but he cannot change his lifestyle completely. Babbitt's tendency to follow the deformed conscience emphasizes his conformity and desperation to belong. Babbitt's sound heart is faint underneath his compliance because his identity lies within this system of corrupt morals. Babbitt cares about his good reputation within the Zenith community. He had the satisfaction of possessing the reputation of a successful real–estate agent. Babbitt's position gave him integrity and status which he believed he deserved. His reputation was significant because it became his identity and a source of belonging. Babbitt's status granted him the proper recognition from his community. Nathaniel Rich, a Novelist and former editor, writes ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He decides to stay with his wife because the Zenith community would strip him of his integrity. This deformed conscience has a major impact in his decisions, because it forces him to maintain the ideal lifestyle. He stays with his sick wife out of guilt and commendation. Babbitt uses Myra's illness as an excuse to revert to conformity and staying as a respectable man when he tells her, "Oh honey, I love you more than anything in the world! I've kind of been worried by business and everything, but that's all over now, and I'm back again." Babbitt has the same deformed conscience because of his insincere apology and motives to stay with Myra. Even though Babbitt has characteristics of a sound heart, it is almost defeated by ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 58.
  • 59. Sinclair Lewis and Babbitt Sinclair Lewis and Babbitt The book under analysis herein is Sinclair Lewis' Babbitt. The copy I am using in this research is published by Harcourt, Brace & World, Inc., New York, 1950. The original version was published in 1922, but there is no information in this book regarding what printing or edition it may be. This edition encompasses thirty four chapters which span 401 pages in length as they are printed here. One interesting note is that the novel is dedicated to Edith Wharton. The author of the work, Sinclair Lewis, was born in Sauk Centre, Minnesota, and holds the distinction of being the first American ever to be awarded the Nobel Prize for literature. Lewis was born in the late 19th century and lived ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... If we look at specific passages from the novel, it is easy to see the author's contention as described above. While he does temporarily decide to fight the limiting influences of a material society that ostracizes individuality opposed to its established norms, Babbitt does revert back to his unquestioning superficial self once he recognizes that having original thoughts and acting on them is isolating, unprofitable and even dangerous. Babbitt is supposed to represent the ordinary human being, the average businessman and upwardly mobile middle–class America. However, Babbitt seems more artifice than genuine human being. Like the ads that sell Americans products, Babbitt has forged an identity that was imposed on him by the dominant forces of democratic capitalism, "Just as he was an Elk, a Booster, a member of the Chamber of Commerce, just as the priests of the Presbyterian Church determined his every religious belief, and the senators who controlled the Republican Part decided in little smoky rooms in Washington what he should think about disarmament, tariffs, and Germany, so did the large national advertisers fix the surface of his life, fix what he believed to be his individuality. These standard advertised wares...at first the signs, then the substitutes, for joy and passion and wisdom" (Lewis 95). However, for all his satire of Babbitt, Lewis, in keeping with his own character, seems somewhat ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 60.
  • 61. Teen Conformity in Sinclair Lewis' Babbitt and in Society... Teen Conformity in Babbitt and in Society Today In society today, people feel the need to belong. They feel as though they have to be a part of something in order to feel special. At times, they will go so far as to lose their individuality and submit themselves into complete ignorance just to be able to know that there is someone or something to which they can always fall back on. Conformity is one of the most common and most apparent forms of Babbittry in the twenty – first century. First, the question must be answered: "What is conformity?" The answer, of course, is very simple. Conformity is a person changing their attitude or behavior on their own in order to fulfill certain social norms (Ferguson). Conforming to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This part is a perfect representation of how sometimes teenagers like to conform to being rebellious against their parents and higher institutions. His views are characteristic of the common teenager that school and our elders can't teach us anything. This point is obvious when Ted says (concerning college), "Yuh, but Dad, they just teach a lot of old junk that isn't any practical use – except the manual training and typewriting and basketball and dancing – and in these correspondence courses, gee, you can get all kinds of stuff that would come in handy." (Lewis 77). Ted speaks about how frustrated he is with his Dad being content with simply sitting around the house and doing nothing (Lewis 220). His need to be different and to not go to college is a perfect example of a teenager's need to rebel against their parents. Ted's assumption that his elders are boring is another form of teen conformity. Even today, children wish to do things that they think are better as opposed to what their elder's tell them. Teen conformity can also be seen with Ted's party for the Senior Class. At this party the Babbitt's serve alcohol and the teenagers exhibit behavior which George considers to be immoral. Babbitt is completely against the idea but his wife tells him, "[I]f you get angry because they go out to their cars to have a drink, they won't come to your ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 62.
