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Term Papers on English
Cannery Row
Number of words: 437 - Number of pages: 2.... be alone for periods of time. Living in a boat with a "cramped cabin and the lack of a toilet" results in driving his girlfriends away. He repeatedly experiences loneliness. However, after he becomes used to the idea of being alone, Henri "felt a sense of relief." By eating what he wants and "free of the endless biologic functions for awhile," Henri shows that it is unhealthy to need constant companionship and being alone can help a person rejuvinate.
Frankie is all alone in the world except for Doc who accepts him although "he couldn't learn and there was someth .....
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How Is Evil Expred In The Play
Number of words: 1157 - Number of pages: 5.... to create evil in Scotland. Macbeth in Act 4 is described as an agent of disorder, "untitled tyrant bloody-sceptered". The language in Act 1 that described Macbeth has changed from "noble" and "kind" to the diction of Act 4 which describes Macbeth as "black Macbeth" and a "tyrant". The Castle that Macbeth lives in, Dunsanine is also indicative of darkness. Dunsanine is similar to the word dungeon a dark and dirty place symbolising hell and the evil that lives in hell.
In Act 4 Macbeth is a vision of utter evil, he murders and he consults witches and murders, bec .....
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Do You Have What It Takes? A Breakdown Of The Educated Person
Number of words: 999 - Number of pages: 4.... will draw a final conclusion from
those findings. Science also helps a person look at things objectively, which
means there is no feelings influencing experiments that can lead to fraudulent
conclusions. This can be a double edged sword however, because in many
instances when a scientist is emotionally removed from the experiments performed,
the question, "Should I?", is never asked. For instance under the reign of
Hitler many cruel medical experiments were preformed. In The Medical
Experiments by William Shirer the author states,"Prisoners were placed in .....
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The Joy Luck Club
Number of words: 676 - Number of pages: 3.... Really, this was their only joy. The mothers grew up during perilous times in China. They all were taught "to desire nothing, to swallow other people's misery, to eat [their] own bitterness." (p. 241) Though not many of them grew up terribly poor, they all had a certain respect for their elders, and for life itself. These Chinese mothers were all taught to be honorable, to the point of sacrificing their own lives to keep any family members' promise. Instead of their daughters, who "can promise to come to dinner, but if she wants to watch a favorite movie on TV, .....
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The Blue Hotel
Number of words: 667 - Number of pages: 3.... out of here alive’"(771). The Swede’s fear of dying had made him want to leave the hotel, but Pat Scull, the owner of , attempted to get him to stay by showing around the hotel and showing him pictures of his family. Scully shows the Swede some pictures of his children "That’s the pitcher of my of my little girl that died. Her name was Carrie. She had the purtiest hair you ever saw! I was that fond of her, she-"(773). Crane’s use of color in the episode helps to point out the pattern of death. Scully and the Swede first walk into a dark room and .....
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Richard II
Number of words: 621 - Number of pages: 3.... She thinks that if Richard is not stopped, he will continue to kill, and Gaunt could be next. " ... To safeguard thine own life / The best way is to venge my Gloucester's death." (I, ii, 35-36)
Richard could have allowed Bolingbroke and Mowbray to fight to the death, but if he had allowed this and if Bolingbroke had won, Richard's full part in the murder could be exposed. On the other hand, if Mowbray had won, Richard would be in debt to him even more so than he already was. The only other option was to exile both Bolingbroke and Mowbray, stopping both .....
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The Short Story Of Night - A C
Number of words: 529 - Number of pages: 2.... husband on various topics possibly beyond her character’s intelligence level as inferred by her husband’s response. It is ironic that she is also placed at this level as she is "raving" during her interrogation on her involvement with witchcraft. Therefore, following the same train of thought, the use of this arrangement suggests that her examiners, namely the Inquisitor, are merely acting out of ignorance.
Most tangible however, is the complete black appearance of the set that helps considerably to establish the notion that the play is a represent .....
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Early American Literature By Stephen Crane And Robert E. Lee About War
Number of words: 402 - Number of pages: 2.... because he gives us mental images of how
horrible war is. In this piece Crane keeps repeated "war is kind". These three
words really show how he and other Americans felt about war. He is not saying
that war is good. He is saying this in a sarcastic way. For example, he talks
about how peoples loved ones are dying. And then later he says "Do not weep.
War is Kind." In this poem he really shows us that Americans were really tired
of war.
In the "Letter to His Son" Robert E. Lee also depicts his attitude, as
well as other Americans, towards war very wel .....
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