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A Good Man Is Hard To Find
... His wife, Faith, symbolizes his faith in himself, the community, and "Faith" herself. Goodman Brown is struggling with temptation, the devil, and the ways of the Christian faith. He doesn't feel that he can face this struggle. He has a low level of confidence in himself, as did the author, Hawthorne himself. Hawthorne wrote this story during a time when he himself was growing up doubting the Puritan faith. This story takes place at least a generation after the Salem Witch Trials. Both Brown and Hawthorne exhibit doubt in themselves as well as their Roland 2 ancestors. Goodman Brown is also struggling with his past. He must take a journey into the forest, which repr ...
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Frankenstein: The Forbidden Fruit
... only took clothes to shelter him
from the bitter cold, not because he was shameful. He did not even
remember his first meeting with is creator. All he desired were basic
animal needs. He hunted for fruit and nut to stop the pangs of hunger. He
slept in the forest under the stars. He sought meager shelter to keep him
dry. These were all he desired before he knew of man. Only after silently
observing a family for months did he learn of the ways of mankind. He
became self-aware and learned common knowledge. He tediously acquired a
written and oral language. Then he yearned to meet his benefactors. For
years after his creation, the Creature was innocent. ...
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Describing Biblical Parallels In Hawthorne's "Rappaccini's Daughter"
... Genesis is a gorgeous, extremely tempting fruit
plant. The fruit on this plant are described as extremely tempting. However,
these fruits have been deemed prohibited by God. The plant in Rappaccini's
garden is a large flowering bush. The flowers on this bush are unlike any
others and extremely exquisite. The two plants share the trait of “forbidden,”
but in different ways. The fruit on the tree in Genesis was forbidden simply
because that was the way God made it. The plant in Rappaccini's garden was
forbidden because it was poisonous. The only people immune to the poison of
this plant were Beatrice and Dr. Rappaccini.
In Hawthorne's story, a parallel between ...
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Their Eyes Were Watching God: Janie Speaks Her Ideas
... The first real action Janie took
was to leave her husband, Logan Killicks. By doing this, she has shown the
community that a person can not always be happy with material things when she
or he is not in love. Janie says, "Ah want things sweet wid mah marriage lak
when you sit under a pear tree and think." She shows her grandma that she is
not happy with her
Janie's next husband, Joe Starks was very nice to her and gave her
everything she wanted. When it came to Janie wanting to talk or speak her mind,
he would not let her, and that made her feel like she was less of a person than
he. Until one day, towards the end of their long marriage, when Jody ma ...
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The Role Of Women In The Odyss
... about women in Homer’s epic. Homer’s male characters in The Odyssey consistently treated women differently and unequally throughout The Odyssey. Concurrent with the time’s belief that women held a subservient position in society to men, the male characters in The Odyssey often expected certain traits and actions that they didn’t expect from men. Also all the societies and lands Odysseus visited that were inhabited by mortals were dominated by men.
In The Odyssey women are unequal, treated differently, and are considered inferior to men. Throughout the epic women are not given an appropriate amount of respect by men. The male characters ...
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Literary Questions On Lord Of
... difference between right and wrong and is willing to act as the absent adult figure. He knows that the children could not survive without rules so he makes up a list of rules based upon common sense. It is Ralph’s job to lay down rules and organize some type of society on the island. Throughout the novel we see many changes in Ralph’s character since he is always in conflict with Jack Merridew, the novel’s antagonist. These many changes put Ralph into the category of a round character, one who is more human as opposed to a flat character who is one dimensional. Ralph’s contribution to The Lord of the Flies is his representation of law ...
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Lord Of The Flies: We Hate Piggy
... description of Piggy and the contents of Piggy's talks, all of us have
a good idea of how he looks like and how he acts. We can all relate to him as
that ‘fat nerd' that always sat alone in the cafeteria. We all had nicknames
for the ‘loner'. We knew deep down that this was a bad thing to do but we
enjoyed putting him or her down.
Piggy is smarter than most of the survivors. You could see this because
he was aware of the situation around him whereas Ralph enjoyed the freedom. It
was Piggy's idea to write down all of the survivors' names and he knew where to
put the hole in the conch and what it could be used for. Piggy is also clever
in which when he is aske ...
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Book Report: I Am David
... labour, cruel slavery and malnutrition,
David has become very skinny. Every night and everyday David hears the
cries of the other prisoners causing him to stay awake during the long
nights which leaves him with bags under eye's. David does not smile a lot
because all he sees in the camp is his friends, family and other prisoners
getting beaten.
Character: In the camp David did not have anyone to teach him anything
until he met Johannes. Johannes taught David different languages and also
to help one another, especially in the camp. After Johannes was shot David
became very much like Johannes. David became caring, kind and smarter with
the languages he had le ...
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Everything That Rises Must Converge
... appreciate the many sacrifices his mother has made for him. In his mind she is a "little girl" ignorant of the changing times. He comes to view himself as her savior who must teach her a thing or two about her outmoded viewpoints. And although Julian's criticisms of his mother do have merit, she is not the oblivious southern racist he makes her out to be. And either is he the free-thinking poet he struggles so hard to make his mother believe he is. In reality, Julian's mother has sacrificed a great deal for her son's well-being. She's allowed her own teeth to rot to afford him braces, has worked hard so that he might attend college, and makes excuses for his unempl ...
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Chrsanthemums
... routine, they are still responsive to each other’s sense of accomplishment and agree to celebrate with a night on the town. Elisa is earthbound, rooted securely in her garden but also held down by her connection to it. Their house is described as “hard-swept” and “hard-polished,” and is the only outlet for her talents. However, Elisa needs something more in her life than a neat house and a good garden. Their marriage is childless and conventional and she has begun to sense that an important part of her is dying and that her future will be predictable and mundane. Elisa is a barren woman who has transferred her maternal impulses to her garden, a garden full of unb ...
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