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Help With Book Reports Papers
Prime Of Miss Jean Broadie
... complaints about her unorthidoxed method of teaching. Mary was the stupid character of the set. Miss Broadie, along with the other girls, treated Mary as their scapegoat. They blamed everything on her stupidity. Miss Broadie harshly accused her and blamed her for faults belonging to everyone, using her to make an example. Monica was known by all for her quick temper and her mind for mathematics. She was chosen, most likely, for little more than the fact that Miss Broadie knew that her parents would not have any problems. Miss Broadie never seemed to have an underlying scheme planed out for her, as she did with some ...
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The Sacrilege: Caesar A Political Mastermind
... Caesar would rather live a luxurious and relaxed
life. Although Caesar didn't think so. Burra, who thought that Caesar would be
brilliant if he enlisted and controlled a legion, was exactly correct. Caesar,
as history as shown, is a brilliant leader. Caesar believed that by leading you
must not just make a plan, you must carry it out with his own manpower. He was
always on his horse leading his pack through the bloodshed, not like many other
leaders.
When Decius was talking to Milo towards the beginning of the story he
says that Caesar is known for being "reckless." He recounts the story of the
pirates that ca ...
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The Yellow Wallpaper: Journey Into Insanity
... name we never learn -- tells
of her depression and how it is dismissed by her husband and brother. "You
see, he does not believe I am sick! And what can one do? If a physician
of high standing, and one's own husband, assures friends and relatives that
there is really nothing the matter with one but temporary nervous
depression -- a slight hysterical tendency -- what is one to do?" (Gilman
193). These two men -- both doctors -- seem completely unable to admit
that there might be more to her condition than than just stress and a
slight nervous condition. Even when a summer in the country and weeks of
bed-rest d ...
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Ernest Hemingway: Allegorical Figures In The Sun Also Rises
... a
feeling of things coming that you could not prevent.”
D. Condition represents a peculiar form of impotence.
E. Restrained romantic.
F. Private grief with Cohn's public suffering.
G. Strongly attracted to Pedro Romero.
H. Later, when Barnes says that he hates “homos” and wants to
hit them. III. Lady Brett Ashley.
A. First appears with a group of homosexuals.
B. Wears man's hat on short hair.
C. Refers to men as fellow “chaps”.
D. All complete distortion of sexual roles.
E. The war has turned Brett into the equality of a man. ...
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Paradise Lost: Milton's Approach To Lust, Sex, And Violence
... themes of
creation, destruction, and the nature of existence. Milton, in Paradise Lost,
establishes that with sex, as with religion, he is of no particular hierarchical
establishment. However, Milton does not want to be confused with the
stereotypical puritan. Milton the poet, seems to celebrate the ideal of sex; yet,
he deplores concupiscence and warns against the evils of lust, insisting lust
leads to sin, violence and death.
From the beginning, Satan, like fallen humanity, not only blames others; but
also makes comic and grandiose reasons for his evil behavior. Yet, despite his
reasoning to seek revenge again ...
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The Canterbury Tales
... very much were the Friar and the Pardoner.
In the medieval society, where people were very religious, illiterate and superstitious, the Friar was respected as God himself. The Friar’s job in the church was to help people, who committed crime, by giving them a guide to pray for a certain time so that they can receive absolution. But the Friar in was not honest and dedicated in doing his job. He abused his position by taking money from people who came to confess. He told them that they would get absolution if they pay him and thus broke the vow of obedience because it is against the Catholic Church. He broke the ...
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Canterbury Tales-a Personal Pe
... matter of fact. Atheism was an alien concept and this is why the church was so powerful. Sometimes, people of the church would take advantage of that
Leading a life pleasing God was one of the most significant concerns of the medieval man. The existence of God was never questioned and the one thing that man wanted most was to be with the divine. In order to do this, he had to achieve salvation. The simplest way to achieve salvation was to buy it. The character of the Pardoner is truly one of the books most evil-hearted and despicable, for he is the person who can “sell” salvation. He takes total advantag ...
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Dante 2
... influenced Dante in his early poetry(Smith 18). Provencal literature was very unique and technically complex(Smith 18), "it was concerned with the worship of the idealized woman (usually married, and therefore theoretically unattainable), involving much sorrow and torment to the lover, not unmixed, with pride"(Smith 18). This was the basis for the linked rhyme scheme of the Inferno. Dante was fascinated by Arnaut Daniel's "cult of the word and his veritable obsession with technique"(Smith 19). The Sicilian School, a refinement of the Provencal, had "significant linguistic effect upon his contemporaries" (Smith 20) ...
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Comparison: Mary Reilly And The Strange Case Of Dr. Jekyll And Mr. Hyde
... the unmitigated evil of his darker self predominates, until finally he performs an atrocious murder. His saner self determines to curtail those alternations of personality, but he discovers that he is losing control over his transformations, that he slips with increasing frequency into the world of evil. Finally, unable to procure one of the ingredients for the mixture of redemption, and on the verge of being discovered, he commits suicide.
Mary Reilly by Valerie Martin, is a powerful and moving novel. It takes the story Dr. Jeckyl and Mr. Hyde, and gives a fresh take on the distinguished Dr. Henry Jekyll and t ...
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Talk So Kids Will Listen And Listen So Kids Will Talk: A Review
... someone else.
The book talks a lot about control. People control the
conversation too much. We do this without knowing it. Sometimes people
control the conversation by talking Sarcastically: ‘is that what you're
wearing -- polka dots and plaid? Ooh, you ought to get a lot of
compliments today.' Blaming or Accusing: ‘Your finger prints are on the
door again, - why do you do that?" Name Calling: "How dumb can you be?"
Threats: "Touch it again and you'll get it!" Commands: "Pick it up,
now!" Lecturing, Warnings: "watch it you'll burn yourself." and
Comparisons: "Why can't you be more like Billy?" T ...
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