The Scarlet Letter and The Crucible - Comparison of Proctor and Dimmesdale The decisions made by the character John Proctor‚ in The Crucible‚ and by Arthur Dimmesdale‚ in The Scarlet Letter‚ were very much alike. Throughout the entirety of both books‚ the similarities and differences between these two male characters‚ and the environments in which they lived‚ seemed to reflect back and forth quite generously. Also‚ the societies in which John Proctor and Arthur Dimmesdale lived in have a fair amount
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In his speech‚ John Kasich talks about how is father was a mailman and how he carried mail on his back. His father knew everybody on his mail route and how he would celebrate with everybody from birthdays to funerals. His grandfather worked in the coal mines and the government would rip him off from the paychecks. His grandfather had no control and the government could take advantage of him. John says the town he grew up in‚ people found they were out of work. People don’t have a decent wage increase
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The Nobel Prize winner for literature‚ John Steinbeck‚ in his novel‚ The Grapes of Wrath‚ illustrates the hardships of the migrant farmers as they moved from their homes. Steinbeck’s purpose is to establish how much the Joads and other migrant farmer families struggled during their journey and to . Through the use of personification‚ allusions and symbols‚ Steinbeck successfully gets his message across to his readers. As Uncle John makes his way down to the “boiling stream”‚ he finds a spot
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Letter from Birmingham Jail (Rhetorical Strategies) Since ancient times‚ promoters of justice have brought into play rhetorical strategies to persuade their opponents. On April 16‚ 1963‚ Martin Luther King Jr. wrote a letter regarding the criticism several clergymen made‚ stating that the movements of nonviolent resistance to racism from Dr. King were “unwise and untimely”. In this letter King uses several rhetorical strategies but mainly he makes use of 3. In the first one‚ King uses an outside
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John Smith’s 1616 Letter to Queen Anne of Great Britain: Most admired Queen‚ The love I bear my God‚ my King and country‚ hath so oft emboldened me in the worst of extreme dangers‚ that now honesty doth constrain me to presume thus far beyond myself‚ to present your Majesty this short discourse: if ingratitude be a deadly poison to all honest virtues‚ I must be guilty of that crime if I should omit any means to be thankful. So it is‚ that some ten years ago being in Virginia‚ and taken prisoner
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what John Downe did in order to find a better life for his family. In John Downe’s letter to his “dear wife” he enlightens her about a country in which “… poverty is unknown.” In hopes he convince her to emigrate to America with their children. Downe begins his essay illustrating some of his first pleasant encounters upon entering the United States. He tells about the kindness of the farmer whom brought Downe to see a factory and then took Downe to his home to dine with him. Presumably Downe had
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Letters from an American Farmer Rhetorical Analysis The movement of human beings has been a major part of the world for thousands of years. Whether it is the conquistadors who explored South America or the Africans who were brought to the United States‚ migration has played an important role in the world as we know it today. America was built solely by immigrants and in his 1782 collection of essays‚ Letters from an American Farmer‚ J. Hector St. John de Crèvecoeur defines what it truly means
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John Singer “The memories of his friend changed in his mind so that he could remember nothing that was wrong or foolish- only the wise and the good. He saw Antonapoulos sitting in a large chair before him. He sat tranquil and unmoving. His face was inscrutable. His mouth was wise and smiling. And his eyes were profound. He watched the things that were said to him. And in his wisdom he understood.” (McCullers‚204) This excerpt is narration of the character John Singer‚ where he explains how his
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beliefs‚ and it’s demonstrated all throughout the “Letter from a Birmingham Jail”. In his letter‚ Martin writes to a clergyman where he finds out that his nonviolent protest movements have been accused of being “extreme.” Whenever he responds back to the clergyman’s accusation‚ he employs rhetorical strategies. However‚ not only are these rhetorical strategies being employed when he’s responding to the accusation‚ but they can be seen throughout the letter. At the start of
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Kristina Perona Mrs.Borgmeyer AP Language & Composition September 11‚ 2014 John Winthrop’s Plea for a Godly Lifestyle in New England John Winthrop plead for the English Puritans that were traveling to New England to lead that of a godly lifestyle in the colony. Being a leader in founding Massachusetts Bay Colony‚ Winthrop hoped to see it flourish and wanted the Puritans to know what God would expect of them. Winthrop gets his point across by using beseeching diction to display his tone
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