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



What I Can Do To Promote Liberty
[ view this term paper ]Words: 362 | Pages: 2

... result in total Åñ㮩hŸ and we'd go into some sorta nuclear war and than afterwards some guy might pretend he is are supreme ruler and insist on calling us frog-people. We don't want that. But here is what we can do. We can go to hills of West Virginia and liberate some guns from the National Guard Armory. Because at some time in the course of human events it becomes necessary to disassociate from the ties that bind us and keep us from true liberty. Now I don't wanna get off on a rant here, but it seems to me that when the local militia group has Uzi's, and tanks and all Deputy Bob has is a hangover fr ...




The Strength Of A Family Willi
[ view this term paper ]Words: 846 | Pages: 4

... and this girl. For whatever reason, he asks her how many brothers and sisters she has. She tells him she has seven. He, of course, sees no other children running around so challenges her answer. When he finds two are dead, he insists “then ye are only five,” she stands firm in her belief that “Nay, we are seven.” Each verse goes back and forth with him trying to convince her that she is one of five and of her explaining to him why her brother and sister are still very much part of her life. One would expect this young child to be sad and heart-broken, yet she always comes across as strong ...




A Rose For Emily
[ view this term paper ]Words: 1294 | Pages: 5

... and women of the town act differently to Miss Emily. A sort of hereditary obligation that triggers a memory. In 1894 when Colonel Sartoris had remitted her taxes, but generations change within the story, and their values differ. So the next generation, feeling no hereditary obligation attempts to collect these reportedly remitted taxes. The encounter between the next generation with its more modern ideas and the aged Miss Emily gives the first visual details of the inside of the house and of her. Inside was a dusty, dank desolate realm dominated by the presence of the crayon portrait of her father. Miss Emily wa ...




Heart Of Darkness
[ view this term paper ]Words: 1091 | Pages: 4

... through his work, the reality of the universe, such as the great virtue of efficiency, the darkness in society and individuals and the surface reality. When Kurtz found himself on his deathbed and he said gThe horror, The horror referring to his life in inner Africa, which caused him disintegration. Marlow emphasized the virtue of gefficiencyh throughout the story because he thought of it as the only way to survive in the wilderness. After seeing the dying natives in the forest of the outer station, Marlow described them as ginefficient.h Under gthe devotion to efficiency,h incompetent people were e ...




Literary Critique Of The Great
[ view this term paper ]Words: 353 | Pages: 2

... of society. Miss Baker shows off her vanity in her actions. In the vehicle with Nick, Jordan insisted she receive special privileges because of her wealth and celebrity status. Her comment, "They'll keep out of my way," implies that other drivers will keep out of her way. She has a spoiled altitude towards because she thinks she owns the road. She is also hypocritical because she hates careless people even though she is a careless driver herself. Daisy Buchanan expresses her vanity in the words she says. For example, she once said, "I've been everywhere and seen everything and love everything," implying that she ...




Philosophy - Absolute Understa
[ view this term paper ]Words: 1007 | Pages: 4

... of circumstances of who said it, to whom, when, where, why, and how it was said. Instead of absolute truths, the concepts or beliefs that the blind men claim are viewpoints that each one clarifies the nature of the elephant. Everybody has learned to see things from his or her own sense of reason and logic. The many things that people experience throughout their lifetimes, help to determine the judgments toward the different issues and objects that they encounter. Because individuals has his or her own sense of reason and logic, the perceptions that people encounter are ultimately true, and not false. Lif ...




Harrison Bergeron
[ view this term paper ]Words: 1487 | Pages: 6

... These handicaps range from little mental handicap radios in more intellectual people's heads to metal or other heavy foreign objects to slow the stronger people. With these handicaps the people are unable to do things that might be simple without the handicaps. This attempt at equality that comes about, makes America a dictatorship rather than a democracy. It also lowers the quality of living in America along with the competition level that America has with the rest of the world. Besides, there is no possible way to make everyone equal in everyday life. Without individuality, there would not be any free thinkers ...




Out Of This Furnace
[ view this term paper ]Words: 1356 | Pages: 5

... of reality and challenges that await the immigrating Slovaks. He shows through the lives of Kracha, Mike, and Mary, that immigrants can be successful despite the anti-immigrant sentiment and power of large corporations. Djuro Kracha, a recent immigrant, leaves Hungary in hopes that he is "leaving behind the endless poverty and oppression that were the birthrights of a Slovak peasant in Franz Josef's empire" (Bell, p.3). Kracha's desire to leave his plight behind in his native country and restart his life in America is the reason that also drove the Chinese to the United States, earlier the Irish and later ...




Julius Caesar - Tragic Hero
[ view this term paper ]Words: 694 | Pages: 3

... his leadership and Caesar also defeated the great Pompey. First of all, At the Feast of Lupercal Caesar manipulated the commoners and made himself look noble to the commoners. Casca said, "Why there was a crown offered to him;...people fell a-shouting" (I,ii,221-223). Next, To show how noble and great Caesar was, the Romans would stand along the street sides to watch him pass by. "Madam not yet, I go to take my stand; /To see him pass on to the Capitol," said the soothsayer (II,iv,25-26). Finally, Caesar had the greatest rank possible as he would have been crowned king if it wasn’t fo ...




Hedda Gabler 2
[ view this term paper ]Words: 508 | Pages: 2

... curio. While the differences of culture and period now put a certain distance between ourselves and the subject, Ibsen was most emphatic that his characters were representative of actual human beings. Although in his two previous works, Rosmersholm and The Lady From the Sea, Ibsen had begun exploring the human psyche in more symbolic, mystical terms,Hedda marked a return to the theatrical style which we term "realism," a method of playwriting in which the internal motivations of the personalities in the play are explored within a specific social context. Other hallmarks of the realistic style include the avoidanc ...




Browse: « prev  407  408  409  410  411  next »

Copyright 2025 PaperHelp. All rights reserved