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How Did Monticello Fight In The Bloody Mary
1690, the era of the golden age of piracy, the wave's lapped at the hull of the galleon of the Bloody
Mary. Captain Susan Monticello stood behind the helm listening to the rustle of the sail's in the
Caribbean breeze. Her tan skin glistened underneath the hot sun, her cinnamon hair was neatly tied
back to keep her eye's clear. So that she wouldn't lead her crew into unknown reef's that lurked in
the uncharted water's. Her flintlock pistol's shone brightly from their daily polishing, her rapier
clicked against her leg as her ship rolled between the wave's. She was very fond of the weapon
earned from the dead body, of the most arrogant English captain she had the misfortune to meet. It
was one of the main reasons she had set her base within those ... Show more content on
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They learned the one and only time that some fool thought to take what wasn't theirs. For you see
Susan knew her women would gut any man faster then they could blink if they thought to ever touch
them without consent. She had personally executed the one fool who didn't heed her warning. It
wasn't only the women she was protective of she would die for any man that sailed under her
command. Yet she felt something was missing from her life as she stared out on to the blue water's
of the Caribbean. For Susan the life of a captain was a lonely one, sure she could take any number of
men to her bed. However that would only ensue that she was placing favoritism onto one of her
crew. That was something she just couldn't afford, they needed to act as one when the time came for
the call of battle. Not worrying which one of them was spending his night's in her bunk. "Captain,
lifeboat off the starboard bow," her lookout called down from the crow's nest. "Lower the
mizzenmasts, secure the jibs, let loose the topsail," Susan barked out her command's as she turned
her ship. Wondering if anyone was alive on board that small boat. Pondering how anyone could
survive in the heat of the summer sun without water to sustain them. "Ready the pole hooks, and the
ladder," she bellowed out as the small lifeboat drew near. "Hook on Captain," called
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Bloody Mary: Urban Legends
You would be sitting around a campfire maybe surrounded by friends out camping for a weekend to
celebrate just finishing the school year, or maybe you are with your family out on a yearly family
bonding camping trip. It is getting pretty boring and everyone has run out interesting of things to say
when someone speaks up. They say they have a story to tell you. It is a story about this witch who
lives in these woods. The story goes that a girl named Elly Kedward was accused of witchcraft and
banished into the Blair Woods and now she goes after anyone that enters the woods. The story is
something that gets your blood pumping and adrenaline rushing. You know the story already
because you have heard it a thousand times before and will hear it again. ... Show more content on
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Kennedy said Ich bin ein Berliner during a speech showing the US support for West Germany 22
months after Soviet–Pro East Germany built the Berlin Wall. The saying 'Ich bin ein Berliner'
translates to 'I am a Berliner,' in English. A Berliner in German does in fact mean Berliner but is also
a popular jelly filled pastry similar to a donut in that region. That would mean the president had just
called himself a jelly donut. American for the longest time had been under the impression that
Kennedy had been laughed off the stage by the locals but in fact no misunderstood what he said he
he finished his speech without a single person even raising an eyebrow. You can still find some
people today who still didn't know that no one laughed him off the stage and that he did say the
correct
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Serial Killers : A Bloody Trail Of Death
Throughout history, serial killers have sparked interest in the minds of many. Serial killers
researched today are generally single people who murder for many different psychological reasons,
still not fully understood. What happens when you get a group of four psychopaths in the same
house, all with the same drive for murder, leads to a bloody trail of death. In the 1800's, on a remote
trail in Kansas, a so called 'family' started killing travelers. Working as a unit to execute their
murders, these four 'family' members would continue their rampage from the same location, killing
approximately 11 victims. This deadly 'family' consisted of Ma, Pa, John, and Kate Bender.
Although they are thought to be a family, the only two related are ... Show more content on
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With all their new land, they would only build a tiny, one bedroom house. In order to make money,
they divided their house into two sections; living quarters, and a general store and inn. Travelers
would pass through, refilling their carriages with traveling needs, and staying for a good night's rest
and meal before continuing their journey. It is unsure how long they went on before becoming
greedy, murdering and robbing their tenants. Travelers would only come around every so often, but
Kate would end up attracting the attention from many outsiders. She was an attractive and outgoing
23 years old lady, practicing in the art of spiritualistic shows. She would often perform séances and
do demonstrations of her 'healing' powers and psychic medium abilities. She was very well spoken
and attracted many people to their little cottage for private readings, where people were never seen
again. This would give these killer family members more victims to prey on. When people would
arrive at their house, they were treated to a nice meal. They were placed in the seat of honor at the
head of the table. This seat of honor was positioned to where the guest would have their back to the
canvas curtain separating the inn from the living quarters on the other side. They would make it
through the first part of dinner, when John would retreat to the living quarters to retrieve something.
He would sneak out, behind the victim, and smash him over the head with a sledge
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In the short stories in ‘The Bloody Chamber’, Carter is...
In the short stories in 'The Bloody Chamber', Carter is excessively interested in violent instincts'.
How far do you agree with this view?
In the short stories in 'The Bloody Chamber', Carter is excessively interested in violent instincts, this
viewpoint is correct to an extent but Carter has a feministic approach to her stories, which at some
points more apparent. I find that her stories are in a literal sense driven by violent instincts but
optimistic outlook of Carter that humans are capable of change is still evident.
Violence is already embedded in fairytales and by bringing this to the surface; she is only catering to
her adult audience. The violent instincts portrayed by the characters shows what happens when we
give in to the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Carter comments on this often in her short stories in 'The Bloody Chamber'.
Secondly, Carter is suggesting that while society remains its patriarchal self, violence will always be
present and this is reflected in her short stories. Carter appears to be excessively interested in violent
instincts because she wanted to explore the human nature. In the Company of Wolves, the narrator
addresses the reader, from the perspective of someone involved in the story In 'granny's bed between
the paws of the tender wolf' suggests that this story is based on little red riding hood. The
juxtaposition of tender and wolf, shows how Carter creates dominant male characters which though
are presented as evil are also seen to be partly victimised by their role which they are trapped within.
Although carter uses intertexuality and makes exospheric references to other folk tales, in 'the
company of wolves', it is actually hinting at what it is like for females to go out into the world and
immediately be in danger from men and the traps that they lay for them, 'You are always in danger
in the forest'. The forest is perhaps an allegory for society and in a sense women must use the
strength that has derived through their female lineage e.g. Mothers, Grandmothers to face obstacles.
