thin‚ “in their white sick faces there glowed the dawn of a new future‚ a perfect resurrection into a new life. Love had raised them from the dead‚ and the heart of each held endless springs of life for the heart of the other” (526). I found this passage intriguing because I think it is amazing how Sonya and Raskolnikov came into each other lives and saved each other‚ whether it be directly or indirectly. For instance‚ Sonya serves as Raskolnikov’s link to humanity. She provides him contact with the
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Together‚ they chanted One! Two! Three! and they crashed the log on to the great pile” (Golding 39). This quotation uses the repetition of the word “together” because the author is trying to express the positive relationship between the two boys. This passage also symbolises the beginning
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Luada Worrell Professor Taylor-Perez English 111 7 March 2013 The Middle Passage The idea of brutal practices of human bondage is hard to entirely understand. The emotions involved in keeping a human captive are beyond understanding. It’s dehumanizing‚ sickening‚ and painful to understand how Africans were enslaved from their homelands. Packed side by side‚ shoulder to shoulder under planks‚ and no room to breathe or move‚ lay the African slaves. The inhumane treatment of the slaves consisted
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The "Middle Passage" was the journey of slave trading ships from the west coast of Africa‚ where the slaves were obtained‚ across the Atlantic‚ where they were sold or‚ in some cases‚ traded for goods such as molasses‚ which was used in the making of rum. However‚ this voyage has come to be remembered for much more than simply the transport and sale of slaves. The Middle Passage was the longest‚ hardest‚ most dangerous‚ and also most horrific part of the journey of the slave ships. With extremely
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find that the light source is actually a harbinger of death. Comparing Gatsby’s guests to moths implies that they are attracted to the brightness of the party’s extravagance‚ yet unknowingly leading themselves towards self-destruction. In this passage‚ Fitzgerald is explaining that as the night goes on‚ people are getting more and more intoxicated. Thus making everything seem different. (i.e the lights are brighter‚ and the pitches are higher) There is the connotation of alcohol flowing thorough
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The Middle Passage was seen as the most terrible version of the slave trade. It was the event during the slave trade that one can argue stripped African people of power and pride. The African body was taken and forced to endure this passage to eventually be sold. This was a ship that the African believe that will take them to their fate. Slaves were captured in Africa and then squashed into wooden crates where they were clamped in chains. They were then loaded onto the ships and there were two ways
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recedes before us. It eluded us then‚ but that’s no matter — to-morrow we will run faster‚ stretch out our arms farther. . . . And one fine morning —— So we beat on‚ boats against the current‚ borne back ceaselessly into the past.” This conclusive passage in
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This passage is important to Romeo and Juliet because it further develops Benvolio and Mercutio’s characters‚ while establishing the dynamic and roles between the three best friends. The scene takes place outside of Capulet’s house‚ moments before they ‘crash’ the party. Romeo questions what to do‚ deciding between causing a scene or dancing for a bit and leaving swiftly. Benvolio is first to give his opinion‚ by suggesting that they ‘have no Cupid hoodwink’d with a scarf’ (1.4.4) and ‘Nor not without-book
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Forster’s novel A Passage to India portrays a colonial India under British rule‚ before its liberation. For convenience’s sake‚ Western civilization has created an Other as counterpart to itself‚ and a set of characteristics to go with it. An "us versus them" attitude is exemplified in Forster’s representation of The Other. Separation of the British and the Indian exists along cultural lines‚ specifically religious/spiritual differences. Savage or ungodly cultures were to be assimilated into or at
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independence and humanness’; they were reduced to cargo. This was what the Middle Passage’ also known‚ as the Slave Triangle’ was all about; the trading of goods and commodities among continents including the trading of black men‚ women and children who were treated like property. The first leg of the journey was from Europe‚ mainly Portugal to Africa. Many of the goods produced in Europe were not available in Africa or America. The Europeans traded manufactured goods‚ including weapons‚ guns‚ beads
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