The idea of good versus evil is staying prevalent in Cormac McCarthy’s No Country for Old Men, Sheriff Bell is coming to grips with his surroundings and seeing that it really is No Country for Old Men. The Sheriff is fighting for what he perceives to be right one massacre after the other, the idea that he has in his mind consistently that people are good deep down inside is fading; he is starting to realize that there are evil people out there and he is definitely among them. “I never had to kill nobody and I am very glad of that fact. Some of the old time sheriffs would[ ]n[o]t even carry a firearm. A lot of folks find that hard to believe but it’s a fact” (McCarthy 63). Sheriff Bell is again making mention of the times changing in the midwest. He believes that evil is currently winning the battle and it is crushing his spirits but he is persevering. The concept of someone having no soul and being purely evil is new to Sheriff Bell, his point of view on the times changing gives great insight into the battle of good versus evil. Sheriff Bell is seeing the evil from Anton Chigurh as something new aged. Further developments are also being made in Cormac McCarthy’s The Road. The Father and his Son are most definitely good people but they do have one major difference and that is the Father lacks innocence versus his Son who is very innocent, and cannot see that certain things that may be considered evil are necessary for them to survive. “Yes. We 're still the good guys. And we always will be. Yes. We always will be. Okay” (120 McCarthy). This is an exchange that takes place between the Father and his Son; the Son is questioning what side they fall on after the father had to kill for their survival. The lines between good and evil are now blurred because in
The idea of good versus evil is staying prevalent in Cormac McCarthy’s No Country for Old Men, Sheriff Bell is coming to grips with his surroundings and seeing that it really is No Country for Old Men. The Sheriff is fighting for what he perceives to be right one massacre after the other, the idea that he has in his mind consistently that people are good deep down inside is fading; he is starting to realize that there are evil people out there and he is definitely among them. “I never had to kill nobody and I am very glad of that fact. Some of the old time sheriffs would[ ]n[o]t even carry a firearm. A lot of folks find that hard to believe but it’s a fact” (McCarthy 63). Sheriff Bell is again making mention of the times changing in the midwest. He believes that evil is currently winning the battle and it is crushing his spirits but he is persevering. The concept of someone having no soul and being purely evil is new to Sheriff Bell, his point of view on the times changing gives great insight into the battle of good versus evil. Sheriff Bell is seeing the evil from Anton Chigurh as something new aged. Further developments are also being made in Cormac McCarthy’s The Road. The Father and his Son are most definitely good people but they do have one major difference and that is the Father lacks innocence versus his Son who is very innocent, and cannot see that certain things that may be considered evil are necessary for them to survive. “Yes. We 're still the good guys. And we always will be. Yes. We always will be. Okay” (120 McCarthy). This is an exchange that takes place between the Father and his Son; the Son is questioning what side they fall on after the father had to kill for their survival. The lines between good and evil are now blurred because in