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A Man For All Seasons: Value, What Would I Die For?
Number of pages: 2 | Number of words: 477.... rarely forever. You do not always share as much love with your friends then compared to your family. To die for friends is questionable. Only the forever friend, will I die for, but how could I tell the future. One does not know the future, and for that reason is my value towards my friends questionable.
As for my country I refuse to risk my life for dictator who is on a power trip. Almost all wars are useless as the war of Vietnam. Did the American solider fight for his family or did he risk his life because the president said so. World War 2 was a war to stop a dictat .....
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King Lear: Three Sisters Comparison
Number of pages: 3 | Number of words: 820.... asked his daughters to profess their love for him and in return receive his land. Just shortly after Cordelia is heard again, “I am sure my love’s / More ponderous than my tongue,” asking herself again what she is going to say. This helps prove the first point of her self-conscience, by Cordelia wondering what she is going to say to her father. This quote also points out her real love for her father, unlike her two other sisters that exaggerate their love for the reason of receiving more land from their father. Cordelia proves that she is a very kind hearted and forgivin .....
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Western Films
Number of pages: 17 | Number of words: 4510.... of the Mohicans (1992)), Francis Parkman's The Oregon Trail (1849), Samuel Clemens' (Mark Twain) Roughing It (1872), Bret Harte's short stories, and other mythologies (tales of Davy Crockett, Daniel Boone, Jim Bowie, Gen. George A Custer, Calamity Jane, and outlaws such as the James Brothers, the original Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, and Billy the Kid).
Westerns are often set on the American frontier during the last part of the 19th century (1865-1900) following the Civil War, in a geographically western (trans-Mississippi) setting with romantic, sweeping frontier land .....
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The Crucible: Struggle For Conformity
Number of pages: 2 | Number of words: 449.... seen as
acts of the devil, and unfortunately are not forgotten. Strange things started occurring within the
village and witchcraft is deemed culpable. This galvanized quite a disturbance in the village and
the girls start making accusations about who is practicing witchcraft. The girls claim in court
that they have all been witnesses to these terrible acts and can see the devil inside individuals.
The culpability of these devilish occurrences fluctuate drastically and the girls conclude that they
would keep their intentions a secret and inculpate one by one other residen .....
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The Play "Amadeus" Is Mainly Concerned With The Destructive Nature Of Jealousy
Number of pages: 2 | Number of words: 546.... food and clothes immediately, instead of
saving it. He spends all his time churning out music in final copy, which,
although beautiful, doesn't earn money as would teaching music.
Mozart is really the one who should be jealous, as he has little in the way of
money or assets, or even respect. All he has is his talent and his priceless
music, but not the sense he needs to capitalise on it.
It isn't the fact that someone has more talent than him, the problem is, as he
sees it, that he isn't as good as someone else after making a bargain with God,
which should guarantee that .....
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Aristotle’s Theory Of Tragedy As Seen In Euripides’ Electra
Number of pages: 5 | Number of words: 1310.... However, Electra lacks a true fall from happiness into misery for either children, a profound sense of tragic suffering, and a strong catharsis of pity and fear.
In Electra, both Orestes and Electra can be viewed as tragic figures, however Orestes is the better choice according to Aristotle. Orestes is the son of a king and is a prince, thus he is of a high birth. He has ethos, or a sense of right and wrong, in that he recognizes the injustices that have been done unto his father Agamemnon, his sister Electra, and himself by both Clytemnestra and her lover Aegisthus. Orestes .....
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Macbeth: Macbeth A Moral Coward
Number of pages: 2 | Number of words: 530.... When Lady Macbeth called him a coward, before you knew it, the murder was taking place. After the successful murder of Duncan, Macbeth entered a life of evil. Ambition was also clearly stated when he thought of killing his friend Banquo to protect the kingship. The witches’ predictions sent Macbeth into his own world where he could not be stopped on his way to becoming king.
Macbeth shows his courageousness by overcoming his personal matters to plot the death of the king. In the scene where the murder of Duncan is taking place, he also shows he is a coward when he will not co .....
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Character Sketch Of Antigone
Number of pages: 2 | Number of words: 532.... bury her brother for herself. That all but erases the thought of her, as a hero because all of her actions that were thought to have been done for Polynices were only done to satisfy her own needs.
The one characteristic of Antigone that seems to be constant throughout the play is her stubbornness. From the beginning of the play when she sneaks out to bury her brother after Creon had specifically told her not to, all the way to the end when she is given the opportunity to marry Haemon and go on living but forces her own death. She always seemed to fight everything for as .....
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