|
Enter your query below to search our database containing over 50,000+ essays and term papers
Search results 4571 - 4580 of 4688 matching essays
- 4571: Hedda Gabler, By Henrik Ibsen
- ... indifference is a trait that is usually common to men: Tesman - "My old morning shoes. My slippers look! I missed them dreadfully. Now you should see them, Hedda." Hedda - "No thanks, it really doesn't interest me'. In another gender role reversal, Hedda displays a financial awareness, which her husband, Jorgen does not posses. Although Brack corresponds with Tesman about his honeymoon travels, he corresponds with Hedda concerning the financial matters ...
- 4572: Heart Of Darkness 3
- ... and the title, Heart Of Darkness, indicates the darkness that Kurtz discovers about himself. He is a soul gone mad but at his death, he realises the reality of his waste of life and self-interest. Marlow's evaluation of Kurtz as an unbounded power of eloquence vanishes at the end of Kurtz life. His last cry is an affirmation with the innumerable defects .adominable terrors .adominable satisfactions that Kurtz finds ...
- 4573: Heart Of Darkness
- ... a year - waiting. (Conrad, 27). Later on he faces the same problem when he needs something so insignificant - rivets. He can not get them, because nobody cares for his purpose, they only see their own interest - ivory. Marlow confirms, They wandered here and there with their absurd long staves in their hands like a lot of faithless pilgrims bewitched inside a rotten fence. The word ivory rang in the air, was ...
- 4574: Hawthornes Reference To Anne H
- From the beginning of his writing career, Nathaniel Hawthorne has made several references to Anne Hutchinson. In fact, he even wrote a sketch called Mrs. Hutchinson . Because of Hawthorne s apparent interest in Mrs. Hutchinson, it is entirely possible that he would use her as a template for one of the characters in his many books. Hawthorne s character, Hester Prynne, is similar in many ways to ...
- 4575: Hammlet
- ... self-ignorance, or guilt. Ophelia, Polonius' daughter and Hamlet's lover, hid behind a mask, just like Queen Gertrude's. It was, according to the society and the culture of the time, in the best interest of the woman to display a passive behavior for their personal preservation, which served as Gertrude's mask. Gertrude was brought up to believe that when a woman protests her innocence, in any matter, too ...
- 4576: Aristotle On Excellence In Lea
- ... excellence of a citizen "relative to the constitution of which he is a member." (III: 4, 30-32) A state is defined by its constitution. The salvation of the state's constitution is the common interest of every citizen of that state. A citizen's excellence therefore is measured by his ability to work towards the salvation of the constitution. With an understanding of Aristotle's definition of "excellence" the meaning ...
- 4577: Hamlet 17
- ... Gertrude cannot bear any pain or conflict in her world and thus falls into whatever force (person or idea) that will sweep her off her feet! 6. Polonius and Laertes are worried about Hamlet's interest in Ophelia because they question Hamlets intentions and Ophelia's judgement. The first such display of this concern was in Act I, Scene III, when Laertes met with his sister Ophelia to say goodbye before ...
- 4578: The Supernatural In Macbeth
- ... night they planned to kill Duncan, Macbeth is waiting for Lady Macbeth to ring the signal bell to go up the stairs to Duncan's chamber. He sees the vision of the floating dagger. The interest of the dagger is that it leads Macbeth towards the chamber by the presence of evil of the dagger being covered with blood. Then the bell rings and Macbeth stealthily proceeds up the staircase to ...
- 4579: Macbeth
- ... may possibly be effected by utter extirpation of the precepts of natural law deposited in his nature. And he imagines that the execution of more bloody deeds will serve his purpose. Accordingly, then, in the interest of personal safety and in order to destroy the essential humanity in himself, he instigates the murder of Banquo. But he gains no satisfying peace because hes conscience still obliges him to recognize the negative ...
- 4580: King Lear
- ... rivals in our youngest daughter's love, Long in our court have made their amorous sojourn, And here are to be answered. Tell me, my daughters (Since now we will divest us both of rule, Interest of territory, cares of state), Which of you shall we say doth love us most? That we our largest bounty may extend where nature doth with merit challenge." (Act I, Sc i, Ln 47-53 ...
Search results 4571 - 4580 of 4688 matching essays
|