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Help With English Papers
The Fall Of The House Of Usher
... and pain encompassed his life as a young child. In , this is apparent.
This house was an actual mansion, huge in appearance with an eerie presence. It was also, the Dynasty of the Usher family. There were many apartments within the house. On a gloomy Fall day, clouds were so near that it felt like a thick fog. The members of the house have a similar disease, it is an inability to cope with real life. The one with the greatest intensity of the disease is lady Madeline. She is a twin sister which dominates this horrifying story till the end. A hosekeeper setting is in the process. All the dreariness and dis ...
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Comparing Prince Hal And Henry's Models Of Statescraft
... In fact the King goes so far as to wish that Hotspur was his
his son and not Prince Henry. Later in Act III, scene ii King Henry tells the
Prince that Hal reminds him of the way King Richard acted before Henry took the
throne and that Hotspur reminds the King of himself. This is the King's not so
subtle way oftelling Hal that the King doesn't think he is fit to suceed him to
the throne.
Prince Hal on the other hand has a different idea of statecraft. He expresses
his ideas in his speech in Act I, scene ii when he says "If all the year were
playing holidays, To sport would be as tedious as to work; But when ...
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Gilgamesh 3
... four thousand years after it was written, in part because we are scholars, or pseudo-scholars, and wish to learn something about human history. We read it as well because we want to know the meaning of life. The meaning of life, however, is not something we can wrap up and walk away with.
Discussing the philosophy of the Tao, Alan Watts explains what he believes Lao-tzu means by the line, "The five colors will blind a man's sight. The eye's sensitivity to color," Watts writes, "is impaired by the fixed idea that there are just five true colors. There is an infinite continuity of shading, and breaking it down ...
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Animal Farm By George Orwell
... from top of the social class to the bottom. At the top were the pigs. Each pig represented someone different in the revolution. Old Major is compared to Lenin. He was an ideologist who dreamed up a wonderful government where all the animals were equal and the humans, or the czars, were pushed out. Unfortunately his dream would never materialize. Then we are left with his predecessors. The first is Snowball. Snowball believed one hundred percent in Old Majors ideals. He wanted all the things Old Major wanted, such as the welfare of the animals. In the Russian Revolution his counterpart would be Trotsky. Trotsky ...
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Lord Of The Flies - The Beast
... birthmark on his face informed everyone of a "beastie," which he apparently saw on the previous night. At the time, this was dismissed by the older boys as his imagination, but even at that early stage it was evident that the younger children were troubled by the little boy’s words. It must be noted at this point that there was no definite physical appearance to the beast because it was assumed to be the over-active imagination of little children at work. At the same time it is obvious that Golding uses the early chapters in the book to set the scene for the chaos and terror of the beast that f ...
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Shakespearean Tragic Heros
... is not until the late 1500s that Shakespeare began to utilize Aristotle’s observations in the production of his many tragedies (Desjardens).
Probably the most important characteristic of a Shakespearean tragic hero is that one must posses a tragic flaw, because without the flaw, there would never be a downfall. The ultimate flaw varies from one play to another, King Lear’s flaw is that of arrogance while Macbeth’s it one of ambition. Some characters may be guilty of harboring many flaws, like Othello. Among Othello’s wrongs are gullibility and stupidity. In either case, the character never r ...
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Ignorance Is Strength
... dominating control of the fictitious Big Brother, he was still under their grasp.
A strong example in 1984 of a case where "" was a truth was Katherine, Winston's ex-wife. A description of Katherine shows the Party's ideal woman: "She had a bold, aquiline face, a face that one might have called noble until one discovered that there was as nearly as possible nothing behind it. Very early in their married life...that she had without exception the most stupid, vulgar, empty mind he had ever encountered. She had not a thought in her head that was not a slogan, and there was no imbecility, absolutely none, that she ...
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The Apprenticeship Of Duddy Kr
... same situation came from his uncle, Benjy. At first sight, Benjy described him as having a "thin crafty face, the quick black eyes and the restlessness...the grain so shrewd and knowing, all made a bad impression on Uncle Benjy." (p. 61) Benjy supported Lennie, giving him money for his education. With the exception of Simcha, he had no other parental support which is the reason why Simcha words had such a great effect on him.
Duddy gains what he had wanted in its acquisition, respect. Everyone except Simcha, Mr. MacPherson, and Uncle Benjy thought he was going to be a nobody. He wanted so much to prove them wrong an ...
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The Jungle 2
... The story opens with the feast at Jurgis and Ona's wedding in America, but soon flashes back to the time before they left Lithuania. Jurgis met Ona at a horse fair, and fell in love with her. Unfortunately, they were too poor to have a wedding, since Ona's father just died. In the hopes of finding freedom and fortune, they left for America, bringing many members of Ona's family with them.
After arriving in America, they are taken to Packingtown to find work. Packingtown is a section of Chicago where the meat packing industry is centralized. They take a tour of the plant, and see the unbelievable efficiency and spe ...
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Beowulf: A Hero
... side when he could have swam off to land and proven that he was the better swimmer, but he didn't. Instead he chose to remain by Brecca and protect him from sea monsters that threatened the two.
The courage Beowulf demonstrates is another remarkable trait. He fought against overwhelming odds in a manner consistent with the highest traditions of the typical "warrior-hero." For example, when Grendel attacks that fateful night that Beowulf and his men are at Herot, Beowulf does not attack Grendel with a sword or any other weapon, but with his bare hands, the same as Grendel. He then wrestles with Grendel without ...
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