Papers on Book Reports
Attitudes Toward Marriage In Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales
Words: 1438 - Pages: 6.... a
lecherous clerk, a vain clerk and an old husband, whose outcome shows the
consequences of their abuses of marriage, including Nicholas' interest in
astrology and Absalon's refusal to accept offerings from the ladies, as well as
the behaviors of both with regards to Alison. Still, Alison does what she wants,
she takes Nicholas because she wants to, just as she ignores Absalon because she
wants to. Lines 3290-5 of the Miller's Tale show Alison's blatant disrespect for
her marriage to "Old John" and her planned deceit:
That she hir love hym graunted atte laste,
And swoor hir ooth, by seint Thomas of Kent
That she wol been at his c .....
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Creon As The Tragic Hero Of An
Words: 796 - Pages: 3.... that Polyneices should not be buried because he was a traitor to his family. This decision affected Antigone greatly, and Creon knew that the decision would be hard on some people. Family and burials are very important in society, and Creon is asking Antigone to not consider them, to only consider that Polyneices was a traitor to his home city. Creon is then faced with the knowledge that Antigone went against his will and law, and buried her brother. Again, Creon is faced with a hard decision. He must choose to kill his own family member and uphold the law, or punish her less severely and show that he is not serious about death as a p .....
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THE OLD MAN AND THE SEA
Words: 944 - Pages: 4.... he has not caught any fish for more than eighty-four days and is therefore "unlucky". Nonetheless Manolin is loyal to Santiago and even when his parents forbid him he wants to help his friend.
Their conversations are comfortable, like that of two friends who have known each other for their whole lives. When they speak it is usually about baseball or fishing, the two things they have most in common. Their favorite team is the Yankees and Santiago never loses faith in them even when the star player, Joe DiMaggio is injured with a heel spur. In this way Santiago not only teaches Manolin about fishing but also about important characterist .....
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Major Themes In Faulkner's "Light In August"
Words: 1222 - Pages: 5.... throughout. Chief
among them; Faulkner's study of 20th century man's search for identity, and
his compassionate portrait of the origins of evil.
I have come from Alabama a fur piece (Faulkner, p.3). The reader
begins the book in this manner, following the simple-minded and determined
Lena as she travels, neither coming nor going, simply moving. Immediately
the book draws into her past, relating events leading up to this point,
explaining her motives. One gets a definite feel for her character, and
settles into her narrative, but as soon as this happens, the book switches
gears, turning instead to a vague character, Joe Christmas. With littl .....
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Frankenstein: Morality
Words: 773 - Pages: 3.... creation he may be endangering others. "The miserable monster whom I had created," (pg.152) says Victor upon looking back at his work. If there is another monster there will be twice the power and possibly twice the evil, which could hurt or kill his family. When and if Frankenstein commits the moral sin of creating another monster he may be rid of both monsters forever. "With the companion you bestow I will quit the neighbourhood of man,"(pg 142) promises the morally corrupt monster to the doctor upon the completion of his partner. When the doctor, if and when he, finished his first creation's mate there is a chance that the monsters wil .....
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Evaluation Of Plato’s Allegory Of The Cave
Words: 300 - Pages: 2.... in the text, “People are happy in their ignorance. They resent those who force them to recognize that they are ignorant”.
Plato's Allegory of the Cave greatly symbolizes man's struggle to reach the light of knowledge and the suffering of those left behind who are forced to sit in the dark of their ignorance and stare at shadows on a wall. I think the problem is with those who choose to stay in the dark. People are afraid, why, or is it simply that they are not ready? For the truth and reality both require change. People can only learn and acquire knowledge through reasoning and open-mindedness. I believe that some people just .....
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Summary Of Nathaniel Hawthornes "The Scarlet Letter"
Words: 1386 - Pages: 6.... opens, Hester
is leaving the prison to take her position on the scaffold. She wears the
scarlet letter and carries with dignity her three-month-old daughter Pearl.
As Hester endures this public disgrace, Roger Chillingworth, an old man new
to the village, asks members of the crowd about her and learns as much of
her story as is commonly known. When he asks the identity of the child's
father, he discovers Hester has refused to divulge this information. From
the balcony overlooking the scaffold, the young Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale
also asks for this information and eloquently appeals to Hester to publicly
name her partner in sin. She refuses .....
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Parallels Between Beowulf And
Words: 826 - Pages: 4.... . . . . . a kingdoms bounty, priceless rings and plated gold a worthy
hoard! (2232-36,2244-46)” In The Hobbit the dragon is introduced by saying: “there he lay, a vast red-golden dragon, fast asleep . . . Beneath him, under all his limbs and his huge coiled tail, and about him on all sides stretching away across the unseen floors, lay countless piles of precious things, gold
wrought and unwrought, gems and jewels, and silver red-stained in the ruby light. (The Hobbit pg.206)” This sounds comparable to a “kings ransom. For some reason people, when they see the dragons treasure, have an uncontrollable urge to steal some .....
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Nine Tomorrows: Will Computers Control Humans In The Future?
Words: 866 - Pages: 4.... story people
would no longer read books to learn and improve their knowledge. People
would rely on the computers rather than "try to memorize enough to match
someone else who knows" (Nine Tomorrows, Profession 55).
People would not chose to study, they would only want to be
educated by computer tapes. Putting in knowledge would take less time than
reading books and memorizing something that would take almost no time using
a computer in the futuristic world that Asimov describes. Humans might
began to rely on computers and allow them to control themselves by letting
computers educate people. Computers would start teaching humans what .....
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Beloved And Don Quixote: Similarities In Themes And Characters
Words: 1655 - Pages: 7.... as a constructed object. The only hope
is somehow to take control, to subvert the constructed identity on order to name
oneself: "She had to name herself. When a doctor sticks a steel catheter into
you while you're lying on your back and you to; finally, blessedly, you let go
of your mind. Letting go of your mind is dying. She needed a new life. She
had to be named" (Don Quixote 9-10). And she must name herself for a man –
become a man – before the nobility and the dangers of her ordeals will be
esteemed. She is to be a knight on a noble quest to love "someone other than
herself" and thus to right all wrongs and to be truly fr .....
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