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All Quiet On The Western Front
Number of pages: 6 | Number of words: 1392.... a lack of acceptance and even disappointment by Flo and shows that there has always been a distance between the two.
The title is derived from a patient Rose met at the nursing home whose only communication was spelling words. After meeting this patient, Rose dreamed that Flo was in a cage and spelling words like the old patient she met in the nursing home. Rose tells Flo about her visit to the nursing home and is obviously trying to influence Flo into going to the home. Flo is suffering from some sort of dementia, perhaps Alzheimer's. In this story the author doesn't tell .....
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The Rocking-horse Winner
Number of pages: 2 | Number of words: 391.... who the winner of the race would be. Paul and his uncle Oscar used this information to gamble on horss and were able to win piles of money. This money he gave anomously to his mother to use for anything that was needed.
it was one night that Paul was riding his horse at full speed when suddenly a blaze of light hit him up. He screamed, "Malabar!" Then he fell off with a crash that would put him into unconsciousness; he never did recover from that fall. He died later that night.
Paul needed his rocking horse, without it he would never have felt that luck. Luck gave him a sen .....
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Character Sketch Of Nora
Number of pages: 2 | Number of words: 342.... he is outraged. She knew the seriousness of the offense that she is committed, but it hardly meant anything for the man that she loved.
Nora committed a small moral thing by going behind is back to do it, and forging her father’s signature, but she knew that was the only way she would ever be able to do it. Torvald was not able to cope the idea what she had done for him. She really worked to save him, but he just wasn’t able to see that. So she left him.
Everything Nora did, she did it out of the love and caring. She is actually a very intelligent woman he doe .....
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James Joyce's "Araby"
Number of pages: 2 | Number of words: 466.... easily be determined is the
culture and life in Dublin. This has a great effect on the boy and the rest
of the people from this city. Dublin is referred to as the "center of
paralyses,"(Internet) and "indeed sterile."(Joyce) This plays a huge role
in the forming of this boy's life, where there is no fun. "Araby" is a
story "of a soul-shriveling Irish asceticism, which renders hopes and
dreams not only foolish, but sinful."(Coulthard) In the story, the only
thing that the young boy has to look forward to is buying something for the
girl he loves, and in the end he can't even d .....
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The True Meaning Behind That Layer Of Blue Nail Polish
Number of pages: 3 | Number of words: 565.... manicurean craze, both the
tamest and the wildest adolescents together are donning the shade. When asked
why they choose to wear this latest cerulean shade of nail polish, many give
back similar responses such as: “It looks cool”; “If I wore red I would just
feel like another ordinary person, but if people see your blue nail polish, they
do a double-take”; “It's a little new, something different”.
Unfortunately, many youths have been raised in a society where they have
been conditioned to fear doing anything that will have them come across as a
freak to others. .....
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King Lear - Blindness
Number of pages: 6 | Number of words: 1432.... of my sight!" to which Kent responds:
"See better, Lear,
and let me still remain"
(Act I, sc I, l. 160).
Kent, once banished, creates a disguise for himself and is eventually hired by Lear as a servant. The king's vision is so superficial that he is easily deceived by Kent's changed appearance. He can never see his trusted servant for whom he really is. He only learns of Kent's noble and honest character just prior to his death, when his vision is cleared. By this time, however, it is too late for an honest relationship to be salvaged.
Lear's vision is also blurred by his la .....
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Virginia Woolf
Number of pages: 2 | Number of words: 421.... hour the thought of death progressing in their head. This is an example of great imagery she uses in explaining an event.
In the same essay she has many more examples of imagery, more than can be expressed. I am beginning to believe she is as remarkable as people say. The more and more I read her writing, the more I began to believe this. She grabs my attention faster and more intensely than any other essayist.
Many people believe her writing style is hard to comprehend, which I can understand why. This allows her examples of imagery to go far beyond other great essayist .....
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Dover Beach Poetry Analysis
Number of pages: 3 | Number of words: 783.... to mind , a gigantic image , provoking again thoughts, this time of France. The title itself however does not give you any emotional insight into the poem . I feel the poet did this as to not alert the reader to what is going to transcend upon them further in the poem.
The poems opening stanza is to begin with very soft and tranquil , 'The sea is calm tonight'. The words the poet uses are pleasing , ' Gleams , sweet , glimmering'. The mood for the poem is being set. The reader is filled with visions of peace and a sense of being content ' sweet is the night air .....
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