  • 63. Tuck Everlasting Conflict Conflict In Tuck Everlasting there is a plethora of conflicts throughout the book, but the two main conflicts are a man vs man (Mr. Tuck vs Man in Yellow Suit) and a man vs self (Winnie vs Winnie). To start off with, the man vs man is an external struggle between Mr. Tuck and the Man in the Yellow suit. Throughout the book, Natalie Babbitt slowly shows readers that Mr. Tuck and the Man in the Yellow suit have completely different viewpoints on the immortal spring. Mr. Tuck thinks that it should be kept a secret and that people shouldn't live forever. To prove this point, when Mr. Tuck took Winnie out to the pond he said that "life is like a wheel and we Tucks are like stones, never moving or changing." This quote represents ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The day when Winnie woke up Miles had ask her if she wanted to go fishing with him and this is when Miles confessed to Winnie that he had made one of the worst decisions in his life. He explained to her that when he had married his wife he never knew if he should tell his wife that there was a magical spring in the woods where they could live forever. He didn't know if it was the right choice to make so in the end he didn't even have a choice if he still wanted to tell his family or not because the wife had ran off with the two children. But, after that he had another choice to make and that was; should he try and find his family and let them drink from the spring or should he just let them live a natural life and die. Miles decided that he shouldn't for after all he didn't think of this for some odd years so his wife was already 40 and children were already all grown up so Miles thought it wasn't worth it. Miles told Winnie that he regrets ever doing this to his family because he misses them so very ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 64.
  • 65. Essay about George Babbitt of Sinclair Lewis' Babbitt George Babbitt: Image of a Presbyterian In Babbitt, Sinclair Lewis portrays religion as a corrupt business. In fact, he emphasizes this by focusing on his main character George Babbitt. George Babbitt is characterized as a businessman in Zenith. He is a man preoccupied about his reputation and his image before the main leaders of the town he lives in. Lewis creates a hypocritical figure for Babbitt through his reasons for being a Presbyterian. He says that if you were to question Babbitt about his religion he would say, "My religion is to serve my fellow men, to honor my brother as myself, and to do my bit to make life happier for one and for all" (199). Of course, if you heard this from Babbitt you would ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... His participation within his religious denomination was his stepping stool. Chum Frink and Mr.Eathorne accepted Babbitt because of his proposals for the Sunday School. He wanted to divide the school into four armies with militaristic characteristics. This would help the children feel as if they were doing something worthy. Secondly, he insisted on improvement of the advertising committee (Lewis 207). This goes to show you how businesslike the Sunday School was becoming. Babbitt was only thinking of business morals and forgetting the religious morals. Lewis also draws an image of George Babbitt's sanctimoniousness through his idea of Hell. We see Babbitt's hypocrisy when he says, "if one was a Bad Man, that is, if he murdered or committed burglary or used cocaine or had mistresses or sold non–existent real estate, he would be punished" (199). Notice how everything Babbitt mentions at the time is something he has not done, however as he continues to live his life he eventually pulls a crooked real estate deal and begins to cheat on his wife, Myra. Babbitt's flirtatious character is seen when he dates several women and is careless because of his wife's absence. Lewis practically points out Babbitt's hypocrisy through his failure to comply with his own criteria of who does and who does not go to Hell. Lewis portrays the Presbyterian Church ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 66.
