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    grow up. It is natural in humans to make decisions and act on what they believe is to be true. This not only applies to humans‚ but authors use them in their books or plays to create different types of characters. In one of the greatest works by William Shakespeare’s Hamlet‚ there are characters that make many different kinds of decisions that determine their role in the book. In the play‚ the protagonist Hamlet‚ after his father’s death‚ is angry about his mother’s hasty marriage to Claudius. He

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    William E. Borah

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    American foreign policy William E. Borah Speech on the League of Nations November 19‚ 1919 In 1919 in order to secure peace and to avoid bloodshed of other wars‚ American Democrat President Woodrow Wilson‚ managed to impose some of his ideas -based on the Fourteen Points- during the Paris Peace Conference‚ including the creation of the League of Nations. The League was an international organization founded as a result of the Treaty of Versailles. Its goals included disarmament‚ the

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    William Blake: the Tyger

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    William Blake: The Tyger analysis To understand "The Tiger" fully‚ you need to know Blake’s symbols. The title seems to be quite simple. It lets us know that the poem is about a tiger. So‚ we expect it to be just that‚ about a tiger. However‚ as we start reading‚ it becomes clear pretty quickly that this is not just any tiger. It could be a symbol Blake uses to make a far deeper point than something like tigers are scary. It is one of the poem of his collection named: songs of experience. The

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    The balance between nature and “progress” plays out with dramatic tension in William Faulkner’s short story‚ “The Bear.” Progress will be our downfall‚ Faulkner seems to suggest through this complex tale of a boy’s evolving understanding of nature‚ experienced through the annual ritual of a hunting expedition in pursuit of an imposing and elusive bear‚ Old Ben. As we destroy the wilderness‚ the story tells us‚ we lose ourselves. Heavy on symbolism and characterized by numerous sub-themes that weave

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    Q) What philosophy do Ezra Pound‚ William Carlos Williams and Marianne Moore share? A) Ezra Pound‚ William Carlos Williams and Marianne Moore were all modernist poets. Modernist poetry deals with experiment and innovation. All three were imagists‚ though at a later stage‚ William Carlos Williams started disagreeing with Ezra Pound. Ezra Pound Ezra Pound was the most aggressive of the modernist poets‚ who made “Make it new!” his battle cry. He turned to classical Chinese poetry as his

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    William Penn had ideological beliefs that could provide an important foundation for the development of Pennsylvania into a tolerant society. He believed in liberty of conscience‚ the constraints of faith and the role of the state in religious matters. As well as his attitudes towards people of different ethnics or beliefs‚ and most important‚ he believed that people should believe in any religion they wanted to‚ without being persecuted‚ which he defined as illegal‚ immoral‚ and contrary to both

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    William J. Bennett

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    William J. Bennett is a conservative against gay marriage. He has written two books about American culture: The Book of Virtues and The Broken Hearth: Reversing the Moral Collapse of the American Family. Bennett writes a piece that appeared in the Washington Post on May 21‚ 1996. Gay marriage is a big controversy. The conservative and non-conservative people usually disagree with one another strongly. In the piece Bennett has a clear and strong argument against gay marriage. I believe that in his

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    that the word ’I’ and no other pronouns apart from ’they’ to describe the daffodils is used in the poem suggests that the first person is on their own- there is no-one else with them. Just this simple pronoun announces the theme of loneliness in William Wordsworth’s poem. The very first sentence also introduces the theme of loneliness: ’I wandered lonely as a cloud.’ Here this simile reminds us of how empty a sky is‚ and therefore how empty the person is. There is a part of them that is not fulfilled-

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    Ezra Pound and William Carlos Williams both comment in a theoretic way on the nature of poetry. Outline briefly their theories. Then discuss the implications their theories have for the writing and reading of poetry‚ and support your argument with a number of specific examples from their poems. I have structured this essay so that the first part deals entirely with the theories and poetry of Ezra Pound and the second‚ entirely with the theories and poetry of William Carlos Williams. Each part will

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    attack us but why did people of the past fear these creatures. As time progressed humans started to interpret and use the word monster in a different manner. In this essay I will be arguing that reader-response criticism is the best way to interpret William Shakespeare’s The Tempest by showing that we create the monsters. The best way to argue this play is to use the Toulmin model of argumentation. I think that Shakespeare argues that we create the monsters we fear and only we can

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