EssaysForStudent.com - Free Essays, Term Papers & Book Notes
Search

The Nature of a Mistress-Servant Relationship in Daniel Defoe’s Roxana

By:   •  Essay  •  335 Words  •  November 18, 2009  •  1,153 Views

Page 1 of 2

Essay title: The Nature of a Mistress-Servant Relationship in Daniel Defoe’s Roxana

Relationships play a large part in the average modern day person's everyday life, just as relationships were important in the past. Although types of companionships have somewhat changed over time, the presence and importance of them still remains. Viewing, analysing and comparing other individual's relationships to our own is something most people do, as a sort of assurance that things are natural. This is why many people are interested in novels about ways that other human beings interact with individuals and groups. Daniel Defoe's character Roxana has her own way of interacting with and manipulating people. In his novel Roxana, Defoe uses examples of extreme faithfulness from the Amy to demonstrate the intimate relationship present between Roxana and her servant.

Amy's loyalty to her mistress is evident from the beginning of the novel when we are also told by Roxana herself that Amy is as “faithful to [her], as the Skin on [her] Back”(25). Amy proves this when she says: “if I will starve for your sake, I will be a Whore, or any thing, for your sake; why I would die for you, if I were put to it” (28). This is proven true over the course of the novel,

Download as (for upgraded members)  txt (1.9 Kb)   pdf (55.4 Kb)   docx (10.5 Kb)  
Continue for 1 more page »