In London‚ England‚ on February 6‚ 1913‚ Mary Douglas Leakey was born. Her original name was Mary Douglas Nicol. She had no siblings and two parents who were Erskine Nicol‚ a scenery painter‚ and Cecilia Frere Nicol. Due to her father’s work‚ the family moved frequently. Quite a bit of her initial adolescence was gone through voyaging abroad with her parents through mostly Europe and some parts of Africa. This made her develop a dedication both for prehistory and drawing. Mary’s powerful fondness
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Kierkegaard discusses the Virgin Mary to compare the greatness of Abraham to that of Mary‚ and to further emphasize the distinction between tragic hero and knight of faith. He writes‚ “for she was no heroine and he no hero‚ but both of them became greater than that‚ not by any means by being relieved of the distress‚ the agony‚ and the paradox‚ but because of these (Kierkegaard 94).” Mary‚ like Abraham‚ is tested by God through her virgin birth. The indignity put upon Mary resembles Abraham’s ethical
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This essay was interesting‚ however it lacked a few details that could help readers better profit Mary Patterson. This essay allowed the ideas for pro-life stance to be explained without offending anyone or discouraging those who do support pro-choice. Abortion is always a touchy subject because people are always very passionate about it‚ but this essay didn’t necessarily take a stand on a side. The essay only highlighted what one individual did to help her cause and what motivated her actions.
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Mary Surrat’s Punishment Mary Surrat stood on the pavilion. A trap door below her feet‚ and strong knotted
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Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote “Old Ironsides” in 1830‚ shortly after hearing the news that they were demolishing the Constitution. It was an emotional time for him‚ so he proceeded to write this poem as a protest. This poem consists of twenty-four lines with three stanzas. It’s an iambic pentameter and the rhyme scheme is ABCBDEFD; ABABCDED; then ABCBDEFE. The theme is centered on the idea that pride and glory are associated with death. This poem is telling a touching story of the decision to dismantle
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Humanity continues to be confronted by universal dilemmas‚ and such‚ texts will explore the human experience despite differing contexts. Mary Shelley’s Gothic epistolary novel‚ Frankenstein (1818)‚ written at a time of tension between paradigms of Romantic idealism and Enlightenment rationalism ultimately questions the legitimacy of scientific advance at the cost of human connection. It explores the challenge to normalcy and the tensions between nature and civilisation that promulgate humanity’s
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Oliver Cromwell was the second ruler of England after Charles the 1st execution. He did not want to take the title King so he became the Lord Protector. He became a ruler only because of how corrupt the parliament was. He was a very religious man he was a puritan and he thought that everyone should live their lives in his example‚ as a puritan he believed that if you worked hard you would go to heaven and pointless enjoyment was a bad thing. This was the reason for why he shut down a lot of inns
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The Okefenokee Swamp is certainly an interesting and intriguing place to learn about regardless of how you see it‚ but the reality and facts of the swamp can be interpreted to give different perspectives and meanings of the place. This is evident in the two unique and stylistically different passages describing the Okefenokee Swamp. In passage one‚ the style of the writing is for the most part‚ factual. Passage one focuses on providing the un-tinted facts about the swamp without trying to incur any
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The challenging and complicated lives of women in the 1930s are explored in the novel‚ The Group‚ by Mary McCarthy as 8 Vassar students struggle through their first 7 years of adulthood after college graduation. Through the lives of these women‚ the readers experience firsthand the political‚ social‚ and economic discrimination women went through in the early twentieth century. The group of friends grow apart as the years go by‚ but a funeral for one of their own ends the book with the remaining
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subject‚ or of themselves. Currently on view at the Blanton Museum of Art‚ Guercino’s Mary Magdalena (c. 1637) and Natalie Frank’s Snow White V (2011-14) overtly depict an image of death‚ yet both of the artworks’ ambiguous context are not completely distinguishable to the audience. Guercino utilizes elements similar to the characteristics of the Italian Renaissance and Baroque era in his painting titled‚ Mary Magdalena‚ to portray an idealized image of a woman. Immediately‚ the audience is drawn
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