¶ … Frank Stockton's "The Lady or the Tiger?" A young man, the forbidden lover of a princess, is sentenced to a trial by ordeal: in front of thousands of onlookers, he must choose between two doors. Behind one waits a tiger, behind the other waits a lovely maiden. Only the princess herself possesses the knowledge that will save her lover's life, though in doing so, she will send him into the arms of another woman. Stockton leaves whether or not she saves her beau to the reader's imagination.
The movie Gladiator also revolves around public spectacle and matters of justice and injustice. The main character, Maximus, a respected general and loyal subject of the Roman Empire, has been betrayed by Commodus, the Emperor. Sold into slavery, his family murdered, Maximus longs for revenge. He is forced to become a gladiator and use his strength to kill for the amusement of the mobs. At first, he resists this role, but his master, a former gladiator, reminds him that if he can get the people on his side, he will be invincible. Maximus takes the advice to heart and works to make the people his ally. When he is taken to fight at the Coliseum in Rome, he comes face-to-face with his old enemy Commodus. Commodus longs to have him killed, but Maximus is too popular for Commodus to risk it. Eventually, Maximus is able to avenge himself, though he does so at the cost of his own life.
The short story, "The Lady or the Tiger?" And the movie, Gladiator, have many similarities. Both utilize public spectacle as a way to control and soothe the citizens of a country; both address betrayal or the possibility of betrayal; and both involve a tyrant who arbitrarily wields the power of life and death over his citizens. However by no means are the two pieces completely alike. Whereas the princess's hapless lover in "The Lady or the Tiger?" faces a harsh but fair trial, Commodus's challenges offer only the appearance of fairness. In truth, every competition is heavily stacked against Maximus. Another difference lies in the character's relationships with others. All of the characters in "The Lady or the Tiger?" are primarily concerned with themselves; the protagonists in Gladiator are often more concerned with the well-being of others or with the greater good of the country. Finally, "The Lady or the Tiger?" is deliberately ambiguous throughout; Gladiator is not.
Both the short story and the movie utilize spectacle to entertain and appease the masses. Stockton's father was a strict, conservative Methodist minister who disapproved of all forms of light entertainment. Although Stockton himself became a popular writer, it appears that some of his father's inherent suspicion of games and spectacles has crept into his work (Golemba 18).
Stockton explains the perfection of the king's method of justice in "The Lady or the Tiger?" As follows: "Thus the masses were entertained and pleased, and the thinking part of the community could bring no charge of unfairness against this plan; for did not the accused person have the whole matter in his own hands?" (70). Gladiator director Ridley Scott also shows how the games in the arena often had political motives (Scott 9). Commodus, for instance, comes up with the idea of sponsoring 150 days of games after his senators chide him for not doing more to end an epidemic that has broken out. When one senator speculates this tactic will make Commodus a laughingstock, the another replies. "I think he knows what Rome is. Rome's the mob....He'll bring them death, and they will love him for it." Ironically, Commodus's plan leads to the elevation of Maximus as a hero of the people, a man so popular even Commodus cannot touch him. Writer David Franzoni elaborates. "The most powerful man in Rome [Commodus] suddenly realizes his nemesis is a sports superstar in the very arena he has created to keep himself in power -- and the crowd says 'thumbs up.' The Emperor can't do a damn thing about it" (qtd. In Soriano).
Second, the short story and the movie each deal with the theme of betrayal. In "The Lady or the Tiger?" The betrayal is not a certainty. It is one of two possible endings. The reader never knows whether the princess actually sends her lover to his death rather than see him wed another woman. Interestingly, Stockton gives the reader no hint that the lover himself suspects the princess is capable of betrayal. She tells...
Frank Stocktons and Langston Hughes. It has 2 sources. Comparing the two characters, the king's daughter in Frank Stocktons' "The Lady or the Tiger," and Nancy Lee in Langston Hughes' "One Friday Morning," one can predict their actions considering their social positions. This is possible because of the life patterns that both the characters exhibit. Nancy Lee is a character in 'One Friday Morning' who believes in hard work to get
male figure in Hills Like White Elephants is inferior to Jig, the female counterpart within the story, yet Jig's realization of her strengths against the male is her power to refuse having the abortion surgery. Of course, the story is never resolved and many critical analysts of Hemingway's story have sought to make a prediction about what decision Jig will ultimately make in the face of such a selfish
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now