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A Horseman In The Sky
... empathizing the brutality and human wreckage of war. He hated war. In 1861 he responded to the first call for war volunteers by enlisting in the 9th Indiana Regiment. He witnessed the Civil War first hand, and saw with his own eyes how horrible the war could be. After he finished fighting in the war, he wrote stories. In them he tried to make people realize that war was bad.
I think that Ambrose Bierce described the setting and the time period very accurately. By reading his story I could picture the scene very accurately. He explained that the sun was shining, and that it was autumn. Because it was autumn it was not too hot or too cold. He also desc ...
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Book Review On Grapes Of Wrath
... unreliable truck and by the “quest for the dollar” that all migrants had. Through their journey to find work and settle down, the Joad’s encounter many calamities that test their relationship as a family and their own limits as individuals. As in real life, not everyone succeeds with his or her goals, and this story of hardship is no different.
In the beginning of the book we get an early look at Steinbeck’s ideals when Muley Graves says,“…if a fella’s got somepin to eat an’ another fella’s hungry—why, the first fella ain’t got no choice.” This is something that was very true back in the p ...
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Frankenstein : Morality
... his mate
the monster resorted to threats. If the good doctor does create a companion
for his first creation he may be endangering others. "The miserable monster
whom I had created," (pg.152) says Victor upon looking back at his work. If
there is another monster there will be twice the power and possibly twice
the evil, which could hurt or kill his family. When and if Frankenstein
commits the moral sin of creating another monster he may be rid of both
monsters forever. "With the companion you bestow I will quit the
neighbourhood of man,"(pg 142) promises the morally corrupt monster to the
doctor upon the completion of his partner. When the doctor, if and when he ...
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Hester Prynne: Comparion Beween Reynold And Herzog Essays
... in pre-civil war history. Reynolds went
on to say, His [Hawthorne's] career illustrates the success of an
especially responsive author in gathering together disparate female types
and recombining them artistically so that they become crucial elements of
the rhetorical and artistic construct of his fiction (Reynolds 179).
Hawthorne used ironies of fallen women and female criminals to achieve the
perfect combination of different types of heroines. His heroines are
equipped to expel wrongs against their sex bringing about an awareness of
both the rights and wrongs of women. Hester is a compound of many popular
stereotypes rich in the thoughts of the time ...portray ...
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Stoker And Rice's Books About Vampires
... Not
much is written about Stoker's use of super-strength for Count
DraculaTherefore, One tends to believe that Dracula in fact did not have
enhanced strength. Stoker did use the power of morphing into animals in his
novel. In Dracula , the Count can morph into a bat and he can turn into a
greyish-green mist. He uses these powers so humans dont detect his presence.
As a gas he can pass by humans without them even noticing and as a bat he
can cover more ground in a shorter amount of time. Rice's novels mention
nothing of being able to morph into a bat, mist or anything else for that
matter.
The ability to fly is used in each novel but they are used ver ...
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Jack London's White Fang: Summary
... dog or the she-wolf. The 3 wolves fought and One-
eye, a old fighting wolf, won and won the rights to the she-wolf. The she-wolf
gave birth to 5 wolf pups. The only one to survive was a spunky cub named White
Fang. White Fang became a pet of the Indians. He moved with the Indians
everywhere they traveled, yet he still heard the call of the wild. They
cherished him as he became a great fighter, fighting dogs. He became wise and
learned many tricks. His value to them was priceless except a man named Beauty
Smith found a way to buy him through liquor. Beauty Smith used White Fang as a
valuable fighter. He arranged fights and took in bets on them. White Fan ...
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All Quiet On The Western Front
... and for this reason they innocently talk as though the fighting and killing that characterizes the seemingly eternal siege, possesses some glorifying reward. The people who have not been forced to look into the eyes of a dying comrade, whose legs have torn off due to the shrapnel of a mortar, can not sympathize with the broken hearts of the soldiers. They only visualize a possibly strenuous battle resulting in few casualties and from which their troops emerge elated and victorious. The soldiers on the front lines actually experience events, which scar their minds with thoughts of death and destruction. Remarque displays these ideas of pain and suffering through ig ...
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Wyrd
... in subtle ways, and encouraged spiritual
openness, as opposed to the dogmatic teachings of the time, vesting confidence
and a sense of worth in her fellow devotees. However, she was plagued by her
evil anti-thesis, the Abbe De Ville, who encouraged her son to join in a
'children's crusade' -- and unwise and dangerous religious march. Pat, her son,
was eventually sold as a slave in the middle east, but the Abbe did not know
this and told Berengaria the 'news' of his demise. Unable to cope with such a
revelation, she died and was entombed, as a mummy, with her book beneath the
priory. Found by two archaeologists in modern times, her book was recovered and
her tomb ...
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Two Themes That Affect Marlow And Kurtz In Heart Of Darkness
... that it takes to get the job done.
He keeps up his apearance and his books are in "apple-pie order." Marlow
respects this fellow because he has a backbone.
"The cannibals some of those ignorant millions, are almost totally
characterized by restraint." They outnumber the whites "thirty to five"
and could easily fill their starving bellies. Marlow "would have as soon
expected restraint from a hyena prowling amongst the corpses of a
battlefield." The cannibals action is "one of those human secrets that
baffle probability." This helps Marlow keep his restraint, for if the
natives can possess this quality Marlow feels he certainly can.
Kurtz is the essence ...
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A Tale Of Two Cities: Characters Are "Recalled To Life"
... Darnay. Charles Darnay is on trial for treason in England(Book 2,
Ch.2-4). C.J Stryver and Sydney Carton are representing Darnay in this
trial. Sydney Carton saves Darnay from death in this trial with his
miraculous wits. Through this Darnay is given another chance at life ,
and therefore was "recalled to life."
The last and most significant instance of someone being "recalled
to life" is found in the last chapters of this book. Sydney Carton has
recently switched places with his look alike, Darnay, and is awaiting the
guillotine. While Sydney awaits his death he thinks, "It is a far, far
better thing that I do, then I have ever done, it is a far, f ...
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