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Search results 8151 - 8160 of 8374 matching essays
- 8151: Hills Like White Elephants
- ... fool of. One day while his father was buying another senseless item that they did not need, he snapped. Elmer said to the salesman, "You get out of here!"(1155). He then pulled out a gun and pratically thretened to shoot the man. He then said "We ain't going to keep on being queer and have folks stareing and listening. You get out of here!"(1155). He oviously does not ...
- 8152: Henry V
- ... no regard for the world around him, as it is shown in Henry IV, Part I, and Henry IV, Part II. He is an irresponsible drunk and the people of England question his ability to control and reign the throne when hisfather dies. He has a poor selection of friends, they all a drunks, thieves,dishonest and cowardly. Henry's father, Henry IV, suggests that Hotspur, the son of his enemy ...
- 8153: Hedda Gabler
- ... she becomes a socially unacceptable spinster, Hedda demonstrates that she is undeniably female and accepts this. Hedda's constantly seeks power over those people she comes in contact with. As a woman, she has no control over society at large, and thus seeks to influence the characters she comes into contact with in an emulation of her father's socially venerated role as a general. Hedda pretends to have been friends ...
- 8154: Hedda Gabler
- ... the time period. To Hedda, it is preposterous that she would have to be under the power of a man. When Judge Brock implies that he will disavow all knowledge of the source of the gun that killed Lφvborg if Hedda becomes "subject to [his] will and demands" (Ibsen 262). She states, "No longer free! No! Thats a thought that Ill never endure!" (Ibsen 262). At this time women ...
- 8155: Hedda Gabler
- ... she becomes a socially unacceptable spinster, Hedda demonstrates that she is undeniably female and accepts this. Hedda's constantly seeks power over those people she comes in contact with. As a woman, she has no control over society at large, and thus seeks to influence the characters she comes into contact with in an emulation of her father's socially venerated role as a general. Hedda pretends to have been friends ...
- 8156: Heart Of Darkness - Colonization
- ... died on that trip. In the stations they worked in chain gangs where, "each had an iron collar on his neck, and all were connected with a chain" (NA 2215). They were supervised by other gun wielding natives who had apparently joined the colonizers in the oppression of their people. When the overworked natives could work no more they would simply crawl under a tree in the shade and die. If ...
- 8157: Intranets
- ... human resources and even non-business announcements. It may also have links to outside sites such as client home pages or other sites of interests. Both the Internet and Intranets, center around TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol) applications. These applications are used for the transport of information for both wide area and local area. Enterprise networks nowadays are a mixture of many protocols. The most popular ones being IPX ...
- 8158: Great Gatsby
- ... willful obsessions, contribute to his fate. Despite his naivete about Daisy and her friends who "are rich and play polo together," he, too, has been seduced by the lure of money and fame. Unable to control his obsessive desire to have daisy, he cares little about the means by which he acquires the money to marry her. He associates with known criminals such as Myer Wolfsheim, appears to be involved with ...
- 8159: Grapes Of Wrath - Characterization
- ... help ditch up. Got to git outa here if they won't" (482). Analysis/ Commentary As the water creeps up on the boxcar, Pa must decide whether to leave or to build a bank to control the flooding. He understands that building a bank is risky and involves help from the other men. However, if the family leaves, they may be unsuccessful in finding any dry land. Pa's decision is ...
- 8160: Goodbye Columbus
- ... never have. Gatsby wants to have Daisy, but she is married and therefore he just lives his life wanting her, in Neils case he has Brenda, but not really because she is able to control every aspect of their relationship. The women in both of the novels are representations of the theme of money and power. The theme of sex is present in both The Great Gatsby and in Goodbye ...
Search results 8151 - 8160 of 8374 matching essays
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