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Hogan, Pg. 1

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Term Paper TitleHogan, Pg. 1
# of Words897
# of Pages (250 words per page double spaced)3.59
Hogan, Pg. 1
     Love between two people is a force that is stronger than any other feeling, whether the feeling opposes the two, or is a positive influence to them.   The couple should stay faithful to each other if what they feel really is love.  Lermontov's classic, A Hero of Our Time, the main character, Pechorin, is subjected to certain journeys, through which he encounters many women to show the reader what Pechorin's representation of love really is.  In the Fitzgerald novel, The Great Gastby, Jay Gastby is determined to win the love of Daisy Buchanan, a married woman from his past.  Both novles have unique ideals of love, which are repeated throughout each novel, however, they also display many similar characteristics that give both books a comparable representative attitude towards women and love, and distinguish that from lust.
     In the two stories, there is a situation in which one person feels like they are obligated to stay in the relationship or into marriage with the other person, however, for different reasons.  In The Great Gastby, as Cathrine talks with Nick about Myrtle and Georges' marriage, she tells him, "Can't stand them. . .It's really his wife that's keeping them apart.  She's a Catholic and they don't believe in divorce,"(p37, T.G.G.), which implies to Nick that Tom and Myrtle aren't together because of his obligation to marriage with Daisy.  The fact that Daisy is not Catholic, and doesn't feel obligated to Tom because of her false religion contradicts Cathrine's whole statement about the relationship between the two married.  Vera, a character from A Hero of Our Time, in the chapter Princess Mary has the true situation that, "She married him[her husband] for the sake of her son." (Pg111, A.H.O.T.).  This is an example of a direct obligation for the

Hogan, Pg. 2.
parents to get married because it involved a childs life.  Eve though they were going to have a child Vera and her husband had love that wasn't based upon material things, as in Myrtle and Tom's case.
     On two or more occasions, the coined phrase 'word of mouth' comes into place when determining the love between a couple.  Daisy's conversation with Nick, in The Great Gatsby is one full of he-saids and she-saids that will influence the characters feelings and original story.  "I forgot to ask you something, and it's important.  We heard that you were engaged," and Nick replies, "That's right.  It's a libel, I'm too poor . . ." In reference to this situation, everyone is hear...

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