Angela Carter presents a feminist agenda in which women are presented as controlling their own
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Bloody Mary Research Paper
Bloody Mary By:Savanah Schafroth Have you witnessed the gruesome game of Bloody Mary?
Despite the fact that this individual was evoked for her disturbance, she used to be sophisticated
monarch, legally named Mary. Bloody Mary is a legend consisting of a spirit christened Bloody
Mary. This mythology consists of a speculum, a dark area, a torch, and a human to play the game.
Who Was She? Bloody Mary is the phantom of Queen Mary. Queen Mary was brought to life ,by
Catherine of Aragon, on February 18, 1516. Her existence was marked by a total of miscarriages or
deceitful pregnancies. Additionally, she was known for her brutal ways such as hollering,
blasphemy,
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Mary Tudor: Bloody Mary
At exactly midnight tomorrow, go into your bathroom with a lit up candle in your hand. Place the
candle right in front of the mirror, and start chanting Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary, and
etc. Do it 3 to 30 times and legend has it that you will see a ghost in the mirror and then that ghost
will kill you or bruise you emotionally or physically really abominably. This legend is called
"Bloody Mary" and many people are assured that the legend is not true because they allege that their
friends did it before and nothing happened. This legend came to be because of one infamous queen,
Mary Tudor or known as Mary I of England. The article, "The bloody history of Bloody Mary: Part
1" states clearly on how Mary got her Bloody Mary nickname, "Mary's 'Bloody' moniker is related
to some of her first acts as Queen: first came the execution of Dudley and then the reinstitution of
the Heresy Acts in 1554. Under the Acts many, many protestants were killed under the Marian
Persecutions, the main method of execution being death by fire. It's believed many of the 283 killed
under the Heresy Act died this way and gave Mary the unofficial title Queen "Bloody" Mary."
(McGarry 1) Mary Tudor agonized many people because she wanted Catholicism back into her
kingdom and not many people supported her. They didn't support her because many people thought
of her as a bastard for the things she did to her fellow citizens and many people headed towards the
direction of Protestantism. Many people say
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Queen Mary Of A Bloody Mary Essay
Thomas Salter Mrs. Lusk Parrish English 11 Accelerated 11 March 2016 Queen "Bloody" Mary Did
you know that the legend of "Bloody Mary" is real and originated with Queen Mary I of England,
the source of over 300 deaths? Over 400 years ago, Queen Mary Tudor ruled in England from 1553,
until her death in 1558. Mary was a Catholic and so were her parents, but when her Mother and
father got divorced, her father switched to a Protestant faith. When she became Queen she quickly
reformed her Father religious laws so she could return England back to its Catholic faith. In doing so
she had hundreds of Protestants burnt alive to prove that she was not playing and really want some
change in England. By doing this she gained the nickname Bloody Mary. Mary really had no one to
blame for her actions as Queen, her childhood was great, her reign was short, and death will always
be remembered in the history of the Tudor dynasty. Childhood Mary Tudor was born on February
18, 1516. Her parents were Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon. She was the oldest of two half
siblings. Everything was going well for the family until; Mary 's father realized that he had to
divorce Catherine. The reason for the divorce Mary 's father knew that "In Marrying her he had
sinned twice over: once by committing incest and again by disobeying the injunction in the book of
Leviticus against 'uncovering the nakedness of thy brother 's wife '" (Erickson 78). After the divorce,
Mary 's father broke all relations with the
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Bloody Mary Essay
Bloody Mary Mary I, Queen of England was a very prominent figure in
European history. Her reign as queen was filled with many trials and tribulations that were not
accepted by most of England. Many of
Mary's rash decisions were most likely do to her upbringing and her lack of will power. Whether it
is being declared a bastard as a young child by her tyrannical father, Henry VIII, or her marriage to
Phillip of
Spain, Mary was easily influenced by others and it showed as she grew older and took over the
thrown.
Mary was born the daughter of Henry VIII and Katherine. Henry had failed again to bear a son to
retain the thrown after him. His annulment from Katherine was not granted so Henry decreed that
the
Church of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Philip returned to England with two friars, leaders of the Spanish
Inquisition. They encouraged Mary to take charge of her own desire and reestablish Catholicism in
England(Liston 193). For what Mary thought was for the good of all the English people, she
mercilessly killed more than three hundred of her subjects. Most of these victims were burned at the
stake by incompetent executors. Gunpowder bags wouldn't explode, wet wood would burn slowly,
and spectators were forced to watch innocent Protestants become martyrs. This all only strengthened
the religion Mary hoped to destroy(Weir 219).
Mary was further weakened by famine that set in while the burnings continued. All of England grew
to hate her and she adopted the name "Bloody" Mary which is still commonly known today. She
then became a laughing stock when she begged for Philip's return and claimed more pregnancies.
She faced death realizing that Elizabeth would succeed her, she imprisoned her and threatened her
with execution, but much like Henry VIII did not want Mary to inherit the thrown; her wishes
ceased to matter when she died(Trease 227).
Mary's sheer naivety made her very gullible for anyone who wanted something from her. The
influence of her mother was simply exploited by Philip and the leaders of Spain, she would have
never
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Urban Legend Of The Bloody Mary
I'm here to tell you about the urban legend of the Bloody Mary. "Bloody Mary" is a urban legend
that first originated in in the early 1960s as an adolescent party game, and the person would take a
candle or a flashlight and go into a dark room and look into a mirror and say a chant," The exact
chant is unknown". After you say the chant a unknown amount of times something would appear
and or happen. For example in the Poems of Robert Burns, published in 1787: Is a great example of
a bloody mary ritual.
"Take a candle, and go alone to a looking glass; eat an apple before it, and some traditions say, you
should comb your hair all the time; the face of your conjugal companion, to be, will be seen in the
glass, as if peeping over your shoulder." I'm going to explain to you where this urban legend
originated from and why i believe its story has been altered and changed so many times over the
years. Also how the legend stands in today's world. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
And this is because folklorists did not really start recording examples of urban legends until 1970s.
But this Urban legend is based around the idea of piering into a mirror and being able to see or feel
something that is not normal. And this can be traced back as told in the Bible (I Corinthians 13) as
"see[ing] through a glass, darkly."There are mentions of looking–glass divination in Chaucer's
Squire's Tale (c. 1390), Spenser's The Faerie Queen (1590), and Shakespeare's Macbeth
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Did Mary I deserve the title 'bloody mary'?
