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    Katerina Klingensmith  Mrs. Drebus   Honors English 10: 7  22 August 2014  Outline   Thesis: The two Aphorisms here are trying to tell you that your life is short and you need to live it to the fullest  before it is too late.   I. “ It is better to die on your feet that to live on your knees”  A. Euripides   1. Born in Athens‚ Greece‚ around 485 B.C. Married a woman named Meleto and had 3 sons.  His family was most likely a prosperous one; his father was named Mnesarchus or Mnesarchide‚ and his 

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    Emily Goodman Dr. Ngezem Engl 2122 31 March 2014 Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde: A Representation of the Duality of Human Nature From the beginning of time‚ stories have been passed down through generations that have depicted the wild adventures of the unorthodox hero. Stories like The Hunchback of Notre Dame‚ where the hated and feared outcast of society becomes a beloved hero. Or in Robin Hood‚ where the thief helps put away the bad guy‚ saves the townsfolk from poverty‚ and gets the girl. The made

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    The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Compared to Dracula Staring London The city of London has had many staring roles in countless pieces of art ranging from paintings to movies to novels. In the story‚ The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde‚ London adds color to the tall of personal discomfort. In comparing that story with Dracula‚ London again has an interesting role in expressing not only how vast London culture is but how vast the cultures range from west to east. Both stories

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    gov/pmc/articles/PMC2738358/ In the novel‚ Stevenson creates a hero in Dr. Jekyll‚ who aware of the evil in his own being‚ and sick of the duplicity in his life‚ succeeds by way of his experiments on himself in freeing the pure evil part of his being as Mr. Hyde‚ so that each can indulge in a life unfettered by the demands of the other. As Dr. Jekyll says‚ “With every day and from both sides of my intelligence‚ the moral and intellectual‚ I thus drew steadily to that truth by whose partial discovery I

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    has been one of the most influential times in English history. In the book "Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde" by Robert Louis Stevenson‚ the author uses images of crime‚ urban life‚ and in heritance to portray the culture of the Victorian Era. The gruesome crimes committed by Mr Hyde reflect the views of his animalistic and lower class way of behavior. The beginning of the story starts of with the introduction to Mr. Hyde by narrating about the first crime that he commits. During this crime‚ Hyde comes upon

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    Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde CA The strange case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde was written in the Victorian Era by Robert Louis Stevenson‚ this novella dwells into the concept of the duality of human nature. The narrative is extremely fragmented structure due to the use of multiple narrators and through the use of mixed media‚ in the form of letters and accounts. The inconsistent structure conveys that of a gothic detective story; which were very popular in the Victorian era. Victorian London at the time was

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    The book Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde made the biggest impact on me. This book was written in the late 1800’s and the theme still has deep meaning today. In my opinion‚ the theme of the story is based on the idea that we all have a good side and an evil side. I believe that there are life lessons to this idea. I also enjoyed the theme because I could relate to it in some ways. Dr. Jekyll was a very kind and friendly man‚ unsuspected to be the cause of any evil. However Dr. Jekyll had a dark side bottled

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    Toni Morrison examines the effect of different mothers on their respective children through the characters of Mrs. MacTeer and Mrs. Breedlove. Throughout the novel‚ both characters express their thoughts and feelings through words‚ with Mrs. MacTeer having a few fussy soliloquies and Mrs. Breedlove having a few interior monologues to get their points across. Although Mrs. MacTeer and Mrs. Breedlove are two entirely different individuals‚ their respective fussy soliloquies and interior monologues

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    his room‚ he is ambivalent about who he thinks is in the room. First he argues that it is his master wearing a mask and after alternating his views a couple of times‚ he is suddenly certain that it is Hyde by saying “I give you my bible-word it was Mr Hyde!”1. If Poole knows him so well (Hyde existed for while and although he lived in secrecy Poole must have seen him at least a couple of times) why then is he so ambiguous about who he thinks is in that room? This is especially the case as the narrator

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    “Lady Lazarus” and Dickinson’s “I Felt a Funeral‚ in my Brain‚” as both poems deal with the morose matter of mental illness. By thoroughly examining these poems‚ it is clear that they reveal underlying themes of immense pain and suffering‚ as evidenced by the literary tools of enjambment and end stop‚ along with various melancholy symbols and images. In order to convey such incredible torment and despair‚ Plath utilizes the highly effective tools of enjambment and end stop. In “Lady Lazarus‚”

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