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Death Of A Salesman: Summary
Number of Words: 1134 / Number of Pages: 5
... Biff and his brother think of a man that Biff used to work for named Bill Oliver. Biff thinks that he will ask Mr. Oliver for a loan of ten thousand dollars so biff can began a business of his own. Biff and his brother tell Willy about there plans. Willy thinks that these two brothers together could rule the world. Willy tells Biff that Mr. Oliver always thought pretty high of him.
Willy is very happy, knowing that his sons are going to see Bill Oliver and become successes. The boys have left the house, and Willy is preparing to go see his own boss, Howard Wagner, to tell him that he does not want to ...
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Hamlet: Act 2 Scene 2 - Compare Hamlet's Reaction To Arrival Of Rosencrantz And Guildenstern And To The Players
Number of Words: 596 / Number of Pages: 3
... is causing Hamlet's "transformation"
( 2.2.5). Hamlet admits his sanity by telling his good friends that his "uncle-
father and aunt mother are deceived." (2.2.348) Why does Hamlet admit his
sanity to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern? Is it an another attempt to at deception,
or is it to implant a sense of trust between Hamlet and his old friends? Hamlet
could possibly be furthering his plans for revenge by admitting his sanity.
Hamlet's friends would relay the message to the King and Claudius may think that
Hamlet really is mad for admitting that he was supposedly feigning madness. On
the other hand, ...
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Othello: Discuss The Techniques Iago Used To Manipulate Others
Number of Words: 948 / Number of Pages: 4
... and
could use his wits and cunningness.
Iago's number one technique was his ability to make people trust him. He
had just about everyone spun in Iago's web. Rodrigo, Othello, Cassio, Desdemona,
Emilia, and etc. And he got every one of them to trust him, although he still
hadn't got Emilia into his web fully. She still had suspicions about him. He
could gain the trust of people as if it was nothing to him. He always when
talking to that certain person said that he was on their side, making a false
trust that the person believed, and therefore trusted him. Now most of the
people he did this ...
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"An Inspector Calls": Issues And Priestly's Viewpoint
Number of Words: 1127 / Number of Pages: 5
... is a ruthless industrialist who
worked extremely hard to make his money, and when he finally reaches the top his
wealth and popularity is threatened by a suicide scandal.
The characters are a mixture of Capitalist's and Socialist's, Mr Birling being a
self made upper-class Capitalist, his wife also has great belief in the family
name, and works hard to keep a good reputation for herself and her family. The
secretive but most sympathetic of the Birling's is Eric their son, who has a
great deal to do with the Suicide of Eva Smith. Eric's sister is Sheila who gets
on well with Eric but seems rather spoi ...
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Advertising - Good Or Bad
Number of Words: 210 / Number of Pages: 1
... of the product.
Advertising is designed for one purpose - to sell. To acheive this goal,
advertises are willing to stretch and distort the truth, just to convincing
people to buy their product. For example, an advertiser may convince
buyers to purchase their product by stating that has been tested and found
superior. In reality, the product is not likely to be beter than any other
- the tests themselves doubtlessly conducted by the promoting company -
conducted to ensure at least something is superior about the product, even
if it is only the colour.
These advertisments are worded carefully so th ...
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From Noble Macbeth To This Dead Butcher
Number of Words: 1224 / Number of Pages: 5
... be brave when he knows what he is doing and feels justified in doing it. He feels like this at the beginning of the play when he is prey to doubts and fears. We first see Macbeth afraid when he thinks of murdering Duncan it makes his hair stand on end and his heart pound. In Act2, scene 1 when Macbeth makes his “Is this a dagger…” speech he is horrified at the murder he is to commit, afraid that even the stones he walks on will give him away. In Act2 scene 2 after having committed the murder he is hysterical. In his fear he brings the daggers away from Duncan’s chamber and cannot bring himself to r ...
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Analysis Of The Ending Of "Death Of A Salesman"
Number of Words: 1229 / Number of Pages: 5
... success. But even here in one of his
last moments, while having a conversation with a ghost from the past, he
continues to lie to himself by saying that his funeral will be a big event [2],
and that there will be guests from all over his former working territory in
attendance. Yet as was to be expected, this is not what happens, none of the
people he sold to come. Although perhaps this wrong foretelling could be
attributed to senility, rather than his typical self-deception [5]. Maybe he
has forgotten that the "old buyers" have already died of old age. His imagined
dialogue partner tells him that Bif ...
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Comparison Of Mary Shelly's Frankenstein To Movies And TV Show's Frankenstein
Number of Words: 430 / Number of Pages: 2
... name of the doctor who created the monstrosity.
Before the doctor created the monster he was a work of art.
"I had selected his features as beautiful. Beautiful!," this is
what Victor said when he saw the monster before it was alive. Afterwards
it was the ugliest thing the doctor had laid his eyes upon. Unlike the
movies, the monster was very nimble and could do anything an actual living
human could. The monster chased after Victor in the wastelands to exact
his revenge for his being. Nobody would love or care for him so he decided
to kill Victor as an act of revenge.
The intellect of th ...
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Hamlet: Was He Mad?
Number of Words: 1448 / Number of Pages: 6
... as I do crawling between heaven and
earth! We are arrant knaves, all; believe none of us...
* Act 3 Scene 1
One minute Hamlet tells Ophelia that “I did love you once.”1 Then in his next
line he says “I loved you not.”2 This quick change in moods suggests that he
was mad.
Hamlet: Nay, but to live
In the rank sweat of an enseamed bed,
Stew'd in corruption, honeying and making love
Over the nasty sty-
1 - Act 3, Scene 1
2 - Act 3, Scene 1
Queen: O, speak to me no more;
These words like daggers ente ...
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The Crucible: The Witchcraft Hysteria
Number of Words: 774 / Number of Pages: 3
... wife. Rev. Parris, Abigail's uncle, sees this and reports it. When
Abigail is questioned about this, she denies everything and doesn't tell the
truth about what really happened. The news of her and the other girl's strange
actions gets around and the hysteria starts. Without Abigail's superstition,
and her fear or telling the truth, I think the events in The Crucible wouldn't
have gotten as serious as they did or even started.
John Proctor was another catalyst to the witch hysteria in Salem. John
Proctor has an affair with Abigail, but he and his wife do make up and get
along well. John Proctor ...
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