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How To Write An Essay 2

... favorite subject, or even entertain the audience who will be reading it. Once who have brainstormed some ideas, examine each one and decide which one you will be able to produce the best quality work and get your point across in the specified length you are given. Once you have chosen a topic or an angle to approach a topic, your next step is to outline or make a plan of action of what you plan to write about. This can be just jotting down everything that comes to your head or making a standard outline using numerals to put ideas into subsec ...

Number of words: 720 | Number of pages: 3

My Mother: In Comparison To Beowulf

... of us on tact and to think for ourselves with the mind God gave us. Teaching us to have morals and goals she has repeatedly been here for us guiding us and protecting us. Taking care of us everytime we called. Caring for us when we were sick she has been like a God to us every second of the day. The very heroic woman I call mom is also a wonderful role-model because of the numerous examples she has set for all of us. She has taught us to take care of ourselves and to watch out for each other. She has taught us how to give and not just receive ...

Number of words: 386 | Number of pages: 2

Son Of A Salesman. (death Of A

... his older brother Biff, was not a great man. In hopes to please his father, Happy also went into the "selling" business, but met little success. He was "one of the two assistants to the assistant buyer" and was miserable. Biff questioned Happy, "Are you content, Hap? You're a success, are't you? Are you content?" (23), and Happy responds, "Hell, no!" Yet Happy stuck with his job, longing to one day please his father. Even after Willy's death Happy did not give up on his quest. "I'm gonna show everybody else that Willy Loman did not di ...

Number of words: 577 | Number of pages: 3

Poetry 3

... day to day existence. It never changes; housework, feed and dress the kids, shop, cook, and work the fields. The only solace, the only redemption, is when she will become one with nature. She has no material goods to show for her hard work, but she has peace in the fact that the world around her is all that is hers. She says, “Shine on me, sunshine, rain on me, rain, fall softly, dewdrops, and cool my brow again.” The rain and the dewdrops symbolize tears falling on her in her final resting-place. She then says, “ ...

Number of words: 877 | Number of pages: 4

George Orwells 1984

... and the fine arts. He is employed in the Records Department, where he writes and rewrites scripts to fit the present and past which adds to the power the Party has over its members, and the history they believe in. Although Winston is a diligent member of the Party, his inner desires, of humanity, individuality, and sexuality are directly rebellious to that of the policies of the Party. His physical expressions are deceptive, an attempt to cover-up his true attitude towards his situation from the Thought Police. Through the novel, Winston&# ...

Number of words: 797 | Number of pages: 3

Is Man Ever Satisfied

... laws and is in fact considered as a whole perfect work of God. It appears unsatisfy to us only because our perceptions are limited by our feeble moral and intellectual capacity. God is perfect and he created man is his image yet man is always unsatisfied. We utter our body parts to make it look perfect to us. The use of weak and blind in the essay tells how man is unsatisfied not be able to see things his way and hence making him unhappy. If any misfortunes in our life’s we still think is the cause of God, as sta ...

Number of words: 506 | Number of pages: 2

The House Of Seven Gables - Sy

... itself. The house itself takes on human like characteristics as it is being described by Hawthorne in the opening chapters. The house is described as "breathing through the spiracles of one great chimney"(Hawthorne 7). Hawthorne uses descriptive lines like this to turn the house into a symbol of the lives that have passed through its halls. The house takes on a persona of a living creature that exists and influences the lives of everybody who enters through its doors. (Colacurcio 113) "So much of mankind’s varied experience had passed t ...

Number of words: 2633 | Number of pages: 10

Ozymandias

... to those who read it. The tone of "" is one of lamentation, a sorrow that a statue proclaiming as the greatest king the world has ever known is now reduced to rubble; and not just the physical aspect but the glory of the king is also long forgotten. In Shelley's "",there are two speakers; the first speaker introduced the poem for the first line and then the second speaker carries the poem to realization. It is ironic that the words inscribed on the pedestal "Look on my works. . . and despair!" reflect the evidence of the next line, "Nothin ...

Number of words: 628 | Number of pages: 3

The Death Of Ivan Illych

... toward life is the same all the way up to his death. He was as the author put it, “…a capable, good-natured, and social man, though strict in the fulfillment of what he considered his duty: and he considered his duty to be what was so considered by those in authority.” (p. 1088) That quote states that Ivan was solely concerned with his duties and his advancement in position by following the orders of his authorities. Ivan was son of a successful man who held many positions in many departments. That man, Ilya Epimovich ...

Number of words: 1281 | Number of pages: 5

Sonnet 72 Shakespeare

... wander’st in his shade, e When in eternal lines to time thou grow’st: f So long as man can breathe, or eyes can see, g So long lives this and this gives life to thee g 3 Sentences: 1st sentence: line 1 2nd sentence: lines 2 - 8 3rd sentence: lines 9 - 14 This is a Shakespearean sonnet with no characteristics of a Petrarchan sonnet. GLOSSARY Temperate moderate Darling very dear Lease the term during which possession is guaranteed Date the time during which something lasts ...

Number of words: 1033 | Number of pages: 4

The Catcher In The Rye

... for it, proved to Holden that his parents didn’t care as much as they were supposed to. As Holden grew up, he found himself flunking out of school after school, never being able to stay in one place. This calamity was caused by either his overwhelmingly powerful hatred for people or because there was a conflict of interest between him and the school itself, about who they were trying to make him. Holden was also starting to view people as who they really were. Many of us in this world accept people at face value and never really take the ...

Number of words: 1105 | Number of pages: 5

Anderson I Want To Know Why

... us is that "everyone in our part of Kentucky who is anyone at all, likes horses". Certain values and conditions are highly prized in this part of Kentucky. The racing season with new colts, bloodlines, legendary horse families and trainers all share a common bond of shared love for the thoroughbreds and champions. The narrator, a white boy, is envious of the black cook, Bildad for his closeness to the horses' life. He states that "he is going all season to the races and working in the livery barn in the winter where horses are and where me ...

Number of words: 804 | Number of pages: 3

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