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    William Grant Still

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    William Grant Still was born in rural Mississippi on May 11‚ 1895 to parents who made a modest living teaching. Today Still is the most famous African American composer. Still’s father‚ though he died when Still three months old was‚ was one of his biggest influence. His father was a local band leader. After his fathers’ death‚ Still and his mother moved to Little Rock‚ Arkansas where she was a High School English teacher for nearly thirty years. Still’s step father‚ Charles Shepperson‚ nurtured

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    “The higher you climb‚ the heavier you fall” (Vietnamese Proverb). In the play Othello by William Shakespeare‚ Othello is a man with many accomplishments. He does not care about what people think about him due to his race and lives a happy life. However‚ this pride is harmed and Othello does not know what to do. As a result‚ Othello’s pride ultimately leads to the demise of him and the people around him. Othello‚ despite being African‚ has huge success in the Venetian army which allows him to marry

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    Adult Living in Despair William Blake was a first generation Romantic poet‚ along with Samuel Coleridge and Charles Woodsworth. Each poet had an archetype which meant they had some form of Byronic hero within them and wanted to find a way to escape their bodies. Blake focused on the social rebel. He believed governments and institutions were corrupt and all the people had a right to fight against them. He was more than just a poet‚ he was also an illustrator. He wanted to combine pictures and words

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    William Cullen Bryant’s “Thanatopsis” is an expression of how people are one with the natural world. It explains how when people die they will become part of the earth again. To William Cullen Bryant‚ people are created equal to each other. “Thanatopsis” means to have a view or contemplation of death. He also believes somehow nature is an antidote to the sorrow and despair that death brings. Studies have shown how nature is soothing to the soul of the depressed and obstructed. Nature can somehow

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    Tyler Hatley Kristi Ulibarri ENGL 1000 September 26‚ 2012 William Blake’s Utopian Ideas The utopian desire of these poems is experience and what experience is. The poem I will be referring to is The Human Abstract. I firmly believe that experience is something you gain‚ and something you never lose. Experience‚ to me‚ means one that has been through something. It gives you knowledge about that particular event. In the poem The Human Abstract‚ Blake states “Pity would be no more‚ if we did

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    In William Gibson’s Neuromancer‚ the main character Case blurs the lines between cyberspace and reality by privileging the virtual over the physical. By prioritizing cyberspace over reality‚ Case loses parts of his identity in the real world as a consequence even though he gains it in cyberspace. For Gibson‚ Neuromancer acts as a cautionary tale through Case’s loss of identity as the novel progresses‚ and the positive aspects of cyberspace do not outweigh the negative. By the conclusion of the novel

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    William Butler Yeats

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    suggestive‚ beautiful lyricism to tragic bitterness. (Yeats 1‚ 1). His early work tended towards romantic lushness and fantasy like quality‚ and eventually moved on to a more modern style (Yeats 2‚ 1). William Butler Yeats was very devoted to writing. Early on in his career he studied William Blake’s poem and Emanuel Swedenborg’s writings and visionaries. In eighteen eighty-eight‚ "Fairy and Folk Tales of the Irish Peasantry" was published‚ which was a study he did with George Russell and Douglas

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    William Pope Duval

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    William Pope Duval William Pope Duval‚ lawyer and congressman‚ the son of William and Anne (Pope) Duval‚ was born at Mount Comfort‚ Virginia in 1784. In 1804 he married Nancy Hynes and was admitted in to the bar that same year. On May 1821‚ President Monroe appointed Duval as a federal judge in the Eastern district of the Florida Territory. That is where his legacy in the Florida history begins. From 1822 -1834‚ Duval served as the first territorial Governor of the territory of Florida. In those

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    William Lloyd Garrison

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    William Lloyd Garrison: Uncompromise During Times of Compromise William Lloyd Garrison (1805-1879) was an American journalist and adamant abolitionist. Garrison became famous in the 1830s for his uncompromising denunciations of slavery. Garrison lived a troubled childhood. His family lived in poverty. In addition‚ his father was a drunkard‚ and when Garrison was three years old‚ his father deserted his family and never came back. Thus‚ with the absence of an encouraging father figure

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    William Penn American Hero

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    Should William Penn be a heroic figure to American history? Throughout British proprietary colonization of the Americas‚ there were many different motives for claiming American soil by those whom were audacious enough to consider the prospect of funding a distant statehood. Penn claimed to see his colony as a “holy experiment” (page XIII); who differed from its “peers” in the respect that it had intent to provide refuge to those whom faced religious persecution‚ even so‚ the “devout” Quaker‚ eventually

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