Thursday, November 14, 2019
Cyrano de Bergerac - Cyrano as Noble Idealist :: Bergerac
      Cyrano de Bergerac - Cyrano as Noble Idealist                  In The play Cyrano de Bergerac, the main  character, Cyrano, is a noble idealist who fights against the harsh reality of  ordinary life, and creates his own world. On the outside he is a strong man with  a hard shell, but inside he is a melancholy poet yearning for love. He feels  that the world bases love too much on appearance. He believes that no one will  ever love him because of his grotesquely long nose. For this reason Cyrano cuts  himself off of true reality and creates a world where love exists without  appearance.               In Cyranos everyday life he is a great swordsman who leads  troops in to the battlefields, and fights a hundred men at once. He stands up  for what he believes in and never compromises. He is full of chivalry, bravery  and wit. In his life of love he is a brilliant poet, comprised of words of  emotion. This life of love exists only in his mind and on the paper by which he  expresses himself.               In the beginning these two worlds are kept apart until  Cyrano devises a way to bridge the two together. He discovers that the woman he  loves, Roxanne is in love with a man named Christian. When he tells Christian  that Roxanne has feelings for him, he reveals to Cyrano that he may have good  looks, but a terrible way with words. Cyrano replies with "strange.... Now it  seems I, if I gave my mind to it, I might perhaps make love well."..... "Borrow  it then! - Your young manhood - lend me that, and we two make one hero of  romance." (p. 84-85)                Cyrano bridges his two worlds together through  Christian.  At first Cyrano assumes that this will be a good plan. At first  it fills him with joy to be able to express his love for Roxanne but as time  went on he realized that he was doing all the work and letting someone else take  all the credit. Cyrano says in the end of the play "Yes - that has been my  life... Do you remember that night Christian spoke under your window?  					  Cyrano de Bergerac - Cyrano as Noble Idealist  ::  Bergerac        Cyrano de Bergerac - Cyrano as Noble Idealist                  In The play Cyrano de Bergerac, the main  character, Cyrano, is a noble idealist who fights against the harsh reality of  ordinary life, and creates his own world. On the outside he is a strong man with  a hard shell, but inside he is a melancholy poet yearning for love. He feels  that the world bases love too much on appearance. He believes that no one will  ever love him because of his grotesquely long nose. For this reason Cyrano cuts  himself off of true reality and creates a world where love exists without  appearance.               In Cyranos everyday life he is a great swordsman who leads  troops in to the battlefields, and fights a hundred men at once. He stands up  for what he believes in and never compromises. He is full of chivalry, bravery  and wit. In his life of love he is a brilliant poet, comprised of words of  emotion. This life of love exists only in his mind and on the paper by which he  expresses himself.               In the beginning these two worlds are kept apart until  Cyrano devises a way to bridge the two together. He discovers that the woman he  loves, Roxanne is in love with a man named Christian. When he tells Christian  that Roxanne has feelings for him, he reveals to Cyrano that he may have good  looks, but a terrible way with words. Cyrano replies with "strange.... Now it  seems I, if I gave my mind to it, I might perhaps make love well."..... "Borrow  it then! - Your young manhood - lend me that, and we two make one hero of  romance." (p. 84-85)                Cyrano bridges his two worlds together through  Christian.  At first Cyrano assumes that this will be a good plan. At first  it fills him with joy to be able to express his love for Roxanne but as time  went on he realized that he was doing all the work and letting someone else take  all the credit. Cyrano says in the end of the play "Yes - that has been my  life... Do you remember that night Christian spoke under your window?  					    
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