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    A Rose for Emily

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    Charwin Miguel Nieves E3en Holy Angel University CREWRITE Mr. Edgar Delalamon A ROSE FOR EMILY BY WILLIAM FAULKNER The narrator describes what happens after Emily dies. Emily’s body is laid out in the parlor‚ and the women‚ town elders‚ and two cousins attend the service. The narrator describes the fear that some of the townspeople have that Emily will use the poison to kill herself. The narrator recalls the time of Emily Grierson’s death and how the entire town attended her funeral in

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    War of Roses

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    THE WARS OF THE ROSES - THE CAUSES OF THE WARS Causes 1. Dynastic - a fight for titles 2. Economic and financial - a crisis in the nobility 3. Defeat in the 100 Years War 4. Long term - a shift in the balance of power causing lawlessness and disorder 5. Short term - the personal failings of Henry VI (1-3 are largely dismissed by Historians in the twentieth century but may still have a part to play) |Long Term |Short Term

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    A Rose for Emily

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    A Rose for Emily Emily’s Father Throughout this story‚ the overbearing presence of Emily Grierson’s father is perhaps the greatest influence on her behavior. The story describes how Miss Emily’s father rejected her suitors by standing in front of her and aggressively clutching a horsewhip whenever the young men came to call. Without her fathers influence and overprotective behavior it is likely that Emily would have made one of her suitors her husband when she was still

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    Notes on Jane Eyre

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    PRACTICA 7: JANE EYRE Chapter XXVII “Jane‚ you understand what I want of you?  Just this promise—‘I will be yours‚ Mr. Rochester.’” “Mr. Rochester‚ I will not be yours.” Another long silence. “Jane!” recommenced he‚ with a gentleness that broke me down with grief‚ and turned me stone-cold with ominous terror—for this still voice was the pant of a lion rising—“Jane‚ do you mean to go one way in the world‚ and to let me go another?” “I do.” “Jane” (bending towards and

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    Jane Austen biography

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    Jane Austen Biography Jane Austen was a feminist and an English author ahead of her own time. Jane was born in 1775 and died in 1817 at age 41 due to an illness‚ which at the time was incurable. Today Jane’s work is recognized and greatly appreciated all over the world partly thanks to the reproductions of her classical works‚ and the television and movie productions covering her novels. One of the main things that separated Jane Austen from the women of her time was her refusal to marry for

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    Jane Eyre Analysis

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    Journal Prompt #1 In the novel Jane Eyre there are two main male characters that are introduced to us‚ one being Mr. Rochester and the other‚ St. John. Mr. Rochester’s rude and abrupt personality reflects in the way he treats every women in his life and the same goes for St. John’s marble like appearance. As the reader can see Mr. Rochester is utterly the opposite of St. John. He isn’t handsome like he is‚ he doesn’t have a charming appeal to him as St. John does and he is not based on a tight religion

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    A reflection on Jane Eyre

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    past the tensions of party control and wealth to overcome the issues of today. Jane Eyre embodies the heart of the feminist struggling that began amidst the Victorian era. Jane Eyre acquires an education‚ which was fairly rare for women of the age. With her education Jane Eyre avoids the common path of domestic servitude‚ choosing to live as an equal with Mr. Rochester. Class structure in Victorian England: Jane Eyre spends her life struggling to avoid the conformist nature of class. When

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    Jane Austen's Persuasion

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    Chacon Professor Kay Decasper ENC 1101_48 18 April 2016 Persuasion Jane Austen’s Persuasion showed the way society worked in the 1800’s. Women of high society were to marry men of the same social status in those times. The personalities of the families of the elite were either snobby‚ dramatic‚ or in some cases generous at times. The upper-class families seemed to have it easier than people of less fortunate homes. Jane Austen takes us back in time to an era of manners and how people from the

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    Jane Austen Responses

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    READER RESPONSE TO AUSTEN’S NOVELS Jane Austen is generally acknowledged to be one of the great English novelists‚ so it is no surprise that her novels have remained continuously in print from her day to the present. Contemporary reviewers found much to praise in them. Reviewing Emma for the Quarterly Review (1816)‚ Sir Walter Scott characterized its strengths and weaknesses: The author’s knowledge of the world‚ and the peculiar tact with which she presents characters that the reader

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    Jane Addams Mother

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    Jane Addams‚ The Mother of Social Work For years‚ men and women have shared the same rights that every American citizen can expect to have today. The land of the free prides itself for being associated with the idea of freedom and equality. These rights are often taken for granted and seem superficial until they come under threat. By being an American citizen‚ one would expect that the American government would grant those rights to every legal citizen. However‚ it has only been about ninety six

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