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Papers on English
A Comparison Between The Dysto
Number of words: 1391 | Number of pages: 6.... source of alcoholic beverage is, in 1984, a "sickly, oily smell[ing]" Victory Gin, and in The Matrix, an anonymous liquid used for degreasing engines (Orwell 8). The clothing and furniture is equally unappealing, being old, ragged, and looking as if it was salvaged from a junk yard. Moreover, not only do the protagonists have to eat unsatisfactory food, they are also unfulfilled sexually. At one point, Winston recalls his encounter with the prole prostitute, thinking about how he needed to use her services despite her elderly age because he needed an "outlet for instincts which could not be altogether suppressed"(Orwell 57). In .....
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The Idea Of Freedom
Number of words: 401 | Number of pages: 2.... In other countries,
such actions could cause one's life to be lost by sun-up the next day.
This is the rationalization of First Amendment tree-huggers who advocate
any bend in the rules which would be otherwise a fair idea.
As far as fair ideas go, until several years ago in Russia,
luxurious living was a thing of dreams and stories for the average John
Doestovky, and then society got tired of the pigs at the top having all the
riches. Here, Americans enjoy luxury throughout all class levels in their
own individual ways. Americans have lifestyle individuality which have
risen to new levels in the recent 10 years with such acts a .....
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Roger Chillingworth, A Great M
Number of words: 825 | Number of pages: 3.... sufficiently evident to Hester Prynne that one of this man’s shoulder rose higher than the other." This deformity may also make him seem hideous or monster like, but it is just a sign of his age.
Roger Chillingworth, although Native Americans captured him, was a refined gentleman, and spoke as one “then touching the shoulder of a townsman who stood next to him, he addressed him, in a formal and courteous manner.” It is Roger’s nature to be calm and cool, and he has the great ability to control his emotions, “His face darkened with some powerful emotion, nevertheless, he so instantaneously controlle .....
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Beowulf 14
Number of words: 501 | Number of pages: 2.... with his bare hands. This miss leads Grendel into thinking that he will be easy to kill. Untold to Grendel Beowulf has taken half of his men with their weapons and hidden them. They attacked him in vain, his skin was too tough
to be pierced by a sword. Beowulf ended up ripping Grendel's shoulder and arm out of its socket, because he could not kill him with his sword. Grendel escaped back to his layer to slowly die of his mortal wound.
This proves that good will all ways overcome evil no matter what stands in its way. Like in the story of Beowulf he could not kill Grendel with his sword so he mortally wounds him by takin .....
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Cloning In Light Of Frankenstein
Number of words: 1596 | Number of pages: 6.... where anything may be dreamed and many things are possible. Cloning is a reality in today\'s world: Not long ago, Gearhart and Thomson announced that they had each isolated embryonic stem cells and induced them to begin copying themselves without turning into anything else. In so doing, they apparently discovered a way to make stem cells by the billions, creating a biological feedstock that might, in turn, be employed to produce brand-new, healthy human tissue. That is, they discovered how to fabricate the stuff of which humanity is made (Easterbrook 20) .
Leon R. Kass proposed three perspectives that serve to classify .....
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The Curse By Andre Dubus
Number of words: 955 | Number of pages: 4.... into an impetuous man who feels old and becomes consumed with guilt. After witnessing the rape: “He did not know what it was like to be very old … but he assumed it was like this: fatigue beyond relieving by rest, by sleep.”
Dubus uses all three methods of indirect characterization in describing Mitchell; he uses words, actions, and thoughts. An example of his words is “I should have stopped it. I think I could have stopped it.” An example of his actions comes after the bikers had left the rape scene, “Then he picked up her sneakers from the floor and placed them beside her and squatted nea .....
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Personal Response To Getting R
Number of words: 837 | Number of pages: 4.... states of mind to add to his gothic story. An example of irrational behavior is shown when Laura becomes outraged and spontaneously murders George. We thought, as well, that when Laura suffers a fainting spell is also an example of this psychological state of mind. Evidence of this is found when Arthur writes: “Harry held Laura until the nausea within her subsided.” Lastly, hallucinations were also prevalent in the story as well. We thought a good example was when Harry and Laura were bringing George to the cabin to dispose of his body, Laura claims that George’s dead eye slowly opened and gave her a knowing wink. .....
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White Fang
Number of words: 878 | Number of pages: 4.... () into his ever-growing underground slavery prison camps. The greed for money and profit is the only need for this "prison camp"; the dog-fighting gambling is their prison cell. A comparison between the bulldog Cherokee and death itself can be made. Once death has you, there is no way of escaping. When Cherokee had gripped between his jaws, "There was no escaping that grip. It was like Fate itself, and was inexorable," (London 139). Surely enough, God (Weedon Scott) came along and saved from the grips of evil. The cold-heartedness of evil can be overcome with the heat and light of good. The care and .....
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Jane Eyre Self-awarness
Number of words: 2053 | Number of pages: 8.... Eyre started from the first time Jane saw herself in the mirror which consequentially gave her a fresh awareness of her own identity. When John "throws the book" at Jane Charlotte Bronte's attempt was to both literally and metaphorically symbolize the deprivation he was instigating of any sense of herself and her rights.
According to Jacques Lacan, the first identity of oneself in a mirror is the most decisive stage in human development. It provides the "awareness of oneself as an object of knowledge".
I had to cross before the looking glass; my fascinated glance involuntarily explored the depth it revealed. All looked colder a .....
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James Joyce's "Araby"
Number of words: 466 | Number of pages: 2.... to as the "center of
paralyses,"(Internet) and "indeed sterile."(Joyce) This plays a huge role in the
forming of this boy's life, where there is no fun. "Araby" is a story "of a
soul-shriveling Irish asceticism, which renders hopes and dreams not only
foolish, but sinful."(Coulthard) In the story, the only thing that the young boy
has to look forward to is buying something for the girl he loves, and in the end
he can't even do that; and by making the final characters English, the story
leaves an impact on the reader about the Dublin society. It shows the antagonist
of the story to be "a repressive Dublin culture."(Coulthard) .....
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