Totalitarian Society As Showed
.... animals were not that smart. Most could not learn to read or write like the pigs and were very easily convinced by Squealer that their memories just deceived them sometimes. Boxer was perhaps the worst victim of this deception. Boxer, a big strong horse, was very excited by the revolution. His motto was ³I will work harder.² He would get up early in the morning to do extra work because he wanted the farm to prosper. Sometimes when things did not always seem right, he would think about it for a wh .....
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Twelfth Night 3
.... write it in a marital hand, be curst and brief.
Andrew believes Sir Toby and Fabian and goes after what he thinks is the young page. It is this type of behavior that makes Sir andrew Aguecheek provide a comic contrast to the entanglements of the more credible lovers. He also helps in the design of the plight against Malvolio, assisting Belch in making the steward into a complete mockery.
As just mentioned, there is also the character of Fabian, who enters this comic subplot later in the play. He .....
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Twelfth Night 4
.... Olivia to like him (Andrew). Back at the Duke's palace, he asks Viola (pretending to be a male servant named Cesario) to approach Olivia and woo her on his behalf. Viola (as Cesario) promises to do so, but privately reveals she will not try hard, since she desires Orsino. At Olivia's house, Olivia and her servant Feste (aka Clown) trade witticisms when Maria and Toby (drunk as usual) tell her Viola (as Cesario) is at the door. Learning Viola is come from Orsino, Olivia tells her steward Malvolio to send .....
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Two Characters Add Mystery In
.... And my dear father; how features are abroad,/ I am skilless of; but, my modesty,/ The jewel in my dower, I would not wish/ Any companion in the world but you;/ Nor can imagination form a shape,/ Besides yourself, to like of. But I prattle/ Something too wildly, and my father's precepts/ I therein do forget."(III, I, l48-59).
In spending most of her life on such an enchanted island Miranda knowing nothing of the real world continues to view the island as a mystery as new events come forth in he .....
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Two Kinds By Amy Tan
.... my mother, maybe even more so.” (491) By saying these things, Jing-Mei’s mother tries to create an ideal identity for her. Jing-Mei’s mother begins to test her with questions and she cooperates. But as time goes on and the tests her mother gives her gets harder, Jing-Mei begins to be resentful and unwilling to cooperate. She thinks to herself, “I won’t be what I’m not.” (492) This shows a child resisting it’s parents control.
Even as Jing-Mei loses in .....
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Techniques Of William Shakespe
.... antanaclasis, which means the repetition of a certain word or phrase but witch a deliberate shift in its meaning. Shakespeare enjoyed using metaphor and puns to express his views in different perspectives.
Imagery: The precision of Shakespeare's imagery gives his writing its unique style. For example,in Macbeth, horrified by his murder of King Duncan, Macbeth looks at his bloodstained hands
and says:
"What hands are here? Ha! They pluck out mine eyes!
Will all great Neptune's ocean wash this bloo .....
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The Allegory Of The Cave By Pl
.... into the light and saw true reality. Yet when he told the imprisoned public what he saw, he was scoffed at and labeled mad, for all the prisoners know and perceive are just shadows on a wall which are just gross distortions of reality. Darwin walked the path to understanding just like the escaped prisoner in "The Allegory of the Cave." Plato's parable greatly symbolizes man's struggle to reach the light and the suffering of those left behind who are forced to sit in the dark and stare at shadows on a .....
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The American Dream 2
.... US Open. He’s an example of a person who lived his American Dream – to strive and achieve - to be happy.
In Walt Whitman’s poem, “America”, he speaks of the United States of being the place with equal daughters and sons. He talks of the amount of equality and opportunities available to each and every person. In one of his passages he says “ … All, all alike endear’d, grown, ungrown, young or old, strong, ample, fair, enduring, capable, rich …” .....
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The Awakeing
.... the house doing little chores. The biggest step she made was her decision to move away from her mansion and into the "pigeon house", a little cottage around corner. After this move she was free to explore her new profound freedom and desires. She succumbed to the passion in her heart and had a meaningless affair with Arobin, a known heartbreaker. She was in control of this new relationship and she loved feeling in control. True, she felt nothing beyond lust for the man but she was able to do as she wish .....
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The Bluest Eye By Toni Morriso
.... Much as Pecola's world falls apart in the novel, the Dick & Jane passages, repeated three times, degenerate into formless, meaningless print: "seemothermotherisverynice."
The object of scorn for her "ugliness" from her family and acquaintances, Pecola yearns to become beautiful and, (she thinks) as a result of her beauty, loveable. That beauty is strictly defined by white and unattainable standards; however, a Shirley Temple mug and Mary Jane candies become the emblems of that for which Pecola yearn .....
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The Brothers K
.... is, the real humdinger, see, is that I tried for CO status, being a Christian and all. And weird things happened. And…well…I didn’t get it.” Page 358
The dramatic realization of the fact that the war will affect a member of the Chance family is apparent in this quote. The amount of sorrow and emotions felt by the Chance family, and for that matter, all families who had children, brothers, husbands, or fathers, drafted into what many felt was a needless war. The novel brings t .....
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The Caucasian Chalk Circle By
.... of Grusha's trial. The emperor is portrayed as the epitome of justice and gives a true verdict. The trial scene is also adapted from the parable of King Solomon. Solomon the paragon of justice and truth oversees the trial of two mothers, one child is dead the other alive, they seek custody of the alive child. The king asks the child to be cut in half, the real mother relinquishes her claim and thus gains custody of her rightful child. In these two whispers the law is shown to be equated with justice, .....
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The Censorship Of Huck Finn
.... passively. The main reason Huckelberry Finn is being subjected to such scrutiny is because of the way Twain protrayed “nigger” Jim, and his use of the racial slur.
The Anti-Huckelberry Finn feel that it is to uncomfortable for African-Americans to read the book and think they are being stereotyped into Jim’s image. Though some find it wrong for this
American treasure to remain availible due to its racism, this is not the case. Even though the word “nigger” is used over .....
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The Chosen 2
.... and with the intellectual prowess of his English and Hebrew studies—qualities greatly revered in traditional Jewish culture. Danny’s revelations startle Reuven; he confesses he would rather be a psychologist than accept his inherited role as spiritual leader of his father’s sect. Reuven’s confessions surprise Danny; he reveals his desire to become a rabbi, though his scholar-father would prefer him to follow his talent and become a mathematician. Danny cannot understand how anyone .....
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The Chosen 3
.... his fathers wants.
"But Silence is infinity," explains how Reb Saunders (Danny's father) has raised his son in silence since he was born. Even though Danny is used to the silence, and still does not like it, others are appalled by it and do not understand it. Danny does not question the silence because his father does not speak. But by raising Danny in silence... it teaches him to be more independent, it puts him in the position to be a leader... a Rabbi, but Danny does not want this. .....
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