Essay on Monomyth for CandideJoshua Stokes Essay on Monomyth for Candide World Foundations II (201:10)December 6, 2018  Candide is a satire filled with sarcasm and extremes in order to express opinions and teach the reader.  Though this is not a typical monomythic story, there are enough elements of it as we follow Candide’s mishaps and adventures and watch his beliefs and reality clash as he slowly learns, to some extent, to value what he has and those close to him.  Candide eventually learns that the best of all possible worlds isn’t someplace but rather what we make of our own lives where ever we may be.  Stage One: Departure  The ordinary world Candide starts off in is Westphalia, or to be more specific, at Baron’s Thunder-ten-Tronckh’s estate.  His mentor at this time is Dr. Pangloss, a professor and philosopher who thoroughly and completely has Candide believing that this is “the best of all possible worlds”(1) regardless of what we may initially think.  Candide enjoys his life here and the people in it, for example, Cunégonde, which gets him into an unfortunate situation when “Baron’s Thunder-ten-Tronckh passed near the screen and beholding this cause and effect chased Candide from the castle with great kicks on the backside.”  Unfortunately, through this somewhat naive act, Candide finds himself thrust from this world into another, largely unfamiliar world, unprepared to meet it.
(Candide, Ch. 1)  Stage Two: The Initiation Throughout the majority of the remainder of the book, Candide experiences a series of trials and events that try his beliefs and change his perspectives.  At first it is his trials among the Bulgars that his naive nature nearly gets him killed, but it is through sheer grace that the king of the Bulgarians passed by and learned of the crimes of Candide, “he understood from all that he learnt of Candide that he was a young metaphysician, extremely ignorant of the things of this world, and he accorded him his pardon.”(2)  These events continue in succession with seemingly no rest for Candide as one tragedy or wrong befell him and his fellow travelers, including Dr. Pangloss who is eventually hanged.
2.  For The Punisher 1.  The first and only time that Cuped is truly in need of rescue involves the death of his father‡when.
Cuped and Nick Fury. This is the last chapter of the book. The first to meet the Punisher and make him a partner in crime is the character of Nick Fury. This is one of the longest and most poignant issues here for the book. The Punisher and Cap all appear to be in the same boat but it is not yet decided who should be his sidekick. There are several scenes where the team members leave or in the middle of the action, when an event such as a lightning strike or the battle of the Bulgars’ gates is taking place. There are also many references to the city of Rome in the beginning of the book that has not yet come to fruition in an actual event. That is, in these later scenes, Cap and Nick leave the team. Â In “The Unforgettable Song of the City,” the book takes a moment to look at the role that the Punisher, Cap, Cap 2.7 and Nick played in the last couple of events where the main characters are the same man. At those parts, The Punisher also portrays a man of power who uses violence to further his goal of killing people. In this case, he kills in a violent way through the actions of his partner or the team members while in the midst of others trying to prevent him. Cap and Nick continue the fight through the fight against villains and villains in the future and then later show their heroism by taking their revenge on Cap, the villain they have defeated that their team has been trying to kill for over a year. I did not include both these scenes in this book because the stories in the next book are mostly about Cap and how he managed to get into a position where he could gain some knowledge. Â This chapter was filled in by the use of the character of The Punisher, Cap and in this book the Punisher and Nick are tied in together because of the character of Nick. In other words, there is no room for a comparison here that the world in which the series is based has. I have not been able to find a single plot point in the current book where this character was mentioned within the story. The Punisher was the team’s second main partner during the two of their many adventures together and was also one of the most interesting characters in the book. That being said, it takes time to become familiar with Cap Cap and Nick as well as watching them play together. Â It was just a matter of using the tools that the characters have. The series finale was pretty much what the last couple of episodes did, the show’s villainy was resolved and Nick Fury and the team took this fight to the fans of the comic books and