Did Mary I deserve the title 'Bloody Mary'? The question of this essay is 'Did Mary I really deserve
the nickname 'Bloody Mary'? This essay will show the reasons why she does and why she doesn't
deserve the nickname. Mary I was the daughter of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon. She was
claimed illegitimate by her father and was forced to sign papers saying that he had never married her
mother (Catherine of Aragon). Mary wasn't allowed to see her mother and was sent away by Henry
VIII. She followed the Catholic ways of her mother and became quite religious. Mary was angered
that her father was turning Britain into Protestants. When her father finally died, at the age of 55,
Mary tried to convince her 10–year–old brother– Edward– to ... Show more content on
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This was a very bad move for Mary, as the French invaded Calais and reclaim the town once again.
The town had been hung onto during the Hundred Years War, and was a major blow on England.
This turned even more people against Mary I. I have gained this knowledge from a modern
textbook. I have also searched on the internet to make sure that this knowledge is correct. On the
other hand, there are a number of reasons why Mary I did not deserve her name. The next bit of this
essay will tell you why. Mary was often mistreated for her beliefs. She was criticised by the likes of
Hugh Latimer and Nicholas Ridely. People started to call the Queen 'Bloody Mary' and called her
'The Monstrous Murderer'. I can gain this information from Source B. This tells me that Latimer
criticised rich people as well as Catholic people and was a preacher. Ridely was a Bishop of
London. This source is reliable as Source C shows Latimer and Ridely getting killed in the woodcut.
I also know from my own knowledge and other internet resources that Mary was called 'The
Monstrous Murderer'. Mary was also accused of being a witch. The source that tells me this is
Source H. This shows a picture of Mary blessing rings which are supposed to cure sickness. I feel
this image is trying to portray that Mary had powers. This piece should not be trusted. We know that
witches are not actually real. However, the person who has created it surprised me.
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The Impact of Bloody Sunday on Northern Ireland Essay
The Impact of Bloody Sunday on Northern Ireland
Bloody Sunday has made a very big impact on Irelandand events occurring there since 1972.
According to Lord Widgery, the soldiers acted in self–defence, therefore it was not their fault and
could not be blamed.
Republicans were very annoyed by this verdict, so in 1998 a new inquiry was started called "The
Saville Inquiry". The inquiry has so far cost £130m. The final cost will be in the region of
£150m. An estimated £15 million of net additional costs arose from the transfer of the hearings
to London from Londonderry. The point of this inquiry was to re–examine the evidence of what
happened on Bloody Sunday. There is an ongoing debate about ... Show more content on
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* Laws against discrimination.
* Fair allocation of housing.
* The repeal of the Special Powers Act which allowed internment.
* The disbanding of the B specials.
The Protestants were suspicious of the Civil Rights Movement. They suspected the IRA may be
involved. The Unionists got the RUC to stop one of their marches and this led to serious rioting. In
the end the British troops were sent over to Northern Ireland to try and keep order.
The IRA split into two groups; The official IRA who wanted to achieve a United Ireland, and the
Provisional IRA who thought of the British Army as an army of occupation and believed violence
was the answer and would achieve their goal.
The Provisional IRA shot Gunner Curtis. He was the first British soldier to be killed in the Northern
Ireland.
The Civil Rights Movement planned a march in Londonderry. British troops fired into the crowd
and killed thirteen people! This day became famously known as 'Bloody Sunday'. After this,
Northern Ireland lost its parliament.
Loyalist fears:
The Catholics in Northern Ireland had a lot of reasons to make them feel displeased. The Protestants
made their lives very miserable, mainly I think because they felt very apprehensive of them. They
were afraid that in a United Ireland Catholics would outvote them and they would lose control over
the education of their
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Essay on Different Historical Interpretations of Bloody...
Different Historical Interpretations of Bloody Sunday
On January 30th 1972, civil rights activists were involved in a protest march against internment
through Londonderry. British paratroopers, who were deployed on the streets, shot and killed 13 of
the marchers and wounded others. Many people have different views on what happened and why.
The main conflicting views are those of the paratroopers and their supporters and the views of the
marchers and the friends and family of those killed. Source A is a newspaper report form the Daily
Mail in September 1999. It is a report on new evidence released from the second enquiry into
Bloody Sunday, led by Lord Saville. The headline reads "PARAS IN ... Show more content on
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However, this would be welcomed by the marchers and families of those killed, as they have always
insisted that those killed were innocent victims of British paratroopers. They were greatly angered at
the findings of the Widgery enquiry and believed that it was a whitewash by the British government.
This new evidence presents a new chance for those who they believe are murderers to be put on
trial. Another change, which discredits the original evidence, is that "forensic scientist Dr. John
Martin, who gave evidence to the Widgery hearing that Mr. Wray had been handling guns or
explosives, has reversed his opinion". This is bad for the Paratroopers side of the story, but could
suggest that Dr. Martin had been under pressure to support the soldiers in the enquiry, as their story
was based on the protestors firing guns at them.
Source B is another newspaper report, from the Guardian. The headline reads "BLOODY SUNDAY
REVELATION. This backs up what we have been saying all these years: the victims were
innocent." This immediately indicated that the writer of the article supports the view of the
protesters and the families of those killed. This also shows that the article may be biased. The article
also does not include the opinion of the Paratroopers or their supporters on the
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Harry 's Death
Harry lunched to life as he heard the springs of his military crib rattle beneath him. His hands
reached blindly in the dark for his gun, gritting his teeth together. He was about five seconds away
from pulling the trigger when Louis' slightly shrill voice filled his ears.
"Bloody hell Harry, put that thing down it's me." Harry did just that.
"What are you doing? Your bed is over the other side of the room. I wasn't expecting to see you."
"I couldn't sleep. Figured I would talk to you."
Harry fell silence in the darkness before scrubbing his eyes with the backs of his fists feeling
exhaustion rear its ugly head and creep in bed beside him. His lids and head hung heavy. He wanted
sleep, needed it. Though it was rare for he and Louis ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This felt both new and familiar. He couldn't help but ask,
"What are you doing?"
Louis' breath grew closer until his lips were pressing into Harry's neck, soft and warm, though
slightly cracked from the blistering winter.
"Nothing... sorry." Louis didn't pull back.
"Someone is going to see us and we are going to be bloody arrested."
