Sunday, August 18, 2019
How George Eliot Presents the Role of Fatherhood in Silas Marner Essay
How George Eliot Presents the Role of Fatherhood in Silas Marner    The novel Silas Marner is about a man who loses everything in his old  hometown Lantern Yard, to the hands of his friend. He moves to a  village called Raveloe which he stays at for 15 years. Being a weaver  for so long, Marner has made himself a very small fortune, which  becomes his life. When it is stolen by one of the other villagers,  Silas feels he has once again lost everything until he finds a small  girl which he names Eppie. The bond between these two characters is an  essential part of the novel as it brings out a key theme in the novel  which is fatherhood.    In the novel itself, there are many fathers, some of which we do not  see much of. The main fathers happen to be Squire Cass, his son  Godfrey, Ben Winthrop, Mr Lammeter and later on, Silas Marner. There  is much distinction between these characters and the one that sticks  out the most is perhaps Godfrey Cass. Godfrey is a young man who was  seemingly forced to marrying some drug taking vagrant after making her  pregnant, this fact is of course his...                      
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