  • 67. Making The Right Choice In Tuck Everlasting By Natalie... Throughout Tuck Everlasting, by Natalie Babbitt, there were many examples of how making the right choice isn't always easy. One example is when Winnie told Jesse that she wants to help the Tucks with the escape plan of Mae from the gallows. Even though Winnie knew that she'll get in trouble for going out in the middle of the night, she still took the risk. Another example is when Miles knew about the spring water, but didn't bring his family to the spring. He made a sacrifice for the Tucks, keeping the secret safe from anyone else. The last example is when Mae killed the man in the yellow suit when he was trying to take away Winnie. Even though Mae knew about the consequences, she still did it in order to protect Winnie. Through analyzing the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Many of the characters in Tuck Everlasting shows making the right choice, but it wasn't easy for them, some had to sacrifice a lot of things. One of the characters is Winnie, on page 114 it states, "I can help! When your mother climbs out of the window, I'll climb in and take her place. I can wrap myself up in her blanket, and when the constable looks in, he won't be able to tell the difference. Not in the dark. I can hump up and look a lot bigger. Miles can even put the window back." Even though Winnie made the right choice, she knew that she might lose the trust of her family members, but she still took the risk. She knew that Mae got sent to the gallows because Mae was protecting her. Another character that has been through this is Miles. On page 84 it states, "Winnie looked at his young, strong face and after a moment she said, "Why didn't you take them to the spring and give them the special water?" "Well, of course, we didn't realize about the spring while we ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 68.
  • 69. Tuck Everlasting Motifs Tuck Everlasting The book Tuck Everlasting is a good book. Throughout the book, three continuous motifs that I found are: the wheel, fence, and fantasy. I chose fantasy as the motif because of the several reasons that I have listed in this essay. Natalie Babbitt uses motif and analogy in the development of theme in Tuck Everlasting by using the motif: fantasy and several different analogies. First off, the concept fantasy is the best concept to use because of the following reasons included in Tuck Everlasting: the wood had a "pass me by" look, the road knows where to go, and the Tucks look the same for over 87 years. These are just a few of several reasons to support that fantasy is the best motif used in the book. Next, I think the theme in Tuck Everlasting is: time and death. I think that the theme is time and death because: the Tucks are immortal. They will live forever. A quote that helps support the theme of time is: "'Everything's a wheel, turning and turning, never stopping. The frogs is part of it, and the bugs, and the fish, and the wood thrush, too. And people. But never the same ones. Always coming in new, always growing and changing, and always moving on. That's the way it's supposed to be. That's the way it is."' Angus Tuck is talking about the wheel of life. That time moves on. People are growing and changing. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... But this rowboat now, it's stuck. If we didn't move it ourself, it would stay here forever, trying to get loose, but stuck. That's what us Tucks are, Winnie. Stuck so's we can't move on.We ain't part of the wheel no more." That's when the motif Fantasy comes in. The Tuck's are immortal now. People can't actually be immortal. They can't be dropped off of the wheel of life. By introducing the analogies of the water cycle: "wheel of life"::rowboat:Tucks, she makes a point of saying that the Tucks are going to stay living forever, making the motif fantasy become more of a supportive ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 70.
  • 71. Tuck Everlasting Research Paper Life Needs Death Have you ever dreamed of living forever? Or have you had a fear of dying? Well the Tucks ,(From the book Tuck Everlasting, by Natalie Babbitt), had discovered a spring with everlasting water; or water that keeps you alive forever without aging, which they drank. After some time, the man in the yellow suit, figured there was something fishy about the Tucks, and discovered the Tucks' secret about the spring water. The man in the yellow suit wants to sell the spring water. The Tucks appose. Here are a few reasons I oppose as well. First, there is only a limited amount of spring water, and there will be a fight over who gets it. Next, if everyone lived forever, the world would be overpopulated. Lastly, if there is no death, there ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... If people kept living, forever, as well as having babies, who would also live forever, there would be no space for anyone to do what they want to do, so you wouldn't enjoy life. Natalie Babbitt also mentions in her book in chapter 12, page 49, " You for instance, a child now, but someday a woman. And after that, moving on to make room for the new children." And in chapter 12, page 49, "Everything is a wheel, turning and turning, never stopping. Always coming in new, always growing and changing, and always moving on." ` Lastly, I believe if there is no death, there is no point in life. You know you have forever to do whatever you want to, you won't live life to the fullest. In my opinion, you will procrastinate on everything. As Natalie Babbitt tells us in her book in, chapter 12, page 49without dying., "If I'd known how to climb back on the wheel, I'd do it in a minute. You can't live without dying. " She also tells us how the Tucks feel about living forever in, chapter 12, page 50. "So you can't call it living what we got.We just are, we just be like rocks , like rocks beside the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 72.
