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Analysis Of The Most Dangerous Game
... life!
This story takes place in the Caribbean, on a secluded island. The
author chose an ideal place for his setting. The story consists of a war
between the two main characters, and what better place then an island which
has such excellent geographical features to support this struggle. Some
examples are the dense trees, trails, and some quicksand. This setting
also makes the two characters display all the skills and tricks they have
learned over the years, and then wage war against each other. The setting
plays a sufficient role in the story's overall development. Without this
setting the story would not reveal the game of “cat and mouse” which is ...
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Bless Me, Ultima
... evil through the utilisation of setting is Tony's own home. To him, his home provided him with warmth and safety. This was due to the people who lived in the house. Antonio's father creates a sense of protection in the home. When Tenorio and his men come to he house to take Ultima away, Tony's father "would let no man invade his home" (pg 123). This gave Tony faith that as long as his father was around, he would be protected. Antonio's mother made home a loving and caring place to be. She would always baby Antonio and give him the affection he needed whenever he needed it. The morning after Tony had seen Lupito killed, Ultima tells Tony's mother not to be ...
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The Scarlet Letter: Evil And Mistriss Hibbins
... because she is always
in the forest, which is an evil place. She is said to go on "night rides"
and attend witch meetings there. "And Mistriss Hibbins, with some twigs of
the forest clinging to her skirts, and looking sourer than ever, as having
hardly got a wink of sleep after her night ride."
The people in town are scared to even be near Mistriss Hibbins. At
the last scaffold scene, "The crowd gave way before her, and seemed to fear
the touch of her garment, as if it carried the plague among its gorgeous
folds." Here, it says that the townspeople were so scared, that they
thought her evil was contagious.
Mistriss Hibbins also effects the way some of the charac ...
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Great Expectations
... it, earning the contempt of the other children. After his father was released from prison, Dickens returned to school; he eventually became a law clerk, then a court reporter, then a novelist. His first novel, The Pickwick Papers, became a huge popular success when Dickens was only twenty-five, and he was a literary celebrity throughout England for the rest of his life.
Many of the events from Dickens' early childhood are mirrored in , which, apart from David Copperfield, is his most autobiographical novel. Pip, the novel's protagonist, lives in the marsh country, works at a job he hates, considers himself too good for his surroundings, and experiences material s ...
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Macbeth From Hero To Murdereth
... of mysticism and superstition on people at the time. In this paper, I would first like to portray the influence of mysticism in the two novels, as well as to demonstrate how the everyday use of mysticism in their society is reflected in the writings of the Bronte sisters.
In the novel Jane Eyre, written by Charlotte Bronte, mysticism is one of the prevailing themes. One of the first occurrences of a mystical situation is when Jane gets locked up in the Red Room where her uncle had died. When it starts to get dark, she thinks that she sees her uncle's face in the mirror, and becomes frightened thinking that he has come to get her. However, it is probably Jane's o ...
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Of Mice And Men: Loneliness
... in this story. One of the
lonely characters is Crooks. Crooks is lonely because he's black and no one
wants to be near him. This was when blacks were segregated from whites. No one
ever went to visit him. Also, because he's black, he has his room out in the
stable with the horses. The other (white) guys have their bunks in a one room
house type of building. The loneliness affects Crooks so that he remains in his
room when he has some books to read. He also usually rubs his own back with
liniment because a horse kicked or threw him when he was younger. Another thing
that showed his loneliness is that he had his personal belongings scattered
around the room. He ...
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The Heart Of Darkness: Theme Based On Lies And The Good And Evil In Man
... wrote a brief statement of how he felt the reader should interpret this work:
"My task which I am trying to achieve is, by the power of the written word, to make you hear, to make you feel-it is above all, to make you see.(Conrad 1897) Knowing that Conrad was a novelist who lived in his work, writing about the experiences were as if he were writing about himself. "Every novel contains an element of autobiography-and this can hardly be denied, since the creator can only explain himself in his creations."(Kimbrough,158) The story is written as seen through Marlow's eyes. Marlow is a follower of the sea. His voyage up the Congo is his first experience in freshwater nav ...
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Inman
... captured and killed. Ada and Ruby slept until Stobrod began
coughing Stobrod had blood all over himself, from his neck to his collar.
Ada and Ruby took care of him.
Inman was afraid to fall apart at a bad time. Then he realized
there is never a good time to fall apart. He thought of Ada. He thought
that maybe she could save him from his troubles and redeem him from the
past four years in the war. He was trying not to listen to the voices in
his head, but he couldn't avoid them. They told him that it was possible
to be lost in bitterness and anger that you are no longer able to find your
way out. Inman finally got up from his slumber and continued on hi ...
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Persuasion--austin Poor Dick
... purpose of Persuasion. That being that happiness and self-fulfillment can only be achieved when one refuses the shackles of the ineffectual aristocracy.
Austen seems to be expounding on Richard’s uselessness and his failure to live up to the promise of his birth and entitlement. This is a very important point. It seems that in the world of Persuasion, it is the qualities of usefulness, resourcefulness and capability that are attractive to the reader. To the aristocracy, what one does with one’s day is of the utmost importance. The Elliots are landed gentry and as such they do not work or conduct themselves in any manner of labor. It has often been said ...
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The Metamorphosis: Society Split Into Different Sections
... death is a gleeful ending, which eventually implies that the cycle
will be repeated, though this time through his sister.
It is apparent even in the first sentence "As Gregor awoke one
morning from uneasy dreams, he found himself transformed into a gigantic
insect" (P862, Ph1) that Kafka meant something underneath the surface.
Awakening from uneasy dreams could mean awakening from an uneasy, labored
life by quitting it all. His transformation could mean how society can
compare him to a cockroach for his giving up on them and treat him as if
he was less than human.
Gregor has obviously had a life of hard labor at a job that he
finds to be unbearab ...
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