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Help With English Papers
Wolf's "The Child By Tiger" And Bowen's "Tears, Idle Tears": The Innocence Of The Child
... boy cries because his mother
can't cry and, consequently, he experiences her grief for her. Some people
in life seem to carry the burdens and grief of the world on their shoulders.
By examining the two stories, it can be seen that both authors use the
symbolism, setting, and character to prove these main ideas of the stories.
The two stories both use symbolism to clarify their themes. "Tears,
Idle Tears" uses a duck to represent Frederick's alteration of personality.
When he first tries to pet the duck, the duck runs down to the pond and
swims away. After Frederick talks with a girl that he meets at the pond,
h ...
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Fahrenheit 451
... home, meets a friend to help him in his brave stand against society but gets discovered, then barely escapes his punishment to join a group of people who attempt to preserve knowledge through memorization.
At the beginning of the novel Guy Montag is described as a "minstrel man" (4). He is a fireman who "never questioned the pleasure of watching pages consumed by flames." (Back cover). He is a brave individual who decides to rebel against society. Montag meets a crazy and imaginative seventeen-year old girl named Clarisse McClellan. She tells him of a time when firemen used to put out fires instead of making ...
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Robinson Crusoe 3
... had all the Sweetness and Softness of an European in his Countenance too…”, “His Hair was long and black, not curl’d like Wool…”, “The Colour of his Skin was not quite black, but very tawny; and yet not of an ugly yellow nauseous tawny, as the Brasilians, and Virginians, and other Natives of America are…”, and “his Nose small, not flat like the Negroes, a very good mouth, thin Lips, and his fine Teeth well set, and white as Ivory” (Defoe 205).
When the two characters meet, Friday approaches Robinson Crusoe in a very sedate manner, Friday is terrified ...
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A Shropshire Lad
... Housman the discovery of self was so disturbing and disconcerting that poetry came as a way of disclosing it" (Bayley 44). The county of Shropshire is central to much of his poetry, but it is employed merely as "a personification of the writer’s memories, dreams and affections;" meanwhile, Housman’s central character is one "who could at once be himself and not himself" (Scott-Kilvert 26). In what Housman himself regarded to be one of his best poems, "XXVII: Is my team ploughing," the focus is placed upon a conversation between a dead man and one of his friends from his previo ...
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T.S Eliot's View On Aesthetic Values
... men that were
familiar with the father tongue because women did not gain the privilege to
be educated until modern times. Any women who did have knowledge in the
father tongue had to do so secretly. Eliot also predetermines that we know
the great writers of his time at that were are familiar with English
literary tradition. In the essay Tradition and the Individual Talent,
Eliot says, " … the historical sense compels a man to write not merely with
his own generation in his bones, but with a feeling that the whole of the
literature of his own country has a simultaneous existence and composes a
simultaneous ...
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A Rose For Emily
... there was
no reply. They wrote her a formal letter asking her to call at the sheriff's office at her convenience. A week later the mayor
wrote her himself, offering to call or to send his car for her, and received in reply a note on paper of an archaic shape, in a thin
flowing calligraphy in faded ink , to the effect that she no longer went out at all. The tax notice was also enclosed, without
comment," (40-41). Miss Emily was convinced that she had no taxes in Jefferson because before the Civil War the South
didn't have to pay. This change occurred when the North took over the South. "After her father's death s ...
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Eveline: Character Analysis
... stick (Joyce 4).” As of late she
has begun to feel “herself in danger of her father's violence (Joyce 4).”
Ironically, her father has “begun to threaten her and say what he'd do to her
only for her dead mother's sake (Joyce 5).”
Eveline wants a new life but is afraid to let go of her past. She dreams
of a place where "people would treat her with respect (Joyce 4)" and when
contemplating her future, hopes “to explore a new life with Frank (Joyce 5).”
When, in a moment of terror she realizes that “she must escape (Joyce 6),” it
seems to steel her determination to make a new home for herself ...
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Macbeth A Story Of Our Time
... in which King Kenneth was influenced by his wife to sponsor the murder. The historical record contains the belief of Macbeth in the prophecies of three wild women soothsayers who reinforced his ambitions for the throne; records Banquho's (sic) role, the subsequent murder of King Duncan and Macbeth's paranoia concerning MacDuff. (sic) The play Macbeth, first published in 1623, wove these separate histories into a coherent whole. No doubt Shakespeare pleaded poetic license. The result is timeless.
Macbeth, is a story of a man who's ambitions have brought him to commit treason and murder. Visions of power grew within hi ...
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C And C Huck Finn, Ethan Frome
... and F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby. Each of these novels' main characters showed a deep emotional bond with another character. Huck Finn's relationship with Jim was somewhat strange, but nevertheless was strong. Jim was a runaway slave and Huck thought that it was a sin to help a runaway slave. Despite his religious beliefs, Huck knew that he was "the best friend old Jim ever had, and the only one he's got now." He knew that by helping Jim he "will go to hell," but took this risk and followed his own morality. Love was also shared between two characters in Ethan Frome. The love shared in this nove ...
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Romeo And Juliet (old Vs. New)
... What stuck out as being most different between the two versions of the movie were how the characters acted. In the classic version, Juliet is a much more timid girl and seems much less "experienced" than in the newer version. I feel that her shyness makes her more desireable. It makes their romance seem much more innocent and more meaningful at the same time. I feel that the new Romeo is much less shy in the newer version. This makes their love seem much more lustful, rather than meaningful. Another actor that seemes to change drastically is Tybalt. In the original version, he seems to be much more in contr ...
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