Monday, August 19, 2019
Unconditional Love in E.B. Whites Charlottes Web Essay -- English Li
Unconditional Love in E.B. White's Charlotte's Web        In fantasy like Charlotte's Web, the animals are true to their  natures, yet similar to people. They think and worry and love and hurt  and laugh and needle one another as people do. In Charlotte's Web,  human truths of friendship and love are revealed. I strongly agree  with the statement that Charlotte is truly the ideal role model of  unconditional love and will support my stand by highlighting  Charlotte's selfless acts, contrasting her with Templeton, showing why  he is the complete opposite of her, comparing her with other models of  love such as Fern, Mrs. Arable and the goose and lastly, proving that  Wilbur's change is a result of her unconditional love.    We know Charlotte's nature very well. She was Wilbur's best friend and  saviour; beautiful and intelligent. As White put it, "It's not often  that someone comes along who is a true friend and a good writer.  Charlotte was both." She is not only motherly, but hardworking, and her  web words prove it. She is the same wise and selfless character at the  end of the story that she was at the beginning, which makes her the  ideal model of unconditional love.    In Wilbur's first conversation with Charlotte, Wilbur's discovery of  how Charlotte survives impedes their new friendship, "Charlotteis  fierce, brutal, scheming, bloodthirsty- everything I don't like. How  can I learn to like her, even though she is pretty and, of course,  clever?" The friendship looked questionable. But White reassures us by  saying "she has a kind heart, and she was to prove loyal to the very  end." The development of what seemed like an impossible relationship  reveals and defines unconditional love.    Charlotte's profound love for Wilbur ...              ... and contrasting Charlotte with the other characters in  Charlotte's Web has shown that the degree of Charlotte's love is  incomparable and irreplaceable. She is indeed the ideal role model of  unconditional love.    Bibliography    Book    -  White, E. B. (1952). Charlotte's Web. Hamish Hamilton.    -  White, E. B. (1999). Salutations! Wit and Wisdom from Charlotte's Web.     HarperCollins Publishers    -  Lukens, R. J. (1995). A Critical Handbook of Children's Literature.     New York: HarperCollins College Publishers Journal    -  Marion, G. (1973). E.B. White's Unexpected Items of Enchantment.     Children's Literature in Education, 11, 104-115.    Internet Resource    -  Huntley, C., Phillips, M.A. (1994). Storytelling Output Report for     Charlotte's Web. Retrieved February 29, 2004, from     http://www.dramatica.com/story/analyses/analyses/charlottesweb.html                        
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