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Call Of The Wild By Jack Londo
Number of words: 721 - Number of pages: 3.... loved to play Chinese lottery" (Page 2). If he didn't love to play lottery Buck might still live in California. Manuel is the gardener for the family and the first person who sold Buck. Buck shows his love for leadership by fighting with Spitz. "The dominant primortal beast was stong in Buck" (Page 15). If Buck didn't want to be leader Spitz might still be alive because Buck never fought with anyone unless he had to. Spitz was the leader of the pack until Buck killed him.
The many different settings helped everyone see how Buck was loved. The first setting was California, then the dog .....
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Comparing And Contrasting Hamlet And MacBeth
Number of words: 641 - Number of pages: 3.... devil” (2.2.598-599). Macbeth also has his
doubts because when the witches tell him that he will be named Thane of
Cawder, Macbeth himself had not known, but many people had. It is
possible the witches could have known. In the same matter in both plays,
the presentation of the supernatural began to lead to the final downfall
of each of the characters. In Macbeth, the three witches cause him to
think and do evil deeds. In Hamlet, if he had not seen the ghost of his
father, he would not have known that Claudius has killed his father to
claim the throne. In both instances the characters .....
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The Mystery That Was Gatsby, T
Number of words: 1765 - Number of pages: 7.... novel. While it isn't clear how he made all his money it is obvious that it was through illegal dealings in organized crime. There was a reference to the 1919 World Series, (That's the one where the players on the
Chicago White Sox helped out organized crime by not trying their hardest when it counted. Go Reds!) When asked about his line of work, Gatsby claims to be in the drugstore business. Drugstores were a common means of bootlegging liquor during prohibition since pharmacists could sell whiskey by prescription. Fitzgerald is never quite clear as to just what extent of illegal activi .....
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A Rose For Emily Characterization
Number of words: 428 - Number of pages: 2.... contributed to her seclusion.
Though her father was responsible for her becoming a recluse, her pride also contributed to her seclusion. "None of the young men were quite good enough for Miss Emily and such" (395). Faulkner uses the feelings of other characters to show Miss Emily's pride. Her pride has kept her from socializing with other members of the community thus reinforcing her solitary. But Miss Emily's father is still responsible for her being a hermit. "We remembered all the young men her father had driven away..." (396). If he had not refuse the men who wanted to go o .....
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Overhead Look At Sands
Number of words: 1113 - Number of pages: 5.... the title is significant to the book
because it describes what the book is really about. Sense and Sensibility is about how Elinor,
practical and conventional, must learn to show her sensible side more often, and how
Marianne, emotional and sentimental, should use her sense more frequently. Elinor conceals
her feelings until she hardly knows how to or wants to reveal them. But on the other hand,
Marianne wants to play out her romantic fantasies. The book describes how Elinor and
Marianne eventually mix their sense and sensibility together, in their dealings with money
and love.
Ma .....
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Hiding From The Truth
Number of words: 775 - Number of pages: 3.... uses comfortable and roomy is to show that the wife, Louise, was happy and relaxed when she heard the news and thought about it. She was pretty much happy with the result. Another easy hidden truth was when Louise was saying, "free, free, free" and "free, body and soul free." These phrases would, in reality, show that she was happy and felt like her own self now. She wasn’t restricted by her husband, he was gone and she was her own woman. She was finally "free" as she would say. And finally, Louise’s pulse beats harder. That is just like the blood warming. Her pulse .....
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I Stand Here Ironing
Number of words: 643 - Number of pages: 3.... made this decision so that she could work and save money for their future. Emily came back to her mother when she was two "all baby loveliness gone" (Olsen, 579). At this time in the story, the reader is able to see a change in the way the mother describes her child. The mother goes from seeing Emily as a beautiful baby to seeing her as a thin two-year-old. Emily grows into a young child who was self-conscience about her appearance, "thin and foreign-looking at a time when every girl was supposed to look [like the] replica of Shirley Temple" (Olsen, 580). Emily’s mot .....
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To Kill A Mockingbird Essay
Number of words: 1300 - Number of pages: 5.... more character than most of the citizens in Maycomb, emerging as a symbol of what is truly right. In the beginning of the story, Boo represents the unknown. The children wonder about Boo and his strange way of life, but really have no concept of who he is. At first, the children ask questions about Boo concerning his "weird" living style. When this does not satisfy their curiosities, they make up games and stories about Boo, which present him as being a monster. At one point, the children invade the Radley property in hopes of finding some clue that will better explain Boo's character. .....
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Great Gatsby
Number of words: 356 - Number of pages: 2.... she hates careless people even though she is a careless driver herself.
Daisy Buchanan expresses her vanity in the words she says. For example, she once said, "I've been everywhere and seen everything and love everything," implying that she has been around the globe and seen everything there is to offer. She thinks that she can solve the problems of the world because she has gone to a few more places than other people have and that she knows more than other people do. Her wealth has given her the opportunity to visit extraordinary places, but it has also given her boredom. She has taken .....
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The Phantom Of The Opera
Number of words: 477 - Number of pages: 2.... powerful force which is not only visualized but is accompanied by a thunderous noise which echo's throughout the theatre.
The lighting is also masterfully used to enhance the magical yet mystical setting of the show. A large portion of the lighting is actually more like shaping the darkness. Unlike many other Broadway shows, the Phantom is a show which needs to use less lighting in order to establish the full character of the Phantom. Lights are used in a way that creates a shadowy feeling which helps bring out the mystery of the Phantom.
The cast is masterfully chosen for it's versatil .....
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