Harry wasn't sure when but sometime between him starting to speak to Louis and him concluding to
speak, Louis' hand had found his waist and stayed there.
"What are they going to arrest us for Harry? We're just two friends talking to one another."
"Talking to one another while bloody snuggling in bed Louis, you know what it will look like if we
get caught. We look like–" Harry cut himself off, saying no more.
"We look like a couple?" Louis finished it for him with the inclination of his brow.
"But we aren't"
"But we could be."
Again there was nothing but silence. This silence was killing Louis. He needed something, anything
to go off because right now god only knew where they stood. It was clear Harry's shocked silence
wasn't ending any time soon, so Louis filled it the only way he could.
"Say something," He begged.
Louis could hear Harry sucking in a breath through his teeth, a nervous habit he had since he was
young. Harry never told Louis this, but his mother had shared it with Louis once when she came
down to see Harry in Paris for a weekend. Her name was Anne and she seemed to like Louis very
much. She said she was
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Bloody Mary Research Paper
Bloody Mary In 1516 a young princess was born at the Palace of Placentia who would later be an
evil, cruel queen. Mary Tudor also known as Mary I was one of the first queens of England."Ruled
England as Queen from 1553 & earned the epithet Bloody Mary for the executions of protestants
that occurred during her reign."(Erickson pg.185.) Mary inherited power from King Henry VIII in
1553 and ruled until her death at St. James Palace in London on November 17, 1558. Mary had
stricken fear into the lives of all under her repressive rule as Queen of England. During her
supremacy Mary had opted to reestablish Catholicism, and in doing so, she executed any who
opposed her and protested against her, in my final point that she was an evil queen and repressive
tyrant. Furthermore, during Mary's reign she had killed protestants and anti conformists publicly as
said in the UXL Biographies "Just under 300 non–conformists were publicly burned during Mary's
reign".(UXL Biographies). When she wed to Philip, King of Spain only more conflicts arose as he
never spent time in England or his knowledge about world trade,which brought more conflicts to
how her people felt about her and only made them go against her is more death brought onto ...
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As said in the quote in the UXL Biographies "She continued burning heretics to the last, while
England grew more hardened against Catholicism than it have ever been". Mary in her process of
reestablishing the Catholic religion to England would publicly burn or execute anyone who spoke
out about being against her reformation. In the end she eventually came to reintroduce Catholicism
to England. As said in the article Mary I"Mary soon proceeded to restore Catholicism, reestablishing
the traditional services & the authority of the pope".(Erikson 185). She had completed what she had
wanted to do, but at a price of being loathed by her
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Essay on The Bloody Chamber by Angela Carter
There is plenty of opportunity for interpretation in Carter's writing, particularly in her book 'The
Bloody Chamber' which is commonly considered to be her masterwork, brimming with
intertextualities and ambiguities. Some may find her work to be excessively violent or savage,
perhaps even alienating. Yet others may have found this no–holds–barred approach to be
exhilarating and refreshing in comparison to other authors of her time. In her re–writing of Perrault
and Beaumont's classic tales, Carter proposes a reading of several well–known stories with intent to
unveil through a feminist perspective the ideological content they present. "The Bloody Chamber" is
her take on the tale of Bluebeard; "The Werewolf" is her variation of the tale of ... Show more
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This in itself begins to uncover a deeper meaning to her literature; both obvious and latent in ways
which create a curiosity to analyse the text in–depth. With 'The Bloody Chamber' collection, Carter
made a clear attempt to demythologise classic fairy tales, using them not only to deconstruct
traditional masculinity, but also to highlight liberation and re–evaluate the female standpoint within
a patriarchal society. Carter herself argued that although 18th century aristocratic writers who
penned these tales sprinkled in some morality in order to convert them into suitable parables for
children, the darkness of their content and belittlement towards women remained. Carter (2013,
page unknown) To counter this, her stories restored the female psyche of her protagonists by
rewarding their active sexuality rather than punishing it into passiveness or misogynistic
suppression.
It would be unfair to disregard the notion of 'gross repellence' altogether, as the book is most
certainly populated with surreal and grotesque material. Carter's baroque and parodist take on fairy
tales outlines the darkness of grotesque literature. She uses vulgar language "..his prick, curved
upwards like the scimitar he held" Carter (1995, page 17] to coincide with scenes of perverseness,
torture, incest, murder, sadomasochism, among other themes which in general are considered to be
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Analysis Of Angela Carter 's ' The Bloody Chamber '
Most of Angela Carter's work revolves around democratic feminism and her representation of the
patriarchal roles subjugated to women. (Evangelou, 2013) 'The Bloody Chamber' by Angela Carter
suggests many substitutions to infamous depictions of femininity. Angela Carter manipulates old–
fashioned fairy tales in order to subvert conformist gender roles like submissive wives and male
dominance. (Makinen, 1992) While Carter receives commendation for her work, Patricia Duncker
critiques her as well, for maintaining traditionally told tales that female relationships are doomed to
rivalry and competition. Duncker basically analyses the story, 'The Snow Child' and then promptly
states that Carter does not explore the masculine desire evident in the fairy tale and which, for the
most part, forms this division between women, leading to their 'destruction'. (Duncker, 1984: 75)
This essay will discuss the cogency of Patricia Dunker's statement as shown in the ENG3705
Tutorial Letter. My argument is in favour of this statement and a discussion will be engaged in
hereunder, using 'The Snow Child' by Angela Carter as a reference point to substantiate it. In the
subversive modification of one of the most common fairytales, The Snow Child, Angela Carter
addresses many feminist issues whilst drawing inspiration from the story of Snow White (Aziz
Mohammadi, 2015).
I would suggest that this particular story from The Bloody Chamber is significant in Duncker's
argument based on the fact that she
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A CRITIQUE OF THE SNOW CHILD, TAKEN FROM ANGELA
CARTER’S...
A CRITIQUE OF THE SNOW CHILD, TAKEN FROM ANGELA CARTER'S THE BLOODY
CHAMBER.
Throughout 'The Bloody Chamber', Angela Carter takes the highly successful conventions that
belong to once innocent fairy tales, and rips them unremorsefully from their seemingly sound
foundations to create a variety of dark, seductive, sensual stories, altering the landscapes beyond all
recognition and rewarding the heroines with the freedom of speech thus giving them license to grab
hold of the reigns of the story.
