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Help With Book Reports Papers
“A Worn Path”: Persistence And Boldness Of The Main Character
... story is very slow, such as the character, it moves as she does. The lagged plot and movement of the story accentuates to the character’s harsh surroundings and emphasis towards her endeavor. As Phoenix Jackson moves carefully, haltingly walks through the woods and fields on her way to town, she speaks slowly and boldly to herself, this highlights her assurance to herself and her persistence as she moves towards her objective. The gradual movement in the story stresses the woman’s tenacity and incredible effort towards an intent she sees fit for such a journey.
Throughout the story, harsh weather and litera ...
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Wyrd
... cordial that was surprisingly popular among the village folk. She
continued to practice Viking religion in subtle ways, and encouraged spiritual
openness, as opposed to the dogmatic teachings of the time, vesting confidence
and a sense of worth in her fellow devotees. However, she was plagued by her
evil anti-thesis, the Abbe De Ville, who encouraged her son to join in a
'children's crusade' -- and unwise and dangerous religious march. Pat, her son,
was eventually sold as a slave in the middle east, but the Abbe did not know
this and told Berengaria the 'news' of his demise. Unable to cope with such a
revelation, she ...
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Hemingway's "A Farewell To Arms": Henry - A Man Of Action, Self-Dicipline, And One Who Maintains Grace Under Pressure
... is a man of action, self-discipline, and one who maintains grace
under pressure.
Whenever the situation requires, Henry rises to the occasion taking
control of potentially dangerous incidents with quick decision leaving no
room for second thought. After Frederick is captured by the battle police,
he foresees his inevitable death if no action was taken and instinctively
escaped detainment. "I looked at the carabineri, they were looking at the
newcomers. The others were looking a the colchel. I ducked down, pushed
between two men, and ran for the river, my head down. I tripped at the
edge and went i ...
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The Catcher In The Rye: Evil And Corruption In The World
... from this point on as the more he looks around this world, the more depressing life seems.
Around every corner Holden sees evil. He looks out on a world which appears completely immoral and unscrupulous. The three days we learn of from the novel place a distressed Holden in the vicinity of Manhattan. The city is decked with decorations and holiday splendor, yet, much to Holden's despair "seldom yields any occasions of peace, charity or even genuine merriment."3 Holden is surrounded by what he views as drunks, perverts, morons and screwballs. These convictions which Holden holds waver very momentarily during ...
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Summary Of Aycliffe's The Lost
... The evil beings in The
Lost are not vampires, but strigoi, free-floating shades of an ancient
family of lords. They die and don't decay. The other characters Aycliffe
has in the book start out having an attractive sense of humor but, humor
fades as the creepy crawlies take over. A prep-school teacher in Cambridge,
Michael Feraru, inherits Castle Vliacu, his family's fortress in the
Transylvanian Alps and hopes to turn it into an orphanage for Romanian
children. Delightful letters pass between Michael and his love, Sophie
Wandless, back in Cambridge, as he describes his travels through Eastern
Europe, his frustrat ...
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Comparison Of The Scarlet Lett
... were the adulters who committed the sin and produced the child Pearl. Throughout the story Hester is dehumanized for her sin, while Dimmsdale is still thought to be the "almighty" minister. In similarity from The Crucible, sin is put on trial. The Crucible directly addresses the themes and ideas from Salem Witch Trials. The young girls and their "leader" Abigail are the core of sin and evil in the girls and the community. Throughout the story accusations are "thrown" at others from the community who are believed righteous. Ultimately in this story the sin is "coming" directly from the black-man or the devil ...
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The Lottery
... in her character by wishing the pain that she must live through, and perhaps even die as the outcome, on others. She does not want to accept the fact that she was chosen. Mrs. Hutchinson says that it is “not fair”, regarding the final results of . was something she looked forward to until the outcome of was forced upon her. The entire population of the town participates in the tradition of . This shows that the whole community releases a part of their evil onto others. They are all eager to see someone beaten with rocks, however none of them want it to be them. Even the town’s children were involved in the s ...
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New Women Of The Victorian Era
... difficulties, and on a broader scale, human frailty. Dorthea Brooke and Sue Brideshead display elements of the “new woman” and both are driven to accomplish what each desires. Both are intelligent and educated women. The contrast in the two comes from the different motives each has to separate themselves from the norm. Sue is self-centered in her “independence,” while Dorthea is an ardent spokeswoman for social reform and justice. Both women follow different paths, neither ending up at a position they once knew they would attain. Dorthea is depicted early in the novel as having an intimidating presence; ...
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John Updike's "A&P"
... and conscious of their appearance and rules about what was acceptable or not were known to all. It was a time when the upper and middle class went to college and those who couldn’t afford it didn’t. A time when a pair of jeans meant you were either a farmer or a worker. A&P was right in the middle of town where “people hadn’t seen the ocean for twenty years.” So to see three girls walk into a convenient store five miles from the beach wearing nothing but their bathing suits would catch anyone’s attention. As the narrator, Sammy, describes in the story, “A&P was right in the middle of town and wo ...
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The Natural
... feelings. One of the more influential symbols in the book, women tend to control what Roy does. The first woman Roy falls for is Harriet Bird whom he meets on a train on his way to Chicago to try out for the Chicago Cubs. Roy is extremely attracted to her, but a major league ballplayer on the train named Whammer Wambold has already caught her eye. Roy becomes jealous and begins to do things to try to get her attention. At a stop in the route, the passengers get off for a break and go to a local carnival where Roy and the big leaguer clash in a contest of talent, a David-and-Goliath-type confrontation (Solotaroff ...
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