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Term Papers on English
Jungle Book
Number of words: 2094 - Number of pages: 8.... ways of the jungle. He learned all these from a bear named Baloo. Shere
Khan turned the rest of the wolf pack away from Mowgli and so he had to leave. Mowgli
then went to live with the humans of the area for a while, but after Mowgli killed Shere
Khan they also threw him out. Mowgli went back to the wolf pack and showed them all
that he was boss and took over the leaders position.
The White Seal
This story is about a baby seal that grows up in a nursery on St. Paul Island. This
baby seal is the first white seal that has ever been born. His name is Ko .....
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Lack Of Knowledge Thesis Examination
Number of words: 2358 - Number of pages: 9.... and limited. Frankenstein speaks of childhood and points out that he would rather seek knowledge of the “world” though investigation, instead of following the creations of the poets. (Shelly 87)[5] He thirsts for knowledge of the material world. If he notices an idea that is not yet realized in the material world, he attempts to work on the idea to get it realized, or give it a worldly existence. He creates the creature and rejects it because its worldly form did not reflect the brilliance of his original idea. The unlearned creature is thrown out int .....
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Methods Of Control
Number of words: 660 - Number of pages: 3.... reach the early stages of adulthood. This means staying out later. When
one has his or her, license, the rest of the world opens up. At this stage
one must be thinking what does this have to do with equality. It's simple.
Age separates the adults from the youth.
When one gets his or her license, they will want more freedom. That
means staying out longer. Now curfew is 11:00 p.m., but most want to stay
out past that. There's always a party to go to, and the youth want to stay
out with their friends and have a good time. Good times can lead to tragedy.
Drinkin .....
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My Mistress Eyes Are Nothing L
Number of words: 465 - Number of pages: 2.... his mistress' breasts were a brownish-gray. "If hairs be wires, black wires grown on her head" (4). The speaker is saying that her hair is not soft, silky and smooth. The speaker goes to the extreme of saying her breath "reeks." When you hear the word "reeks" you imagine an awful smell and using this to describe her breath creates an image of not wanting to come face to face with her. But as you continue to read, the speaker says that she is a real person and is obtainable, unlike a mystical form such as an angel or goddess. "I grant I never saw a goddess .....
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A Critical Analysis Of "Revelation" By Flannery O'Connor
Number of words: 1747 - Number of pages: 7.... with her black workers, she often uses the word “nigger” in her
thoughts. These characteristics she gives her characters definitely reveals the
Southern lifestyle which the author, Flannery O'Connor, was a part of. In
addition to her Southern upbringing, another influence on the story is Flannery
O'Connor's illness. She battled with the lupus disease which has caused her to
use a degree of violence and anger to make her stories somewhat unhappy. The
illness caused a sadness inside of Flannery O'Connor, and that inner sadness
flowed from her body .....
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George Bernard Shaw And His Short Story About The Cremation Of The Narrator's Mother
Number of words: 772 - Number of pages: 3.... cremation, the interior chamber “looked
cool, clean, and sunny” as by a graveside, and the coffin was presented “feet
first” as in a ground burial. In selecting aspects of a traditional burial
service, Shaw's mood is revealed as ambivalent toward cremation by imposing
recalled fragments of ground burial for contrast. Strangely fascinated, he
begins to wonder exactly what happens when one is cremated. This mood of awe is
dramatized as he encounters several doors to observe in his chronological
investigation. He sees “a door opened in the wall,” and follows the .....
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The Sly Side Of Portia
Number of words: 743 - Number of pages: 3.... they do choose, they have the wisdom by their wit to lose" (Shakespeare 39). She says that the Prince of Morocco is "A gentle riddance! I curtains, go. Let all of his complexion choose me so" (Shakespeare 34). This shows not only harsh criticism, but also her prejudices against color. When Bassanio comes in however, Portia responds in an entirely new and opposite manner. She asks Bassanio to wait a while, telling him; "Before you hazard; for, in choosing wrong, I lose your company" (Shakespeare 44). Bassanio chooses the right casket and Portia promises all he .....
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Revenge In The Odyssey
Number of words: 687 - Number of pages: 3.... who don’t follow the practice are dealt with. Those who don’t follow this practice are considered barbarians. Homer gives a clue into the extent of the fear when he writes that Telemakhos was “irked with himself / to think a visitor had been kept their waiting…” (5). One example in The Odyssey is when Odysseus comes to the home of the Kyklops. Odysseus states:
“We will entreat you, great Sir, have a care
for the gods’ courtesy; Zeus will avenge
the unoffending guest” (153).
Kyklops just answers that, ̶ .....
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