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    Symbolism In Macbeth '

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    Macbeth-Act 1-Scene 6 DUNCAN “This castle hath a pleasant seat; the air nimbly and sweetly recommends itself unto our gentle senses.” Banquo The swallow bird building its nest here demonstrates that the gust of wind is tempting. There is no extension in the castle walls where these birds have not built their nest. I have observed that they like to live and mate where the air is the most pleasant. Lady Macbeth Enters

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    Symbolism of Falling

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    When kids reach their adolescent years‚ they sometimes do not know right from wrong. Teens tend to try out new things that can lead them into a better world or fall into the worse place they could ever be. In Catcher in the Rye by J.D Salinger‚ Holden‚ the main character‚ is going through the stages of life where he starts to realize the bad influences in the world. He sees so many children fall off a cliff and land deep down under where the darkness lies. Though falling in the book can be taken

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    The Lottery Symbolism

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    Motifs are an important element to develop themes in stories. The magic behind motifs is that depending on how the author uses it they can help develop different themes in different ways. As seen in “The Cask of Amontillado” by Edgar Allan Poe‚ “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson and “A Good Man is Hard to Find” by Flannery O’Connor‚ where three different authors use death that can be interpreted to develop different themes. In “The Cask of Amontillado” the theme revenge can be perceived with Montresor’s

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    Symbolism In Hamlet

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    Many characters in Hamlet display a false front‚ hiding their true nature and intentions while acting out the role society has given them to keep their power. This is seen through Hamlet by William Shakespeare‚ as King Claudius becomes corrupt and presents an image of a caring and loving leader‚ when in fact‚ he has ulterior motives. The painting enhances the text by showing one of the characters who most prominently conveys the theme of appearance versus reality‚ providing evidence for Claudius’s

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    Woodstock Symbolism

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    The 60s‚ for some‚ can be remembered as a wonderful time‚ symbolizing a decade of love and harmony‚ where music brought one another together. Others remember this time as a decade of America’s moral decrease‚ with the dawn of rock and roll and the "sinful"‚ inappropriate culture that it generated. In 1969 somewhere between 40‚000 and 50‚000 people gathered at Woodstock to celebrate their music‚ their love‚ and their freedom in the concert that has remained one of the most influential events of the

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    In The Emigrants‚ author W. G. Sebald uses many returning themes as a way to represent the struggles that emigrants repeatedly experience. Going through a traumatic event‚ such as being forced to leave one’s home‚ leads to the need for repetition as a coping mechanism. This repetition is an outlet for the emigrants‚ because they long to feel as if they have control in their lives. All of the emigrants that Sebald introduces throughout the novel have the same obsession with looking out a window‚ or

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    Symbolism In Beowulf

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    Beowulf is an epic poem‚ which tells the fictional story of a Scandinavian hero for which the poem is named. It is written in the Anglo-Saxon language and is thought to be the oldest surviving long poem in history. Its author is unknown and although the tale itself is fictional‚ the poem holds many historical‚ pagan and Christian elements. In this close reading of lines 702-836‚ Grendel‚ the terrifying‚ man-eating monster‚ pays a visit to Heorot with the intention of attacking and feasting on the

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    Alexander Graham Bell‚ a man who best known for inventing the telephone. Most people don’t know he spent the majority of his life teaching and helping the deaf. Educating the hearing impaired is what he wished to be remembered for. Bell was born on March 3‚ 1847‚ in Edinburgh‚ Scotland. His mother was a painter of miniature portraits and also loved to play the piano even though she was nearly deaf. Aleck’s mother knew that he had a talent for music and always encouraged him to play (Matthews

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    in Mary Anne Bell’s case‚ is here to stay. It has its way of affecting each and every person it encounters. In the book The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien‚ he incorporates an innocent city girl into the wild jungle of war in Vietnam; Mary Anne Bell. Because Mark Fossie decides to take a drastic measure and fly his girlfriend to Vietnam during one of the most brutal wars‚ she gains the soldier’s sympathy and soon becomes the “not so innocent blonde” new to the territory; she is simply an entirely

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    Response to “For Whom the Bell Tolls” John Donne’s “For Whom the Bell Tolls” is a very deep poem‚ and it’s difficult to understand if you only read it once. It focuses on how all humans have a connection to one another; if one person dies‚ the entire population is affected. In 1623‚ Donne was extremely ill with malarial fever‚ and he wrote the meditation during recovery. He observed that every death diminishes the fabric of humanity. He wrote about the tolling of a church bell‚ representing a funeral

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