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Papers on Book Reports
Canterbury Tales-a Personal Pe
Number of words: 689 | Number of pages: 3.... books most evil-hearted and despicable, for he is the person who can “sell” salvation. He takes total advantage of his position intimidating people into buying his pardons, indulgences, and holy relics. The Pardoner has no real concern for the sinners, he only wants his money, as shown on page 243, where he says “Out come the pence, and specially for myself, for my exclusive purpose is to win and not at all to castigate their sin. Once dead what matter how their souls may fare? They can go blackberrying for all I care.” The pardoner is the biggest hypocrite in the book because he preaches to follow the pat .....
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Machiavelli's "The Prince": By Any Means Necessary
Number of words: 593 | Number of pages: 3.... arguments driven by
ego and opens his mind to Machiavelli on a personal, sincere level. By placing
himself at the feet of the reader, Machiavelli puts himself and his argument in
a position of power. He wastes no time in using this power to gain more control
over the reader. In the next sentence he states that his intention is to create
an outline for behavior in public office “ of use to those who understand”. This
statement compels the reader to agree with the points that the trustworthy,
forthright Machiavelli argues, or be relegated the ranks of those ignorant
dullards that do not understand. Machiavelli then presents h .....
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Book Review Of "The Burning Man" By Phillip Margolin
Number of words: 1154 | Number of pages: 5.... with an old friend who was looking for someone
trying to regain status as Peter now was. Whitaker was not as exciting as
Portland was to Peter, but he began to be accustomed to the town when he began
his handling small criminal cases and ran into an old friend who graduated with
him from highschool, Steve Mancini. Steve, like Peter's father, was a football
star, but at the Division II level for the Whitaker State football team. Hale
became close with Mancini and met many other residents of Whitaker through Steve.
One being Steve's beautiful and intelligent fiance, Donna Harmon and her
slightly retarded brother Gary. Just a .....
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Catcher In The Rye: Summary
Number of words: 1703 | Number of pages: 7.... years old, and attends a school
called Pencey. Holden starts off this story by telling his story about the
last Christmas. He starts off by saying that he was at Thomson Hill
watching a football game. He returned from New York with the fencing team.
He was the manager of the team. Holden went to his room located at Pencey.
Holden was very bored; so he took out a hunting hat that he had
bought at New York. His next door neighbor came in to bother Holden. His
neighbors name is Robert Ackley. He is a tall kid that never brushes his
teeth. They were both talking about Holdens roommate Stadlater. Robert Did
not like Stadlater at .....
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The Grapes Of Wrath: No One Man, But One Common Soul
Number of words: 2337 | Number of pages: 9.... Steinbeck has been compared to a twentieth
century Charles Dickens of California; a social critic with more sentiment
than science or system. His writing is warm, human, inconsistent,
occasionally angry, but more often delighted with the joys associated with
human life on its lowest levels (Holman 20). This biological image of man
creates techniques and aspects of form capable of conveying this image of
man with esthetic power and conviction; the power to overcome adversity
through collectiveness, or in this case, as one combined soul(Curley 224).
Steinbeck's basic purpose of the novel is essentially religious,
but not in any .....
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Harrison Bergeron
Number of words: 516 | Number of pages: 2.... that are needed to improve the population's way of life.
Suppose someone did not have the ability to invent the automobile. It would be
difficult to commute to school or work. Imagine if you had to walk to work
every day no matter how bad the weather is. Now-a-days people complain about
having to simply walk out to their car in the morning and wait for it to warm up.
Many jobs would have never been created if there were not any cars. Without
technological advancements, the economy would also come to a stand still.
If new goods and services were not being produced, the economy could not
survive. Monopolies would eventually .....
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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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Wuthering Heights: Summary
Number of words: 438 | Number of pages: 2.... wants both Heathcliff and Edgar to suffer-Edgar, because he never understood
heraffection for Heathcliff; and Heathcliff, because he never understood why
she married Edgar. Cathy has a mind of her own and some of Catherine's
willfullness. She is also capable of great sympathy towards Linton, whom she
marries and finally Hareton Earnshaw.
Heathcliff is a strange mix-ture of the refined and incouth; slovently, yet
dresses and acts like a g gentleman. While being dark with the look of a gypsy,
he is quite handsome. His son, linton resembles his mother, Isabella, as he is
blonde, pretty, feeble, adn effeminate. It is ironic thta .....
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Albert Camus' "The Plague"
Number of words: 498 | Number of pages: 2.... seemed paralyzed. Mr.
Rieux tried to help the man the best that he could, but he ended up dying.
Michael was the first person to die of this illness. After his death, many
cases of this illness were reported widespread. Again more details of sickness
and death, this is the parallelism for this novel.
As the reports of sickness and death came to inform Dr. Rieux, he tried
to comfort and cure the plagued patients. About ninety percent of the people
infected had died. He wanted a stop to this plague. Quickly he linked the rats
with the people. He knew that the rats began to get sick before the people did.
At this time .....
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All Quiet On The Western Front: Themes
Number of words: 1015 | Number of pages: 4.... portraying war as something terrible, though,
the nature motif is expressed most dramatically in the following passages.
These passages mark the three distinct stages of nature's condemnation of
war: rebellion, perseverance, and erasure.
The first passage occurs in Chapter Four when the troops are
trucked out to the front to install stakes and wire. However, the
narrator's squad is attacked unexpectedly by an English bombardment. With
no visible enemy to fight, the soldiers are forced to take cover and live
out the bombardment. In the process, the earth is shredded and blown
asunder. It is during this melee that many of the c .....
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