6. “ We should be like a couple of hot tomatoes/ but you’re as cold as yesterday’s mashed potatoes”.…
Contemporary youth themes of excessive drinking, drink driving, lack of responsibility and family fragmentation are addressed in this compellingly suspenseful book. When Tom Brennan's brother, Daniel, drink drives and is involved in a car accident, their cousin is paralysed and two people die. Daniel is convicted and gaoled, and the Brennans are forced to leave town. Tom and his sister have to adjust to a new life. His mother remains in bed, his father struggles with their new situation and the debt of his paralysed nephew. There are no easy answers as Tom and his family search and work towards solutions. This fast paced, multilayered…
James Fenton and Carol Ann Duffy are both contemporary poets. Their poems ‘In Paris with You’ and ‘Quickdraw’ both include the themes of the pain of love. This essay compares how the two poets present the pain of love in their poems, exploring things such as imagery, vocabulary and form and structure.…
Lorraine Hansberry, author of the play Raisin in the Sun, creates and develops a clear hero in Raisin in the Sun. This hero is a main character named Walter, and he is the hero of this play because of his actions and characteristics. Hansberry also made various author decisions in which she created literary effects such as surprise. The central idea Walter aids in the development in throughout the entirety of the play are that family is important; this central idea is essential to the development of a hero in Raisin in the Sun.…
In the text ‘’Dougy’’ by James Moloney, there is lots of theme based in this book. I am going to be talking about Racism, Relationship and Stereotypes. Out of three things the most important is Racism to black people because this book is mostly based on white and black community. I choose this three themes is because in this book they play a big role in it.…
“As more individuals are produced than can possibly survive, there must in every case be a struggle for existence, either one individual with another of the same specie, or with the individuals of distinct species, or with the physical conditions of life.”…
The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini is inundated with the phrase “for you a thousand times over” (__). It plays a major role in the life of the main character, Amir. The quote first arises when Amir is young. Later, it resurfaces in the forms of dreams and an acquaintance that gradually change Amir for the better. In the final section of the book, Amir himself uses the quote and invokes a defining moment for his life. The saying “for you a thousand times over” fills Amir with first pain, then guilt and finally what he needs, healing (__).…
1. ” ’But the Director’s old; lots of people are old; they’re not like that.’ ‘That’s because we don’t allow them to be like that. We preserve them from diseases. We keep their internal secretions artificially balanced at a youthful equilibrium...’“ (Huxley 110-111). In this excerpt it can be determined that Lenina is incapable of acknowledging the fact that people can appear physically aged. This is due to the reason that the World State does not allow it to happen through a series of scientific methods, which is meant to benefit the society.…
|CH 1 – “The quest consists of five things: (a)a quester, (b) a place |In this passage, the author is stating that all “quest” stories have |…
What is true happiness? This is an important question that is related to Brave New World, a novel by Aldous Huxley. This book was written right after the first automobile was mass-produced, the Model T Ford. This assembly line production sparked Aldous' mind into thinking if humans were produced in the same way. When Aldous imagined this he thought that the world would be quite different and he decided to write a satire on present day culture. He thought that a world like this would be in a certain state of happiness. The residents of World State A.F. 632 are not truly happy. Instead they live a life of instant gratification, or a fleeting moment of happiness that ends quickly. Also they have no adversities in their life so they are never truly…
Marriage is when two people who love each other come together to form a special bond. However, perception and reality of marriage couldn’t be more different. Although Hera is widely known for being jealous and violent, she is in fact a victim. She is a victim of being mistreated by Zeus and misunderstood by most people when indeed Hera is one of the most influential goddesses of all time. She embodies perfectly the characteristics of pride and honor. Hera should not be remembered just for being envious and vengeful, but worshiped for being the queen of all gods.…
4. "I am the Emperor!" cried Harrison. "Do you hear? I am the Emperor! Everybody must do what I say at once!" He stamped his foot and the studio shook.…
Both Keats and Longfellow were poets during the Romantic period. The two compose poems in which they reflect on their inability to live up to their creative potential and the idea that death could intervene at any moment. Longfellow is disappointed in his failures and sees comfort in the past rather than an uncertain future. Moreover, Keats fears he won’t accomplish all that he wants, but sees possibility and realizes his grievous goals won’t be important after death. While Longfellow’s tone is fearful, Keats’ is appreciative and hopeful about what life has to offer right now. In both poems, the poets use the literary devices parallelism and symbolism, to depict their particular situation in their own lives, while also using diction with characteristics of romantic poetry, reflecting their time period.…
Humanity’s ungraspable longing for a sense of permanence such for beauty, aging and love, acquires tones of both contemplation and despair such seen in The Wild Swans At Coole. This reception of despondency is portrayed in the juxtaposition by the “sore heart” of an “aging poet”, with the “brilliant creatures” whose “hearts have not grown old”. In addition to this physical pain, it is the sense of loss that signifies humanity’s desire for something that is lasting. Yeats clearly admires the nature; especially the “autumn beauty”, as he “counts” his “nineteenth” one. The water imagery throughout described as detailed observations of “brimming” and his careful observations of the swans displays his meditation and appreciation through nature, but then echoes his envy towards their beauty and apparent immortality being different to himself. Yeat’s life develops symbolically as a “woodland path”- eventually becoming metaphorically “dry” and miserable. This portrays a sense of reflection as time passes, looking back, showing that Yeats “unwearied still” holds onto his desire to love, despite already knowing it is unaquirable as it has…
Beauty and evil cannot come much closer than when being in the same quote, and much of Keats’s work is pockmarked with references to these two seemingly unrelated conditions, and I feel is notable, if not key, to much of Keats’s work. In a way it could be said to symbolise Keats’s “bitter-sweet melancholy”; the idea which all the Romantics referenced, and which Keats literally lived, with the fact that he had just met the love of his life, and was just coming to prominence, but at the same time would soon be claimed by tuberculosis. The beauty of his work, and his perceived beauty of Fanny Brawne, verses the evil of his disease would be praying heavily on his mind and as such it was an inevitability that it would percolate through to his work.…