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Cyrano De Bergerac 4
Number of words: 1381 - Number of pages: 6.... Le Bret, he has a rousing “No Thank You” tirade in front of the Cadets where he openly refuses to be under De Guiche’s patronage, proclaiming that living under another man's honor is beneath him.
“Seek for the patronage of some great man,
And like a creeping vine on a tall tree
Crawl upward, where I cannot stand alone?
No thank you!”
(Cyrano, p.75)
However, Cyrano should have realized that with De Guiche’s support he would have a higher status and a more stable economic source. The reason why Cyrano's ingenuity is never publicly recognized is bec .....
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Cymbeline Essay
Number of words: 716 - Number of pages: 3.... to the King and his Queen, her son, Cloten should be the
rightful man for Imogen. Not only are they sold on the idea, but Cloten is
as well. He tries every second he can to, in some way, try and do
something to look great in front of her. His life, sadly, revolves around
trying to do what his mother thinks is right and winning Imogen's
affections. Much to his dismay she is not only annoyed, but uninterested.
Giacomo is the next in line to hurt Imogen. With the bet he made
with Posthumus in mind, he tries to woo his way into Imogen's heart and her
bedroom. He i .....
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Great Expectations 7
Number of words: 477 - Number of pages: 2.... (88), she tells Pip with no feeling, almost as if the kiss was money or a gift. With every cold-hearted action, Estella furthers herself from any true feeling.
Though she advocated it, Estella's actions weren't entirely her fault. Motivated by a jilting on her wedding day, Miss Havisham adopts Estella to raise her into a heartless instrument of revenge against men. Estella makes unwise decisions mostly based on Miss Havisham's teachings. She marries Pip's rival Walter Drummle who beats her. Miss Havisham pushes Estella to the limit, and ends up hurting Estella, and herself as well. Miss H .....
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Lack Of Knowledge Thesis Examination
Number of words: 2358 - Number of pages: 9.... rather seek knowledge of the “world” though investigation, instead of following the creations of the poets. (Shelly 87)[5] He thirsts for knowledge of the material world. If he notices an idea that is not yet realized in the material world, he attempts to work on the idea to get it realized, or give it a worldly existence. He creates the creature and rejects it because its worldly form did not reflect the brilliance of his original idea. The unlearned creature is thrown out into the world and is forced to discover the hidden meanings behind human life and society, on his own.
Frankenst .....
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Cathedral 2
Number of words: 699 - Number of pages: 3.... that prejudices is one of the main themes which is shown through the husband’s way of react, when he hears that a blind man is coming. Because he does not know what to expect, he imagines a man, totally different, who does not have the same habits or knows the same thing as “normal” people.
“I remembered having read somewhere that the blind did not smoke because, as speculation had it, they couldn’t see the smoke they inhaled.”
Here he gets his first surprise, when he sees that the blind man actually do smoke. Maybe he realises that even though he has .....
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Nathan The Wise
Number of words: 1222 - Number of pages: 5.... refusal, although harsh, seemed to affirm the goodness Nathan saw in the young man, “A modest greatness would hide behind the monstrous, merely to escape admiration” (212). The lengths the Templar went to in order to save a life is a testament in itself of his goodness, far more powerful than his insults, "I find it strange that such an ugly spot [on Templar’s robe], soiled by the fire, bears better witness than a man’s own lips” (212).
For Nathan, friends do not concern themselves with social status, religious beliefs, or titles; but rather, they can distinguish between the man .....
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The Road Not Taken By Frost
Number of words: 1227 - Number of pages: 5.... future, only hope to choose a path that will lead you to good fortune and happiness. Another interesting part of this line is how he describes the woods as yellow. “Yellow” is a word that strongly helps out the imagery, helps to describe the uncertainty of the speaker, and implies that he may be scared to even choose a path. Evidently he does not want to choose the wrong road and mess up the rest of his life. I believe that as he stands before these two roads he is really confused and scared as to which road to pick. All he can do is look as far down each road as possible, and .....
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The Journey Of Odysseus And Te
Number of words: 2541 - Number of pages: 10.... emotional status has resulted in. These all partake a immense role in the way the story is set up, stemming from the purpose of each character’s journey, their personal challenges, and the difficulties that surround them.
The story commences when Odysseus, a valiant hero of the Trojan war, journeys back home. Together with his courageous comrades, and a several vessels, he set sail for his homeland Ithaca. Fated to wander for a full ten years, Odysseus’s ships were immediately blown to Thrace by a powerful storm. The expedition had begun.
Upon this misfortune, he and his men started a ra .....
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The Adventures Of Huckleberry
Number of words: 765 - Number of pages: 3.... in
the beginning of the book, but towards the middle and end, the racial term is not used to
degrade people of the African American race.
The most prevalent misuse of the word “nigger” is in the introductory part of the
novel. This racial slur is mostly abused by Huck’s father, Pap. Pap represents the
average misinformed “redneck.” In each appearance that Pap had in the book, he had
criticizing words for whatever was going on around him. For example, he was making
fun of the North because black people were allowed to have freedom. Pap had many
stere .....
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Early American Writers
Number of words: 515 - Number of pages: 2.... on high."
Jonathan Edwards also found comfort in god, "leading me to sweet
contemplations of my great and glorious God." Jonathan was also a puritan
from the early America, however, he was a preacher.
Like Anne Bradstreet, he did not believe in material things. In
his sermon entitle Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God, he states "now they
see that those things on which they depended for peace and safety were
nothing but thin air and empty shadows." This statement agrees with what
Bradstreet believed in, that nothing (possessions) is important on Earth.
If a person has depended on .....
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