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Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None
... he was late and go ahead and make themselves at home.
First night at dinner, they all hear a voice saying they murdered someone. All around the house there a picture frame hanging with a poem of TEN LITTLE INDIANS. The poem is about ten indians dying of seemed like murder.After dinner they notice one of the 10 little indians that were on the table missing. That night they find a person whom they arrived with dead. They all begin to freak. The killing went write along with the poem that was posted.
From that day on their friend that invited them has not yet arrived. Throughout the book the people are dying off as the poem suggests. Everyone is blaming everyone.
The ...
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Matilda
... the other hand, does nothing for except chastise her every move. Feeling unloved, turns to reading to keep her busy. Thinking that books are stupid, Mr. Wormwood calls her stupid and foolish for wasting her time on such things. Despite the verbal abuse from her parents, continues with her interests and does what she can to get back at her father for constantly denouncing her. For instance, she replaced his hair tonic with her mother’s hair dye, causing Mr. Wormwood’s hair to be turned a platinum blonde. On her first day of school, ’s teacher Miss Honey becomes very interested in her abilities, wondering where the child picked up such an ability to solve complic ...
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Silent Spring: Abuse Of Pesticides
... fields by the truck loads, and the government had no problem with it. With each season, our fields were growing more deadly.
The chemical plants that made the pesticides were also to blame. They though they were dumping harmless chemicals into our water supply. The relatively inert compounds when combined with other forms in the environment formed deadly compounds. In Silent Spring, Rachel talks about one case where the chemicals were caught in a storm drain, when they were flushed out, they mixed together and went into nearby streams, and contaminated the nearby lake and killed all the fish for 8 miles downstream. The government just didn’t have the r ...
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The Scarlet Letter - Punishment And Death
... herself wears only drab clothing of ordinary
clothing, punishing herself with humility. There is only one piece of
clothing that she is forbidden to make, the wedding vail, it is assumed
that she can not possibly represent the values of a marriage. It would be
most improper to have one who has committed as sin as she had to be
involved in the marital bonds of another couple. Nevertheless, she does her
work dutifully and completely.
She is emotionately worn out by all the work and penance for her sin.
Midway through the novel she no longer appears as a hidden beauty. Hester
now wears her hair in a cap, and the only effort of considerable worth is
that which she ...
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Candide 2
... lies not in the analyzation of minute details in the story, but rather in the context of the story as it is written. One of the voices that is present throughout the story is that of irony. The story itself is ironic since no one can take Swifts proposal seriously. This irony is clearly demonstrated at the end of the story; Swift makes it clear that this proposal would not affect him since his children were grown and his wife unable to have any more children. It would be rather absurd to think that a rational man would want to both propose this and partake in the eating of another human being. Therefore, before an analyzation can continue, one has to make the assump ...
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The Adventures Of Huklebery Fi
... 1993 version. There are a few scenes in particular that I will focus and comment on. The major difference between the movie and the book is an important character named Tom Sawyer, who is not present or mentioned in the film. It is evident from reading the story that Tom was a dominant influence on Huck, who obviously adores him. Tom can be seen as Huck's leader and role model. He has a good family life, but yet has the free will to run off and have fun. Tom is intelligent, creative, and imaginative, which is everything Huck wishes for himself. Because of Tom's absence in the movie, Huck has no one to idolize and therefore is more independent. Twain's major theme i ...
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A Dolls House 2
... She must discover this for herself, as they can only help to point her in another direction other than the one that Torvald has.
Nils Krogstad is in fear of losing his job at the bank. He will stop at nothing in order to retain his position, as he has struggled relentlessly to get to where he is now. Krogstad was guilty of committing the same crime as that of Nora and although their motives were different, the law still regards their actions as fraudulent. In all of his ruthlessness and selfishness, Krogstad represents the desperation that Nora experience’s throughout the play as she tries to figure a way out of her desperate situation. She had gone to ...
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Boys Life: Techniques Used To Develop Loss Of Innocence
... were acting. He states that
"the people came in like Christian civilization and went out like
barbarians" (pg. 70). Cory witnesses that most of the people just ran out
and didn't care about who was getting attacked by the bees or who might be
hurt. Cory loses a lot of respect for his grandfather when he realized
that he left everyone for his own safety. This taught Cory that people
cared more about themselves before anyone else's safety.
The author uses magical realism many times throughout the novel.
When Cory and his friends do their annual ritual at the end of the summer,
they pretend to fly with their dogs (pg. 187). They do this at the
beginning of the ...
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The Prediction Of 1984
... “salvation’s” or torture of the person who rebelled to make them into a believer of the society.
The first section of the book introduces the reader to the totalitarian society in which Winston, the main character, lives, and Winston’s growing awareness of his resistance against the society, The totalitarian society is governed by the seemingly Oxymoron principles of “the three slogans of the party
WAR IS PEACE
FREEDOM IS SLAVERY
IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH”2
By the totalitarian society , Oceania, being in a constant state of war, their economy never goes down for lack of demand on a supply. Furthermore, because the society is in a war the citizens assume t ...
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Appearance Versus Reality In T
... such as sexual abuse, mental illness, alcoholism, adultery, greed and restlessness, affect the lives of even those who appear to live the ‘American Dream.’ In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novels The Great Gatsby and Tender is the Night, the characters Daisy Buchanan and Nicole Diver give the appearance of a charmed existence, but it is in fact flawed.
Daisy Buchanan was raised in a wealthy American family, and had the appearance of a perfect upbringing. In reality, Daisy did live a “ white” (p.20) childhood, pure and innocent. In fact, her childhood was so ideal that even her friend Jordan Baker commented, “The largest of the banners ...
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