Great Books Taskperformance
Great Books Taskperformance
Great Books Taskperformance
• Falling Action
He committed suicide
in order for their time
together to last forever
and for his love to stay
unadulterated. The
world has changed
from what the tiny
prince knew while he
was alive by the time
he passes away. He has
encountered
businesspeople,
salespeople, and other
grown-ups that he
cannot comprehend
since leaving his world.
-
• Resolution
1. Plot
• Exposition
- One day, an unusually dressed young child appears out of
nowhere and requests that the pilot draw a sheep for him. The pilot
complies with this bizarre request, which surprisingly results in the
pilot discovering more about the Little Prince and his origins.
• Rising Action
- The prince journeys to nearby worlds after concluding that
his rose has rejected him, and he eventually settles on Earth.
• Climax
- The confining views of the adult world are at odds with the
prince's and, to some extent, the narrator's impressionable
viewpoints.
• Falling Action
- He committed suicide in order for their time together to last
forever and for his love to stay unadulterated. The world has
changed from what the tiny prince knew while he was alive by the
time he passes away. He has encountered businesspeople,
salespeople, and other grown-ups that he cannot comprehend
since leaving his world.
• Resolution
- The Little Prince's conclusion is really depressing. There is
no disputing that. The prince has vanished from Earth; although it
appeared that he had passed away when the snake bit him, his
body has not been located. Even if the narrator has survived the
desert, the question of what happened to the prince feels more
pressing.
2. Theme
- The secret that the fox teaches the young prince embodies
the fable's central theme: "What is vital is invisible to the eye; one
may see clearly only with the heart."
3. Settings
- The Sahara Dessert
4. Characters
• Protagonist
- The Little Prince
• Antagonist
- The Business Man
• Characters
- The Turkish Astronomer
- The Fox
- The Vain Man
- The Railway Switchman
- The Little Prince
- The Three-Petaled Flower
- The Salesclerk
- The Drunkard
- The Geographer
- The Baobabs
- The Pilot
- The Lamplighter
- The Businessman
Summary
Once upon a time, there was an agitator who was alone among men. He was alone
because adults like him were only interested in issues that didn't matter to him at all,
such as the size of your houses or mathematics, but he was an imaginative soul and his
heart desired to paint and draw things that could only be seen and understood in depth,
and adults never really have the time to look at pointless things like those at one time.
When he was very young, he drew an elephant in the belly of a bull constrictor, a snake
from the Amazon forest, to symbolize aggression and danger. To see a hat instead, he
showed it to all of the adults, and they. . When he showed it to the elders, they all
thought it was a hat and advised him to learn more practical subjects like math,
linguistics, and science. He took this advise and entered that lonely place for males.
When he crashed one day while flying over the Sahara Desert and a young boy asked
him to draw a sheep, the experience was so bizarre that he was forced to comply.
Although shocked that the youngster recognized the sketch for what it was, the aviator
drew a sheep for him to the best of his ability because that was all he knew how to
draw. The boy rejected his drawing of an elephant within a snake and wanted a sheep
instead. The young prince had traveled from an asteroid that was scarcely larger than
himself, home to three volcanoes and daily buried baobabs. Because his tiny asteroid
was constantly in danger of being invaded by enormous, terrible baobab trees, the Little
Prince would meticulously clean his volcanoes and remove any emerging baobab
seeds. The prince waited for a fresh seed that suddenly sprouted on his planet until it
blossomed into a stunning rose unlike anything he had ever seen. Despite her exquisite
beauty, the Rose was quite conceited and quickly developed a nagging and demanding
personality, continually bugging her prince about the cold and fictitious breezes while
boasting about her four thorns and her beauty. She ultimately became too much for the
tiny Prince to handle, so he chose to leave the asteroid after growing weary of caring for
her and placing her in a glass cage. The tiny prince didn't realize how bothersome his
rose was until it was already too late. Although she had not shown her love to him
verbally, she had shared her scent and her beauty with him nonetheless. The Prince,
who had been too young to comprehend and appreciate her grace, roamed through
space after she had gone, encountering unusual characters. He came across a mighty
monarch on one planet along the road who was looking for someone to rule over on
another. . A businessman who tallied the stars he could see as his possessions but did
not appreciate them for what they were. A lamplighter who had to light and snuffle that
every 30 seconds on a planet where the day lasted one minute. a geographer who
didn't think it was important to record transient items like flowers. The Little Prince
follows all these varied paths and encounters a variety of grownups, which causes him
to grow progressively perplexed by adults. Unfortunately, the young Prince first touched
down in the world's largest desert before traveling to our tiny planet Earth. At first, he
didn't encounter any men. He created a snake that spoke in riddles and promised to
assist him someday. The snake informed him of the isolation felt by humanity and the
vastness of the land. Send him return to his house if he starts to feel too homesick. The
young Prince traveled the earth in a similar way to his adventure through the stars,
although this time he encountered a cast of intriguing characters who were far more
enigmatic. A bland flower in the sand, an echo in the mountains, a train driver ferrying
passengers back and forth, and a vendor selling tablets to relieve your thirst will all be
planted in an hour. Finding this in the rose garden full of flowers similar to his own rose.
despair and was unable to hold back tears. The tiny Prince first encountered the fox at
that point. The fox requested the young prince to tame him, which is the same as asking
someone to connect with them so they can be tamed. The fox told the young prince that
just as he had grown to love them while living among 100,000 other foxes, so too would
they grow to depend on one another among all 100,000 men and 100,000 foxes in the
world if they were to be tamed by the young prince. When the aviator had finished
giving him his tale, they had already met on the ninth day. Coincidentally, the tiny prince
and the aviator went to the desert in search of a well after their water supply ran out.
The tiny prince remarked along the way that the desert was so lovely because of the
priceless water concealed in its depths until they discovered the well. The aviator's
plane was almost restored by that time, and he was leaving, so the little Prince made
the decision to offer him a gift. He informed the aviator that he was also leaving for
home and that he would know he was in the stars going forward just as he was ready to
bid the man a decent farewell.
Valuing Traditions
Value of Culture and Tradition The people's life cycles serve as a metaphor
for significant cultural and traditional values. It appears that everyone,
regardless of race or origin, adheres to a particular set of traditions, rituals,
and morals. Values are universal and are transmitted from one generation
to the next. Tradition and culture are incredibly advantageous to a person
because they have numerous positive benefits and because they aid in
forming their sense of self-identity. Additionally, it keeps a community or
family together so that everyone may assist one another through hardships
and happy moments. However, given that detrimental customs continue to
persist, traditions may also have unfavorable effects.