Cited: Adams, Richard. Watership Down. Rex Collings, Ltd.: New York, 1972.
Cited: Adams, Richard. Watership Down. Rex Collings, Ltd.: New York, 1972.
For the last couple of weeks I have been reading the novel Watership Down. In the beginning, two brothers, Hazel and Fiver, lived in a rabbit warren. Fiver saw blood in the future and decides to run away from the warren. On their adventure some rabbits join them, in the forest they come across a river and use a board to cross. Later on the group is invited into a strange warren, Bigwig gets caught in a snare and the group, including Bigwig, left. Finally they find a down (hill) to live in. The group realized they needed does and asked a bird, Kehaar, to find another warren. Bigwig went to the other warren to gather some of the does. Bigwig and the does barely escape with their lives.…
Rudderless is a movie of drama- musical which directed by William H. Mancy. Billy Crudup, Anton Yelchin, Felicity Huffman, Selena Gomez are the leading actors. The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival 2014. Sam (Billy Crudup) is a successful businessman who has a college son. A day, at the college there was a shootout, his son dies and his life changes. After that, he lives on a boat at the dock. Any day, he finds a box with several things your child and he finds a collection of music that your son sang and recorded and Sam's life changed again.…
So in the book Of Mice and Men it follows two men named George and Lennie. George and Lennie are best friends and they dream of owning a small farm together. Lennie wants to take care of the rabbits if they get get any. Lennie always asks “Will I be able to tend the rabbits?” (Steinbeck,56).They end up working on a ranch and they both stick out. That’s when most of their troubles started.…
In the novel Watership Down, there are many types of communities, and with those communities comes a different type of government. All three of these governments vary from each other, in how they are set up and how they are ran. Each of the governments in the novel are run by different rabbits, Hazel, Cowslip, and Woundwort. Adams describes each one of these governments with hints about their leaders and their actions. Throughout this novel, the three types of governments that Adams referred to are: Socialist, Dictatorship, and Democracy.…
In the book “Of Mice and Men” by John Steinbeck. George travels everywhere with Lennie. After aunt Clara asked George to take care of him. George is small but an intelligent men and Lennie is a guy with a tremendous size but a mind of a young child. George and Lennie get a job at a ranch, their goal is to earn enough money to buy their own ranch and have many rabbits but not everything comes out as they had imagined it.…
Both rabbits are also very cunning and not afraid to take risks. El-ahrairah is known for his many adventures of outsmarting, escaping, and defeating others no matter how impossible the situation seemed. He would constantly take risks for others but would also takes risks for his own pleasure, showing his confidence in himself. Though Hazel tried to limit his own risks, he was full of courage and carried out plans that many of the rabbits thought risky. He was very cunning and would think of ideas to bring them out of their predicaments, such as setting a dog loose on their enemies or befriending a large bird that would help him in times of need. Both rabbits were willing to give their lives for their people, and in return saved them from destruction.…
In To A Mouse, the poet Robert Burns sympathizes with the mouse, looking at the mouse’s plans, similar to a humans. The mouse had been collecting its nest for months, but taking just one blow to be shattered, much like a human’s dreams. The dreams take much preparing, but in the end, they too can ultimately shatter in one ‘blow’. This is what happens with Lennie and George’s dreams of owning their own land. “An live off the fatta lan’,” Lennie shouted “An’ have rabbits. Go on, George! Tell about what we’re gonna have in the garden and about the rabbits in the cages and about the rain in the winter and the stove, and how thick the cream is on the milk like you can hardly cut it. Tell about that George!”(p.14) ” Their dream was particularly simple, acquire a mere few acres of land and live there, contently for the rest of their lives. Eventually, like the mouse’s home, their dream was shattered all with one ‘blow’.…
