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    In the story‚ “The Lottery‚” by Shirley Jackson‚ the only point of view used by the author is the dramatic or objective point of view. In this point of view‚ the narrator is an unidentified speaker who reports things in great detail‚ even though the narrator does not play a role in the story. By using such point of view‚ Jackson builds an aura of uncertainty that endures until the dramatic ending of the story. From the beginning of the story‚ the knowledge about the lottery is revealed only by the

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    In the short story “Young Goodman Brown” we are met with the challenge of determining appearance vs. reality. Throughout the story Brown faces many things he does not know to be true or false. Some of these are the symbol of the woods‚ plot of the meeting in the woods‚ and the character of the townspeople. Brown first leaves his home and wife Faith to meet a fellow traveler in the woods. As Brown starts towards the woods his mind is plagued with thoughts of his faith and heaven and getting back

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    with God the Devil lurks near to test what might look like a strong relationship with Christ. As shown in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s "Young Goodman Brown‚" even a grounded‚ sincere Christian can have his or her faith tested. Hawthorne’s story refers to Brown’s travel companion as “the serpent‚” and though the story is allegory based the story itself raises an age old battle that is being fought to this day‚ the great controversy. The Great Controversy as it is formally known

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    Nathaniel Hawthorne’s Use of Allegory In "Young Goodman Brown‚" Hawthorne uses moral allegory to exemplify the story of a young man who is unwillingly separated from his world of purity to become conscious of the extensive wickedness that lives in his world. Allegory is a type of extended metaphor‚ in which objects‚ people‚ and events in a narrative‚ are equal with the implications that extend beyond the story itself. The hidden meaning has ethical‚ social‚ spiritual‚ or political implications

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    Every good story has interesting main characters that the reader can follow. This includes the stories of “Young Goodman Brown” by Nathaniel Hawthorne and “The Black Cat” by Edgar Allan Poe. Both stories have their main characters change towards the end of their respective stories. In addition‚ both stories can be centered around the theme of losing innocence as both characters partake in actions that they thought they would never do or see. In fact‚ both characters are similar in the fact that they

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    “Hills Like White Elephants” calls to mind the “A Game of Chess” section of T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land (1922); like Eliot’s masterpiece‚ Hemingway’s story deals with the sterility and vacuity of the modern world. The boredom of the man and the desperation of the girl reveal the emptiness of the postwar generation and the crucial necessity of taking responsibility for the quality of one’s own life. Hemingway’s characters seem to live in a world without a God‚ without traditions or clear and established

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    The stories "Young Goodman Brown" by Hawthorne and "The Man in the Black Suit" by King are very similar and touch upon many of the same key points in literature‚ including good versus evil and allegory. However‚ they do have their differences‚ which make each story unique and interesting. Both stories are allegorical and have the main theme of good versus evil. They also have prominent characters that help to project the images of the devil‚ and how once encountered with the devil‚ their lives are

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    The Pointless Pursuit of Perfection: Implications of Young Goodman Brown The story of Young Goodman Brown delivers a core underlying message that perfection is impossible‚ and those who expect it are doomed to disappointment‚ as the author repeatedly shows through the presence of the devilish shadow figure and symbolism of the final meeting. The impossibility of perfection is manifested in the dark figure Goodman Brown meets in the forest. This shadowy figure is introduced as an “elder person as

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    bumps into Mme. Forestier‚ and comes to acknowledge that the necklace was fake. So‚ if Mathilde had told the truth right from the beginning‚ she would have never had to buy a diamond necklace and work so hard all these years. Moving on‚ another story that shows conflict is Richard Connell’s “The Most Dangerous Game.” A very good example of an

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    [pic] PEN 0055 Essential English Foundation in Law ONLINE NOTES Reading 1 (Short Stories) A Rose for Emily William Faulkner | When Miss Emily Grierson died‚ our whole town went to her funeral: the men through a sort of respectful affection for a |1 | |fallen monument‚ the women mostly out of curiosity to see the inside of her house‚ which no one save an old man-servant—a | | |combined gardener and cook—had seen in at least

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