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This paper discusses the novel Gone with the Wind. Houghton Mifflin had scheduled the publication of Alice Randall's story, entitled "The Wind Done Gone," in June last year when the lawyers of Margaret Mitchell's estate - represented by Sun Trust Bank -- sought for and obtained a preliminary injunction in April, stopping its publication (Associated Press 2001). Margaret Mitchell was the author of the classic novel and very famous movie, "Gone with the Wind," in 1939 and Alice Randall wrote "The Wind Done Gone" in 2001. The estate's lawyers held that Randall violated the Copyright Law by plagiarizing Mitchell's novel and that it was not simply a case of free speech, as claimed by Randall.
Pages: 10
Bibliography: 13 source(s) listed
Filename: 106 Gone With Wind.doc
Price: US$89.50
1689.111 Romantic Poets.
This paper discusses the various romantic poets such as Rousseau, Douglass, both prose writers; and Whitman, Tennyson and Wordsworth, all three, poets. What bind them together, what is their common denominator? Nationalism, democracy, love for the common man, singing praises for the ordinary man on the street, fighting for the rights of the poor, seeking the liberation of the downtrodden from oppression, glorifying the human being - man! These are elements that are common to them.
Pages: 5
Bibliography: 2 source(s) listed
Filename: 111 Romantic Poets Rousseau.doc
Price: US$44.75
1690.126 Samuel Beckett.
This paper focuses on Samuel Beckett. Samuel Beckett, well-known poet, playwright and novelist on the absurd, was born on Good Friday of 1906 in Foxrock, Dublin in Ireland. He belonged to a middle class Protestant family and sent to the famed Port Royal School in Enniskillen (today Northern Ireland) and to Trinity College in Dublin. He excelled in sports and showed no indications of the bottomless gloom that would characterize his later life and literary works. At the age of 17, he met and got close to Dante, a lifetime literary friend, who figured in Beckett's early works. He was an excellent student of French and Italian at Trinity College, where he also won a prestigious scholarship at the Ecole Normale Superieure in Paris.
Pages: 7
Bibliography: 5 source(s) listed
Filename: 126 Samuel Beckett Playwright.doc
Price: US$62.65
1691.135 Anne Bradstreet.
This is a paper on Anne Bradstreet who was a poet that was deeply attached to her loved ones. A strong connection existed between she and her father, her husband, he children. Her poems illustrate the greatness of her love for her husband; she gives light to a love that withstands time and distance. Everything she wrote was with only the strongest of feelings. Most of her works were written after the death of her father. Perhaps Bradstreet experienced greater freedom to express her deepest personal feelings in her work after his death. During these years, she wrote primarily about her domestic life and her spiritual experiences. Poetry writing enabled Bradstreet to endure the conflicts of her middle years when her affections were not sufficiently weaned from her family to permit her to put the demands of God first. Her craft also made it easier to accept the periods of isolation during her husband's frequent and sometimes long absences while he was on business for the church.
Pages: 4
Bibliography: 6 source(s) listed
Filename: 135 Anne Bradstreet Poet.doc
Price: US$35.80
1692.154 The Bodies in the Canterbury Tales.
In the middle ages, three virtues, the vital, natural, and animal, were believed to control the body. To realize the exact extent of Chaucer's achievement in the Prologue to the Canterbury Tales, we must look at the descriptions he used to describe the bodies of these tales. This paper will take a look at several of Chaucer's bodies and the way in which he unfolds their persona. In all the tales, all human points of view have something to be said for them and something to be said against them. Chaucer's Knight is the personification of those [courtly] ideals, yet he is far more than the lay figure he would be were he that alone; like the other pilgrims taking this April journey to Canterbury, he is flesh and blood. He is one of those exceptional heroes who strive to live according to a great ideal yet who is at the same time understandably and understandingly human.
Pages: 6
Bibliography: 5 source(s) listed
Filename: 154 Bodies Canterbury Tales.doc
Price: US$53.70
1693.216 Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening.
This paper is on a poem by Robert Frost "Stopping By the Woods on a Snowy Evening." If The Road Not Taken is my favorite poem, this would definitely be a close runner up. Frost uses good diction in giving it a very smooth transition from line to line due to its assonance and end rhyme. Although this poem has no direct metaphors or similes, the poem's format and very vivid detail still keeps the reader interested. There are also very few technical features inserted in the poem, the only special addition, (other than the alliteration "dark and deep") like with most of his other poems is the heavy use of symbolism. Like the previous one, it appears to be very simple, but it has a hidden meaning. Someone who has not read much of Frost's work might think that there is no deep meaning, just that people should stop once in a while and spend time with nature, away from the hustle and bustle of cities, but this, although it is one of the minor points Frost is trying to get across to the reader, is not the main one. This could be considered a flaw, or just a marketing tool to get people to read his other poems.
Pages: 9
Bibliography: 1 source(s) listed
Filename: 216 Poem Robert Frost.doc
Price: US$80.55
1694.235 The Power of a Romantic Drama.
This paper discusses the power that can be found in romantic drama. Drama has a way of being is quite powerful. It has the power to transform us; it can convey serious messages, lighten the load of even more serious situations, and make us feel not alone even when we truly are. Romantic drama especially has the power to transform. There is no one that is not touched by the power of love or lifted by the rivets of a powerful drama. The More the Merrier, while filled with many other facets of drama, is that medium we look to change us.