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A Winter Storm
Number of words: 513 - Number of pages: 2.... banshee, blowing a sheet of snow across the yard. The storm is here. I pull the collar of my coat up a little higher and hunch my shoulders against the wind. Snowflakes begin to fall from the leaden sky, silently, making the air shimmer with their beauty. I try to hurry but the deep snowdrifts beneath my feet and the relentless wind slow my progress.
As I trudge onward the snow begins to fall heavier. It is getting harder to see as the wind whips the snow into a whirling mass of white, stinging as it makes contact with bare skin. I feel the ice crystals freezing onto my eyelashes mak .....
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The Parable Of The Cave
Number of words: 1293 - Number of pages: 5.... life. It begins by telling us that the reality we initially see when we are chained down in the cave is nothing more than an illusion. This is true in my own life in that I was told by my parents what was right and what was wrong without questioning the reason behind it. They kept a chain of sorts around me so that I was not harmed by all of the realities of the world at once, but rather gradually introduced to them as I grew up.
As we are released from bondage, our reality is immediately changed. When we first look toward the light we "will suffer sharp pains;" as we try to adjust to .....
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Boethius Argument Against Univ
Number of words: 613 - Number of pages: 3.... universal is existing in several
things at one time (and thus is not one in number) then it cannot exist in this Platonic
fashion.
Boethius’ second argument deals with universals if they are to be spoken of as
being many rather than one. He explains that to say is also false. For to say this is to
imply that “there will be no last (universal set above the others).” This is because there
will be a universal set over many things and will thus be multiple. And because it is in
many things, it “has a likeness of what is a (universal).” But it is a liken .....
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The Picture Of Dorian Gray
Number of words: 1003 - Number of pages: 4.... being a pure and inexperienced man at first, Dorian's decadent actions during the story are prompted by the theories of Lord Henry Wotton. Lord Henry's attempt to influence Dorian is responsible for many of the wrong choices Dorian makes. Initially unadulterated by society, Dorian's views change when Lord Henry tells him that he is presently at the peak of his life. Basil Hallward recognizes Lord Henry's tendencies and tells him not to "spoil" his innocent Dorian; "Don't try to influence him. Your influence would be bad." Ignoring Basil's wishes, Lord Henry utilizes his c .....
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Steinbeck, His Critics, And Of
Number of words: 2001 - Number of pages: 8.... about twenty miles east of the German city of Düsseldorf. During summers he worked as a hired hand on nearby ranches, "nourishing" his impression of the California countryside and its people (Lisca 32). He made occasional exciting trips to San Francisco with his family and more frequent trips to the Monterey peninsula (Fontenrose 2). In 1918, he became ill with pneumonia and almost died, but he was able to recover. After graduating from Salinas High School in 1919, Steinbeck enrolled at Stanford University, taking courses in English and Marine Science (Bloom 11). He was always a .....
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Candide - A Contrast To Optimism
Number of words: 1213 - Number of pages: 5.... seriousness.
Leibniz, sometimes regarded as a Stoic or Fatalist because his
philosophies were based on the idea that everything in the world
was determined by fate, theorized that God, having the ability to pick
from an infinite number of worlds, chose this world, "the best of all
possible worlds." Although Voltaire chose that simple quality of
Leibniz's philosophy to satirize, Leibniz meant a little more than
just that. Even though his philosophy stated that God chose "the best
of all possible worlds," he also meant that God, being the perfection
he is, .....
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The Eleventh Commandment
Number of words: 1094 - Number of pages: 4.... power, and with that the ability to manipulate others. "'You ass'... said the Director,... 'Hasn't it occurred to you that an Epsilon embryo must have an Epsilon environment as well as an Epsilon heredity'"(Huxley 23). Through a hierarchy of Alaphas and Betas down to the lower cast Epsilon, everyone was suited for their job. The Director however, through his position of authority, was able to "... condition the masses to hate the country,"(Huxley 30). In doing so, the Director succeeds in creating an obedient society, which obeys and bows to every whim of his commands. The Resident Contr .....
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Edgar Allen Poe's: "The Murders In The Rue Morgue"
Number of words: 1028 - Number of pages: 4.... all heard an indistinguishable voice
("that of a foreigner") and one of an angered Frenchman at the scene of
the crime. As the account of the last witness is registered, Dupin and the
narrator decide to examine the apartment on the Rue Morgue for themselves.
The Sherlock Holmes-like protagonist does not disappoint us. Dupin assures
the narrator that he knows who the culprit is, and he is indeed awaiting
his arrival. After collecting evidence and careful analysis, Dupin seems
to have solved the murder beyond the shadow of a doubt. The strange
circumstances lead Dupin to believe that the .....
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The Hobbit 2
Number of words: 1425 - Number of pages: 6.... Gandalf for tea, but instead of the wizard at the door, there is a group of dwarves... thirteen in all. Thorin son of the dwarf king starts to outline a plan on how to regain the treasure stolen by the dragon Smaug. Bilbo is shocked to realize these plans involve him! He then realizes that Gandalf has tricked him by inscribing on his doo r that he was a burglar seeking a job with lots of excitement. With all this talk of quests and glory Bilbo decides to join the party after all.
Gandalf reveals a key and a map of their journey which ends at the Lon ely Mountain. It is there that t .....
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Elizabethan Revenge In Hamlet
Number of words: 2558 - Number of pages: 10.... Seneca was among the greatest authors of classical tragedies
and there was not one educated Elizabethan who was unaware of him or
his plays. There were certain stylistic and different strategically
thought out devices that Elizabethan playwrights including Shakespeare
learned and used from Seneca’s great tragedies. The five act
structure, the appearance of some kind of ghost, the one line
exchanges known as stichomythia, and Seneca’s use of long rhetorical
speeches were all later used in tragedies by Elizabethan playwrights.
Some of Seneca’s ideas were originally taken from t .....
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