Innocent Daisy Miller
In Webster’s New World College Dictionary, innocence is defined as a very naïve or simpleminded person. In Henry James,’ Daisy Miller: A Study, young Daisy Miller is very innocent girl. She is an American girl traveling in Europe with her mother, brother, and her brother’s teacher trying to fit in with the European culture. She meets a man named Frederick Winterbourne, narrator, who is born in America, but grows up in Europe. Winterbourne begins to like Daisy and they have a little romance that is cut short by her move back to Rome in the winter. When he goes to see Daisy in Rome, he finds her with another man and his heart is broken. Some people say that Daisy’s actions in James’ story make her selfish, immature, and disobedient. However, Daisy is innocent because she is a young American girl who is surrounded by a new culture and is being portrayed by a brokenhearted narrator, Winterbourne. In a preface to Daisy Miller, Pandora, The Patagonia and O
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Approximate Word count = 648
Approximate Pages = 3 (250 words per page double spaced)
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