(“Forward Quotes”). Tzu explains how life is a long series of changes‚ ups and downs‚ and that people should accept the changes they face rather than resist and struggle against the path that was set for them. In Emily Dickinson’s “Because I Could not Stop for Death”‚ the speaker enters into a carriage with Death‚ heading towards their final resting place. Instead of seeing Death as an enemy‚ the speaker sees him as a friend‚ and gracefully accepts their death. Acceptance of an inevitable situation
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otherwise. Finny struggles to accept how things are considering he lives in his own perfect world. Connie put herself in an adult and more mature world when her mentality was still in a young and innocent state. In Night by Elie Wiesel ‚ Where Are You Going‚ Where Have You Been by Joyce Carol Oates‚ and A Separate
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In the story Where are You Going‚ Where have you been reach out to young girls that have family issue and personal issues going on in their life. Connie is a young teenager who is self-centered and thinks that she is a grown women but still has a child mindset. She doesn’t know how much danger she is in by messing with a older man that she barely knew. Connie felt like nobody in the family careed about her so she decided to stay at home instead of going to the family barbecue. She is a shattered
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"Could You Live with Less" Stephanie Mills in her essay "Could You Live with Less" states her opinion about technology. According to this author‚ "technology comes at a serious cost to the planet and most of its people" (Mills 2). It is hard to argue with this author about how we can restrict our needs by using less technology. However Mills believes that technology has a more negative then positive influence in our lives. Mills is proud to live simply‚ restricting herself to technology. This
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Joyce Carol Oates captured more than just the reader when she wrote the story‚ “Where Are You Going‚ Where Have You Been.” Oates recreates an event that took place in the mid-1960s‚ where a grown man‚ who had shaggy black hair and a boyish charm‚ would lure teenage girls into his car‚ rape and murder them‚ and then bury their bodies in the desert. The fate of the main character in “Where Are You Going‚ Where Have You Been” lies between Oates’s wavering suspense. From the beginning Oates shows the
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Because I Could Not Stop for Death” by Emily Dickinson gives insight on mortality from the perspective of the immortal. Death is personified as a gentle man who eases the speaker into the afterlife. The poem is full of intricate and subtle symbolism revolving around mortality and the world in which the speaker is leaving. Death is introduced early in the poem‚ in lines 1-2. It is used as an extended metaphor throughout the poem. Death is first personified when it shows “him” stopping for someone
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In the short story “Where Are You Going? Where Have You Been?” by Joyce Carol Oates‚ Connie’s house illustrates irony because of the changes that occur in Connie’s behavior towards her mom throughout the story. At the beginning of the story‚ Connie epitomizes a normal teenager’s feeling towards her parents‚ especially feelings towards her mother when at home. “Connie’s mother kept picking at her until Connie wished her mother was dead and she herself was dead and it was all over‚” (492). With
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The nineteenth-century poets wrote on the diverse topics such as death‚ whose effects have been explored in a number of ways. Considering Emily Dickinson‚ she abundantly uses the death theme in her poem "Because I Could Not Stop for Death." Dickinson portrays demise as the gentleman that comes to offer an eternity ride to the speaker‚ thereby developing an unusual death interpretation throughout the poem. Through accurate literary‚ the defined style of writing and a dramatic imagery theme‚ the author
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Where Are You Going‚ Where Have You Been? Innocent‚ young‚ naïve; this is how Connie was at her age of fifteen. She liked the attention boys gave her and how it made her feel. A man named Arnold Friend‚ whose much older than her‚ has stalked Connie and wants to convince her to go for a ride in his car. Connie doesn’t notice the man’s older features and this causes her young mind to contemplate going with Arnold in his car. Connie is more conflicted with herself‚ she battles to make the right choices
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English 11 “From Now‚ to Than” Where has the time gone? It’s already the end of my junior year 17 years young and almost a senior! I can’t even believe it myself. I remember my first year being a freshman thinking that 2014 is a long time away! Now that’s 2013 and only a year away. High school goes so by so fast I can barley recall it. So they say high school is suppose to be the time of your life‚ it’s seriously the hardest and most stressful time. I can’t wait to be standing in my graduation
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