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Symbolism In Hopkin's "The Windhover"
... th presence of Mary in a piece of coal. This untraditional symbol
indicates that dedication to God is also possible by means of natural
perceptions which are, as it were, the first fruits of the senses.
Religious and natural perception fall together in Hopkins. He
describes the windhover in detail as an individual. In the second part of
the poem, the symbol of the windhover gives way to the figure of Christ.
Yet Christ is not symbolized through traditional symbols, but in clay and
coal. In this Christ is shown to be a component of a physical or material
world.
The flame from the windhover indicates self-sacrifice under stress.
It is interesting that Hopki ...
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Canterbury Tales: Chaunticleer; Behind The Rooster
... Chaunticleer's language is that of a scholar. He quotes many
different scriptures in a conversation with Pertelote, such as, Saint Kenelm,
Daniel and Joseph (from the bible), and Croesus. From each author he tells a
story about an individual who had a vision in a dream and the dream came true.
He may have been making all the stories up in order to win the argument with
Pertelote, but, this seems unlikely because he does not take heed to his own
advice and stay away from the fox that encounters him later. He is educated
enough to know these supposed quotations but not intelligent enough to
understand the real meaning of them. It is if he simply brings because they ...
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The Blue Hotel
... the story’s characters. The only place that they interact with each other is inside of the hotel and the main points of the story happen there. All of the violent confrontations happen in the hotel or around its grounds. The main fight between the Swede and Johnny is outside in the bitter cold in the street. The hotel could possibly change the characters thinking and cause them to be really weird. This is shown when Scully shows the Swede pictures of his dead family (269). What person in their “right” mind would show someone who thinks they are going to be killed a picture of someone who was killed? These examples show how the settings are more important then the c ...
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Juanita Platero's "Chee's Daughter": Character's Environment Reveals A Great Deal About Personality
... son. He shows that
he cares for the land by thinking that "if he sang the proper songs, if he
cared for the land faithfully, it would not forsake him now..."(82) Chee
is trying to grow food and he thinks that if he cares for the land and
respects it that the earth would in turn make the food grow well. Another
way to show this is how Chee thought that if he "Take care of the land and
it will take care of you."(81) Chee cared and respected the land and in
turn the land gave him food for which he would to barter back Little One
from Old Man Fat. Chee treats the land as an equal. "he felt so strongly
that just now this was something between himself and the land."(82) C ...
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“A Raisin In The Sun”: Struggles
... immediately puts thirty-five hundred dollars down on a new house and sixty-five hundred into Walter’s care. All hope is lost when Walter loses the money and the family ends up back to where they started, with nothing. Though the money is gone, this lifetime dream of Mama and Ruth is not destroyed. They keep their pride and dignity and contribute to sacrificing their time into working endless hours to keep the house. Ruth says, “Lena—I’ll work… I’ll work twenty hours a day in all the kitchens in Chicago… I’ll strap my baby on my back if I have to scrub all the floors in America and wash all the sheets in America if I have to—but we got to move….” Through the str ...
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The Sundiata
... males of the village would go hunting. Though killing animals was the goal of hunting, this activity allowed the young boys to practice for wartime. Not only did they learn the art of hunting; "the medicinal leaves which heal wounds and cure diseases" were revealed (Niane 3). During wartime, a man would have to know how to kill his own food to survive, and knowing which plants would heal the wounds of injured sofas and cure their diseases was important to the survival of the troops. A great hunter would never die of hunger or wounds not treated properly.
In , the Muslim rulers were portrayed as powerful, respected, good rulers. Sundiata was a Muslim as well ...
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Narrative Of The Life Of Frederick Douglass
... slaves to speak out against the injustices they had suffered.
Douglass’ speeches made a ineffable impression upon Garrison’s mind, he thought that if Douglass could be persuaded to consecrate his time and talents to the promotion of the anti-slavery enterprise, the campaign would get to its goal much faster. It is remarkable that the advocates of the slaves is a fugitive slave, in the “person of Frederick Douglass” and that despite numerous oppressions in slavery, they have a human spirit so strong and steadfast that no power could crush it. It is also to be understand that it was slavery that darkened the mind, crippled the intellects, debase their moral na ...
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The Pearl: Summary
... stung by a scorpion. Kino
takes the baby to the rich doctor who will not treat him because they are poor.
So Kino gets into his boat to find a pearl. He finds a pearl "the size of a
seagull egg" , and they think there trouble is over.
conclusion:
Kino and Jauna ultimatly have to go to the capital to trade their pearl in. Some
trackers follow them to get the pearl. What insues is a chase through the
mountains ending up with the death of Coyotito. Finally , they come back home
and destroy the pearl forever.
thoughts:
this book has a good message about greed and humans. It tells us it is human
nature to want what someone else has. ...
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Hatchet
... in the Canadian wilderness in the middle of nowhere.
Brian is average height and weight for his grade, maybe a little bit husky and a bit shy. Brian is very smart and able to get himself out of problems by thinking with his head. He is very resourceful and strong. Brian is lost without food or shelter for fifty for days and that experience changed him for the rest of his life. He made the best of his conditions and learned many things about the wild and he had great respect for it. Brian felt that if it were not for the wild he would not have survived. Through the whole time Brian never lost hope. Had he not been rescued before winter his survival would have bee ...
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Taming Of The Shrew
... Tranio replied to Lucentio when told to go along with the scheme. Shakespeare then uses Tranio (as Lucentio), to pull a fast one on an innocent merchant. He then uses him for the real Lucentio's personal gain. He concocts a false tale of how the merchant will surely be put to death if anyone knows where he is from. His false tale is the following:
"‘Tis death for anyone in Mantua to come to Padua.
Know you not the cause?
Your ships are stayed at Venice, and the Duke,
For private quarrel ‘twixt your duke and him.
Hath published and proclaimed it openly.
Tis marvel, but that you are but newly come,
You might have heard ...
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