The Snow Child is one such story by Carter, where connotations seen in fairytales such as 'Sleeping
Beauty' and 'Little Red Riding Hood' are in evidence and are fused together accompanied by the
emergence of feminism to the foreground ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The first example can be seen in the title of this story – the aspect of snow suggests purity that
audiences have come to associate with the colour white whilst the word 'child' suggests the
innocence that can only be possessed by children so young.
The connotations carried by colour are used to give us an insight into the personalities of both the
Count and the Countess. For we are told that the Count rides 'on a grey mare' and the Countess 'on a
black one'. Therefore, if the colour white is associated with purity and goodness as previously
mentioned, the colour black is at the opposite end of the spectrum, seeming to suggest evil whilst
the colour grey is in between – not totally good but not totally evil either. This begs the question,
certainly in mind, as to whether or not we are supposed to feel some sort of ambivalence towards the
Count, given his associated colours – however, his language and his later actions seem to deter this
thought.
'Oh how I long for a girl as white as snow'.
At face value, this certainly seems to suggest sexual desire yet the words 'girl', suggests innocence
and the colour 'white' used in the simile suggests purity, possibly virginal purity which in today's
context
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Informative Essay On Bloody Mary
Would you ever go in front of your mirror in pure darkness and repeat Bloody Mary 3 times to see if
this ghost will hurt you or not? If you found out the legend was true would you still dare to do it at
your own risk? Well Bloody Mary is one of the most popular ghost in the world. People say that she
was a widow who killed her children, while some say she was a young child who got killed and is
wandering around her grave. Meanwhile legends also portray her as a good ghost, but mostly she is
an evil spirit. While there is events that appear to be true about this legendary ghost it has inspired
people around to cover if these events are really true.
Queen Mary I was born unwanted. She was the only living child of Henry VIII and his first wife,
Catherine of Aragon. While loved by her parents, and by all accounts remarkably intelligent, the fact
that she was born female meant she was openly and constantly regarded as a disappointment – not
merely to her royal family, but all of England.Mary married ... Show more content on
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Here is an actual event that appeared online in 1994 with the legendary ghost Bloody Mary at a
slumber party. "After hearing this story, which was told very scarily, we decided to turn out all of the
lights and try it. We all huddled around the mirror and starting repeating "Mary Worth, Mary Worth,
I believe in Mary Worth." About the seventh time we said it, one of the girls that was in front of the
mirror started screaming and trying to push her way back away from the mirror. She was screaming
so loud that my friend's mom came running into the room. She quickly turned on the lights and
found this girl huddled in the corner screaming. She turned her around to see what the problem was
and saw these long fingernail scratches running down her right cheek. I will never forget her face as
long as I live!" David, Emery."Explaining the Legend of Bloody Mary in the Mirror"September 25,
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Bloody Mary Research Paper
Mary I of England, commonly known as "Bloody Mary", was the only surviving child of Henry VIII
and Catherine of Aragon. When she was 17 years old, the marriage of her parents was officially
annulled, but records of her presence started to decline as early as age 11. Henry's attentions had
been averted by Anne Boleyn, causing him to break England from the Catholic Church in order to
divorce Catherine and marry Anne. When Mary fell out of favor as the daughter of Catherine, she
was distanced from both of her parents, especially her father. When Mary was queen, she tried
desperately to restore Catholicism in England, going so far as to have numerous people killed for
speaking against the Catholic Church. It is difficult to define one cause ... Show more content on
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He was Spanish and ardently Catholic, not unlike Mary's mother. Mary adored and craved the
attention of Philip, but he did not reciprocate her feelings, and considered her unattractive and old.
Rejected by Philip, just as by her father, Mary wanted desperately to produce a male heir. It is
unsurprising that she would believe producing an heir would win Philip's affections, as Henry's
affections tended to stray from any woman who was "unable" to do so. Mary had numerous
"phantom pregnancies", scientifically known as pseudocyesis, in which there was no real pregnancy,
but she experienced the physical symptoms of one. (Gold 124) Pseudocyesis is classified as a
somatic mental disorder, meaning that she experienced the symptoms of pregnancy simply because
she convinced herself that she was pregnant. After her first false pregnancy, she experienced another
about two years later. This time, only Mary believed it to be real. (Crofton 144) It soon became clear
that Mary was not going to produce an heir. It was around this time that the burnings of Protestants
occurred. Some say that the reason so many were burned was that Mary was simply too depressed
and apathetic to stop. (Gold 125) As Mary saw it, Protestantism was the tool that Henry used to cast
her aside. Although Philip's rejection had nothing to do with religion, it seems that she expressed her
distress by enacting violence towards the Protestants of the country. The only logical conclusion,
therefore, is that her frustration was, at the root, due more to the rejection of Henry than that of her
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Mary Tudor (Bloody Mary): The True Story Essay
"She was a king's daughter, she was a king's sister, she was a king's wife, she was a queen, and by
the same title a king also" # Mary Tudor was an influential women of her time period. Many in
modern society know her for her particularly bad reputation as Bloody Mary, however they do not
realize the contributions she made, or her influence on history . The story behind Mary's reputation
gives insight as to her true accomplishments as England's first queen. When Mary Tudor was born
on February 18, 1516, she was the only child that King Henry VIII and his wife Catherine of Aragon
had successfully conceived together. She was widely celebrated and raised well in the kingdom. She
was well–educated and privileged. However, her father wanted ... Show more content on
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Mary and Edward did not get along and when Edward became sick he was convinced by the Duke
of Normandy and Henry Grey to make Jane Grey his heir. Jane was only considered queen for nine
days before the Privy Council declared Mary the true Queen of England on July 19th, 1554. Mary
immediately started passing acts and reforms to bring back the Catholic religion. She also realized,
in order to maintain her power she must get married, and she chose Phillip of Spain to be her
husband. Many were apprehensive and upset about her choosing Phillip as a husband, but she
argued it would be best not only for her, but also for England. However, in 1554, Sir Thomas Wyatt
led a rebellion to prevent their marriage, he thought it would cause England to be controlled by
Spain. This rebellion was known as the Wyatt's Rebellion. During this rebellion, 3000 followers
marched from Mainstone to West Minister, but they had to surrender to Mary's troops. Many of the
rebels were arrested for treason and hanged and 300 were burned at the stake. This mass execution
is what caused Mary to gain her nickname Bloody Mary. Though Mary thought Elizabeth was
involved and came close to executing her half–sister, she instead put Elizabeth in the tower.
