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Every Trip Is A Quest (Except When It’s Not) Chapter 1. Rajiv Ajodha Period 4 9/28/11. Any Action is a Quest. Each action you take may lead you on a quest . A quest may have happened even though “…it just looked like a trip to store for some white bread”(Foster 2).
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Every Trip Is A Quest(Except When It’s Not)Chapter 1 Rajiv Ajodha Period 4 9/28/11
Any Action is a Quest. • Each action you take may lead you on a quest. • A quest may have happened even though “…it just looked like a trip to store for some white bread”(Foster 2). • Smaller actions can lead to much bigger quests.
The 5 parts of a Quest • A quest needs a quester or, “…a person that goes on a quest”(Foster 3). • A quest needs to have a destination, or place to go. • A quest needs to have a, “stated reason to go there” (Foster 3). • A quest needs to have challenges and trials over its duration. • Finally, a quest requires a real reason to go to the destination.
Always and Never • Literature cannot be categorized into separate categories. • There will always be exceptions to any literary rule because “some wise guy will come along and write something to prove that it’s not” (Foster 6).
The Reasoning Behind Quests • Quests always have an underlying reasoning that, “never involves the stated reason”(Foster 3). • A quester will normally fail they first task. • The quester continues on because they don’t know their real purpose.
The Real Purpose • Characters are always sent on quests because, “The real reason for a quest is always self-knowledge” (Foster 3). • Questers are usually quite young because they have a quest for self-knowledge. • If questers aren’t young, they are usually immature, or sheltered.
Is Everything a Quest? • Unfortunately, not everything can be a quest. • Literature sometimes requires that, “ a writer get a character from home to work and back again” (Foster 6). • However, you should always be on the lookout for quests when a character takes a journey.
How This Relates to Great Expectations • When Pip first gets invited to the Satis house, he believes it will be a normal occasion. • He is under the impression that he was only “…going to play at Miss Havisham’s…”(Dickens 92). • This is where he will ultimately start his quest to be a gentleman and have extreme wealth.
How This Applies to Everyday Life • This chapter greatly applies to everyday life. • Most things we do will be quests, since most tasks require us to make decisions and we’ll learn about ourselves in the process. • However, every day there are some tasks that are just routine.
Works Cited • Dickens, Charles. Great Expectations. New York:Bantam Dell, 1986. Print. • Foster, Thomas C. How to read Literature like a professor. New York: Harper- Collins Publishers, Inc., 2003. Print.