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Papers on English
Influence Of Traditional Ways
Number of words: 904 | Number of pages: 4.... that they do not force her to pay taxes which is also the reason Emily does not rebel against her father and his wishes. This is all due to the fact that she is a Grierson. Faulkner also states that “none of the young men were quite good enough for Miss Emily and such.” (468) Her father, under the appearance of protection which is actually control, chases away all of her suitors, not because they are not good enough, but so that he may keep her for his own housekeeper. Faulkner gives a description of Emily and then says ”...and about the eye sockets as you imagine a light house-keeper’s face ought to look.”(469)
E .....
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Girls Of Slender Means
Number of words: 941 | Number of pages: 4.... what to leave,
and in making counter-resolutions in view of the fact
that her work at the publisher’s was essentially mental,
which meant that her brain had to be fed more than most
people’s” (35-36). Unlike Joanna, Jane “...was on the
look-out for a husband,...” (32) since she was only twenty
two years old.
Joanna’s and Jane’s occupations evolved around the
world of books. However, they had different perspectives
about it. Jane worked for a publisher and Joanna attended
a school of drama to be a teacher of elocution. Jane
thought of the publishing business as “... .....
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Does King Lear Play The Tragic
Number of words: 874 | Number of pages: 4.... anxieties are directed outward, and, through sympathetic identification was the protagonist, his insight and outlook are enlarged.
Also, as importantly and significantly, Aristotle introduced the term hamartia, the tragic flaw, or an inherent defect or shortcoming in the hero of a tragedy. Aristotle casually described the tragic hero as a man of noble rank and nature whose misfortune is not brought upon him by villainy or corruption, but by some error of judgement. This imperfection later became known, or interpreted as a moral flaw, although most great tragedies defy such a simple distinction of the term. We could say that in .....
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Comparison Of The Swimmer And
Number of words: 1561 | Number of pages: 6.... of flowers or plants. This similarity is very strong, as it helps to paint the same picture in the reader’s head. Both describe a very beautiful scene of nature involving the blossoming of a plant, perhaps reflecting the
changes the character might go through.
However, there is one fact that distinguishes the imagery in “Lone Bather” from the imagery used in “The Swimmer.” The “Lone Bather” tends to describe a softer, calmer image, while “The Swimmer” seems to have a rougher, more darkened picture it paints for the reader. For example, in “Lone Bather”: “ .....
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Henrik Ibsen
Number of words: 2071 | Number of pages: 8.... former partner, is now a broken old man. He does odd jobs for Werle. He is now living with Hialmar and Gina. Gregers Werle comes to Hialmar and explains the claim of the ideal and tries to make Hialmar see that his marriage is based on a lie. But rather than making Hialmar happy by understanding the true nature of his marriage, Gregers only succeeds in turning Halmar against his daughter, Hedvig. The daughter, in order to prove her love for her father who is rejecting her, takes a pistol and kills herself.
The Wild Duck is a play in which reality versus idealism becomes a structural feature. Each scene illustrates this dua .....
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The Awakening
Number of words: 1136 | Number of pages: 5.... she did not like where she was, a sign of maturity. Her tears symbolize her first awakening.
Although the next morning, after Edna had cried the night before had to go and say good-bye to her husband because he was leaving on a business trip. Edna acted immaturely around him again when he gave her half the money he won the night before. ¡§¡¥It will buy a handsome wedding present for Sister Janet!¡¦ she exclaimed, smoothing out the bills as she counted them one by one,¡¨(15). Edna is spoiled by all of her husbands money.
Another example of how Edna¡¦s immaturity allows her to mature is when Edna swam like a baby when sh .....
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Exploration Of The Theme Of Or
Number of words: 841 | Number of pages: 4.... Joseph, the youngest of twelve sons, is provided with a prophecy of his future greatness which he tells his brothers: “behold we were binding sheaves in the field, and, lo, my sheaf arose...your sheaves stood round about, and made obeisance to my sheaf...and behold the sun and the moon and the eleven stars made obeisance to me.” This is the first indication that God is at work defining and orchestrating events in the world. When Joseph’s brothers later decide to sell him into slavery, they are attempting to circumvent God’s will to prevent Joseph from ruling over them. They are not able to understa .....
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Great Gatsby
Number of words: 1017 | Number of pages: 4.... and Nick stop off at the valley to see Myrtle, Tom’s mistress. Nick describes this valley as being: "about half way between West Egg and New York... a fantastic farm where ashes grow like wheat into ridges and hills and grotesque gardens" (27). The concern here is with the corruption of values and the decline of spiritual life. The traditional views of God and Religion are dead here and the readers can tell this because the only God-like image in this novel is a billboard with the eyes of Dr. T. J. Eckleburg advertising glasses. The eyes of Dr. T.J. Eckleburg represents the fact that God and religion have taken a less .....
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The Sanctity Of Oaths In Medea
Number of words: 367 | Number of pages: 2.... power (76-77).
Medea is outraged that she sacrificed so much to help Jason, only to have him revoke his pledge to her for his own selfish gain. She asks him whether he thinks the gods whose names he swore by have ceased to rule, thereby allowing him to break his promise to her. Medea vows to avenge her suffering by destroying Jason’s new family and his children. When Jason curses his wife for her murdering at the end of the play, she says to him, “What heavenly power lends an ear / To a breaker of oaths, a deceiver?” (1366-1367) In this way, Medea lays the blame for all the evil she has done at the feet of .....
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Things Fall Apart 7
Number of words: 967 | Number of pages: 4.... to Christianity, the change in daily life the new religion brings, and his frustration caused by his apathetic clansmen. Nwoye’s conversion to Christianity was a sharp blow to Okonkwo because the Christians are looked down upon as being insane. The missionary tells them that all of the Ibo’s gods are false images of wood and stone, and can do them no harm. Upon hearing
this, the men of Mbanta decide that “these men must be mad [for] how else could they saythat Ani and Amadiora were harmless? And Idemili and Ogwugwo too?”(146) The missionary goes on to tell them about the Holy Trinity. “At the en .....
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