Eventually, she reconciled with Elizabeth and she became the next heir to England after Mary's
death. Mary suffered many terrible misfortunes over her lifetime from her parent's divorce to her
belief she was pregnant twice. One of the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Bloody Mary Tudor Research Paper
Mary Tudor became known as "Bloody Mary" during her reign as Queen of England and her
insistence upon returning England to Roman Catholic faith. Although her cruel acts cannot be
excused, Henry VIII played a major role in her violent and angry tendencies. Mary continued the
displeasure of her father up until the last of her life, due to his minescule participation in curing her
rampant illness. From the moment of Mary Tudors conception, her chances of ever successfully
holding the throne were sabotaged due to Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon placing her birth out
of wedlock. Although her illegitimacy remained a secret for some time, it came to haunt her after
she finally received the throne, and obtained the much yearned for title as The Queen of England.
Once she admitted to being born to unmarried parents, she was stripped of her crown and forced to
be called "Lady Mary" in the time outside of her queenship, rather than having the title of "Princess
Mary" (Mary I). Mary's hatred for Protestants stemmed from her father's ... Show more content on
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Anorexia thrived among the many different trials of her well–being. Along with the eating disorder
came sleep disorders, combined with stomach pains and frequent headaches. She also experienced
frequent swelling of the abdomen and poor digestion; she admitted that "my health is more unstable
than that of any creature." Her father often sought out remedies for his daughter but found little
success for her. Henry stated that Mary was "sick in the head and the stomach." Mary found herself
to be immensely displeased in her father's lack of success in discovering a cure for her. The cause of
Mary's mortality came from influenza; however, the illness was greatly accelerated by her poor
mental health caused by her anger towards her father along with the disappointment from her false
pregnancies. Along with influenza, amenorrhea played a large role in the death of the 42 year old
queen (QUEEN "BLOODY" MARY
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Symbolism In The Bloody Chamber
Angela Carter's "The Bloody Chamber" depicts a woman as the heroic figure who represents
persistence, vigor, and passion as she continually encourages and inevitably saves her daughter from
the grips of death. Carter's attempt to effectively portray a woman as an animal like hero is done so
by the mother as seen progressively throughout the story. At the same age as her daughter now, the
heroine already accomplished so much and created an identity illustrating her beastliness, power,
womanhood, and strength. In "The Bloody Chamber", Carter's nameless heroine is in fact the
mother due to her fierce and ferocious attitude as she is explored throughout the story from her
daughters admiring descriptions and her own fearless actions.
The girl is eager to marry the marquis so she can transform into a woman and develop a strong
identity as her mother has. The girl admiringly notices that her mother is "eagle–featured,
indomitable," which illustrates a fierce and tough exterior that correlates to her personality (Carter
2). Boasting that her mother "outfaced a junkful of Chinese pirates, nursed a village through a
visitation of the plague, shot a man–eating tiger with her own hand," as this depicts the girl's mother
as a strong independent character who stands tall in the face of adversity (Carter 2). Her beastliness
is evident as we are now aware that the mother has killed a tiger with her very own hands and she
would not mind doing it again. After the father died, the mother was distraught but prevailed
through her misery able to grow into an even stronger woman and mother for her daughter. As the
girl reflects on such a difficult period in their lives we are able to see how much her mother's growth
also affected her as she states, "my mother... had gladly, scandalously, defiantly, beggared herself for
love... grown magnificently eccentric in hardship" which illustrates her mother did not allow her
grief to control her or inhibit her abilities to be a mom (Carter 2). Being a single parent helped her
flourish as a mother and as a person. The mother is already portrayed as a strong female figure
before this information is introduced but after the audience gains this knowledge about her, it is
clear that the mother is
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Bloody Mary Myths
Creepy urban legends.
1) Bloody Mary:
There are numerous origins of this tale. Mary was supposedly a witch who lived in the woods in the
outskirts. She wasn't allowed inside the village. The villagers didn't like her for obvious reasons.
Mary kidnapped all their kids, one night and burnt her house down along with all the kids. The
villagers, naturally, did not spare her and burnt her down the same way after beating her black and
blue.
Now, according to the legend, if one stands in front of a mirror in a dark room, with a candle lit in
their hand, and chants "Bloody Mary" thrice, they will have summoned her and will see her in the
mirror. She, then, may either kill them, drink their blood or gouge their eyes out. Fancy ways of
killing someone. Talk about creativity! ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Hanako–san is said to reside in the third stall of the toilet, on the third floor. Unlike other spirits,
Hanako has to be summoned by knocking three times on the third stall of the toilet and asking, "Are
you there, Hanako?" If you are replied with a "Yes, I'm here," you may open the door and see
Hanako, who is a girl in red skirt and bobbed hair.
If you do not get any reply, then it's your lucky day and you may and must walk away!
3) Kuchisake–onna:
When it comes to creepy legends, Japan could be the one with the most number of them. This one
began around the 1970s. Kuchisake–onna, the slit mouthed woman, is a spirit of a woman who
walks around wearing a mask. She stops people on her way and strikes the same conversation which
goes something like this;
She: Am I pretty?
Person: No.
(Wrong answer. You're dead. She'll stab you with a pair of scissors.)
If the person says yes, she takes off her mask, unveiling her mouth slit from ear to ear. She asks
then, "How about now?"
If the answer is no, she kills them, if it's yes, she slits their mouth the same way. There's no
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Bloody Mary Rumor
Rumor has it that now everything you read, see, or hear is true. This statement can be told at any
point of history, yet we still believe in them. Why is that and what is the reasons for believing in
some of the most outlandish things? Take for example, that if you walk under a ladder you will get
some amount of years of bad luck. To moss people they won't walk under a ladder for that very
reason and not for the fact that walking under a ladder in the first place is not the safest walking
path. That is what I will be talking about. The way these rumors are spread and also the reason we
tend to believe these false claims of flushing ice cubes down the toilet for snow or a black cat
having evil intent. For the first set of rumors that we'll be looking at are most or the rumors that hold
a dark or sinister meaning behind them. First rumor that will be looked at is the Bloody Mary rumor.
