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» English Essays and Papers
Odysseus' Journey
<view this essay>.... guiles of Circe.” (287-290)
Confrontation with Polyphemus
After their cycloptic enemy ate many of the crewmembers, Odysseus knew he would have to blind the Cyclopes, but not to kill it because the stone blocking the entrance was too large for the men to move. Our hero quickly devised a plan to escape. “… We twirled it in his eye, and the blood boiled around the hot point, so that the blast and scorch of the burning ball singed all his eyebrows and eyelids, and the firs made the roots of his eye crackle,”(387-390) Odysseus says while speaking of the blinded Cyclops.
The evils of Thrinakia
On his way from the Isle of Calypso, Odysseus and crew encount .....
Number of words: 1158 | Number of pages: 5 |
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Catcher In The Rye 7
<view this essay>.... to catch him before it was too late. The night of Allie’s funeral Holden smashed every window in his garage with his fists. Holden tried smashing the windows on the car but his fists were too badly injured to do it. Holden went to the hospital bleeding during Allie’s funeral. Holden did not attend his brother’s funeral, so that he would not have to completely let go of Allie.
Holden was changed so much by his brother’s death, Allie’s death. Holden often talks to himself, like Allie was still right next to him, thinking he is having a conversation with Allie. This shows Holden has unresolved issues of Allie’s death, that .....
Number of words: 836 | Number of pages: 4 |
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Tess 2
<view this essay>.... stayed out too late. In addition to that, she was forced to do her father’s work because he was too drunk to realize what the current situation was. Neither parent cared much about Tess: her mother was always thinking about getting Tess married, and her father was thinking of ways to restore their social order. Due to the negligence from her parents, Alec was able to take advantage of her physically and mentally. By giving Tess’s father a horse, Alec was able to exert mental control over Tess in such a way that Tess was obliged to obey.
Yet, Tess was able to overcome her affair with Alec because she possessed a keen sense of justice and morality. .....
Number of words: 834 | Number of pages: 4 |
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The Lottery: Symbolism
<view this essay>.... the black box. We do not always enjoy change, even if it might prove beneficial to us. The box is symbolic of our loathing of change; it is old and splintered showing that we cling to what is familiar rather than change and it also symbolizes the traditions of the community. No one in the little town questions the origin of the black box, but accept it as an intrical part of their lives.
The lottery itself is symbolic of the paradox of the human psyche between compassion on one hand and the thirst for violence and cruelty on the other. An example of this is when the children are enjoying a break from school, playing and being children, and suddenly they are .....
Number of words: 442 | Number of pages: 2 |
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The Power Of One: One Person Can Change The World
<view this essay>.... give up
in these times when things seem impossible to do.
The other thing I think is very important to note about the power of one
person is that we need to look at what that one person is doing that is making a
difference. One person can make a difference in someone else's life. I have
had, in my life, many people that have made a huge difference. If someone
changes your entire life or your outlook on it, your can definitely testify to
the power of one. I think someone that can reach out to just one person's life
is just as important as someone who can change the lives of millions.
One last thing I think is important to note is that, in recognizing .....
Number of words: 390 | Number of pages: 2 |
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The Yellow Wallpaper 4
<view this essay>.... window. In literature, traditionally this would symbolize a prospect of possibilities, but now it becomes a view to a world she may not want to take part in. Through it she sees all that she could be and everything that she could have. But she says near the end, "I don’t like to look out of the windows even - there are so many of those creeping women, and they creep so fast." She knows that she has to hide and lie low; that she would have to creep in order to be accepted in society and she does not want to see all the other women who have to do the same because she realizes they are a reflection of herself. She expresses how women have to move with .....
Number of words: 1087 | Number of pages: 4 |
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To Be Or Not
<view this essay>.... nationalism. We might say goodbye to such things as war, secrecy, faceless social disaffection, and public powerlessness. Soon enough it could be goodbye to dangerous stress, tobacco, burgers, serial killings, muggings, and smog. Times change. Many of today’s accepted virtues might one day be judged as crimes against humanity and nature, which leads to the question: What kind of world do you want to live in?
Our ancient habit is to stumble backwards into the future. We feel that we as individuals make little difference, as if history and the future just happen at us. Obscure plans, which have guided people forward in the past, have now rendered themselv .....
Number of words: 1638 | Number of pages: 6 |
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Call Of The Wild By Jack Londo
<view this essay>.... to reveal the theme the power of love is stonger than all other powers.
Buck is the main character and he loves many people. Buck shows his love for John Thorton (his last owner) many times. For example, Buck pulls a sled 100 yards that has a thousand pounds of flour on it because John bet that he could (Page 50). Buck could not have moved the sled if he didn't love John. Manuel shows his love for money by selling Buck, the family dog. "He loved to play Chinese lottery" (Page 2). If he didn't love to play lottery Buck might still live in California. Manuel is the gardener for the family and the first person who sold Buck. Buck shows his love for leade .....
Number of words: 721 | Number of pages: 3 |
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