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Help With Book Reports Papers
An Analysis Of Why Jimmy Doyle Will Never Succeed In Life Due To His Father
... son become popular and make a lot of connections. Jimmy's father is the
reason he will never succeed in life on his own.
Jimmy Doyle grew in a family that was quite well off financially due to
the hard work of his father. Mr. Doyle made a lot of money through hard work
and sacrifice as butcher, and he wanted nothing but the best for his son. He
did not want his son to work as hard as he did growing up. When Jimmy went away
to college, he spent more time socializing than he did studying. "Jimmy did not
study very earnestly and took to bad courses for awhile. He had money and he
was popular; ..."(p.25). Ji ...
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The Call Of The Wild: Effect Of The Environment
... weather in Alaska. Each day while serving as a sled dog, this slave endures freezing temperatures. Buck learns how to deal with the unbearable conditions by watching the other dogs and imitating them. This lesson proves to be very helpful to Buck in the future. Because Buck’s first home was in Southern California, he was never exposed to snow. Buck’s body became accustomed to the harsh snow and he toughened and learned how to use it for his advantage. For example, Buck learned how to dig into the snow and use it to insulate him from the outside air. Buck was built for hard work; he was a huge, muscular and ...
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The Crystal Cave: Merlin
... who openly welcomes Merlin into his workshop. Merlin remarks on
how Tremorinus, “allows me to learn all I can from him, gives me space in
the workshops and material to experiment with.” (181). Merlin is able to
learn a myriad of information while in Tremorinus' presence. This space
that Tremorinus gives Merlin is the right tool to entitle Merlin to advance
intellectually.
Some mentors provide the space for knowledge to grow, but others
are more effective because they set the foundation for the knowledge to
develop. The personage who is the most efficacious and who bestows the
true idea of know ...
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Dr. Jekyll And Mr. Hyde
... and they saw the man, Edward Hyde. The crowd forced the man to give money to this girl for trampling over her. Hyde did not run over her for any reason. He just did it out of spite and evil. He represents all the evil in the world. The reaction of others to him is one of horror because while looking at him, others feel a desire to strike out at him and kill him. His physical appearance brings out the worst evil in other people. Since Hyde represents evil, he is symbolically represented as being much smaller than Dr. Jekyll.
I believe Dr. Jekyll created Hyde because he had a theory that man has a good side and a ba ...
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Alice In Wonderland By Lewis C
... Oxford mathematics professor. Dodgson was a deacon in his church, an inventor, and a noted children's photographer. Wonderland, and thus the seeds of his unanticipated success as a writer, appeared quite casually one day as he spun an impromptu tale to amuse the daughters of a colleague during a picnic. One of these girls was Alice Liddell, who insisted that he write the story down for her, and who served as the model for the heroine. Dodgson eventually sought to publish the first book on the advice of friends who had read and loved the little handwritten manuscript he had given to Alice Liddell. He expanded ...
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All Quiet On The Western Front: Tragedy Of War
... to join the army. Most times these teachers successfully persuaded them. Paul, the main character in the novel, realizes once he had reached the front, how betrayed he had been by his teacher and the older generation. He said, “The idea of authority, which they represented, was associated in our minds with a greater insight and a more humane wisdom.” This bitter quote shows that after the war is over their generation does not know what will be left for them. The characters felt betrayed. This idea of betrayal is paramount in the loss of war. Even though they may be able to go home after the war is over, ...
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Battle With Fate
... of these waves was a hill, from the top of which the men surveyed for a moment a broad tumultuous expanse, shining and wind-riven. It was probably splendid, it was probably glorious, this play of the free sea, wild with lights of emerald and white and amber"(p. 246). This quote shows the oceans relentless pursuit of the crew never letting up, and even though the ocean had beauty in all its ferocity, the crew never had time to realize it. The ocean was cruel despite its beauty. The crew was being smashed to pieces, the ocean doesn’t care. They were always trying to survive the unforgiving ocean. When the crew wa ...
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Gimpel The Fool: Golde Vs. Elka
... household. When he told Golde to put up the samovar for tea, or set a place at the table for a guest, she did it without question.
Not to say, that Golde was a pushover. She was able to put Tevye in his place when necessary, and she was not scared to do it. When he would carry on, quoting the bible, she would get fed up and say, “Spare us your bible!” (Aleichem 42) This would quiet him immediately. Where Golde would silence Tevye because his speeches were tiresome to her, Elka would simply make fun of Gimpel, keeping him quiet because he did not know how or want to retaliate. “Look who’s here! He ...
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The Rime Of The Christo-marine
... his own in the retelling of his story. He is the Christ figure also in the view of the whole poem, as when Jesus was tempted by Satan in the desert. Like Jesus, the Mariner endures many trials, but his failure at the first costs him dearly during those which follow. The initial "temptation" was to kill the good seabird, which he does without conscience. And, like the temptation in the desert, the Mariner is parched with thirst, "Water, water, everywhere,/Nor any drop to drink." And when the Mariner tries to pray for salvation, he hears a demonic voice, like Lucifer: "I looked to heaven, and tried to pray;/But ...
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Hemingway's Portrayal Of Nick's Consolation
... Hemingway's depiction of Mrs. Henry Adams, Nick's mother, portrays
her to be an overbearing and obnoxious woman. Benson describes Mrs.
Adams as: "Nicks mother is a woman who smothers sweetly with that peculiar
self righteous intensity which is born of Victorian moral certainty" (6).
Mrs. Adams constantly questions the actions of Dr. Adams and Nick.
According to Jackson Benson, after the row with Dick Boulton in "The
Doctor and the Doctor's Wife," Mrs. Adams only attempts to second guess
Dr. Adams.
Instead of backing her husband up or sympathizing with him, Mrs.
Adams scolds her ...
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