Get Help Writing Your Paper Here
  home | faq | cancel
search papers :
Paper Topics
> American History
> Arts and Theater
> Biography
> Book Reports
> Computer
> Creative Writing
> Economics
> English
> Geography
> Health
> Legal Issues
> Miscellaneous
> Music
> Poetry
> Political
> Religion
> Science
> Social Issues
> World History
> Sign Up Today

We have been helping thousands of students with their term papers since 1998. We can help you with yours too.
> Register


Help With English Papers



Macbeth - Shakespeare
[ view this term paper ]Words: 1083 | Pages: 4

... th’ milk of human kindness To catch the nearest way.”(p29) Lady Macbeth also “speaks” with “demons” to give her the courage and fill her with evil to allow her to carry out the murder of the King. “…fill me from the crown to the toe top-full Of direst cruelty…”(p30) 4.) This speech tells us that Macbeth does not wholly want to proceed with the murder of the King, and that the very idea scares Macbeth, and seems impossible to commit. “…Doth unfix my hair…murder yet is but fantastical…”(p19) Act Two 1.) At first Macbeth sees a dagger floating, leading him to Duncan’s room, which existe ...




The Dual Qualities Of Nature (
[ view this term paper ]Words: 0 | Pages: 0

... ...




A Rose For Emily 6
[ view this term paper ]Words: 648 | Pages: 3

... her life. The rose from the title symbolizes this absent love. It symbolizes the roses and flowers that Emily never received, the lovers that overlooked her. The domineering attitude of Emily's father keeps her to himself, inside the house, and alone until his death. In his own way, Emily's father shows her how to love. Through a forced obligation to love only him, as he drives off young male callers, he teaches his daughter lessons of love. It is this dysfunctional love that resurfaces later, because it is the only way Emily knows how to love. When Homer Baron, a construction worker, comes into Emily's life he she ...




Citizen Kane By Orson Wells
[ view this term paper ]Words: 790 | Pages: 3

... acting of the actors, but the symbolism and cinematic effects. The techniques used by the cinematographer brought this film to life. This is what sets Citizen Kane apart from other films. Symbolism has an enormous role in this film. “Rosebud” is the last word uttered by Cane. He then dies and takes his secret to the death. The film follows one reporter on his search to the truth. Throughout the film, the tragical existence of powerful newspaper tycoon Charles Foster Kane, becomes apparent. He spends most of his life in solitude. Although he was married twice, he always stayed alone. This was because of h ...




Hamlet - Act 4 Summary
[ view this term paper ]Words: 308 | Pages: 2

... my 'mad' routine and then leave. Now, being escorted by Guildenstern and Rosencrantz, I learn that Fortinbras is planning to fight the Poles over some land that is completely invaluable. Later, after some thought, I conclude that he is fighting more for honor than anything else, something I have forgotten completely in myself. Now, I realize that I MUST finish what I have barely started. I must kill Claudius and will allow no other thoughts then the death of him to enter my mind, or I will be wasting my life. Pirates attacked the ship headed for England that I was aboard and I told them that if they took me back to D ...




Writing Styles Of Poe And Hoffman
[ view this term paper ]Words: 1608 | Pages: 6

... As defined in our class discussion, grotesque is the distortion of reality so that ordinary objects become so exaggerated that they become terrifying. The first point made by Kayser is that: Hoffman is a master in the composition of grotesque scenes; still we get the impression that the grotesque effect is usually weakened by the conclusions of his works. (Kayser 71) I find this statement to be very true in that in many stories, even by other authors, as well as some movies, this sort of thins happens frequently. During the course of the story or movie, the writer does an exceptional job of terrifying th ...




Tortilla Curtain
[ view this term paper ]Words: 886 | Pages: 4

... is a lot more than just that. He isn’t stupid. In many ways his reasoning about illegal immigrants makes a lot of sense. Illegal immigration does hurt the economy. Illegal immigrants do take away jobs from citizens. But Jack takes it to such an extreme that it is hard for one to feel that his views of illegal immigrants and his sentiments about them are purely a result of his concern about the economy and the state. “Don’t be surprised, because this is only the beginning. We’re under siege here-and there’s going to be a backlash.”(pg. 146) Jack acts like citizens are in some kind ...




Jungle
[ view this term paper ]Words: 569 | Pages: 3

... he eventually worked at various positions in the town. Jurgis, someone who believes in the value of hard work, was naïve in thinking that anything can be accomplished through the application of it. Jurgis was forced to send his family to work in order to survive. He was horrified to discover how the meat packers, where he worked, took advantage of their employees. The workers at the plant had no benefits, worked long hours, and were paid poor wages. Jurgis decided to join a Union and took a stand on the issues with some other family members. For the first time in his life, he saw the corruption of a town and it ...




Rules Of Prey
[ view this term paper ]Words: 676 | Pages: 3

... blacks by the N-word because he has never heard them called anything else. He's been brought up to see blacks as slaves, as something less than human. His best friend was Jim a black slaves. Huck's freedom is a setback to him in many ways because it holds him back from getting an education and being a functioning member of society. This is the author's way of saying that there needs to be a balance between freedom and rules. Jim's opinion is that he wants to be free from Mrs. Watson. He also wants to be like Huck free from nature and society; he explains his freedom as superstition. For example, he wants to be free ...




The Scarlet Letter 3
[ view this term paper ]Words: 674 | Pages: 3

... brought with him new ideas about religion as well as a renewed passion for the sermons which he gave. The Reverend is described as a “person of very striking aspect, with a white, lofty, and intending brow, large, brown, melancholy eyes, and a mouth which, unless when he forcibly compressed it, was apt to be tremulous, expressing both nervous sensibility and vastpower of self restraint.”. Though as the chapters go on it becomes apparent that Dimmsdale is in fact not quite the man that he had been perceived as.Though thoughtful and honest, Dimmsdale did not have the restraint as thought. He in fact, w ...




Browse: « prev  164  165  166  167  168  next »

Copyright 2025 PaperHelp. All rights reserved