Saturday, March 23, 2019
Essay on Freedom and Fate in Moll Flanders :: Moll Flanders Essays
Freedom and bunch in moll Flanders   Are people who believe in freewill simply ignorant of the reasons of their actions?  In the context of Defoes Moll Flanders, this question may result in considerable debate. Was Flanders free or was she predetermined to screw a wicked and improper life mired in long time of penitence? Did the whorish behavior of Molls mother predetermine Molls actions? Certainly there is no question that Flanders was a criminal - she was a whore, a thief, and she practiced incest.    In regards to Flanders having sex with her stimulate brother it would be difficult to argue that this was a predetermined event considering she truly did not know her husband was of her own flesh and blood. If, indeed, she was aware of the relation and then chose to proceed then wiz could discus it further in the context of freewill. As for being a whore there is no question that Flanders, especially later in her life, involved herself with such happenings, but for me it was the thievery that seemed to capture the essence of Flanders running(prenominal) undoing and constant need for penitence. There is no better embark on of Defoes work to capture the feelings of utter despondency then when Moll is passing play to steal for the first time from the pill rollers shop. Defoe prefaces the scene with a few paragraphs where Moll explains her absolute desolate state. The annoyance is then set in what James Sutherland explains, ...Molls first theft he sets the scene with such conscientious attention to detail that he fixes it in our minds, and gives to it that air of authenticity which, for Defoe, is near justification of fiction. This is where Defoes journalistic stylings shine. The reader is indeed in the apothecary and sees Molls gaffe unfolding before him.   We are free to judge whether or not we would take the bundle that so often becomes Molls pursuit in the future. It is at that instant that we can decide whether Moll was free t o do so or controlled by something unavoidable, such as fate. If Moll was playacting on freewill it is arguable that she would not repeat the same crime in the future, in fact she would most likely avoid each such acts that resulted in the terrible feelings she experienced during and after the first offense. For she says herself, It is unrealizable to express the horror of my soul all the while I did it.
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