A quick recap if you say bloody Mary 13 times in a candlelit room in front of a mirror Bloody Mary
will appear. For many this is a game that would be played as a little kid at a sleepover or party. I
think that this rumor is so widespread is the fact that we learn this as kids. Along with being kid we
are naive and will believe most things we hear. Along with that many kids like to play jokes with
one another and as kid the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The reason people will believe in these "cleansings" might be in the wording and the types of
marketing that these diets use to persuade you into buying the diet plans. Also, in most cases there is
the placebo effect where it does nothing but conveys the feeling that it is doing work. Then you take
these people and they will post an article on how this miracle of a diet help them so much and this
leads into more people thinking that it works. Then you set off a chain reaction in which leads to the
masses believing in these diets and body
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Bloody Mary Research Paper
The Real Story Behind Bloody Mary Queen Mary, the real story behind the infamous legend of
Bloody Mary. Queen Mary or Mary Tudor was the 1st queen regnant of England, she was born on
February 18, 1516 and the only child of Henry the 8th and Catherine of Aragon to live to adulthood.
Queen Mary was a courageous queen, rising above all and taking what she wanted no matter the
consequence. When Mary was younger she was treated like a princess, her father made sure that
Mary was surrounded with jewels, furs, and many other luxuries. Mary was betrothed to her cousin,
Charles V, the Holy Roman Emperor, he wanted Mary to come to Spain to train as a spanish queen,
her father said no and said that she will stay in the castle till the age of 12, the engagement was
called off by Charles V soon after. Mary received a high education, knowing Spanish, Latin, and
French, she was also a very talented dancer and showed her talents to ambassadors when they
visited her father at court. When Mary was nine years old, Henry sent her to Wales with her own
personal court to act as a royal representative, many believed that she would succeed her father
despite being a woman. Later on there were allegations of incest made by Henry, between him and
Catherine since she was married to Henry's ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The reason why Mary is still a big topic in the middle ages is because of her name, Bloody Mary,
which inspired many legends told around campfires or games involving candles and a mirror,
without her name and what she had done to get it, the legends would have never been told. Mary
had a large number of miscarriages, she never had any children and her husband soon became bored
of her and spent little time with her in the castle, because of this she fell into a deep depression, she
also may have suffered from uterine or ovarian cancer and died on November 17,
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Urban Legend Of Bloody Mary
"I will never forget her face as long as I live!" The urban legend of bloody mary is terrifying, many
will see this as morbid but I see this a story as explaining why parents tell us never to never do this
challenge. This story is explaining why our parents say not to do this challenge known as the
"Bloody Mary". This urban legend is one of my favorites, it is very paranormal and that is
something I would like to study one day. Bloody mary was a beautiful woman who was in a car
accident in the 1700s. She spent hours a day looking at herself in the mirror. One day she was in a
severe car wreck, after this wreck she wasn't able to look at herself in the mirror, even the kids at
school could not look at her. One night she was done thinking
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Bloody Mary Myths
The mysteries of urban legends, almost everyone has heard of this bloody woman. Some people fear
mirrors because the urban legend of her appearing. The legend is if you say "Bloody Mary" 3 times,
she appears in the mirror, usually covered with blood. I know most urban legends are fiction, but
could this one be true? I've tried to do this before and nothing has happened, I still do believe in the
conspiracy of bloody mary. As a little kid I was always scared of the chances of ghost and monsters
being real but are they? Urban legends have always been a thing I enjoy, the mysteries of knowing
or seeing the things that people say are true really interests me. There were different things you
could say for her to appear in different ways. If you
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Bloody Chamber
As a feminist, it is almost to be expected that many of Angela Carter's happy ever after endings will
strike the reader with a bold feminist message. However, in The Bloody Chamber, this is not
necessarily the case. Although there are several feminist messages in the stories' resolutions, these
messages are not always presented in the way one would expect, and not every female protagonist is
presented as a feminist character. By taking the roles of typically Gothic women and toying with the
presentation of female characters, many of Carter's feminist messages are not as one would expect.
The eponymous story The Bloody Chamber ends with a sense of resolution, love and happiness. The
antagonist of the story is no more, and the narrator is able to live a happy and fulfilling life with
Jean–Yves. Whether the ending is truly feminist, however, is open to discussion. In one respect, the
actual resolution to the story is all down to the narrator's mother, who is presented at the story's
climax as an incredibly powerful female figure. Carter uses masculine and bestial imagery to
describe the mother, in a way that is not dissimilar to earlier imagery to describe the Marquis. The
narrator refers to her mother's hair as "her white mane"; just as earlier she had referenced the
Marquis's "dark mane". The juxtaposition between light and dark here is a typical example of Gothic
extremes; while the Marquis seems to represent darkness – the supernatural and evil – the mother is
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The Causes Of Sunday : The Events Of Bloody Sunday
The events of Bloody Sunday
On January 30, 1972 in the Bogside area of Derry, Northern Ireland an incident occurred, "The
Bloody Sunday." The major massacre dealt with The British Army and public responses, critics of
Widgerys findings, and the exoneration of the British Army documented in the Widgery tribunal
report.
One Sunday morning a civil rights march took place in Londonderry, January 30, 1972. There were
around 10,000 people who gathered for this march. In the nationalist Bogside area of the city, the
route for the march took place where organizers were sealed off by the British Army which led
demonstrators towards "Free Derry Corner". Stones were thrown at soldiers and though there was an
army barricade, people continued on this march. The soldiers responding with water cannons, rubber
bullets and a gas known as CS which causes a "burning sensation and tearing of the eyes to the
extent that the subject cannot keep their eyes open, and a burning irritation of the nose, mouth and
throat mucous membranes causing profuse coughing," (the stationery office, 2010) When this
uprising began to take place, the 1st Parachute Regiment soldiers moved in and captivated as many
rioters as possible. Within minutes, open gun fire went into the crowd, killing 13 men and injuring
13 others.
The dead were all male, aged between seventeen and forty–one. Another man, aged fifty–nine, died
some months later from injuries sustained on that day. The wounded included a fifteen–year–old boy
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Bloody Mary Research Paper
There was a substantial assortment of 33 cocktails, all estimated at just $15, and all having sexy–
sounding ingredients like cypress essence, myrrh, and smoked salt. The sangria assumes an
imaginative part on rose with rosé syrup. The Bloody Mary consists of such flavor that it needs a
paragraph to portray the elaborate flavors combined of bacon vodka, pickled quail eggs, and
homemade beef jerky. The Dark Chocolate Citrus Protein, which includes rum, honey, chocolate
protein, orange bitters, orange essence, and smoked salt sounds like it would wake you up with
vibrant flavors to leave you feeling refreshed with a sense of vitality. We ultimately ordered
something that reminded us of a dessert we ate as children and it made for a pleasant unexpected
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Angela Carter’s The Bood Chamber Essay
In Angela Carter's The Bloody Chamber, the theme of transformation appears throughout the short
story cycle. The hero/heroine's virginity acts as a source of strength that protects them from harm.
