In the writing “Joyas Voladoras” by Brian Doyle at the end of paragraph 3 and the beginning of paragraph 4 the shift goes from talking about hummingbird hearts, to talking about the blue whale heart. Before the shift Brian was talking about how many heart beats we spend in a lifetime and used shorter sentences, for example stating “It's expensive to fly”. You burn out. You fry the machine. You melt the engine.”…
Cabeza de Vaca: Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca was born in Jerez de la Frontera in the Southern parts of Spain. Cabeza de Vaca enrolled in the Spanish military as a mature man and battled with honor at the clash of Ravenna in 1512 in Italy. Due to his military assistance to the Spanish crown at that time and then well along throughout a short-lived civil war in Spain he earned the promotion as bookkeeper or also known as accountant and a lieutenant in the mission of Panfilo de Narvaez in 1527-1528. Narvaez a small contributor in the victory of Mexico left Spain in 1527 with about 5 ships and with an agreement by Charles V (the Holy Roman Emperor). This bond allowed Narvaez to colonize and land in the area amongst Rio de Las Palmas and Florida.…
In the passage “Joyas Voladoras,” the author Brian Doyle uses the heart as a metaphor to help him communicate his main idea about the differences between life, love, and its state of vulnerability. To start, Doyle uses many examples to display his ideas, but his first example is the hummingbird. He describes how fragile the small bird is by saying, A hummingbird s heart is the size of a pencil eraser. A hummingbird s heart is a lot of the hummingbird. (Doyle)…
The author of the primary source titled “A Short Account of the Destruction of the Indies” is Bartolomé de las Casas, a Spanish colonist, social reformer and Dominican friar from the 16th-century. He became the first resident Bishop of Chiapas, the first officially appointed Protector of the Indians and was also appointed an officer of the King of Spain in the New World. Based on these positions he held, it could be acknowledged that De Las Casas was higher up on the hierarchy than most of the population. After he held his role as an officer for the king, he was given an estate with native laborers who were who were forced to work for him. Casas had a revelation when he listened…
Do you pray before every meal? Do you ever wonder why you pray before every meal? Well if you didn’t know, you pray before every meal because you show God that you’re thankful for the food you eat everyday. Spanish explorer Cabeza de Vaca prayed before every meal, but he didn’t always have good food to eat. Infact, most of the things he had weren’t very good at all. Here’s some brief background of whom Cabeza de Vaca is. Cabeza de Vaca was a Spanish soldier, but he was also on an expedition to the New World for Spain. Things didn’t go too well for him, as his ship wrecked in Tampa (they were supposed to be in present day Texas). The captain ordered 5 groups of 10 people to go on a raft. In a year of sailing Cabeza and 3 other people were only left. Overnight, Cabeza was separated from the other 3, and washed up on an island he…
Sor Juana Ines De La Cruz was a woman far beyond her years. Living in a time when society was dominated by men, she disregarded the fact that women during this time were forced to be uncurious objects, whose highest achievement in life was to give birth. Her relentless pursuit to attain knowledge and defy her culture's standards for women is illustrated throughout her writings. In the readings, ("Response to the Most Illustrious Poetess Sor Filotes de la Cruz, the three "Romances" and the "Redondillas"), she spills out her beliefs, feelings and pain in forms of symbolic devices and irony in attempt to erase the differences between men and women as intellectual beings, as well as to argue for a woman's right to pursue intellectual activities.…
To conclude, the author uses diction and metaphors to describe the bird’s song. Through the use of these literary devices, the author shows how the birds’ songs are powerful, and how quickly their songs’ end once the sun has fully…
In Julia Alvarez's Yo!, Yolanda Garcia's family and friends get their chance to tell the truth about Yo. They express their feelings and their stories about Yo, including how she's always told lies, how she stole the plot for a story from a student, and how her college professor kept trying to prevent her from ruining her life and her talents. Alvarez tells Yolanda's story through other characters, while Yo is denied the privilege of defending herself. It is ironic because initially, the novel is based on Yolanda and how angry her loved ones are after she publishes a book that exposes personal things about each of them. In this novel, these very people are working to set the story straight and portray the true Yolanda Garcia that they know, a liar, a plagiarist, and a dropout.…
The word “heart trouble” has symbolic meaning in the story. The heart trouble has a…
I chose the poem "Dark swallows will" by Gustavo A. Becquer for this project. The reason I chose it is because I've read a lot of other poems by Bequer and have liked them. His ideas about poetry and love are idealistics; he thinks that love and poetry are like dreams that have a definite shape, a shape that is not satisfactory for him. So when I read this poem, the idea of that god like love called my attention and I found it interesting to analyze it and to find the real message. The theme of love is always associated with poetry, but in this poem we'll find the theme of love as something that "will not return".…
Edgar Allan Poe; through his masterpiece provides access to the life of a narrator who insists on his sanity even after committing murder. The short story dubbed “The Tell- Tale Heart” provides an insightful view of the life of the unnamed narrator who showcases his abhorrence of an old man’s eyes that he describes as reminiscent of a vulture’s. Edgar Allan Poe uses diverse techniques to make the story a memorable piece. The techniques consequently bring out the various themes that feature in the short story. Therefore, the ultimate purpose of this literary work is to provide a conclusive analysis on “The Tell-Tale Heart”.…
When I moved to California eight years ago, I always ask myself “why people think that because we speak Spanish we are from the same country and we are classify as Latinos?” at the beginning it was so offensive that people will ask me “Are you Latina from Mexico or EL Salvador?” and used to get so upset and tell them “No! I am from Ecuador and I am Hispanic”. Despite, the fact that Latinos and Hispanics speaks Spanish as their primer language of communication, this does not mean that we are all from the same country.…
In summation, throughout “The Tell-Tale Heart” Poe personifies the narrator’s guilt as such a thing that slowly deteriorates the mind and opens a door to moral insanity. Between the lines of this Gothic tale Poe uses the continuous beating heart as a symbol for the narrator’s inescapable and eternal guilt. Once the narrator awakened the old man, the beating heart grew to such a volume that he had no choice but to kill him. However after committing the senseless crime the beating heart prevailed causing the narrator to go mad. Consequently, the sound forces the narrator to give himself up to the police because the guilt grew so strong that he could no longer bear for it to be on his conscience. The overall moral of this story certainly teaches…
Our identities are always subject to change as it is strongly linked to our ever- changing surroundings. This concept of identity is reinforced in The Death of the Bird by A.D Hope through the shift in the mood of the poem. The poet’s diction as he depicts the migrating journey of the bird as it travels through the ‘warm passage to the cooling station’ and is ‘sure and safely guided by ‘love’ emphasises the bird’s strong emotional ties to the place where it belongs creating safe and comfortable mood. However, as the poem progresses the bird gets ‘uncertain of her place’ and is portrayed as a ‘vanishing speck in those inane dominions creating the strong visual imagery of a tiny, delicate bird juxtaposed to the harsh condition of its unfamiliar environment emphasising the bird’s vulnerability. The contrast created by this dramatic shift in mood exemplifies how identity is a result of the place you connect to but is susceptible to change once that connection is lost.…
This piece is formulated through an allegory which exists on both a literal and figurative level. Virginia Woolf relates the struggles that a moth, which is so vulnerable to death to the everyday life of the human struggle. Implicitly, Woolf describes the moth to have value like individuals as they try to put a stop to death in the same sense like humans do.…