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Twelfth Night
Number of words: 983 - Number of pages: 4.... for his inner self, not the self that heshows to the public, or would reveal and share with Viola in her true female self, but rather his secret self, as he believes he shares with a peer. So, she grows to love him. But, Orsino's motivation is actually not love for Viola, but rather he seems to be in love with love itself. His entire world is filled with love but he knows that there might be a turning point for him, like when he says: If music be the food of love, play on; give me excess of it, that, surfeiting, the appetite may sicken, and so die. (206) This quote shows that he knows .....
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A Description Of Winter
Number of words: 288 - Number of pages: 2.... wet snow that lays uneven over the yard, or piled on the side of the driveway.
Yet, there are the days of magic, when fresh, fluffy snow bursts through the
clouds and surrounds everything. The flakes lightly touch your face, attaching to your
lashes and tickling your nose. The snow covers the dirt, and piles upon the ground. The
bare driveway made of dirt and rocks is covered with a blanket of cold, smooth white.
These fluffy flakes grasp onto the branches of the bare trees, giving them back their
beauty. This surrounding snow brings silence, enchantment and wonder with it. One
stand .....
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Julius Ceaser The Importance O
Number of words: 737 - Number of pages: 3.... of the people. Brutus was a naive man as well. Sincerity is often misconstrued as being naive; however, I will treat each as a separate characteristic. Brutus's naive spirit is mostly shown not in one
single action, but in the overall willingness he has to believe that those around him are essentially good. “Only be patient till we have appeased the multitude, beside themselves with fear, and then we will deliver you the cause why I, that did love Caesar when I struck him, have thus proceeded.” (Act 3, Scene 1, Lines 179-183); And also
when he said: “So fare you well at once; .....
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1916 By Morgan Llywelyn
Number of words: 910 - Number of pages: 4.... that he cannot take in the sounds and
sights of America. He is shell-shocked by the greatest experience of his life so
far. Ned finally builds up the inner courage to go back to Ireland. He is in
horrible shape. The Titanic tragedy had really affected the way he chose to
look at life. When Ned returns to Ireland, he takes it upon himself to tell Dan
Duffy's family that they lost a son and brother aboard the Titanic. While in
Dans' home county of Clare, Ned meets Dan's sist .....
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Plato Vs Shelley
Number of words: 559 - Number of pages: 3.... is the work of the carpenter.” (44) And finally Plato defines his thesis through metaphor. He uses a metaphor that compares the work of a poet to a mirror. “Turning a mirror round and round – you would soon enough make the sun and the heavens, and the earth and yourself, and other animals and plants, and all other things of which we were just speaking, in the mirror…but they would be appearances only.” (44) The way in which the writing is interactive with two people creates contradictions, which challenge Plato’s beliefs, yet they are still proven throughout. “Why not? For t .....
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Superman And Batman: The Greatest Superheros Of All Time
Number of words: 1622 - Number of pages: 6.... visions
from his home planet. The rocket finally crashed in a field in Smallville,
Kansas. Luckily, at that exact time, an older couple, Jonathan and Martha
Kent, were driving by. The impact of the rocket gave their truck a flat
tire.
When the Kents saw the little boy in the spaceship, they thought he
was part of "some cruel Russian space experiment" (Kents 1). They were
going to turn him into an orphanage, but decided that no one wanted him,
so they called him their own. The Kents had always wanted children, but
could never have any, so when the chance came to keep him, they did; and
n .....
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The Gambles In Life
Number of words: 534 - Number of pages: 2.... for a date.
This male is wandering will this lovely female will say "yes," or "no." If
the female says "yes," He has won the gamble; although the male has lost
the gamble is the female says "no."
As life progresses, this child continues to gamble. When this
person gets old enough to obtain a driver's license, he will continue to
take chances. Some people will drive very recklessly by speeding,
disobeying traffic signs, running traffic lights, and even passing. When a
person does any of these, he gambles with both his life and even the law.
Through speeding, and disobeying signs and tra .....
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Character Analysis Of The Gran
Number of words: 957 - Number of pages: 4.... so she uses the same antics on her daughter-in-law who doesn't even acknowledge her. Before she has a chance to work on the children, they tell her "stay at home if you don't want to go." The grandmother then decides that she will have to go along after all, but she is already working on her own agenda.
The grandmother is very deceitful, and she manages to sneak the cat in the car with her even though she knows Bailey does not "like to arrive at a motel with a cat." She decides that she would like to visit an old plantation and begins her pursuit of convincing Bailey to agree to it. She descr .....
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Animal Farm
Number of words: 1692 - Number of pages: 7.... characters of the book.
Mr Jones: Mr. Jones is Orwell's chief (or at least most obvious) villain in Animal Farm. Mr. Jones symbolizes (in addition to the evils of capitalism) Czar Nicholas II, the leader before Stalin (Napoleon). Jones represents the old government, the last of the Czars. Orwell suggests that Jones (Czar Nicholas II) was losing his "edge". In fact, he and his men had taken up the habit of drinking.
Old Major: Old Major is the first major character described by Orwell in Animal Farm. This "pure-bred" of pigs is the kind, grand fatherly philosopher of change an obvious m .....
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Techniques Of William Shakespe
Number of words: 443 - Number of pages: 2.... no longer used. That is why, in most adaptions of his plays, you have notes which define complicated words.
Special Literary Devices: Shakespeare and other Elizabethan writers enjoyed using rhetoric (also known as literary devices) that present a fact or idea in an interesting way. One familiar kind is alliteration where the same sound is repeated in a line or group of lines of verse. He also used the device of repetition, where words are repeated in a verse. Another device used was called antanaclasis, which means the repetition of a certain word or phrase but witch a deliberate shift in i .....
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