Exercise 2
Have you found all the mistakes?
- The Romantic hero is isolated and so is Roderick. His friend has had
to ride for a whole day through a 'singularly dreary tract of country' before getting to the house of Usher (277). He rode alone and doesn't tell
us about getting to meet any people
on the road. In Rodericks room
the windows are 'altogether inaccessible from within' (232), suggesting
that he can't get out of the house. Roderick isn't, however,
only physically isolated, the isolation's also psychological. The narrator
recalls that he'd always
been reserved and now he finds that Roderick hasn't been out of the house
for several years, and thus he hasn't met other people.
- It’s the
argument of this essay that stability symbolised by the estate is
being threatened in
various ways. In order to study the threats the essay is
going to bring forth characteristics
of a good landowner and contrast it with those of a bad landowner’s, as a bad landowner is
going to inflict
instability on his estate. Changes in contemporary society is
also going to be studied. For this purpose I’m gonna use two novels, The bride of lammermoor written
by sir Walter
Scott and Mansfield park by
Jane Austen. First, however, we’ll look
at the sociological background during 17th and 18th centuries,
as Scott’s novel is set round 1700 and Austen’s novel 100 years
later.
- A nation's story isn't,
or shouldn't be, solely about wealth
or power, but about the quality of the communities existence. Britains loss
of power needn't damage
that quality, unless this is measured only in material terms. (McDowal:
An Illustrated History of Britain, p. 159).
- By this time Britain had an army of over 5 million
men, but by this time over 750.000 had
died, and another 2 million
had been seriously wounded. About 50 times
more people had died than in the 20-year war
against napoleon. Public opinion demanded no mercy for Germany. (McDowal:An
Illustrated History of Britain, p. 161)