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All Quiet On The Western Front
[ view this term paper ]Words: 878 | Pages: 4

... that practically everything they were taught in school is of no use to them anymore. All of the knowledge they had acquired via their studies was not applicable in the trenches. Instead of having to know, for instance, “How many inhabitants has Melbourne?”, they have to know how to light a cigarette in pouring rain. On page 263, Paul comments, “I am young, I am twenty years old; yet I know nothing of life but despair, death, fear, and fatuous superficiality cast over an abyss of sorrow.” This sums up his entire disposition towards himself at the end of the novel. He was taken into the a ...




The Awakening 6
[ view this term paper ]Words: 791 | Pages: 3

... world. Edna was truly brave in the way that she slowly began to defy society’s conventions. She was never unfaithful to her husband because he had betrayed her by seeing her as an object. This contributed to her yearning for truth and freedom. Her husband was a well-meaning man, but Edna had no real trust in him. She felt empty with him and their children. Once Leonce was gone and Edna had been with Robert, she felt like she had found true and passionate love, but she had not. Robert was like Leonce. Robert speaks of her being "set free and given to her" and she realizes that Robert also viewed wome ...




Touch Wood By Renée Roth-Hano
[ view this term paper ]Words: 847 | Pages: 4

... move into a crowded apartment in the German-occupied zone. Renée was disappointed in Paris when she arrived. She finds that everything seems to be smaller in Paris. Eventually, her new neighborhood becomes more of a home and helps Renée to miss Alsace a little less. Renée¹s parents had left Poland and then Hungary to find a freer, better life. They settled in France and thought they¹d be safe. Then Adolf Hitler, a German man who hated Jewish people, started trouble all over again. First, seven synagogues were blown up. Then, the Germans created a curfew prohibiting Jews to go during certain hours. Any Jew caught ...




Wind From A Foriegn Sky
[ view this term paper ]Words: 787 | Pages: 3

... fallen in love with each other. After many days of travel, they reach the Prince’s kingdom in the town of Princeport. Gaultry uses her Magic powers to save her beloved sister, and like any good story, everyone lives happily ever after. I think if I could meet anyone of the characters in the novel, I would like to meet Gaultry. Gaultry reminds me of myself in many ways. She is smart, but she does not always think until it is too late. She always gets herself into trouble by not thinking before acting. Like in the near beginning of the novel when she was attacked by a group of men, instead of using her cun ...




Of Mice And Men 5
[ view this term paper ]Words: 1940 | Pages: 8

... cultures that figure so prominently in his works. Steinbeck's family was middle-class. John Ernst was his father and he was a miller and County official. His mother, Olive Hamilton taught in schools at various locations in California. As a boy Steinbeck was more of a reader than a scholar; he was vivid reader and read a wide varity of literary pieces. Steinbeck wrote for the student newspapers at Salinas and at Stanford University. His reading background was both varied and intense, but he couldn't adjust to the disciplines necessary for a college degree, and never graduated. He had gone to college at Stanf ...




To Kill A Mockingbird
[ view this term paper ]Words: 1134 | Pages: 5

... book however, is not an easy task to accomplish, for typically, courage is displayed in the smallest or most unnoticeable fashions. In , Atticus, a man who provides the morale guidelines in the story, and also Scout and Jem¹s father, demonstrates courage in a variation of different ways, but the biggest of all the tasks that he had to overcome was when he was given the opportunity to defend Tom Robinson in court. Atticus did not treat this litigation such as any other case that he had ever dealt with before, for he new that this one would most likely change his life. The reason: Tom Robinson was a Negro. At ...




A Separate Peace 2
[ view this term paper ]Words: 1161 | Pages: 5

... the main character in the book, returns to his old prep school-Devon- that he attended some fifteen years earlier. While there he remembers the incident that changed his life. In the summer of 1942, Gene and his friends stayed at their prep school for the summer session. His best friend in those days was a boy named Phineas, or Finny. During that time World War II was going on and the sixteen-year old boys were trying to preserve the peace in their lives, before they would be old enough to be drafted into the war-just one year later. One day Finny, the best athlete in the school, came up with the crazy idea to ju ...




Grapes Of Wrath
[ view this term paper ]Words: 552 | Pages: 3

... if they have the money to pay for the gas they are pumping. Tom gets rather angry at this remark and tells the attendant "why do you stereo type us?" Tom soon realizes, after being shown around the station that the attendant and his family will probably be move soon also because he is in the same situation. Continuing on the trip they encounter another hardship; the Wilson's car breaks down. This is another large set back for the family because it may split them up. After the news of tom and al staying is told to ma she starts to flip out because she doesn't want the family to be split up. Tom explains that w ...




Gentlemen Of The Night
[ view this term paper ]Words: 1441 | Pages: 6

... Frost relied on the natural flow of things to control him. One of the most remarkable features of the poetry of Frost, is the manner in which he combines relatively straightforward accounts of ordinary experiences with subtle complexities of thought which, in turn, raise central philosophical issues of universal relevance to the human condition. He gives, in Shakespeare's phrase, a 'local habitation and a name' to these theoretical and even spiritual conceptions and dilemmas, at once making them accessible while never diminishing their significance. Dylan Thomas' emotion was at times erratic…He used to say, ...




All About Triffles
[ view this term paper ]Words: 1068 | Pages: 4

... Three Sisters who control the fate of men. Mrs. Hale's behavior is similar to Clotho the Spinner, the sister who spins the thread of life. Mrs. Hale subtly suggests that Mrs. Wright is not the sole agent in the death of Mr. Wright (Meak86). Mrs. Hale's reference to that event, "when they was slipping the rope under his neck," (Glaspell568) showing a plural pronoun and a singular verb suggests the involvement of more than one in a single outcome, and it suggests that the three women will be in conspiracy in the case controlling the outcome or the fate of all characters(Meak88). The information about the living c ...




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