One can kill the other, but it will be a passive hero. In Harrison Hayford and Merton M. Seaths' short story "Billy Budd, Sailor", Billy Budd is represented as a passive hero. Surprisingly, Billy Budd was picked out and forced to enter the king's service. Still, Billy Budd had a positive impact on nearly all captains and officers. But Billy's impact on the new owner proves that Billy does not have a positive impact on everyone. After all, the lack of Billy Bard's adult experience was his downfall; Billy could not understand that someone would destroy his role.
Young seamen seems to arise from the essential cause of evil. As Merton Seltz pointed out, Billy and Craggett "contrast verses of innocence and secular experience" (John Bryant, "Billy Budd, Sailor" by Melville Research editor). Companion, 408). In order to trap Billy, Craggar asked one of his men to try to cover him up against the rebellion, but Billy refused. Kragat responded to Captain Vele and officially accused Billy rebellion. When he was faced with the accusation he faced, he could not answer because of his stuttering. Billy could not express outrage, relying on plaintiffs, giving a fatal blow to the head of Kragat. The battlefield army came, and according to his noble emotions, but according to military law, Captain Wire stopped at Billy, accusing the upper officers to beat and kill.
Facts about companions of American short story document, 2nd edition (literary series companion)
Writer Herman Melville started writing the novel "Billy Bud" (Sailor) in 1890. Billy Budd published after the death of 1924 is a story of a violent incident on a merchant ship and the captain of a young sailor ordered him to be executed with a crime of murder. Melville's lifelong friends and writer Nathaniel Hawthorne said at the end of Melville's lifetime, "I suffered from literary work and I did not succeed after that." Once upon a time, the state of the pathological mind was shown "(Cohen 7)