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English Term Papers and Reports
Skunk Hour
814 Words - 3 Pages

.... visitors with a noxious vapor. Here, the reason for Robert Lowell’s choice in animals becomes obvious. Utilizing such an isolated animal to parallel the thoughts of the speaker, Lowell considerably strengthens the distance between the speaker of the poem and the “love-cars” (Lowell 11) being watched. Even if the occupants of those cars knew they were being observed, chances are they would not associate themselves with the speaker. In addition, Robert Lowell portrays his character as something akin to a stalker, illustrated in the following excerpt. One dark night, my Tudor Ford climbed the hill’s skull; I watched for love-cars. (Lowell 25-27 ....


Enstragement In Hamlet
1568 Words - 6 Pages

.... his father’s death because both murder and suicide are considered sins (Cahn 97). “ To be, or not to be, that is the question:/ Whether’ tis nobler in the mind to suffer/ The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune/ or to take arms a sea of troubles…”, (Act III, I.) Hamlet is questioning if it is worth living in such misery or not as everyday he is burdened with trying to avenge his father’s death. At this stage Hamlet is suicidal and risks himself being estranged from his religious principals as he begins to think of suicide. If Hamlet were to kill Claudius, he would be violating a central religious principle against murdering another human being. Both sui ....


Its The Earps Vs. The Clantons
2096 Words - 8 Pages

.... Holliday displays character traits that show that he could be or might have once been a cleaner, straighter, and more-distinguished man. Through an exploration of the Earps (mostly Wyatt), the Clanton family (mostly Old Man), and eventually Doc Holliday we will be able to better understand the building tension that occurs in Ford’s “My Darling Clementine”. From the very beginning, it is easy to see that the Earp brothers, especially Wyatt, are pure, brave, and good-natured boys that fit the law-abiding ideal. This is important, because the West was (or, at least, represented) an unregulated area where the law could be bent at virtually any time. ....


Pornography And The New Puritans
772 Words - 3 Pages

.... to sexual material influences criminal sexual behavior. Irving then gives us several reasons why the will is a “grave mistake.” His first reason is that the bill is blaming the responsibility of any sexual crime onto a third party, which are the ones who expose sexual material – namely, away from the ones who are actually committing the crime. Second, it runs against the First Amendment. Finally laws on obscenity differ from state to state, and if the bill does not describe what kind of obscenity is not allowed then how are the creators of the material supposed to know weather or not its actionable? Irving’s understanding of the bill is that it makes the publishers ....


Chrysalids
260 Words - 1 Pages

.... novel The Crysalids written by John Wyndham, lives in a community that scarfs out against all types of deviation abnormalities. The reader notices Joseph Strorm (David's father) uses his occupation as an advantage to destroy and abominate all type of human alteration. For instance, Joseph used his substantially moral mind to deny the request of David's aunty Harriet to trade babies to get the needed certificate, "She's a lovely baby-except for that. She is, isn't she?" (pg. 70) As a result Harriet and the baby had committed self annihilation. Not only were deviations left out they were also sent away an sometimes killed. Normality was so ....


Medea
805 Words - 3 Pages

.... of the legend of the Golden Fleece, and the love between Jason and , from beginning to the end. She also brings them to the present state is in, which is of complete despair and depression after Jason remarried. “And she hates her children now, and feels no joy at seeing them.” (Oates, 292). In Antigone, one of the purposes of the chorus is to provide history to the audience. Although, Sophocles did change the structure a little. The first to enter the play are Antigone and Ismene, who are engaging in conversation over defying the edict forbidding their brothers burial, which brings the audience to the present time. Shortly after, the chorus enters and recount ....


Moody Landscape
1025 Words - 4 Pages

.... but the material out of which countries are made...I had the feeling that the world was left behind, that we had got over the edge of it, and were outside man's jurisdiction. I had never before looked up and at the sky when there was not a familiar mountain ridge against it...I did not believe that my father and mother were watching me from up there; they would still be looking for me at the sheepfold down by the creek, ... I had left their spirits behind me... I did not say my prayers that night: here, I felt, what would be would be."(Pg. 11-12) We see that Jim is a state of awe. He does not see this place as land or a country, but the building blocks for such things. ....


Cuckoos Nest
1588 Words - 6 Pages

.... of the novel. The world which Bromden describes is a hazy, transparent realm, where the borders between insanity and sanity are unclear. “There’s long spells -three days, years- when you can’t see a thing, know where you are only by the speaker sounding overhead like a bell clanging in the fog (94)” Bromden’s view is omniscient. Although he poses to the ward staff as a deaf-mute, he actually hears and comprehends all that happens within the hospital. The Chief was able play the part of a passive observer, stationing himself in important meetings and able to see and hear things which are concealed from other inmates. This insight into what is happening around the war ....



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