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Papers on Book Reports
Secrets In Scarlet Letter
Number of words: 1373 | Number of pages: 5.... yet another sin, that of hypocrisy. Dimmesdale’s accumulated sins build inside of him, constantly afflicting his soul until it begins to affect him negatively. Thinking himself a hypocrite, he tries to ease his conscience and requite his sin by scourging himself on the chest during the night, fasting for days on end and even climbing the same platform on which Hester began her humiliation.
Walking in the shadow of a dream, as it were, and perhaps actually under the influence of a species of somnambulism (sleepwalk), Mr. Dimmesdale reached the spot where, now so long since, Hester Prynne had lived through her first hours of .....
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Okonkwo: Overwhelmed By His Past
Number of words: 1755 | Number of pages: 7.... in life. As time progresses, he becomes obsessed with the concept of being different from his father, beginning his life having nothing.
With a father like Unoka, Okonkwo did not have the start in life which many young men had. . . . But in spite of these disadvantages, he had begun even in his father’s lifetime to lay the foundations of a prosperous future. It was slow and painful. But he threw himself into it life one possessed. And indeed he was possessed by the fear of his father’s contemptible life and shameful death. (18)
Okonkwo will try whatever he can to be unlike Unoka. He is determined to gain respect and admira .....
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Lord Of The Flies : Summary Of Conclusion
Number of words: 616 | Number of pages: 3.... a psychotic person who
was refrained from his true genetic personality and yearning for violence
because of the standards to which he was born. He was a rich and went to a
private school where he could not be himself. The school was very strict
and therefore not allowing any of the boys to do things that they had
always wanted. So then, when faced with the idea of an island with no
adults where they can do as they like, they give in to the idea of being
hunters and playing a game of being a native, wearing war paint, killing
animals and getting their own meat.
Sooner or later, Jack would lose all control and split the group .....
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Malory’s Le Morte D’Arthur: Myths And Legends
Number of words: 348 | Number of pages: 2.... Though there are many parts in the book that stray away from the legend, this is a novel that lets the reader use his or her imagination and wonder in far off places. This book “remains an enchanted sea for the reader to swim about in delighting at the random beauties of fifteenth-century prose.”
The fact that this is a myth allows the reader to be prepared for some strange occurrences. Obviously most of these events did not take place, but Malory makes them convincing by mixing them with some facts, for instance this is a novel based on the customs of the English people at that time, the knights represent some of thes .....
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Of Mice And Men: Life, Dreams And Friendship Of George And Lenny
Number of words: 537 | Number of pages: 2.... could live so easy. I could go get a job an work, an no trouble. No mess at all, and when the end of the month come I could take my fifty bucks and go into town and get whatever I want.” George feels the responsibility to his Aunt Clara. Also while talking to other ranchers George reflects on a time when he and Lennie were working together for the first time. George told Lennie to jump into the lake, he did and nearly drowned. George jumped in and saved him. Lennie was so grateful that he had forgotten that George was the one who told him to jump in. George knows how feeble minded and kind Lennie is and that he needs supervision. .....
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Black Like Me
Number of words: 901 | Number of pages: 4.... white man who lived with his wife and children. He was not oriented to his family. He decided to pass his own society to the black society. Although this decision might help most of the African Americans, he had to sacrifice his gathering time with his family. “She offered, as her part of the project, her willingness to lead, with our three children, the unsatisfactory family life of a household deprived of husband and father” (Griffin 9). Leaving Mrs. Griffin and his children would deprive them of the care they needed. Even though he was not oriented to his family, he was full of courage. He was willing to dis .....
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The Good Earth: Wang Lung
Number of words: 747 | Number of pages: 3.... first experience away from his land was troubling for him. He had worked the land since the beginning of his life. He depended on it for his subsistence, as did his family. When a serious drought came, he had to abandon his land and travel in search of a way to feed his family. He and his family moved south, to a big city, where he found work. Although his family was fed, he still longed for his land. When he returned, he felt as though he had never been away from his land. He was happy to have returned.
Seven years after Wang Lung returned to his land after the drought, he had become wealthy compared to the other farmers .....
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Herodotus' The History
Number of words: 1319 | Number of pages: 5.... the East and the West. The East, represented by the Persian Empire, signified tyranny and oppression. The West, represented by the Greek city-states, signified freedom. As Herodotus interprets the Persian Wars we see the beginnings of Western Civilization and the association of that tradition with freedom.
The Greeks had always been aware that foreign, barbarian peoples worshipped different gods and had customs different from their own. The rise of ethnographic studies, however, encouraged a systematic examination of the nature of human culture and society. To the Greeks this suggested that customs which they had always taken t .....
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The Beast In The Jungle: The Beast Of James
Number of words: 2435 | Number of pages: 9.... plainly of Marcher's and Bartram's relationship?
The author could tell us exactly why John Marcher does not marry May
Bartram. The narrator tells us that Marcher's situation "was not a
condition he could invite a woman to share" and "that a man of feeling
didn't cause himself to be accompanied by a lady on a tiger hunt" (p. 417).
This is nonsense. Marcher won't marry May because he doesn't want to
inconvenience her with his condition or endanger her life on a tiger hunt?
First of all, he inconveniences her right up to the day of her death with
his condition, and as for the metaphorical tiger hunt, what exactly does
that refer to? .....
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What Makes Up A Work Of Literature
Number of words: 765 | Number of pages: 3.... daughter. But he wants to torment and
take revenge on the Reverend Dimmesdale, who suddenly became sick.
Chillingworth uses his knowledge of the human mind and of medicine to
deduce that Dimmesdale's sickness lay not in his body, but in his mind: He
was holding a secret, a deep, dark, secret, that was destroying him. By
asking Dimmesdale if he were hiding something, Chillingworth angered
Dimmesdale and tried to torment him. This insight into human behavior,
that one's physical attributes can be determined by a mental condition,
makes The Scarlet Letter a classic.
Ken Kesey gives an excellent insight into human behavi .....
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