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Help With Book Reports Papers
Romeo And Juliet- A Thin Line
... is not difficult, as in most of them we as readers see ourselves in the similar situations in our own lives. From the pain Romeo suffered from Rosalyn's rejection, to the enchantment of the first scene where the "star-crossed couple" meet. Each installment of the drama invokes a multiplicity of empathy through our own similar experiences. These are mostly considered episodes of love, but there are intermittent portrayals of the jealousy and feelings of malice to which a person subdues because of love. The most memorable of these portrayals is the first scene of Act Three. Love inspires rage in this fight scene in whi ...
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Arthur C. Clarke's 2061: Odyssey Three
... size of
Everest had appeared and that a thousand kilometres away from the mountain
a monolith about five hundred kilometres wide and a thousand two hundred
kilometres long.
When Universe landed The passengers were allowed on to the surface but
only if they had some body with them so that if something went wrong they
could help each other out. Floyd found some caves and decided to
investigate it but came back empty handed. After The universe dropped the
passengers back off at the moon base the universe was assigned to go pick
up a ship that had crash landed on Europa. Universe went to pick up the
people when it w ...
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Macbeth Motif Of Blood
... is referring to a soldier coming in from battle. The soldier then explains to King Duncan of Macbeth’s heroics in battle. One assumes that Macbeth is bloody just like the soldier. The soldier describes Macbeth in action “Disdaining Fortune, with his brandished steel, / Which smoked with bloody execution.” (I,ii,17-18) This line connects Macbeth with killing, and hints at the future.
The evil deed of murdering the king becomes too much of a burden on the Macbeths. The blood represents their crime, and they can not escape the sin of their actions. Macbeth realizes that in time he would get what ...
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A Tale Of Two Cities - Syndney
... possible by his sacrifice.
This argument also links Carton's death with Christian sacrifice and
love. When Carton makes his decision to die, the New Testament verse
beginning "I am the Resurrection and the Life" nearly becomes his
theme song. The words are repeated a last time at the moment Carton
dies. In what sense may we see Carton's dying in Darnay's place as
Christ-like? It wipes away his sin, just as Christ's death washed
clean man's accumulated sins.
For readers who choose the negative view, Carton's death seems an
act of giving up. These readers point out that Stryver's jackal has
little to los ...
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Night: The Holocaust
... injured, or simply can no longer bear the pain, they are shot or trampled without pity. An image that secures itself in Elie's memory is that of Rabbi Eliahou's son's leaving the Rabbi for dead. The father and son are running together when the father begins to grow tired. As the Rabbi falls farther and farther behind his son, his son runs on, pretending not to see what is happening to his father. This spectacle causes Elie to think of what he would do if his father ever became as weak as the Rabbi. He decides that he would never leave his father, even if staying with him would be the cause of his death.
The ...
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Of Mice And Men: The Great Depression - The Uncommon Struggle Of All Men
... things. On a day-to-day basis, the farmers, workers an every
other common person had to wake up each morning with the question: "How am
I going to feed my family today?". If you had a job, or could find one,
you were very lucky and grateful.
My grandfather was the 11th of 12 children in his family and they
moved from Bridgeport, OK to "the city" of Edmond after the Depression hit
and he took any job he could find to help out with the monthly income and
payments. Many people did not cope with the dust bowl or the Depression
very well. The younger generation had to change its way of thinking. They
a ...
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The Red Badge Of Courage And A Farewell To Arms: The Main Characters
... Red Badge of Courage and A Farewell to Arms have war as
the background of the story. War is the perfect setting in which one can
be tested to see if he or she is a hero. This idea is the major framework
of The Red Badge of Courage, in which Henry Fleming aspires to be a man, a
"hero" in the eyes of the masses by enlisting in the army. Henry's goal of
returning a man from war has already marred his image of being a potential
hero because his thoughts are about himself and not about the welfare of
others. Also, the fact that he wants to impress people and appear heroic
is a selfish aspiration. Heroes act not to ...
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Silas Marner: Eliot's Manipulation
... in Silas' desolate cramped cottage in Raveloe. This is an important time span because what is learned here about Silas contributes to the whole novel. Silas wants to stay away from social human life and keep to himself. He takes the job of a weaver so that he can be alone at his work. We learn from his flashback of 15 years earlier that he comes to the village of Raveloe because he has been falsely accused of stealing by the members of his religious sect in Lantern Yard, his hometown. Having lost faith in both God and man, he seeks a new life in Raveloe with new inhabitants, and falls into a routine of work and ...
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Oedipus Rex 2
... when Oedipus pronounces his curse upon the head of King Laius’s murderer in the opening scenes of the play :
So will I fight on the gods’ side,
And on the side of the slain man!
But my curse be on the one who did this, whether he is alone
Or conceals his share in it with others.
Let him be free of no misery if he share my house
Or sit at my hearth and I have knowledge of it.
On myself may it fall, as I have called it down!
-Oedipus from Oedipus Rex
When Oedipus pronounces this sentence he has already unwittingly judged himself, and to the excitement of the crowd foreshadowed later events to com ...
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The Truth About The Big Two He
... at the town of Seney, he sees that the town is completely burned to the ground. When Nick was on the bridge he looked down at the water and saw trout in the water going against the current. Nick realized that the trout were changing their positions only to steady themselves once again:
Nick looked down into the clear, brown water, colored from the pebbly bottom, and watched the trout keeping themselves steady in the current with wavering fins. As he watched them they changed their positions by quick angles, only to hold steady in the fast water again (472).
Hemingway is trying to show that the trout are better ...
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