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    The poem “The Odyssey” and the movie O‚ Brother Where Are Thou were about two men and their struggle to get home. They were similar in many ways‚ yet they were also very different. Some of the similarities are more obvious and some of them are somewhat discrete. It was a very good way of showing what happened to Odysseus in a more modern way. In “The Odyssey” the main character’s name is Odysseus‚ which in Roman is Ulysses. Odysseus was on a journey home from the Trojan War. He had a wife named

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    Helen of Troy is simultaneously one of the most revered and most reviled characters of Greek myth. While some love her for her beauty‚ others hate her for the role she played in sparking the Trojan War. Exemplifying these two extremes are Edgar Allan Poe’s poem‚ “To Helen‚” and Hilda Doolittle’s poem‚ “Helen.” While the imagery used by Poe to describe Helen’s beauty portray an undeniable adoration‚ Doolittle’s diction starkly contrasts this with clear resentment for her wretched character. The vivid

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    long one (more than two years with no child)‚ or getting pregnant invoking Gods‚ fish bearing a human child after consuming human semen or a child fertilizing or getting a life in pot of ghee with flash or from just a semen. Also abandoned kids of nymphs and sages are all over the forest with some coming out from the (spiritual) fire as gifts from god. Some examples of unnatural births in Mahabharata Ghandhari’s 101 children: Kauravas Ghandhari who once pleased Rishi Vyas on his visit to Hastinapur

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    Once stated by Edith Hamilton‚ the author of the original myth “Perseus”‚ “The fullness of life is in the hazards of life.” (Hamilton). Meaning that you aren’t living unless you are truly face to face with death and risk. You are on edge and not cooped up afraid of going for something. And that is exactly what Perseus and Percy Jackson‚ two heroic figures‚ live up to. To that extent‚ “Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief” by Rick Riordan transforms the ancient legend of “Perseus” in a compelling

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    While Bearsley describes the artist as an ephemeral agent in material‚ supplanting pastoral‚ aesthetic experience; within the Ovidian oeuvre‚ particularly the ‘Metamorphoses‚’ a diuersae artis (diversity of arts) is often portrayed as a vehicle by which to transcend mortal suffering – occurring in spite of artistry - on the “lore legar populi” (“lips of the people”) [Met. 15.877]. Predominantly‚ however‚ in the fabulae of Marsyas [Met. 6.382]‚ Daphne [Met. 1.452]‚ Pygmalion [Met. 10.243]‚ Morpheus

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    Science Revision Half-Yearly’s Name the lenses found in a microscope. Eyepiece or ocular lens Objective lens Recall the units used to measure microscopic objects. Micrometres Recall what happens to the field of view as the magnification used increases. As the magnification increases‚ then the amount of the specimen you can see (the field of view) gets smaller. Name two different types of: Light microscope- monocular microscope and the binocular microscope. Electron microscope- transmission

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    In many pieces of literature the theme is often obscured in which the author attempts to reveal the hidden truths. Through his utilization of characters‚ Shakespeare incorporates the personalities of individual beings within the play in order to express the overall message. Shakespeare’s extensive use of imagery further demonstrates his conveyance of the surreal nature within the play. In "A Midsummer Night’s Dream"‚ Shakespeare uses the mechanicals to differentiate the reality from the dream‚ while

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    heroes to have a godly parent. It set the heroes apart in a way that was desirable‚ yet unattainable. In fact‚ there are few examples of Greek heroes that don’t have a godly parent. Heracles was borne to Alcmene by Zeus. Achilles was the son of the nymph Thetis and King Peleus. Aethra bore Theseus to Poseidon and Aegeus. Jason did not‚ however‚ have a godly parent‚ although he was the son of a King. The majority of Greek heroes are either gods themselves‚ or are the children of gods. This makes them

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    talent that allowed him to have control over living things. His musical talent allows him to convince even the most powerful Gods like Hades to allow him to do what he wants. However‚ every legend has to come to an end. Orpheus fell in love with a nymph named

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    While clever and determined‚ Odysseus is unfaithful and selfish. Although revered in the past‚ Odysseus is not so glorious today. Odysseus shows infidelity multiple times throughout the whole epic. First‚ he cheats on Penelope with the goddess/nymph Calypso. Hermes finds Odysseus “tormenting himself with tears and sighs and heartache” (Homer. 65) on Ogygia’s beach‚ so clearly Odysseus is miserable and misses Penelope. This still doesn’t take away from the fact that Odysseus cheated on Penelope

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