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» English Essays and Papers
Oedipus Rex As The Tragic Hero
<view this essay>.... all go well for the hero until a part in the play or story where the hamartia occurs. This is the error, frailty, mistaken judgement, or misstep which causes the good fortune of the hero to go in the other direction. In the story of Oedipus, the circumstances seemed to have made his attempt to evade the bad luck all in vain. His mistaken judgement was deciding to take someone's life, even though it might be deserved, "Being enraged, strike him who jostled me… he rolls down headlong; and I slay them all!"(29). Another mistake might have been his decision to marry Jocasta. Had he never married, he could have avoided his misery, "And how can I help dreading .....
Number of words: 559 | Number of pages: 3 |
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Great Expectations
<view this essay>.... career bring you wealth. Being poor to wealthy or being rich and staying rich as a child to an adult, does the wealth usually bring you happiness? In the novel "Great Expectation," Pip is a character who as a child become a wealthy person from a poor background family. As he grew up in a poor childhood, an opportunity came up for him to become rich and surely he took that opportunity from a secret benefactor which was Magwitch, Pip convict. Now being wealthy, Pip thought that it would bring him closer to the girl he loved, Estella. But it didn't. In return, he had more problems personally then before to face and wasn't enjoying his wealthy life. Wealth bro .....
Number of words: 1068 | Number of pages: 4 |
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Epics
<view this essay>.... in many different cultures. They each contain heroes and villains and encompass tales of adventure and fantasy. Unlike the Greeks, this Hebrew epic is monotheistic in content and belief. To fulfill yet another quality of an epic, intervention by God does frequently occur.
While the Hebrews were responsible for the production of The Old Testament, the Greeks employed the works of Homer. Homer's Iliad and Odyssey are the most famous of the Greek . These epic poems tell the story of the Trojan War and the events and famous people surrounding the war. Throughout the Iliad, the universality of the poem is evident as concepts of war and man vs. man confli .....
Number of words: 438 | Number of pages: 2 |
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Oedipus Rex
<view this essay>.... tested Oedipus' patience in the beginning of the
story with the information he was holding; "You'd try a stone's patience!
Out with it.". This impatient accusing of Teiresias proved to be bad,
especially since Teiresias foretold the ending of the story. If Oedipus
had been more patient and waited, he might have not been quite so upset
about the future, nor shaken up about what was to happen.
However, that one trait did not alone take away his position of high
authority. Oedipus displayed anger throughout the whole story, which did
not help him at all. During the story, we learn of Oedipus' anger as he
knocked a passerby at the meeting of the three .....
Number of words: 553 | Number of pages: 3 |
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The Lord Of The Flies
<view this essay>.... arrive on the island. The conch is described on page 16 as being colored "a deep cream, touched here and there with fading pink...covered with a delicate, embossed pattern." Ralph blows in one end of the shell emitting a "deep, harsh tone"(17) which lead the other boys to the beach for the first meeting. This was the very first example of the power that the conch would come to have, and lose. The conch represents power and authority throughout the novel, because whoever holds the conch has the right to speak uninterrupted. However, as the boys' society decays, and the conch fades, becoming "fragile and white"(171), its power diminishes until it is fina .....
Number of words: 1267 | Number of pages: 5 |
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Ceremony
<view this essay>.... the invention of the white people and all the evil inside of them, causing them to destroy the world and everything else that inhabits it.
When the wind blew the white people across the ocean, thousands of them in giant boats (Silko 136), they were faced with the unfamiliar culture of the Indian people. Besides the fact that the Indians were in their way of expansion and development, the white man feared what they found. They feared an unknown language that they had never heard before and could not understand. They feared rituals and ceremonies that seemed strange and suspicious. They feared a social unity of sharing and togetherness that they found al .....
Number of words: 1106 | Number of pages: 5 |
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Of Mice And Men
<view this essay>.... it is fairly obvious from the beginning that his physical strength is lacking. Lennie, on the other hand, is physically "strong as a bull"(22), according to George, but mentally is a weak as George is physically. Together, as they travel from place to place looking for their chance at making their dream a reality, they use each other’s strong points to help them complete the task. Without one another the two characters would have absolutely no chance at success, for what one is lacking the other has an ample amount of. George and Lennie are the perfect example of how opposites attract.
The two of them have spent the majority of their adult live .....
Number of words: 2072 | Number of pages: 8 |
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Genesis 2
<view this essay>.... the world by partaking of the tree of knowledge - education at school. Dawe has used various techniques to convey his message across.
Throughout the poem, there is an underlying criticism of what society does to children by sending them to school, leading us to question the wisdom of "education" as provided at school. He has achieved this critical commentary by lightly incorporating the technique of gentle satire into the poem to attack the human folly. This satire implies that society has not learnt from Adam and Eve's mistakes and condones the sinful behaviour in the name of "education". His idea has been put forward by the interpretations that God creat .....
Number of words: 883 | Number of pages: 4 |
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