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Analysis Of Brooks And Red (Sh
Number of Words: 90 / Number of Pages: 1
... is the removal of all hope. Both Brooks and Red had gone through its final stage, but Red’s friendship with Andy gave Red a glimmer of hope. Brooks and Red, although slightly different, were essentially the same in every way. It’s just that hope had set Red free. ...
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So This Was Adolescence, By Annie Dillard: Author Writing Style
Number of Words: 290 / Number of Pages: 2
... exhibited. The first style Illustrated in So This Was Adolescence is
comparison/contrast. In this style, the author compares or contrast the
character with specific mannerisms of others. The next style is imagery.
Imagery helps the reader to visualize what is happening to the character. Annie
Dillard uses both of these styles to tell her story.
The first style is comparison/contrast. Dillard utilizes
comparison/contrast to compare herself to characters in books. She longs to
become a woman such as those in romance novels. “I envied people in books who
swooned.” She shows that by ...
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Does Romeo Behave Rashly While
Number of Words: 613 / Number of Pages: 3
... with him to a nunnery. Instead she tells him "Go, get thee hence, for I will not away." She tries to poison herself but there is none left. When she hears the watch coming she grabs Romeo's dagger and fatally stabs herself. Juliet is so upset she doesn't think and tries to poison herself instead of listening to the Friar, and in desperation of death, kills herself with the dagger.
Romeo is careful and considerate in some parts of the play. An example of this is when he tries to convince his friends not to go to the Capulet ball : "'tis no wit to go". Another example is when Juliet confesses her desire ...
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A Certain Hunger
Number of Words: 686 / Number of Pages: 3
... there is no perfect weight. When a person gets too thin, though, it is not simply enough to tell her that she needs to eat, she knows that she is getting to thin, but she has starved her body for so long that her brain is telling her that she does not want to eat and that food isn't good for her.
In this day and age when no one in Canada should go hungry, let alone purposely starve herself, society is totally to blame. Models and celebrities are put on pedestals because of their looks. That is where mixed up conceptions about oneself are formed. Almost every magazine cover and fa ...
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Robert Frost 3
Number of Words: 927 / Number of Pages: 4
... forms are traditional--he often said, in a dig at archival Carl Sandburg, that he would as soon play tennis without a net as write free verse--he was a pioneer in the interplay of rhythm and meter and in the poetic use of the vocabulary and inflections of everyday speech. His poetry is thus both traditional and experimental, regional and universal.
After his father's death in 1885, when young Frost was 11, the family left California and settled in Massachusetts. Frost attended high school in that state, entered Dartmouth College, but remained less than one semester. Returning to Massachusetts, he t ...
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House On Mango Street 2
Number of Words: 924 / Number of Pages: 4
... had to get a job in order to go to a private Catholic high school. Catholics do not attend public high schools. Also Esperanza’s father said, “Nobody went to public school unless you wanted to turn out bad.” (53). Esperanza’s job was at a photo shop that her Aunt had once worked at. At the photo shop she matched the negatives with the photos. She also has not been able to keep friends because of her constant moving around.
Esperanza is very ashamed about many things such as her name, which means “too many letters” in Spanish and “hope” in English ...
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Analysis Of Hills Like White E
Number of Words: 911 / Number of Pages: 4
... each side of the station where each hill is, there is a train track. These objects are symbolic devices prepare the reader in realizing that the characters are in a place of decision. The railroad station is a place of decision where one must decide to go one way or the other. The tracks symbolize either decision that the girl must make. By the looks of the environment around each track, it is clear what kind of destination each track leads to. This proves that the girl must decide whether she wants her body and life to become barren and desolate or plentiful and beautiful. If she chooses abortion, ...
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Summertime Blues
Number of Words: 672 / Number of Pages: 3
... criticism is strewn with failed attempts to determine the identity of this mystery woman" (Hadfield). He starts off his sonnet by implanting an image in our head of a summer day. A summer day triggers a scene that flashes in our head of children playing and the sun shining, basically a carefree day where everything is beautiful. He contemplates whether or not to compare his love to this ideal day, "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?" (Line 1) but decides against it in his second line because he feels his love is "more lovely and more temperate" than this day. He then proceeds to bombard us w ...
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Beowulf As An Epic
Number of Words: 743 / Number of Pages: 3
... to perform outstanding deeds, be greater than the average character, and be of heroic proportions. Most of all, he must have super-human courage. The poet first describes Beowulf as "...greater/And stronger than anyone anywhere in this world" (Raffel 195-196), without informing us about what he did to acquire this reputation. The reader initially sees him through the awestruck eyes of the Danish soldier patrolling the cliffs. Beowulf's appearance--his size, his armor--obviously commands immediate respect and attention. When asked by the soldier to identify himself and give detail of his visit, he ...
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"Red Convertible" And "Red Dress": Changes In Personalities
Number of Words: 922 / Number of Pages: 4
... very close to his broth, Lyman. One day, the army turns Henry into a Marine. Henry joins the Vietnam War and his enemies catch him. Later on, the war is solved by the government's mind. When he goes back his home, he is totally different from before.
When he came home, though, Henry was very different, and I'll say this: the change was no good. You should hardly expect him to change for the better, I know. But he was quiet, so quiet, and never comfortable sitting still anywhere but always up and moving around. (P.86)
And Henry becomes jumpy and mean. "¡K and now you couldn't get him to laugh, or whe ...
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