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Help With Book Reports Papers
No Loser, No Weeper By Maya Angelou
... a lot of negative things in her life. The Great Depression, her parents' death, racism, being sexually abused at an early age, becoming a single mother in her middle teenage years and bad marriages. This period in Maya's life constitutes much of the pain that is included in many other poems. In the poem, ANo Loser, No Weeper," Maya describes how she just hates to lose something, whether is small like a watch or a toy. Moreover this poem is directed towards another female trying to steal her lover. Maya wants to make it clear to the woman not touch her Alover-boy." She explains her warning by stating that sh ...
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In Our Time: Review
... you can view the painting in its entirety." He thought this was
very wise and went away, contented that I was a literate genius.
Myself, I didn't really know what to gather from the stories. I've never
honestly read any Hemmingway previously. I've started to read The Sun Also Rises
about ten times and gotten waylaid by Batman, Robert B. Parker, and the like
each time. I think I read The Old Man and the Sea ages ago in high school, but
it was so long ago that it has slipped completely from my memory. He is one of
those authors that I always connect with my father and his college years for
some reason, ...
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"The Miller's Tale" And "The Reve's Tale": Similarities
... tales share the relationship between a jealous man, his
wife, and a young scholar. In "The Miller's Tale" the scholar Nicholas is a
"close and shy" (89) person who has a talent for "making love in secret"
(89). His talent is illustrated when he turns his eye to the Carpenter's
wife and makes love with her. The situation is very similar to "The Reeve's
Tale." In that tale the Miller lets John and Alan, two scholars, who lost
their horse from the Miller's own doing, stay at his house. However, since
the two boys are "Headstrong…and eager for a joke" (110), Alan proceeds to
rape the Miller's daughter, while John sl ...
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The Scarlet Letter: Hester, What A Change!
... For sinners are in the
hands of a angry God.
Many years later Nathaniel Hawthorn was greatly interested by the
Puritans. This 19th-century American novelist, was born on July 4, in
Salem, Massachusetts, and died May 11, 1864. He was the first American
writer to apply artistic judgment to Puritan society. He was intrigued by
the psychological insight into the complexities of human motivations and
actions. In The Scarlet Letter, he expressed one of the central legacies
of American Puritanism, using the plight of Hester Prynne and Arthur
Dimmesdale to illustrate the conflict between the desire to confess and ...
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The Great Gatsby: Eastern Desires
... from the midwest, and even
though his family was doing pretty well in the money department, Nick
wanted to make his own money. By going from the midwest to the east,
Fitzgerald shows Nick's desire to have more money. After spending the
summer in the east and seeing how money affects people, he decides to go
back west.
I see now that this has been a
story of the west, after all-Tom
and Gatsby, Daisy and Jordan and
I, were all westerners and and
perhaps we possessed some deficiency
in common which made us subtly
unadaptable to eastern life.
In other words, after finding out what th ...
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Overview Of "Catcher In The Rye" And "Death Of A Salesman"
... is always trying to be something that he is not. He
lies to his family about how how good he is doing at work and he also ends
up lying to himself. He lies so much, that he starts to believe the lies
that he is telling, and then he falls into his own trap. He wanted to be
something that he was not. He knew that he couldn't be that, but he kept
trying, and he kept lying. He tried and tried to be the best salesman, to
die, and have the death of a salesman, but in the end, it all backfired on
him, everything was the opposite of what he strived for. He started going
crazy, and then he lost it. He started to have h ...
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Dante's "The Hermaphroditic Joyce"
... passive, and not as elaborate as men in
their speech, however, James Joyce did not see things in the same light.
The most developed female character in Joyces A Portrait of the Artist as a
Young Man, is one who speaks with dignity, passion, and the female tact
which is all too often ignored in the ch aracters of women. Joyce's Dante
Riordan's words and thoughts are true to those of literate twentieth
century women.
Although a short-lived character in Portrait, Dante Riordan, in a brief
amount of time emits an apparently important and mysterious aura, the aura
of a woman. Judging from the studies of twentieth cen ...
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Racism In Wright's Black Boy
... whites. Yet he is aware of the existence of a difference. "My grandmother
who was as "white" as any "white" person, had never looked "white" to me."
(Wright pg. 31). This statement shows his confusion about blacks and whites.
When, as a child Wright learned of a white man beating a black boy he believed
that the white man was allowed to beat the black child. Wright did not think
that whites had the right to beat blacks because of their race. Instead he
assumed that the white man was the black boy's father. When Wright learned that
this was not true, and that the boy was beaten because of his race, he was u ...
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"The Loons"
... it about fifty years before, when he came back from Batoche with a bullet in his thigh. Jules had only intended to stay the winter in the Wachakwa Valley.
The cottage on Diamond Lake had a sign on the roadway bore in austere letters name MacLead. It was a large cottage; it was on the lakefront. Everything around the cottage were ferns, and sharp-branched raspberry bushes, and moss that had grown over fallen tree trunks. Above the backdoor there was the broad moose antlers that hung there.
Vanessa loved the summer at Diamond Lake because she loved to listen to the loons all night. She also loved because she would ...
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Maggie A Girl Of The Streets And Pudd’nhead Wilson
... in a slum and the boy is of higher social
status than her. The boy ends up cheating on her and Maggie is destroyed,
she is killed in the end.
Pudd’nhead Wilson is about 2 boys switched at birth. One was a
slave and grew up as a rich white boy, while the other who was the heir to
the house grew up a slave. After a murder it was realized who was really
who and the mistake was returned to normal.
Roxy, the mother in Pudd’nhead Wilson was first seen as a hero in
the book. She saved her own child from slavery and put her masters child
into it. This idea does not work out and son grows up beating her and
whippin ...
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