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A conflict between Jerome Lauwrence and Robert E. Lee

 

             Inherit the Wind, by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee, set in a small town of Hillsboro, not so long ago presents us with a duel between legal giants Henry Drummond, and Matthew Harrison Brady as they come together in the battleground of the courtroom . Prosecutor Matthew Brady represents the values of fundamental Christianity while defense attorney Henry Drummond is the voice of reason and science. Although the two men have been good friends and partners in the past, the case in Hillsboro illuminates the difference in their values. Through the scene on the porch with Matthew Brady and Henry Drummond, director Stanley Kramer illustrates the incessant tug-of-war between religion and science. More specifically details ,and Drummond's metaphor of the "Golden Dancer" help deliver my belief for what ways are they both similar and opposites . .
             Matthew Harrison Brady- An orator and a three-time presidential candidate. Brady represents the prosecution in this trial. His role as a fundamentalist and his familiarity with the Bible win him significant respect and result in his pompous attitude, which Drummond's questioning eventually destroys. .
             At the beginning of the play, Brady has confidence in his abilities to win the trial. Scornful of the threat Drummond might present to him as the opposing attorney, Brady exhibits hubris in that he does not consider the prospect of his subsequent failure. Brady determines his self-worth largely from others' opinions of him. The townspeople's early support infuses him with an undeserved sense of his own abilities. Later on, however, when he loses this support, his composure crumbles along with his confidence.
             Henry Drummond- Clearly the hero of this play, Henry Drummond represents the character whose personal philosophies most closely resemble those of Lawrence and Lee. Drummond had made a career for himself as a criminal defense attorney and a reputation for himself as an agnostic.


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