Welcome to Essay Galaxy!
Home Essay Topics Join Now! Support
Essay Topics
American History
Arts and Movies
Biographies
Book Reports
Computers
Creative Writing
Economics
Education
English
Geography
Health and Medicine
Legal Issues
Miscellaneous
Music and Musicians
Poetry and Poets
Politics and Politicians
Religion
Science and Nature
Social Issues
World History
Members
Username: 
Password: 
Support
Contact Us
Got Questions?
Forgot Password
Terms of Service
Cancel Membership



Enter your query below to search our database containing over 50,000+ essays and term papers

Search For:
Match Type: Any All

Search results 4311 - 4320 of 4688 matching essays
< Previous Pages: 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 Next >

4311: Jane Eyre
... to the plot in order to fully appreciate the novel. Is Blanche Ingram a villain? Could a heroine create a more perfect consummation? No; that is why no other character could have brought out more interest, more satisfaction, than Blanche Ingram.
4312: Johnny Tremain
... this tax. It worked no hardships on the peoples pocketbooks. The stubborn colonists who were insisting they could not be taxed unless the voted on who taxed them. As you can see there was an interest in Esters in politics he said that the colonists were stubborn. Over all this book was very pleasing to read, at first it is lame but than it becomes real interesting, for example I basically ...
4313: Jane Eyre
... thinking and living. This is especially seen in St. John as Jane describes her cousin as being “as stiff about urging his point” as possible. They believe that want they do is in the best interest of Jane and use unfair methods to tempt Jane into going against her own morals. Rochester tries to convince Jane to run away with him by using the tragic story of his marriage to Bertha ...
4314: Jane Austen
... Darcy and consequently affect his nature. Furthermore, Lady Catherine tells Elizabeth that Darcy must reserve himself for someone of equal lineage, wealth, and integrity and that he cannot marry Elizabeth, "Because honour, decorum, prudence -nay, interest, forbid it,"(256, emphasis added). Lady Catherine leaves Longbourn and tells Darcy to return to Netherfield under penalty of losing her 'persuasion'. The extent of Lady Catherine's influence and the effect on Darcy's ...
4315: John Steinbeck
... honored not one of his books, but all of them. The Nobel Foundation was established in 1900 on the will of Alfred Nobel, Swedish chemist who invented dynamite. In his will Nobel said that the interest from his $9 million estate be used to fund the annual prizes. Perhaps Alfred Nobel set up this prize to compensate for all the destruction that his dynamite was responsible for. Each year a medallion ...
4316: Julius Ceasar
... human nature and utilizes his awareness of it in his speech. Antony appeals to the passion and the distress of the people. What Brutus failed to recognize in the people, Antony used to his best interest. He realized that the people of Rome were completely incapable of acting with "reason" and he employed this inability to manipulate and control their emotions and actions. By using Brutus' own explanations for Caesar's ...
4317: Longfellows Optimism In Writin
... of Life”. It encourages you to go out and accomplish things. It seems he felt a new resolve to live a more fulfilling life after his depression lifted. He shows through his poetry a renewed interest in moving away from the past that had troubled him. Something in his life gave him expectations and hope to live each day to the fullest and be confident the future would not revisit him ...
4318: First Philippic Against Marcus
... Ops, but they must put up with its dissipation if it is a fact that this is what his acts laid down. The laws made by Caesar were made for good reason and with the interest of the nation in mind. Cicero knows that the Senate was not happy with all of Caesar s rules. That is why he points out that the laws passed by legislation are the only ones ...
4319: Lady Macbeth Is More Ruthless
... wife that “We will proceed no further in this business” she fools him into changing his decision. Lady Macbeth does not care what her husband’s decision is; all she cares about is her self-interest. She scolds Macbeth on his decision and changes his mind by saying such phrases as “What beast was’t then that made you break this enterprise to me?” Lady Macbeth lowers her husbands feeling of ...
4320: Everyday Use 2
... symbols of oppression. Her family made these things because they could not afford to buy them. Her admiration for them now seems to reflect a cultural trend toward valuing handmade objects, rather than any sincere interest in her "heritage." After all, when she was offered a quilt before she went away to college, she rejected it as "old-fashioned, out of style (Joy in a Common Setting 1). Yet, a careful ...


Search results 4311 - 4320 of 4688 matching essays
< Previous Pages: 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 Next >

 Copyright © 2003 Essay Galaxy.com. All rights reserved