The Code of Hammurabi Hammurabi was a ruthless leader who killed and hurt hundreds of people for their mistakes. Hammurabi was a powerful king in a small city state called Babylon which was the capital of the kingdom of Babylonia. Hammurabi took power in 1792 B.C. for 42 years and had brutal rules with lots of power. Hammurabi´s code is not just because the laws that he has made are too harsh,and why should diffrent people get punished more than others, finally Hammurabi should not have that much power.…
As the sun set on the last bonfire of the year, the kids all gathered around, waiting for Billy Black’s famous campfire stories. The weekend prior Halloween meant his tales would make even the bravest would shiver in fright as they huddled in a tight group, listening attentively as his voice echoed through the night air with only the crackling fire to interrupt him.…
The whites as a typical family “living in an isolated area”. One gloomy night they get an…
The bad man in African American folklore came about in the postbellum period, after the civil war. During this time, many plantations adopted the sharecropping system, this entailed former slaves living on site and tending crops on the “very same plantations where they and their parents had been slaves” (Starr and Waterman, 33). There had also been a rise in groups such as the Ku Klux Klan that supported violence targeted towards the African American community. The bad man served to be a figure that was “celebrating the courageous and often rebellious exploits of black heroes” (Starr and Waterman, 33). Bad men stood up for the African American community, they were tough and confronted and overcame their obstacles. “The bad man in black folklore did provide emotional catharsis, an understandable reaction to racism, but they also offered hard lessons about the effects of violence within African American communities” (Starr and Waterman, 33). It provided a character that showed that African Americans could survive and come out victorious.…
The Logan children don't have the energy or enthusiasm at the beginning of chapter 4 because of what Cassie saw. Cassie saw the night men at their house so told her siblings which frightened them. In Roll of Thunder Hear My Cry on page 68, it states, " ... the vision of ghostly headlights soaked into my mind and an uncontrollable trembling racked my body." Cassie went outside because she thought her brothers were out there and soon noticed it was her dog, but on her way back to her room she saw headlight come up and stop in front of her house. The headlights frightened her because they were the night men, she told her brothers and they are now scared which is why they are not…
That their are safe houses and routes to take to get to the North. The men listened to the woman and her husband and they followed the route to the North. The men were running through the dark gloomy woods when they hear a man go “hey get over here,” and they just kept running and running and got out of site of the man. The next morning the men ended up in the North and escaped and were now free. Trey and the rest of the men met some people in the North and explained their story to them, and what had happened to other slaves that were on his plantation, and that Michael the slave owner was the meanest man they’ve ever seen and they explained what he did to slaves that didn’t listen. The people Trey and the rest of the men met helped them start a new life and get them started in a new life of freedom and decisions that they can make on their own and not be told what to do like Michael would do when they were slaves. All in all, these men were now free and were very satisfied, for how they got free, and they fought very hard for that freedom and they believed in…
Further on, the author dwells on the main reason of the black man’s coming – to meet with Sarah. The author introduces Mother, the hostess of the house, where Sarah worked and lived. When she opened the door, she saw that black stocky man, who looked very respectfully. He asked for the permission to see Sarah, but the girl (being very resentful) refused to see him. The author points out the fact that Mother was outraged when she saw the black man in the kitchen, kneeling beside the carriage and staring at Sarah’s baby. She asked him to…
My father-in-law, Robert E. Brown, a prolific storyteller, grew up in Bradley, South Dakota, a railroad town servicing the surrounding farming community on the eastern Dakota prairie. Although his childhood encompassed the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl eras, his anecdotes didn’t dwell on the hardships. Rather, he recalled and passed on fond memories of these years. Several of his stories recounted events regarding mischievous activities carried out by the males from Bradley. Boys will be boys.…
In symbolism he uses the word night to foreshadow that death is near or to help explain how terrifying something was. In setting he talks about the camps he visited and all the places he stayed. He explains how all the places he stayed got worse and worse and the story went on and he used the symbol night to help paint a picture for the reader. In the tone of the book, he didn't add any humor or comedic relief to show that everyone there was scared for their life and their families lives. Using all these stylistic elements to help show the pain and missouri he went…
