career?
career?
He thought as a consequence for him loving Martha more than his men, Ted Lavender had died. The morning after Lavender died, Lieutenant Cross burned Martha's letters and the two photographs. He believe the gesture was stupid but also sentimental. He realized he couldn't burn the blame, that Lavender was dead. Even though the letters were burned they were still in his head, he could still picture Martha playing volleyball. He then decided he hated her. Love, but still hated. I guess he loved her even if he hated her.…
“I’d hate to have men comin’ into my kitchen snoopin’ around and criticizing (Glaspell)”, Martha Hale said testily. Martha Hale is a minor character in a short story by Susan Glaspell “A Jury of Her Peers. She is at a friend’s house with her husband, the county sheriff, and his wife looking for motives to a murder. Martha Hale cares about other’s feelings, hates to see things unfinished, and wants to make a difference in Minnie Foster’s life.…
In chapter one the narrator gives insight on a man named Jimmy Cross describes his love for a girl named Martha. Martha is a girl from New Jersey that Jimmy regrets not taking a chance with. Before Jimmy was sent to Vietnam Martha and him were on date that led to Jimmy placing his hand on her thigh, only for her to pull away. Cross did not get to do all that he wished to do with Martha romantically due to his cowardliness and…
Born in 1929, Edith Windsor became a widow following the death of her wife, Clara Spyer in 2009. Edith Windsor was entitled to receive the entire estate left behind by Spyer in her will. Windsor attempted to claim the federal estate tax exemption for surviving spouses, however, due to section 3 of DOMA, the state of Internal Revenue Service failed to recognize the same-sex marriage as legitimate and ordered Windsor to pay estate taxes of $363,053 in order to receive the estate even though the state of New York had recognized the marriage as of 2008. If their marriage had been recognized by the IRS, Windsor would have qualified for the marital exemption and not had to pay any taxes to receive the property. Windsor filed a lawsuit against the federal government in 2012 claiming the lack of tax exemption due to the same-sex status of the marriage to be unconstitutional. The Supreme Court ruled a 5 to 4 ruling in favor of Windsor declaring section 3 of DOMA to be unconstitutional.…
The mightiest movement the world has known in two thousand years. . . is sending out the gladdest message to oppressed humanity that the world has heard since John the Baptist came preaching in the wilderness that the world’s Redeemer was coming to relieve the world’s misery….…
At the beginning of this unit Barbara Jordan states “We, as human beings, must be willing to accept people who are different from ourselves”. In my opinion, I agree to this quote and strongly support it. My reason beginning, is because if we do not accept people who are different from use we will be arguing with every person we see. The reason why I say this is because everyone is different from others. This is why I strongly support Barbara Jordan's statement.…
Women have always been judged, we have been called sensitive, emotional, vulnerable, pathetic, sentimental, and, many other labels invented by society. I mean, is being sentimental a bad thing? No, it’s not, it’s completely normal to have emotions, everyone has emotions. Mary Anne Bell symbolizes how women are capable of being part of a war and finding interest in subjects in which society would consider “Only meant for men”. Tim O’Brien is not a feminist, I believe that he is making an argument discussing how women should be treated equally as men, no gender labels nor excuses. O'Brien says, “If Mary was a man it wouldn't be a big deal”. No matter what gender soldiers are they lose their innocence. War changes soldiers into completely different people and damages them mentally even causing them to commit suicide.…
Daphne Du Maurier’s Rebecca is a story about a mysterious first wife named Rebecca, told from the perspective of an unnamed second wife. While this tale could also be considered a love story, it’s more of a mystery since it slowly reveals a history that a reader won’t expect just from reading the first few chapters. It slowly enlightens everyone about the major characters, from hidden traits and characteristics, to untold stories, which were literally left to settle at the bottom of the sea. What adds to the appeal and mystery of the story is the protagonist -- the unnamed narrator and heroine. By not revealing her name, readers turn their attention towards the titular character Rebecca, and how the whole story revolved around her life and eventual death.…
It was necessary for George to shoot Lennie in the book Of Mice And Men. I can think of many reasons why he had to kill him including Lennie was always getting in trouble and Lennie was mentally ill.…
The death of Lavender has caused Lieutenant Cross to resent ever dreaming about Martha. For example, O’Brien notes that, “He felt shame. He hated himself. He had loved Martha more than his men, and as a consequence Lavender was now dead, and this was something he would have to carry like a stone in his stomach for the rest of the war” (1256). Because of his lack of attentiveness Lieutenant Cross has to carry Lavenders murder with him forever. Cross now realizes how much of a distraction Martha and her letters are, and how he is not a part of her world. He realizes he must rid himself of all distraction to prevent anything like Lavenders death from happening again. To rid himself of Martha, he decides to burn his pictures of her and her letters. O’Brien notes that, “On the morning after Ted Lavender died, First Lieutenant Jimmy Cross crouched at the bottom of his foxhole and burned Martha's letters. Then he burned the two photographs…He realized it was only a gesture…Besides, the letters were in his head” (1259). Lieutenant Cross has to rid himself of Martha so that he and his men can survive. Any distractions, even for a single moment in time can be harmful. Lieutenant cross now knows he was using Martha as a scape goat and it is now time for him to live in his reality and take his job…
She writes letters which never mentions the war or her love for him. Cross takes pride in this and allows himself to become distracted by the thoughts of her. An example of this occurs when he “wonder[s] if Martha was a virgin” (2). Cross was distracted by the thought of Martha; he did not seem to realize that the more he thought of her, the less aware he was of his fellow soldiers. Cross is even willing to go to an extreme degree in order to feel close to her with Martha occurs with the envelope. “He would sometimes taste the envelope flaps, knowing her tongue had been there” (1). He’d do anything just to feel close to her, which was much more than love. Cross is allowing himself to be taken over by the thought of a woman and leave his men…
This quote means that you have many moments in life that are simply just to take up time and carry one throughout the years but memories are much more important and stay in one’s head forever with no time limit. This quote is significant to the two novels Rush Home Road and Kite Runner because each protagonist has a past that they carry with them throughout their years. Their memories of tragedy are with them forever and there is no way of escaping them permanently. In the novels Rush Home Road by Lori Lansens and Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini, the protagonists, Addy and Amir, are constantly drawn back home by recalling difficult memories, through adoption, and with the idea that they have a mission to complete.…
Maycomb has fallen into the norms of segregation, steeped in prejudice, violence and hypocrisy — the mere, simplistic idea of status and power, where your socio - economic class solely determined who you were. I had already entered the war, when I took the case of a negro, when I decided to bypass the status quo. Tom Robinson — a black man charged with the rape of a white girl, in a town blindly divided by race, which story is the jury going to believe — one that falls into the town's notion and expectations or one that breaks the code of acceptable race relations ?…
The Webster dictionary defines the word dream as “A succession of images, ideas, emotions, and sensations”. Many people have different perspectives about dreams. In John Steinbeck's novel Of Mice and Men, George and Lennie set out to achieve their dream of owning a ranch while demonstrating the importance of friendship/companionship, while explaining the power of dreams and the impact they have. Steinbeck has shown throughout the story the bond of friendship is a double-edged sword, because while it can strengthen relationships it can also weaken and destroy them. Steinbeck shows this in the story when George ends Lennie’s life because he looked out for him.…
crumble in this instance, later it is rebuilt by the love that she and Maxim…