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Search results 1841 - 1850 of 2219 matching essays
- 1841: The Catcher In The Rye: Holden
- ... very important to listen to people and respect their privacy. Examples of this can be found in many parts of the story such as : 1. Holden's willingness to stop in the middle of the sexual act because of a girl's request when others wouldn't. 2. Holden's respect to the nuns. 3. Holden's respect to Jane : the willingness not to kiss her and comforting her when she ...
- 1842: The Major Years: Isolation and Emily Grierson - A Deadly Combination
- ... Faulkner, William. "A Rose for Emily." Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama. Ed. X.J. Kennedy. New York: Harpers Collins, 1991. Pp. 24-31 Gwin, Minrose c. The Femenine and Faulkner: Reading (Beyond) Sexual Difference. Knoxville: The University of Tennessee Press, 1990 Morris, Wright. The Territory Ahead. The Macmillan Company, 1957.
- 1843: Great Expectations: Themes of Love, Redemption and Isolation
- ... wisely sought a partner elsewhere. Biddy and Joe share the same values and are ideal partners. Herbert and Clara, Mr Wemmick and Miss Skiffin and Mr and Mrs Pocket have loving steady relationships. Pip's sexual attraction towards Estella is more romantic ideology than genuine love. He envisions Estella as a captive princess and himself as the heroic knight, only he can awaken love in her heart. Even though Estella tells ...
- 1844: The Characters in Chaucer's "The Clerks Tale" and "The Wife of Bath Tale"
- ... marquis bade prepare brooches and rings, all for Griselda, lit with jewels, gold and lapis." (328). The Wife of Bath also demands the favor of her personal satisfaction from others. She demands material treasures and sexual desires from her husbands. " But as I had them eating from my hand and as they yielded me their gold and land, why then take trouble to provide them unless to profit my leisure" (264 ...
- 1845: The Catcher in the Rye: A Bridge from Innocence to Adulthood
- ... also tells of how in the past he had almost gone all the way, but at the last moment he recoiled. This indicates how immature he is and how he is not ready for a sexual relationship, primarily because he is doing it for the sake of doing it and not for love, and also the fact he shys away from sex is a definite indication he is not ready for ...
- 1846: My Son's Story
- ... s commitment to end apartheid transforms into his undying need for Hannah. His emotion naturally flooded into desire between Hannah and him and there was no conflict to taint it because in her--needing Hannah--sexual happiness and political commitment were one(125). Sonny has no real need for his family because he is satisfied by what Hannah can give him. His goal to end apartheid and achieve peace has ultimately ...
- 1847: Brandy's "I Want A Wife": An Analysis
- ... to sacrifice time in order to attend PTA meetings. So they know what's happening with their child's education. The final role a mother has to play is making room for the husband's sexual needs. She has to make sure the husband is well satisfied, while giving passionate love. Woman have to supply special attention towards the husband during difficult times, and when the husband is unhealthy. Mothers have ...
- 1848: The Canterbury Tales: The Wife of Bath
- ... to saye. Upon an amblere esily she sat" (p.91, ll. 470-471) This physical feature is attributed to lust and passion. The fact that she could ride a horse easily also could take on sexual connotations (Maclaine 32). The horse she "rides" so well could actually be her husband. Early in the Wife of Bath Prologue, The Wife of Bath declares that experience is more important to her than knowledge ...
- 1849: Symbolism in Harper Lee's To Kill A Mockingbird
- ... that blacks and whites are, certainly, not the same. Another way of looking at the symbolism of the snowman would be to say that Jem's combination of mud and snow signifies miscegenation, marriage or sexual relations between persons of different races. The fire at Miss Maudie Atkinson's could, once again, be seen as the prejudice of Maycomb County showing that the mixed child is, in fact, no better than ...
- 1850: Symbolism in Harper Lee's To Kill A Mockingbird
- ... that blacks and whites are, certainly, not the same. Another way of looking at the symbolism of the snowman would be to say that Jem's combination of mud and snow signifies miscegenation, marriage or sexual relations between persons of different races. The fire at Miss Maudie Atkinson's could, once again, be seen as the prejudice of Maycomb County showing that the mixed child is, in fact, no better than ...
Search results 1841 - 1850 of 2219 matching essays
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