|
» English Essays and Papers
Of Mice And Men
<view this essay>.... traveling buddy, is smart and fits right in with all of the employees of the ranch, adding to Lennie’s isolation. The black stable hand, Crooks, sleeps alone in a tiny room in the stable and is disliked by everyone except for Lennie. Since he is black, segregation is the ultimate reason why no one tries to like or befriend Crooks. Lennie, who, as an innocent person, has no bigotry in him, visits Crooks one night when everyone else is in town. Even thought Crooks does not show it, he enjoys Lennie’s company, and it seems that he and Lennie form a small friendship that would had developed more has the book been longer. Another soul not included with the ra .....
Number of words: 996 | Number of pages: 4 |
|
A Story Of An Hour: Feelings
<view this essay>.... her soul.
Physical exhaustion followed her first storm of grief. At first she did not
know what was coming to her. She could not even give it a name. When she
started to recognize it, she was trying to beat it back with sheer will power.
Only to find that will power is no match for the total encompassing of feelings.
Once she had abandoned herself the word “free” had escaped from her lips. She
did not deliberately want it but it had come anyway. Unmistakably, a joy over
took her. Not that she would not be sad again, but for now she was like a bird
let out of the cage.
Mrs. Mallard was a good example of Shakespeare's line “To Thine own self
be true. .....
Number of words: 472 | Number of pages: 2 |
|
Analysis Of Those Winter Sunda
<view this essay>.... when he was a child. Hayden wrote this poem in 1962 when he was
middle age. To understand Hayden why he wants to write this poem, we must
look back the childhood of Hayden. Hayden was born in a destitute area of
Detroit in 1913. He had an emotionally tumultuous childhood. Because his
parents separated before he was born, he was raised by neighbors. As he grew
up in a foster family, he and his foster father have a generation gap. He does
not realize how much his father loved him until he is an adult.
In the first stanza, Hayden uses vivid language to show that his father woke up before everyone else to light the fire.
Sundays .....
Number of words: 1141 | Number of pages: 5 |
|
Montana 1948
<view this essay>.... very stability though, combined with the respect in which the much loved and admired Frank is held by both the townspeople and David, that make the events which occur suddenly and with increasing speed, so shocking and destructive, particularly for David.
David’s view of life dramatically starts to change through the eavesdropping of his mother and father’s conversation regarding Frank’s behaviour towards the woman on the Indian reservation.
While David must pretend, not just for the remainder of the novel, but for the next forty years, to be ignorant of Frank’s crimes, and therefore of much of what is happening although his parents do not rea .....
Number of words: 496 | Number of pages: 2 |
|
To Kill A Mockingbird 7
<view this essay>.... Families with the Finch’s stature would be found at or near the top. According to the caste system people had a position to uphold for example, if you were of a Finch’s status you were to act respectably and not act like trash. The Ewells’ in this story are just above the colored folks only because they are white. Most people look down upon them resulting in avoidance. This caste system exists because in Maycomb it is the way things have always been. Class structure promotes a sense of security for the people, and that’s the way the people want it to stay.
Since this story takes place in the 1930s there is also a prejudice toward .....
Number of words: 663 | Number of pages: 3 |
|
Huckleberry Finn - Life On The River
<view this essay>.... passage Huck uses the image of swimming peacefully to describe how the time passes, ‘you might say they swum by, they slid along so quite smooth and lovely. The alliteration of swum, slid and smooth helps to formulate a mental semblance of the swift and steady motion of the river and like the rivers flowing the words also seem to easily flow. This image is appropriate as it directly relates to the motion of the river on which they are travelling.
‘Here is the way we put in the time.’ Presents Huck’s idyllic life on the river is as routine. The words ‘then’ and ‘next’ are repeated several times in the first half of the passage, their function and effect is ens .....
Number of words: 864 | Number of pages: 4 |
|
Mark Twain 3
<view this essay>.... who considered himself to be a member of the professional class both by virtue of his birth and by the fact that he studied law. He was Justice of the Peace in Florida and he owned 3 slaves, inherited by the death of his father."
Samuel’s father was the owner of a 75,000 acre estate in Tennessee--land he had purchased for 500 dollars convinced that he was securing his family’s eventual fortune. Despite owning an estate in Tennessee, in 1839 James Clemens moved his family to Hannibal, Missouri where he hoped to find prosperity. 8 years later, Samuel’s father died of pneumonia leaving behind a family of five. Samuel was 11 and was de .....
Number of words: 1355 | Number of pages: 5 |
|
Symbolism In Dreams, From The
<view this essay>.... dreams represents the conflict in his life, and the lives of those around him. One example of the weather in his dreams is the wind. In one of Tony’s dreams the wind is used to represent conflict that disrupts the peace that is a still lake. “There was a howling wind as the moon rose and it’s powers pulled at the still waters of the lake.”(Anaya 120) The wind here is used to represent forces of disturbance caused by nuclear testing taking place south of the town, just as wind kicks up dust and blurs the view. Another element of storms is thunder and lightning. In Tony’s dream he sees, “.....a flash of lightning st .....
Number of words: 1311 | Number of pages: 5 |
|
|