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Search results 431 - 440 of 1300 matching essays
- 431: Great Gatsby
- ... to marry him until he made his first million. Since he had fixated on her as his goal, he did not realize that could not be the basis of a healthy relationship. According to his letters to his daughter Scotty, he did finally realize this but not until too late. He realized that she demanded to much from him. She expected everything to be done for her, because that's what ...
- 432: Growth Of A Chrysanthemum
- ... Ford. "D. H. Lawrence." Portraits from Life. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1937. Lawrence, David Herbert. "Women Are So Cocksure." Phoenix. London: Heinemann, 1936. 167-69. Lawrence, David Herbert. "To T. D. D." 7 July 1914. Selected Letters. Ed. Richard Aldington. New York: Penguin Books, 1996.
- 433: Go Ask Alice!
- ... period starts. Beth comes home from camp, but she is hardly the same the same person and she met some Jewish jerks, that she’s going with. Alice feels lonely but Roger writes her some letters. Alice gets to know Chris Chris takes drugs too and she works in a shop where are the flippiest clothes are sold. Chris has a boyfriend named Ted and Alice gets to know Richie. Alice ...
- 434: Buddhism And The Poetry Of Jac
- ... simply adopted Buddhist literary technique. He made several attempts at Haiku throughout his career sporadically, although he dropped the standard syllabic pattern of 5-7-5. He explained that the great difference in writing with letters as in English, as opposed to characters as in Japanese called for this strict adherence to be dropped. In being that Haiku is Japanese in origin, it is reflected in Kerouac s attempts that he ...
- 435: Basic Principles Of Writing
- ... work relations or customer service. Without catchy words and quick phrases that entails marketing, companies would not enjoy the prominent affects of increased sales and bottom line percentages. The flow of company communications are through letters, memos and e-mails. Writing as it relates to research is extremely fundamental. Historic events and people were documented in various reports and books. Students today would not be able to grasp the torment and ...
- 436: A Rose For Emily
- ... road paver, Homer Barron. It seems, however, that she is more infatuated with the relationship than he. Emily “had been to the jeweler’s and ordered a man’s toilet set in silver, with the letters H. B. on each piece. . . .We [the town] said, ‘They are married.’” Homer, however, remarks that “he was not the marrying type.” Emily then uses the only means she knew how to hold onto her ...
- 437: Adults Of The Bell Jar
- ... actually she buys Esther’s freedom many times over with college scholarships and proper treatment from Dr. Nolan, for instance. Esther rarely refers to Philomena directly, preferring instead to mention her car, her hat, her letters, objects around her, actions of Philomena to other people, but never any direct interaction between Esther and her. This tells me that Esther felt no connection with this woman. Even though Philomena obviously cared a ...
- 438: A Rose Of The South
- ... give in to the new ways. It was approximately 1920 and Miss Emily was about 50 years old when the people decided that it was time for Miss Emily to pay taxes. They sent her letters, but she would not acknowledge them. When they finally approached her at her house she would just repeat to them "See Colonel Sartoris. I have no taxes.4" The years would go on and no ...
- 439: A Rose For Emily
- ... them that Emily has finally found her rose. Emily then sets out to fulfill the ultimate form of the rose dream, that of marriage. She purchases "a man's toilet set in silver, with the letters H.B. on each piece" and "a complete outfit of men's clothing, including a nightshirt". However, Homer disappears when his work is through, leaving Emily once again without a rose. Within a couple of ...
- 440: A Duty Dance With Exploring De
- ... says as he goes on with his daily affairs. He spends much of the rest of his life "actively disseminating that philosophy, first preaching it orally on the all-night radio program and then writing letters to the Ilium New Leader" (Bryfonski and Senick 615). But Vonnegut disagrees and "rejects the Tralfamadorian philosophy… [and] Billy's total "incapacity to understand the significance of the death of human beings" (Bryfonski and Senick ...
Search results 431 - 440 of 1300 matching essays
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