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» English Essays and Papers
Heart Of Darkness
<view this essay>.... self-discovery.
In the beginning of Marlow's story he tells how he, "Charlie Marlow, set the women to work--to get a job."(23) He tells this in the context that he was so desperate to travel in the trade industry that he did what was unthinkable in those times: he asked a woman for financial assistance. The woman, his aunt, also transcended the traditional role of women in those times by telling Marlow that she would be delighted to help him and to ask her for help whenever he needed it. This incident did not have much to do with the symbolic theme of the story; it simply served to tell the reader how Marlow managed to be able to travel to the Cong .....
Number of words: 564 | Number of pages: 3 |
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Bushed
<view this essay>.... monotone and continuous that was disturbed by the incident that may have ruined his life. Yet this man faced this as a new beginning, as a survivor. Birney uses the roasting of the porcupine bellies as a symbol of his facing the difficult situations that faced him in stride. He uses those situations to his advantage and takes pride in the way he handles them thus the reference to keeping the quills in his hat.
In the third stanza Birney shows us through a series of metaphorical actions the characters evolution in his attitude towards the entire situation. At first our character is still unsure and alert at all that is happening around him, " At fi .....
Number of words: 558 | Number of pages: 3 |
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Oedipus - Fate
<view this essay>.... Oedipus a tragic hero according to Aristotle's ideas about tragedy, and a narcissist.
Using Oedipus as an ideal model, Aristotle says that a tragic hero must be an important or influential man who makes an error in judgment, and who must then suffer the consequences of his actions. Those actions are seen when Oedipus forces Teiresias to reveal his destiny and his father's name. When Teiresias tries to warn him by saying " I say that you and your most dearly loved are wrapped together in a hideous sin, blind to the horror of it" (Sophocles 428). Oedipus still does not care and proceeds with his questioning as if he did not understand what Teiresias was talking .....
Number of words: 914 | Number of pages: 4 |
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The Garden Party
<view this essay>.... flattered. Laura tries to repress the accident, by saying to herself that she would think of it after the party. She tries to enjoy herself, but you can sense that she “enjoyed herself” with a rather bad conscious, probably thinking, “What have I done? Why didn’t I stop the party? What will the family of the killed man think?”
After the party there are some leftovers. Mrs Sheridan suggests that they can give the exposed family some food to show some sympathy. Laura isn’t sure if this is the right thing to do, but she gets the task to give the basket filled with sandwiches to the poor family.
Laura isn’t certai .....
Number of words: 391 | Number of pages: 2 |
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The Scarlet Letter And The Cru
<view this essay>.... those of God.
In The Scarlet Letter Hester Prynne's punishment was assigned to her by a highly prestigious panel of men from the Churches and Courts of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. All of the townspeople came to see Hester Prynne's punishment because of their loyalty to the court. They had to see what was going on with the court, because that is what they held in highest regard.
"Now, good Sir, our Massachusetts magistracy, bethinking themselves that this woman is youthful and fair, and doubtless was strongly tempted to her fall; - and that, moreover, as is most likely, her husband may be at the bottom of the sea; - they have not been bold to put in force the .....
Number of words: 629 | Number of pages: 3 |
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Famous Last Words
<view this essay>.... his friends are useful to us." (141) Although the Duke dislikes this man, he pretends to like him because he needs this man in order for his own selfish schemes to work. The Duke and Duchess of Windsor use their own alliance to gain leadership over the people in Europe, and truly believing they are the right leaders. The Duke says Europe needs, "…a new kind of leader--someone like a flag, whose very presence makes us rise. Not a Mussolini, of who we are afraid. Not a Hitler who drives us to our feet. But an emblem whose magnetism pulls us upward." (180) The Duke sees himself as being more powerful and influential, more of a leader, than either Hitler or .....
Number of words: 1252 | Number of pages: 5 |
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Collective Unconscious In Haml
<view this essay>.... from one individual to another depending upon the dominance of each archetype. In the play Hamlet, each one of these archetypes manifests itself as a dominant personality trait within one of the play’s main characters. It is also apparent that the collective unconscious itself is an underlying theme which exists throughout the events in the play. Although, these concepts have only recently been discussed and proposed as a psychological theory, it appears that they pre-date Jung by three hundred years. I will provide proof of this hypothesis through parallels between Jung’s work and the play.
Carl Jung believed that the structure of the human psyche is co .....
Number of words: 1403 | Number of pages: 6 |
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Beowulf 12
<view this essay>.... But, in addition to status, the Anglo-Saxon culture also adds an
element of honor. To the Anglo-Saxons, a character's importance, as well as
their wealth and status, where measured not only in monetary terms, but it
was also measured in terms of honor, fame, and accomplishments.
Hrothgar, king of the Danes, is one example of the Anglo-Saxon
measurement of importance in Beowulf. In Canto 1 the story teller describes
his wealth and importance, not as mounds of gold or jewels, but instead as
his ability to "[lead] the Danes to such glory." and as his tendency to "In
battle, [leave] the common pasture untouched, and taking no lives."
Through .....
Number of words: 1007 | Number of pages: 4 |
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