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Search results 7391 - 7400 of 12257 matching essays
- 7391: Egotism In Kokoro By Natsume Soseki
- ... This story's major theme, egoism, is directly connected to us. We all are egotistical as Sensei and "I" are. Since childhood, we are all trained to rise above another in order to succeed. In school, we are trained everyday on how can we get a better grade than others. This concept does not halt after childhood, but it continues on throughout one's entire life. When we apply for jobs ...
- 7392: Edward Gein
- ... moved to Plainfield, Wisconsin to a one-hundred-ninety-five-acre farm, isolated from any evil influences that could disrupt her family. Eddie's father died in 1940. ( In the Beginning ) Eddie was average in school, but he loved to read. His schoolmates shunned Eddie because he was effeminate and shy. He had no friends. In 1944 Eddies brother Henry mysteriously died. ( In the Beginning) On December 29, 1945, Augusta died ...
- 7393: Elie Wiesel
- ... a wheelchair for about a year or less. His good friend convinced Elie to apply for U.S. citizenship, and then Elie eventually decided to remain in America. As many knew that Jewish people were high believers and mainly focused on religion. However, Elie Wiesel thought of God before, during, and after the Holocaust as both the protector and punisher of the Jews. Whatever had happened before he had faith that ...
- 7394: Edward Vii
- ... class Edwardian Era ( Comptons Online Encyclopedia). These two novels were , The Unbearable Bassington , and When William Came. The Unbearable Bassington features a likeable but maljusted hero ( AOL: Biography Find). Saki shows his sense of humor, high spirits, wit and urbanity in the two stories ( www.bnl.com). In June of 1916, Saki goes back to London to spend time with his sister and brother. Three months later, he becomes a lance ...
- 7395: Ernest Hemingway
- ... out candy bars and cigarettes in the trenches he was wounded by a mortar shell. Even though the shell had hit both his legs, he was able to carry another man to safety. Showing his high moral character he repeatedly refused medical attention before other soldiers. After Ernest had been stabilized he was moved to a makeshift hospital in a nearby village. During his recovery he met a nurse named Agnes ...
- 7396: Ernesto Guevara De Serna
- ... mother, Celia de la Serna. It was these early years when he became an eager reader of Marx, Engels, and Freud which all were all part of his father's library. He went to secondary school in 1941, the Colegio Nacional Dean Funes, Cordoba, where he excelled in literature and sports. At home he was impressed by the Spanish Civil War refugees and by the long series of political crises in ...
- 7397: Emily Dickinson
- ... flashes of wholly original and profound insight into nature and life (Chelsea House of Library Criticism 2841). At first impression her tiny lyrics appear to be no more than the jottings of a half-idiotic school-girl instead of grave musings of a full grown, fully educated woman (Monro 81). Miss Dickinson often writes out of habit allowing her poems to not require a point of view, but instead, they require ...
- 7398: Edgar Allan Poe
- ... the one thing that everyone fears, he interlaced it into his tales to provide us with horror, sorrow, and entertainment. Since his death, he has become appreciated and celebrated. His tales are taught in grade school. His works have been made for theater and film. His genius is preached to anyone who studies the English language.35 From a sad life and a troubled mind flourished a name that will remain ...
- 7399: E. M. Forster
- ... characters, a decent story line, and his prolific knowledge of writing to make his books readable and enjoyable. E. M. Forster was born on January 1, 1879, in London, England. After an education at Tonbridge School and King's College, Cambridge, he spent a year traveling in Europe. On his return, he taught at the Working Men's College and established the Independent Review, a journal that supported the progressive wing ...
- 7400: Duke Ellington 2
- ... the crewcut hipsters of the fifties (Holmes). The most notable album of this period was Skin Deep in 1952, an album rife with extendend drum solos by Louis Bellson , and the stratospheric trumpet squeels of high-note specialist Cat Anderson (Holmes). The beginning of third major phase in Duke Ellington s music career came in 1956, at the Newport Jazz Festival, with the return of blazing saxman Jonny Hodges. Needless to ...
Search results 7391 - 7400 of 12257 matching essays
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