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The Key To Greatness (great Ga
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The Canterbury Tales: Wife Of Bath
... in this story, the Wife is a woman who has
outlived four of five husbands for “of five housbodes scoleying” (P50) is she.
She holds not her tongue, and says exactly what she thinks, even if she
contradicts others, even Jesus. For in the Bible it states that Jesus “Spak in
repreve of the Samaritan:/‘Thou hast yhad five housbondes,' quod he,/‘And that
ilke man that now hath thee/Is nat thyn housbonde'” (P16). Despite this quote
from the holy writ, the Wife states that ther are no other arguments “Eek wel I
woot he [Jesus] saide that myn housbonde/Sholde lete fader and moder and take
me,/But of no nombre mencion made he [Jesus]--/Of bigamye or of octagamye” (P30).
S ...
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Wuthering Heights 4
... and that they can be interpreted in many different ways.
The first incident in which books play a role in this story is also one of the most powerful scenes in the entire book. It occurs when Mr. Lockwood has determined that he must stay the night at Wuthering Heights, his landlord’s estate. Heathcliff’s servant, Zillah, shows Mr. Lockwood to his room and cautions him to “hide his candle and not make a noise” since Heathcliff would not willingly approve of his staying in that room. Just after Mr. Lockwood enters the room, he discovers three names carved over and over onto the ledge near the window, Catherine Earnshaw, Catherine Heathcli ...
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Ordinary People: Dysfunctional Family
... his personality to be different from Beth’s. He seems anxious to
please everyone, putting their needs before his. Guest develops the theme “
forgiveness sets one free”, through the characters Beth and Conrad. Both
are unable to forgive themselves for similar reasons, but Conrad comes to
terms with his guilt while Beth cannot.
She is furthermore, a perfectionist. "Everything had to be perfect,
never mind the impossible hardship it worked on her, on them all." Conrad
is not unlike his mother. He is an overachiever, an "A" student, on the
swim team and a list-maker. His father tells the psychiatrist, "I see her
not being able to forgive him. For surviving, m ...
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A Comparison Of The Magic In "The Rocking-Horse Winner" And "A Very Old Man With Enormous Wings"
... it is thought. The magical
angel's identity had to be discovered by a neighbor of the couple because they
didn't think that an angel could wind up on their land. Who would think of an
angel landing? Meanwhile, Paul doesn't show when he discovers the magical power
of the rocking horse he received as a gift one year. He does ride it often as
Lawrence describes. The stories are bound by the fact that the magical things
they discover are unbelievable at best. They often criticize Paul for his
affection for a horse he should have outgrown long ago. No one would believe
that the rocking-horse essentially talked to him. Although the characters in "A
Very Old Man ...
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Animal Farm By George Orwell
... began. Old Major’s role compares to Lenin and Marx whose ideas were to lead to the communist revolution. Animal Farm is a criticism of Karl Marx, as well as a novel perpetuating his convictions of democratic Socialism. (Zwerdling, 20). Lenin became leader and teacher of the working class in Russia, and their determination to struggle against capitalism. Like Old Major, Lenin and Marx wrote essays and gave speeches to the working class poor. The working class in Russia, as compared with the barnyard animals in Animal Farm, were a laboring class of people that received low wages for their work. Like the animals in the farm yard, the people is Russia thought there wou ...
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Dante 2
... complex(Smith 18), "it was concerned with the worship of the idealized woman (usually married, and therefore theoretically unattainable), involving much sorrow and torment to the lover, not unmixed, with pride"(Smith 18). This was the basis for the linked rhyme scheme of the Inferno. Dante was fascinated by Arnaut Daniel's "cult of the word and his veritable obsession with technique"(Smith 19). The Sicilian School, a refinement of the Provencal, had "significant linguistic effect upon his contemporaries" (Smith 20). Giacomo Lentini, inventor of the sonnet, was a prominent poet in this school along with Cecco Angiolieri and Cino da Pistoia who heavily influence ...
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The Great Gatsby: Nick Carroway Was A Good Narrator
... the end, Mr.Gatsby's dream still had not came true
because Daisy did not break up with Tom and go with him. It can be seen
in the last chapter on the novel, when Gatsby was murder, Daisy went to
somewhere else with her husband, and did not go to Gatsby's funeral.
I called up Daisy half and hour after we found him,
called her instinctively and without hersitation. But
she and Tom had gone away early that afternoon, and
taken baggage with them.
Therefore, Nike Carroway's analysis was right by these clear
observation.
However, Nike Carroway is a good narrator, he sees everything
happen and does not trust ...
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Tyler's "Accidental Tourist" And "Searching For Caleb": Individualism And Belonging To The Family
... Physical contact with people not related to
him made him draw inward like a snail (34). Therefore, he eventually moved
in with his sister and brothers to be a part of the family again.
Furthermore, there is a portrait of the Leary children at the Leary
household. This portrait symbolizes the security that Macon feels now that
he has moved back into the unchanging past (Reisman 1980).
Then Macon met a woman, Muriel, and "he felt content with
everything exactly the way it was. He seemed to be suspended, his life on
hold." (161) With Muriel he was isolated from his family. He is an
individual who does not need family to rule his life. However, Macon
finally ...
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The Scarlet Letter: Hester's Alienation
... she must reject any
happiness she might gain from her meager subsistence. She does not accept
any joy into her life and she constantly punishes herself for committing
her sin. Having been alienated from and by her community Hester forces
herself to live plainly and simply. She "strove to cast ["passionate and
desperate joy"] from her." She loves to sew, as women such as herself
"derive a pleasure…from the delicate toil of the needle," but she feels she
does not deserve the gratification. Though sewing could be "soothing, the
passion of her life …Like all other joys, she rejected it as a
sin." Hester no longer feels worthy to wear the finery she is capable ...
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