Atticus Finch tells his children that it’s a sin to kill a mockingbird. The metaphor is only stated a couple of times, but the meaning is relevant throughout the book. As the story progresses, it’s easier to understand what that meaning is. So, what is it and why is it used?…
Most of the kids wake up and run to get their parents to start opening up presents under the tree. But in the Houses of the Robinson’s, the Ware’s, and the Lester’s none of this joy was happening, and there were no kids waking up the parents wanting to open their presents. Instead, there were tears and frantic calls to the police and 911 and to everyone they know around town because the kids were missing.Everything in the houses looks normal, no signs that they had gotten kidnaped or that they had run away. All of the kid’s beds are made perfectly as if they had not even gotten into bed the night before and the air in the rooms felt still and cold. All of the kids missing are boys and all of them are only kids except for ten-year-old Titus Ware, he has a younger brother who is 8. Titus sleeps in the same room as his brother, Tristan, who claims to his crying parents that he saw Santa during the night. Both of the parents ignore what he is saying, they too focused on the phone call with the police describing what Titus looked like. The day is dark for those three families who's kids were missing, while other families have joy and thanks for this day of…
The story of Young Goodman Brown takes place in the town of Salem, Massachusetts, and the forest surrounding the town. Salem became famous for its witch tr1ials and the evil lurking within its forests. Forests are best known for being places of evil, “Satan’s playground”, for “There may be a devilish Indian behind every tree,” (Hawthorne 1). Night itself is considered to be the time when evil lurks about. The night and the forest represent the unknown, and the darkness lurking within every person. The story of Young Goodman Brown commonly describes the path Brown takes, winding its way through the forest, in and out of trees. “He had taken a dreary road; darkened by all the gloomiest trees of the forest, which barely stood aside to let the narrow path creep through, and closed immediately behind… he passed a crook of the road.” (Hawthorne 1). Crooks in the road and narrow winding paths symbolize both good and bad choices. The two routes long and complex, but some may show the way out, while others drag many people farther into the forest, deeper into the grip of Satan. The evils of uncertainty easily temp people when they are unsure of the world around them. “At one extremity of an open space, hemmed in by the dark wall of the forest, arose a rock, bearing some rude resemblance either to an altar or a pulpit, and surrounded by four blazing pines, their tops aflame, their stems untouched, like candles at an evening meeting.” (Hawthorne 5). The dark wall that surrounds the edge of the clearing represents the location of the clearing in the depths of the forest, still in the realms of evil. For example, Hansel and…
When words are not an option to describe someone what else might one use to represent themselves? In some ways each individual has little qualities that define them as a person and distinguishes them from other people. But also images can play an important part of telling a lot about someone because there is always a story behind an image. Many images come to mind when thinking of things that represent who I am. The imagery I would include in my metaphoric portrait would be a stage, Disney World, and a plane.…
The purpose of the men is to reinforce that segregation is a big deal. One instance is the bathrooms. Helene arrives at the station expecting there to be a bathroom stall. “While Helene looked about the tiny stationhouse for a door that said COLORED WOMEN”. She then realizes where the bathrooms for colored people are when she finds the lady that was on the train. “She looked around for the other woman and seeing the hop of her head rag in the grass,slowly realized where “yonder” was.” Another purpose the men served was to show that males have more liberty than women. They were able to look at women anyway they wanted and nobody would scold them. “ She never felt a stir as she passed the muddy eyes of the men.” The men in the story represent…
The opening paragraph of the story contains a metaphorical passage: "I stared at it in the swinging light of the subway car, and in the faces and bodies of the people, and in my own face, trapped in the darkness which roared outside"(349). This reference is significant because it is a contrast to the dismal society that the narrator and his brother Sonny live in. The darkness is the portrayal of the community of Harlem that is trapped, in their surroundings by physical, economic, and social barriers. The obvious nature of darkness has overcome the occupants of the Harlem community. The narrator, an algebra teacher, observes a depressing similarity between his students and his brother, Sonny. This is true because the narrator is fearful for his students falling into a life of crime and drugs, as did his brother. The narrator notes that the cruel realities of the streets have taken away the possible light from the lives of his brother and his students. The narrator makes an insightful connection between the darkness that Sonny faced and…