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This paper discusses King Henry IV. King Henry IV and the Crown Prince, Hal or Prince Henry, are different personalities, as the play shows at the outset. The King is stately, disciplined and apprehensive about the situation in the kingdom. The Prince, on the other hand, has been wasting his time will vagrants and profligates at the Tavern and seemingly uncaring about the conditions of the kingdom and how his father and England feel about his behavior. But their separate dialogues - Hal's soliloquy in Act 1 Scene 2 and the King's outpouring on his son in Act 3 Scene 2 - reveal that they are alike. in at least the following matters : Both have a deep drive or inclination towards might and adulation.
Pages: 7
Bibliography: 1 source(s) listed
Filename: 97 King Henry IV.doc
Price: US$62.65
1675.100 The Real And The Unreal In The Scarlet Letter.
This paper examines the characters in The Scarlet Letter. As real people often are in actual life, Hawthorne's three main characters - Dimmesdale, Chillingworth and Hester Prynne - are not in their inner world as they seem in the outside world. The two men, at least, have inner agendas they need to camouflage externally. On the other hand, Hester, despite the honesty, humility and penitence with which she accepts the censure and abominations of the people, remains unreadable to them in her unbroken silence as to her secret lover is and all the thoughts and feelings that nestle and wrestle within her and behind the scarlet letter on her chest.
Pages: 6
Bibliography: 2 source(s) listed
Filename: 100 The Scarlet Letter.doc
Price: US$53.70
1676.101 The Guest By Albert Camus.
This paper examines and analyzes The Guest by Albert Camus. This is a story of lamentation where Albert Camus uses symbols alternately with plain language. Everything and everyone in it are everything and everyone in his own world and in the objective universe as he views it. Though sadness, wrath, and rebellion against an oppressive reality, Camus, through his character Daru, triumphs over it by turning compassionate, warm and just towards a victim of the state of things in reality and, thus, larger than that reality. Camus is both the Arab rebel guest and Daru, the schoolmaster. The guest is his personal embodiment : impoverished, sensitive, lost and crushed in a world too big and distant for him. He is an uninvited guest for the night at the deserted school, just like Camus feels about being in this world.
Pages: 4
Bibliography: 2 source(s) listed
Filename: 101 Guest Albert Camus.doc
Price: US$35.80
1677.102 Mother Courage.
This paper focuses on Mother Courage and Her Children. Nothing tests our mettle better than adversity, and there is no adversity greater and more trying than war. This appears to underlie Bertolt Brecht's Mother Courage and Her Children, which is sharply and precisely set against the Thirty Years' War in certain parts of Sweden in 1624 and thereafter. Mother Courage's valor and grit in nurturing her children and sustaining them by keeping her selling business hefty or surviving have been told and re-told, but the undertones never wear out and continue to reverberate how this brave mother- woman- person's instinct to survive leads her to be more than herself in each stroke of tragedy.
Pages: 5
Bibliography: 1 source(s) listed
Filename: 102 Mother Courage Children.doc
Price: US$44.75
1678.15856 "I'm Nobody, Who Are You?": An Analysis.
This three-page undergraduate paper involves a close reading of Emily Dickenson's poem, "I'm Nobody, Who Are You?" The author examines the theme, perspective, and poetic content of the poem, and discusses the poet's view that it is more important to have one true friendship than the shallow acclaim of the crowd. Several quotes from the poem are used to support the author's analysis of the poem's theme, and demonstrate how Dickenson expressed her feelings about human relationships, anonymity, and social status.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 1 source(s) listed
Filename: 15856 Emily Dickenson Poem.doc
Price: US$26.85
1679.15861 "The Mending Wall": An Analysis.
This three-page undergraduate essay evaluates Robert Frost's poem, "The Mending Wall." The author examines Frost's theme of the dynamics of friendships and enmities, discusses the views of the speaker in the poem and his neighbor, and explores the merits of each of their views regarding the function of walls in human relationships. The author then expresses his own views as to whether he agrees with Frost or not, and provides a specific example from his own experience that demonstrates that walls can be good or bad, depending on the neighbor in question.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 1 source(s) listed
Filename: 15861 The Mending Wall.doc
Price: US$26.85
1680.15863 Short Story Analysis.
This three-page undergraduate essay analyzes a short story in terms of plot development, characterization, and theme. The author discusses the literary devices used to advance the story, and comments upon the irony weaved throughout the story as a young wife learns that her husband has been killed, grieves for him, and then begins to discover that she is filled with joy at the thought of a life she can live for herself. The essay incorporates quotes from the short story to support the analysis, and concludes with observations about the story's impact.