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Literary notes about Reckless (AI summary)

Literary writers often use "reckless" to convey a sense of bold abandon and unthinking audacity. In heroic epics, for instance, characters are depicted as daring to the point of disregarding life itself, embodying a valor that is both admirable and fraught with danger [1, 2, 3]. At times, the word underscores a character’s unchecked impulsivity—a disregard for consequences that can lead to personal downfall or social disruption [4, 5, 6]. In other contexts, "reckless" carries a dual tone, simultaneously celebrating a spirit of uninhibited courage and critiquing imprudent actions that border on the self-destructive [7, 8, 9]. This layered use enriches character portrayals and thematic explorations throughout the literature.
  1. 60 So any must act whenever he thinketh To gain him in battle glory unending, And is reckless of living.
    — from Beowulf: An Anglo-Saxon Epic Poem
  2. Sang the wizard, Lemminkainen, Screeched the reckless Kaukomieli,
    — from Kalevala : the Epic Poem of Finland — Complete
  3. Thus the reckless Lemminkainen, Thus the son of Kalevala, Was recovered from the bottom Of the Manala lake and river.
    — from Kalevala : the Epic Poem of Finland — Complete
  4. The feeling began and ended in reckless, vindictive, hopeless hatred of the man who was to marry her.
    — from The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins
  5. But his self-complacency seduced him into attempting a flight into regions of unexplored English, and the reckless experiment was his ruin.
    — from The Innocents Abroad by Mark Twain
  6. He had lost his wife, was a man of reckless habits and all of a sudden shot himself, and in such a shocking way....
    — from Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
  7. "Then I like to stay," said Godfrey, with a reckless determination to get as much of this joy as he could to-night, and think nothing of the morrow.
    — from Silas Marner by George Eliot
  8. A spy of that sort can afford to be more reckless than the most reckless of conspirators.
    — from The Secret Agent: A Simple Tale by Joseph Conrad
  9. As to destroying and plundering cities, let me say that great care should be taken that nothing be done in reckless cruelty or wantonness.
    — from De Officiis by Marcus Tullius Cicero

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