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Beast and the Jungle

d-too bad to tell him.The above passages very greatly, in Daisy, James is describing the appearance and personality of a young woman, while in Beast, he takes on the complicated depths of John Marchers intimacy issues. From the later passage James structure becomes weighty, his sentences ran on like a long river, twisting and turning through several commas. His words seem to be chosen cautiously, peppered with powerful visual imagery, and several different references, which make it difficult to follow. By contrast, his earlier work offers short, choppy tidbits, with manageable words.Daisy as a whole story is concrete, dealing with social issues, which is easily apparent. Daisys relationship is light and flirty. On the other hand, Marchers relationship is profound and compulsive, intellectual. James as an author deals with Beast in a more introverted way, while appearing as an extrovert in his earlier work. It seems as if James maturity lead him to conquer deeper issues about life, especially how valuable ones life is. In Daisy, the social issues dominate the story, Winterbourne never gets the chance to love Daisy, however, that is not the point James is tying to make. It becomes more important to emphasize societys class system, rather than the individual. James later work aims at the complexity of life as an individual, which in turn becomes more compelling than society itself....

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