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Chapter 20 and 21 Chapter 20 and 21

Chapter 20 and 21 - PowerPoint Presentation

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Chapter 20 and 21 - PPT Presentation

Silas Marner by George Eliot Summary Find 2 3 quotes to support each point below Nancy and Godfrey agree to keep secret his true relationship to Eppie You wont make it known then about ID: 524158

silas godfrey nancy eppie godfrey silas eppie nancy eppie

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Slide1

Chapter 20 and 21

Silas

Marner

by George EliotSlide2

Summary

Find 2 – 3 quotes to support each point below.

Nancy and Godfrey agree to keep secret his true relationship to

Eppie

.

–”You won’t make it known then about

Eppie’s

being your daughter..”

Nancy is pleased that

Eppie

will marry Aaron –

”sober and industrious” (about Aaron)

She is sorry for her husband but feels that he deserved

Eppie’s

rejection –

“her spirit of rectitude would not let her try to soften the edge of what she felt to be a just compunction”.

She encourages him to accept what has happened.Slide3

Analysis and commentary

We return home with Nancy and Godfrey. They realise

Eppie

will never be their daughter. In the circumstances they agree to continue hiding that Godfrey is

Eppie’s

birth father. He decides to reveal it in his will. He has had enough of hidden crimes like Dunstan’s. Nancy is relieved that her relations will only know of Dunstan robbing SilasSlide4

Analysis and commentary

Godfrey guesses that

Eppie

will marry Aaron Winthrop. Nancy feels Aaron is a good choice because he is serious and hard-working. They discuss

Eppie’s

character and her resemblance to Godfrey. He feels that his punishment for rejecting her is that she dislikes and will misjudge him. Nancy feels it is right that Godfrey suffers. She tries to cheer him up by telling him he has always been a good husband. She encourages him to try to accept what has happened and the position he is in.Slide5

Analysis and commentary

Godfrey’s character has at last grown as he realises that some wrongs cannot be put right and that money cannot solve everything.

He comments on the

irony

of his situation – he once wanted to appear to have no children, now he is forced to seem childless.Slide6

Questions

Provide supporting evidence from the text in every answer

Godfrey’s

last test

has been his attempt to reclaim

Eppie

– what does he realise about the nature of human contacts?

How is the contrast between

Eppie

and the

gold

furthered in this chapter?

How is the image of

Eppie

as a blessing renewed?

Is Godfrey’s childlessness gratuitous poetic justice? (What is he being punished for? How is this linked to his past error?)

Godfrey thinks his punishment is divine retribution. Does Eliot share this view?

How does Eliot soften the readers impressions of Godfrey – especially in light of the previous chapter?

Describe Godfrey and Nancy’s marriage.

Godfrey goes against his desire, he decides to do what? How is this different from the Godfrey we have come to understand?Slide7

Chapter 21 - Summary

Find 2 – 3 quotes to support each point below.

Silas decides to revisit the scene of his former humiliation at Lantern Yard

He is unable to recognise anywhere except the jail where he had once been imprisoned.

Where Lantern Yard stood, a factory has been built.

He returns now to

Raveloe

, the place he can finally call home.

He has regained his faith and a true familySlide8

Significance

Silas emerges from darkness – gather evidence for the points below:

The rapid changes of the Industrial Revolution have completely transformed the town.

Silas and

Eppie

are both appalled by the conditions and noise.

Prison Street and the jail are images of the misery of factory workers’ lives.

Light and dark are images of faith. The town is dark and the streets narrow. The narrow religion of Lantern Yard has disappeared – the light Silas once lived by. Dolly told Silas she would be glad of any light he could bring back from his visit and comfortingly accepts the truth is in the dark unknown when he returns. Silas realises he himself received light (or faith) when

Eppie

came. It will be enough, now she has promised to stay with him.Slide9

Conclusion

The loose ends are tied up.

Eppie

and Aaron are married.

Godfrey has paid for the happy couple’s reception but feels unable to attend the wedding itself.

The villagers welcome the couple as full members of their community.

They return to Silas’s cottage which has been extended and improved by its owner, Mr Godfrey Cass.Slide10

Significance

Justice is done! Gather evidence for the points below:

Godfrey has generously provided the wedding feast but has absented himself for the day.

It is Silas who appears as

Eppie’s

father.

The villagers feel Godfrey’s action is right, considering the hurt

Dunsey

did to Silas. Ironically, Godfrey’s secret wrong to

Eppie

was greater.

Eliot ends the book with conventional happiness which reflects the moral code, that the good are rewarded while the evil are punished.Slide11

Essay question

“At the end of Silas

Marner

, there is a feeling that justice has been done, that the bad have been punished and the good rewarded.” To what extent is this statement true.