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Huckleberry Finn And Holden Caulfied's Journey Into Self Discovery
... conscience. When Huck runs into the
bounty hunters he is forced to make one of these decisions. He must choose
whether to turn his run-away slave friend Jim as his conscience advises or
to trust his morals and protect his friend in need. Fortunately, his will
is strong and he creates an elaborate lie to prevent Jim's capture. Huck
seeks refuge in nature, where right and wrong don't exist and life's beauty
is what is truly important. He mentions that nature is peaceful and he need
not worry about either his morality or conscience but is allowed to ponder
these personal discrepancies.
Holden Caulfield, however, has a much more complex yet equally important
struggle. ...
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The Secret Sharer: A Summary
... of a course that a novel may take is its title.
The three little words contained in the title give rise to many
interpretations. An image generated by the title could be that of a gossip.
Since a gossip is someone who tells people's secrets, or in other words is
a secret sharer if the word secret is taken for a noun, it is a possibility
that this image might come to mind. Another image is that of a person who
shares in secrecy, therefore becoming a secret sharer, if the word secret
is taken for an adjective. This could be an image of a miser, who
generally does not share his wealth, but does so only in secrecy. A secret
sharer could also be an imaginary ...
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The Scarlet Letter: Hypocrisy Is A Sin
... is the practice of professing beliefs, feelings, or
virtues that one does not hold or possess. All three main characters,
Hester, Dimmesdale, and Chillingworth, commit the sin of hypocrisy.
Hawthorne shows that hypocrisy is indeed a sin by punishing the offenders.
Hester Prynne is a strong, independent woman who deals with her sin of
adultery very well. Instead of running away from it, she lives with it and
accepts her punishment. However, while succumbing to the will of the court,
she does not for an instant truly believe that she sinned. Hester thinks
that she has not committed adultery because in her mind she wasn't really
married to Chillingworth. H ...
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One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest And The Scarlet Letter: To Live With Fear
... At a meeting,
when McMurphy was holding a vote to prove that the patients wanted to see
the World Series, the Chief voted for it. At first he said that McMurphy
controlled his hand. Later on he admitted that it was he who raised it. He
even talked to McMurphy one night, and began laughing at the situation at
hand. One day when McMurphy and the Chief tried to help another patient
who was being taken advantage of by orderlies, they were caught and
sentenced to electro-shock therapy (EST). The Chi usually blacked out in a
fog when confronted with problems; however, this time (he had endured over
200 EST sessions previously) he did not. However, McMurphy was ...
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Symbolism- The Chrysanthemums
... overall feeling of death.
At the begging of the story Steinbeck set the tone of the story. "The high gray-flannel fog of winter…made the valley like a closed pot." Here the tone is very plainly presented, it’s cold and foggy, a sense of dark, even perhaps death can be seen. It is intrusting to note the parallel and symbolism between the clay pot and the valley Elisa. It is almost as if Elisa was to leave the valley, like the Chrysanthemums, she would be dumped out on the "road of life"
The chrysanthemums are the most powerful symbol in the story. Not only do the flowers represent motherhood for Elisa, they also represent her womanhood. Elisa isn't de ...
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Foreshadowing And Flashback; Two Writing Techniques That Make Fitzgerald A Great Writer
... flashback
to tell about Gatsby's funeral for the readers to know what happen the day
Gatsby was shot. Flashback in The Great Gatsby also helps to give the
reader background information about the characters. In The Great Gatsby,
the structure of the novel is influenced by foreshadowing an d flashback.
Fitzgerald utilizes foreshadowing to the best of its ability to help
organize the novel. "Luckily the clock took this moment to tilt dangerously
at the pressure of his head, whereupon he turned and caught it with
trembling fingers and set it back in place. 'I'm sorry about the clock,' he
said. 'It's an old clock,' I told him idiotically." (Fitzgerald, pg. 92)
This quote ...
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"Haircut"
... someone's wife indicating that her husband had passed on and she needed him shaved. He traveled 7 miles and had to pay for transportation to their home and was shocked to see the "dead man" answer the front door. The barber found it mildly amusing whereas I'm almost sure the couple did not.
Jim also couldn't stand the fact that the object of his desire, Ms. Julie Gregg, had the hots for the new town doctor, Doc Stair. So in his eyes he had to make one of them look bad in order to boost himself up. He called Julie on the phone and impersonated the doctor, urging Julie that she had to come to his office at once, knowing the doctor was out of town, because he h ...
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A Seperate Peace
... boys have not yet been drafted like those a few years ahead of their class. They have not trained for war, and most do not see it as much of a threat. A few boys are ready to enlist, and some do not even consider it. Phineas says he does not even believe there is a war at all, and he partly convinces Gene of this idea as well. The war doesn’t hit any of them until Leper, the first to enlist, goes to war and comes back a complete mess. Although not children, they are not quite adults, and they share a rare time of carefree play that is completely isolated from the war. These young boys are separate from the reality of the world while they continue their studies just ...
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Faust: An Elemental Romantic Work
... the way Faust was willing to sell
his soul to better himself.
In Faust Mephistopheles makes a wager with God. The wager is that Faust,
a common doctor, will stray from the path that is true and fit. Mephistopheles
makes an agreement with Faust that if Mephistopheles satisfies Faust's desires
in this world, Faust will work as Mephistopheles servant. Faust lives a typical
romantic life full of passion, pride, and adventure. A turning point to Faust
after Faust lives his life with his desires fulfilled he decides to change.
Goethe is generally recognized as one of the greatest and most versatile
European writers and thinkers of modern times. Goet ...
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Crime And Punishment: Protagonist And Antagonist Essay
... the protagonist is the character that the reader
cares most about. In Crime and Punishment the reader cares about Rodion
Raskolnikov. He is the primary and most significant character in the novel.
We are introduced to this complex character in Part 1. We get to know the
poverty stricken condition that he resides in, and we get to know his
family situation as we read the long letter from Raskolnikov's mother.
Then we witness the murder as it is graphically described by Doestoevsky.
After reading this graphic description of the murder, how can the reader be
sympathetic towards Raskolnikov? How can the reader believe that a
murderer is the protagonist? It is, ...
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