The court case was about The Ransom Of Red Chief. The teams defended the witnesses such as Red Chief, Sam, Bill. The prosecuting team believed that Bill didn’t get kidnapped by those two kidnappers. The defense team believed that Bill was mentally challenged and Red Chief did harm his kids and abuse the cat. The prosecuting team said that Red Chief was hounded down by those two kidnappers and lured in by some candy that they had hidden. They conjointly believed that they put her in a bag and yielded her into a little shed. The prosecuting team won the case by way of evidence. I believe that the defense team should have won by way of evidence from the trial.…
iii. The judge at the end of the story states the fact that it to always clear between right and wrong. The judge declares that the more Anna donates to Kate, the more her value of life deteriorates, and the fewer donations she gives, the sooner Kate will die. In this mutual relationship, it is hard to recognize which is the better good, and that is the point in which the Judge is trying to make. In the end, they come to the conclusion there is no right…
Although only one of the stories has a justified reason for revenge, the plot of both stories create a sense of suspense that lead up to the deaths of the unfortunate, Fortunato and wealthy college drop out, Richard Strout.…
Slow And steady wins the race Is a common theme. Theme is the lesson or moral in a story, novel or movie. The movie Home Alone And the short story Ransom of Red Chief have several common themes. The first theme for home alone And Ransom of Red Chief is…
In peace like a river, guns are a symbol used for taking authority into your own hands. When guns are used in the book, there is always a sense of power belonging to whoever is wielding the gun.…
In the “Masque Of Red Death” by Edgar Allen Poe, Poe uses imagery and symbolism to create an allegory that communicates to the reader the idea that nobody is able to escape death. In the story, Prince Prospero and his royal friends seclude themselves away from a plague called red death that is killing every poor soul it comes in contact with. As the royals entertain themselves with a masquerade, red death himself arrives at the party, finishing up of what's left of human civilization. Now the first thing that is found that creates imagery and symbolism is a line in the story that says,”While the chimes of the clock yet ran, it was observed that the giddiest grew pale”.(Poe pg.5) This shows a symbol of a black grandfather…
3.) In contrast to Roderick Usher, the narrator presents himself as someone who values a.) reason b.) money c.) nature d.) a juicy horror tale…
4)The old man and the lady say that they heard the boy screaming at his father saying "I'll kill you" but that doesn't really mean he actually killed him since people say that phrase all the time but don't really mean it and that was proved when juror number three has and outburst and say's "I'll kill you" to juror number eight.…
The Masque of the Red Death by Edgar Allan Poe is the story of Price Prospero’s attempt to quarantine himself and his courtiers from the deadly disease, the Red Death. One of the major themes in the short story is: No one can escape death, not even the rich and powerful. To convey this message, Poe used symbols to express the images of wealth, power, control, vanity, the stages of life, and the inevitability of death. Two of these symbols are explained below.…
The universal theme, no one can escape death, is displayed in “The Masque of the Red Death” by Edgar Allan Poe. In this story, Prince Prospero threw a masquerade to distract him from the pestilence that was The Red Death. His guests were worried about the plague getting to them and killing them all, and they tried forgetting about it. Eventually, The Red Death came and everyone, including the prince, was killed. This theme is not just found in this story, it appears in other places. The universal theme, no one can escape death, is found in “The Masque of the Red Death” as well as in The Fault in Our Stars by John Green and in the “Book of Psalms”.…
a) Nelson’s hanging: Husband stole cow, son killed & shot deputy. Woman and son hung from bridge (pg. 7)…
2) Q: In chapter four and five, the boys steal food because they are starving. We usually consider this “acceptable” theft, but the boys stole from other people who didn’t have much food. What was your reaction to this? Was it unavoidable?…
During the past few weeks, the young Red Guard had bring the revolution to the climax. All schools were closed, and students had taken all the streets as the Red Guard. They walked tall as Chairman Mao had told them “ The lower-middle class will lead everything, and everything about the four old has to be destroyed.” The Red Guard destroyed everything about the four olds ( old thinking, old custom, old culture, and old habit.) They walked in the streets, and sang the revolution songs. The buildings around them were old, and some stores had destroyed by the “Builders of the new world” which was the Red Guard. They were posted the da-zi-bao around the streets and buildings. Those da-zi-bao were all talked about destroy the four olds. There were…
Silhouetted against the backdrop of a war-torn Troy, David Malouf’s Ransom explores the inner conflict and grief caused by the loss of loved ones. The rage of Achilles, so central to the dramatic structure of the Illiad, is portrayed by Malouf as an expression of the most deeply instinctive, primal emotions, unmediated by cultural or social code, an innate human response in its most raw “animal” state. The depths of Achilles’ rage, his refusal to be consoled after the death of Patroculus is mirrored in the pain felt by Priam - the sense of loss that he experiences is no less intense. Throughout his novel, Malouf explores the idea that men from starkly different backgrounds can be united through common experience and their underlying humanity the most explicit of these experiences, which all men feel is pain and anguish resulting from the death of a loved one. Malouf suggests that the death of a loved one is a harrowing affair, plunging men into a ‘clogging grey web’, which can only be liberated through the expression of self and the connection to one’s true humanity. The power of death as a common experience for mortals is further compounded as Malouf advocates that men, even from different socio-economic backgrounds can forge a connection based on their similar emotions, as depicted through Priam’s connection with the ‘ordinary’ carter, Somax. Death, as the final experience of all mortals, is shown to be able to catalyse deeply human connections between men, through which Malouf draws an allusion to the cyclical nature of life and death.…
Walking late down Fifth Avenue, I saw him ahead of me, on the dim stretch of sidewalk between two arc-lights. It was biting cold. Head sunk between hunched-up shoulders, hands in his pockets, he shuffled along, never lifting his feet from the ground. Even as I watched him, he turned, as if in a daze, and leaned against the wall of a building, where he made an angle out of the wind. At first I thought it was shelter he sought, but as I drew nearer I discerned the unnatural stiffness of his legs, the way his cheek pressed against the cold stone, and the glimmer of light that played on his sunken, closed eyes. The man was asleep!…