Jung suggests
the archetype is eternal and subconscious, the pattern of our thought as we navigate the delight and despair of the human condition. Archetypes assist us in decoding the world of story and learning how we should live. The archetypes in these two novels are indeed perennial; from Eve and the serpent to Jezebel and even our modern daytime dramas, we have learned that the woman who lives in a world of dream and delusion becomes a poor decision maker when she must return to the reality of daily duty. Chopin and Flaubert have created two stunning heroines, gifted with beauty and sensuality but flawed with a dangerous capacity to dream. They fell tragically, and they fell needlessly, but they fell to leave a lesson. Dream carefully, lest the dream debilitate the capacity to live each day wisely.This link explains the better features of a concluding paragraph.
This begins by revisiting the organizing device of the paper, which was the Jungian archetype. It then links the particular archetypes of this paper’s focus to some similar examples throughout history. The theme is restated in two new and different ways, with a quick and summative reference to the two women. The close is written for maximum final effect upon the reader; it restates the theme in a stylistic and memorable way.