The common dream between George and Lennie of an independant rabbit-filled farm life diverges once Lennie’s rabbit-filled mind wanders. Each and every one of Lennie’s requests for George to talk about the rabbits on their dream farm is met with bitterness from George: “The hell with the rabbits. That’s all you ever can remember is them rabbits.” (Steinbeck, 3). George could not care less about the rabbits which is evidently Lennie’s only desire from their dream farm. Unlike Lennie’s rabbit-obsessed mindset , George has the mindset of the American working class in which being independent, owning a farm, and being financially secure is utopia. George’s dream is realistic while Lennie’s lacks any thought outside the realms of soft furry things. As well as distinct dreams, George and Lennie’s individual obstacles are nothing alike. In George’s case pleasure is the greatest adversary: “. . . I could take my fifty bucks and go into town and get whatever I want. Why, I could stay in a cat house all night. I could eat any place I want, hotel or any place, and order any damn thing I could think of. An’ I could do all that every damn month. Get a gallon of whisky, or set in a pool room and play cards or shoot pool” (6). George’s pleasure thieves from him and ensures his perpetual spiral away from his dream. Meanwhile Lennie’s childish lack of in depth thought and awareness is his greatest adversary. This lack causes Lennie to habitually break or kill things unintentionally, or take self-detrimental actions without forethought such as getting him and George chased out of Weed for holding a girl’s soft dress. Lennie’s unusual strength and childish thinking partnered with the forethought and realistic mindset of George does no favours for either…
Watership Down is about a young rabbit named Hazel, his prophetic brother named Fiver, and a whole other list of characters. One day Fiver has a vision that their warren is in danger and persuades Hazel and some other rabbits to leave the warren. Hazel leads them away from the warren and to another one with an odd chief named Cowslip. The group learns that this warren is bad news and abandon it, not knowing what they are going to do or where they’re going. When they come across what is seemingly the perfect hill to set up a new warren, they find themselves in another problem, they have no does.This leads them to a farm where Hazel sets free the does from the farm but not before getting shot in the leg, in which he crawls into a pipe and rests,…
Emily Brown is the lead character in the Emily Brown series of novels by bestselling children’s novelist Cressida Cowell. Cowell wrote the first novel of the Emily Brown series The Rabbit Belongs to Emily Brown in 2006. The novels are picture books with illustrations done by Neal Layton. The picture books are a visual feast of delightful stories following the adventures of Mary Brown the child lead. Most of the stories are about the usual childhood fun themes and a lot not fun themes.…
Lennie’s dream is for George and himself to own a farm; a place that they could call their own. Their farm animals would include rabbits for Lennie to play, pet and keep. Page 18: ‘”Let’s have different colour rabbits George”, “sure we will,” George said sleepily. “Red and blue and green rabbits, Lennie. Millions of ‘em”, “furry ones, George, like I seen in the far in Sacramento.”’…
His clear dream of tending the rabbits on a farm is the strongest element he relishes. “Go on,” said Lennie. “How’s it gonna be. We donna get a little place. Live off the fatta’ the land” Without this dream, his life would be compromised from the inevitable hostility waiting to take its turn. And without George along his side, restricting his strength both physically and mentally, his hope of tending the rabbits on their imaginary farm would never seem possible. His daydreams teach him a discrete difference between what is right and wrong. Lennie’s assertion of a much relished dream constructs an uplift life of fantasies, rather than the ominous reality of…
Perspective. A particular attitude toward or way of regarding something. A different perspective can change how you see the world. In watership down, it gives you the perspective and point of view of life from a rabbit’s eyes. Life is like a garden or a dungeon depending on how you look at it. Perspective is one of the key elements in Watership down and it is why this book should be recommended.…
Steinbeck illustrates the theme “the impossibility of the American dream” through characters on the ranch. George and Lennie have a dream of owning a farm and believe that with hard work, they will successfully own that dream farm. Lennie in particular plans to tend rabbits on this future farms. However, early on, the novella it reveals the dream of having a farm will soon fade away when “the sat as quietly as the little gray, sculptured stones… the sound of footsteps [came]... the rabbits hurried noiselessly for cover,” (Steinback 2). The flee of the rabbits reveals that the rabbit dream will become a distant…
These parts in the story is what I like. In the end the rabbits had a place to live for years to come. It had no harm from humans and there was plenty of food. Also, Kehaar got to go back to his home after helping the rabbits. Although there were many good things these are parts I didn’t like. When Bigwig almost dies in a snare at Cowslip’s warren. I also didn’t like when Cowslip’s rabbits attacked Captain Holly and Bluebell. Many parts were good and some bad, but the book was amazing.…