  • 73. I Think Tuck Everlasting, By Natalie Babbitt Is living forever a good thing, or a bad thing? I think Tuck Everlasting, by Natalie Babbitt, has many messages in it, and can definitely influence people. However, could a book influence decisions in life? How about your life? This book can change the way you think about some things. Decisions for school, life, your family, etc. Winnie was faced with a difficult decision, many, actually. The biggest one would probably be whether to drink the springwater or not. Would you drink something like that, even if it meant that you could never die, and you had to live forever? Winnie didn't completely believe the story about the springwater. In the end of the book, you can somewhat infer that she did, even if it was just a little. She did believe that the springwater could really make you live forever, and yet she still didn't drink it. I believe that she made the right decision not to drink the springwater. Before I read this book, I thought that I would want to live forever, but now I see that I wouldn't want to drink the springwater. Seeing how Angus Tuck had felt about living forever, I realized that living forever may not be all that great after all, you wouldn't even get to experience the rest of life, or even know what happens as you get older. I would have made this choice differently. I would have definitely done what Winnie did, give the water up, and not drink it. If I were to compare myself to some of the characters, I might be most like Winnie. If I ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 74.
  • 75. Comparing Cordasco's Ranch And The Babbitt Ranch A writing that I enjoyed was "Just Participate!", an interview with Billy Cordasco about the Babbitt Ranches he worked on. This piece caught my attention due to its cowboy nature, divulging the methods and tricks of the trade when it comes to farming cattle. Having lived in Hawaii my entire life I have been surrounded and involved with farming, hunting, and ranching. I was subjected to the life of the Paniolo(Hawaiian cowboys) at a very young age, two of my neighbors and good family friends were involved with Parker ranch, a 250,000 acre ranch in the mountainous town of Waimea. Parker ranch deals with a generous supply of livestock; primarily cattle accompanied with smaller herds of sheep and horses. I've been able to ride around the ranch and observe the Paniolo herd cattle and perform simple daily tasks like refilling troughs and cycling horses for grazing. Simply reading about Cordasco's lifestyle and duties made me very reminiscent of the many days I spent on the ranch, one very fond memory of mine was riding on the back of an atv while my uncle drove to find a herd of cattle and perform a head count. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Parker ranch is in the middle of often luscious green grass at a high elevation where it is very moist and fruitful, this being said there was little consideration for drought conditions and what actions would be taken in such a case but recently conditions have become drier. The Paniolo at Parker ranch would also hunt wild cattle that graze near the outskirts of the ranch to supply large amounts of food for friends and family without diminishing the herd that they care for. The Babbitt ranches were also much larger and mainland ranches have quite a varied lifestyle when compared to those of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 76.
  • 77. Analysis Of Hester Street And Babbitt Essay Assimilation in Hester Street and Babbitt Identity crises are common problems for immigrants coming into any country. Deciding whether to stay true to their roots or to assimilate to a new culture puts pressure on many immigrants and their families. Both Jake and Babbitt, from Hester Street and Babbitt respectively, define what means to be American on superficial terms, even though they both believe that being an American does not merely stem from racial identity. They both become obsessed with being as seen as Americans through their social status, physical appearance, the pursuit of wealth, and freedom. While both Jake and Babbitt try to assimilate to American culture, only Babbitt truly succeeds in achieving this goal. Babbitt and Jake both believe that achieving a higher social status will make them more American. To Jake, social status is very much tied to the accumulation of wealth. He berates Mr. Bernstein for making less than he does each week. He prides himself on having more wealth than other in his home country and some of his fellow workers. Jake, however, never actively tries to climb the proverbial social ladder. To him, wealth and social status are one and the same, so he tries to achieve both through the pursuit of wealth. Babbitt, on the other hand, has a much more diverse thought process when considering the relationship between himself and his social status. He knows the difference between accumulation of wealth and social status, and while he already ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...