Their lack of fear also saves them from death. Virginity acts as power of potentia, either literally or
symbolically and results in a release of an observed transformative power. The bloody chamber
serves a different symbolic purpose of transformation for Beauty in "The Courtship of Mr Lyon",
the heroine in "The Tiger's Bride" and the Countess in "The Lady of the House of Love". Each of
these characters will embark on a journey that questions their selfhood in circumstances that are
presented to them and ultimately each will go through a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This foregrounds potential of narcissism within Beauty. The Beast allows Beauty to go back to
London to be with her father under the condition that she must return before winter is over. While in
London, she, "[sends] him flowers, white roses in return for the ones he had given her; and when she
left the florist, she experienced a sudden sense of perfect freedom, as if she had jus escaped from an
unknown danger" (48). With this gesture, Beauty feels all her debts are settled and she no longer has
an obligation to the Beast. When she puts on her robe of fur, she becomes her own beast, showing a
parallel between her and the Beast.
Beauty undergoes a physical alteration essential for her negative transformation, due to her
susceptibility to corruptibility. Since "she was learning at the end of her adolescence, how to be a
spoiled child and that pearly skin of hers was plumping out, a little, with high living and
compliments" (48–49). Beauty transformed into a snobbish woman who became obsessed with
materialistic objects and her looks. Her epiphytic moment for redemption occurs when the spaniel is
at the door, thinking the Beast has come to collect her. She acts as a supplementary element, who
offers companionship to the Beast. She is a loyal hybrid figure, half human half beast and despite
being, "[a] well brushed, jewelled dog" (49) she demonstrates human capacity for compassion,
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Urban Legend of Bloody Mary Essay
Bloody Mary Version 3
The story of Bloody Mary is told in different versions all around the world has been included in nine
different movies (three in the past two years) (The Internet Movie Database). This particular version
of the popular urban legend of Bloody Mary originates locally from North Potomac, Maryland. The
storyteller is a female 19–year–old Caucasian sophomore student, currently studying psychology at
the University. The story was collected in the spring on the University campus. After dinner, in a
one–on–one environment, she began the story of an urban legend from her childhood.
I remember this from back in second grade. It scared me so much.
It was Friday the 13th. Back in elementary school, we always ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
The stories that speak of Bloody Mary's origins, surprisingly, tend to be more similar on their history
of the ghost than the accounts of ghost summoning ritual.
One full version of the urban legend posted on urbanlegendsonline.com begins with a little girl
named Mary who became ill and fell into a deep coma (Urban Legends & Superstitions). The doctor
and family members, believing she was dead, buried her alive in a family plot next to their house.
The first night, Mary's mother heard a scream from Mary's grave, but no one else believed her. Days
later, the family finally dug up young Mary's grave to find Mary dead along with scratches on the
top of the coffin. Mary's fingernails were also covered in blood.
This version of the tale is similar to the version given by the storyteller at the beginning of this
article. Both accounts speak of a girl named Mary who was buried alive. The version offered by the
storyteller tells of a hateful motive that led to the return of the vengeful spirit. The version given by
urbanlegendsonline.com explains that what had happened was an accident due to negligence.
The second half the urban legend, or in most cases, the entire urban legend itself, tends to be much
more varied in explaining how to summon the ghost. The simple organization of these variations
leads to easily comparable details of the ghost story. Certain instructions require the date to be
Friday the 13th, while others do not.
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Bloody Mary Ritual Analysis
"The Bloody Mary Ritual" told by Bianca. I was the most affected in this story and here's why. It all
started on a saturday night and one friends house when we had all ran out of ideas on what to do. It
was around midnight and we had ran out of things to do so another friend Lacey suggested "Let's do
the Bloody Mary Ritual." When Lacey suggested this I was for sure it was fake I just thought it was
something people told little kids to make them scared. We lit a candle and all of us stared at the
mirror in the bathroom and waited patiently. Finally I said "Nothing's happening. Let's just get out of
here." I reached for the doorknob but it was locked, but no one locked it, at this point we knew
someone or something was holding the door shut. Suddenly, Alex (another girl at the sleepover)
screamed and pointed at the mirror. I whirled away from the locked door and ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
The ghost had scratched a message deep into the flesh of my right forearm. It said "I AM REAL."
When I woke up I saw the message and I wanted to throw up, when I woke up the girls asked me
what happened I said. "After that...that horrible ghost knocked the four of you down, it grabbed me
by the hair and pulled me through the mirror," Bianca said with a shudder. "I felt something
scratching my face and hands, and I tried to fight back but I was knocked to the ground and dragged
along a cold floor by my hair. The ghost tossed me into a dark room. I couldn't see anything, but I
felt the ghost clutched my arm and there was this terrible pain. That's all I remember until I heard
your voices and the light came on." We still have sleepovers but we will never ever do the Bloody
Mary ritual again who knows what might
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The Mary Summary : Bloody Mary
"Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary." Have you ever said these three words in front of a
mirror in the dark? Well you don't want to see what happens if you do. Bloody Mary has many
things involved in her such as her looks, where she lives and how she got her name, how she died,
the legend and the curse, the different versions of her, and even people's own experiences. There are
a lot of facts about Bloody Mary but those are the main ones. Bloody Mary was always a mysterious
woman. Everyone was afraid of Mary and no one would cross paths with her because they were
scared that if they did their cows would go dry, the food in their shops would rot before winter, and
that their children would get sick (Bloody Mary: From Scary stories at ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
They found out she was using the young girl's blood to keep her young the whole time. The Curse
that Mary put on the village was harsh. If you chant her name three times in a mirror and in the dark
with a lit candle she will pop up (Haunted Rooms). Many say it takes about twelve to thirteen times
chanting her name and she will show up. There are many different descriptions of Bloody Mary and
many people have witnessed her and they all have different descriptions of her. This girl and her
friend called for Bloody Mary and when she showed up in the mirror, it was a clear image of a
woman in black and white, her mouth was wide open but no sound was coming out. She had a black
around her eyes, her hands were bright red and some of her fingernails were missing (Museum
Occult). Two other friends called for Bloody Mary in the Mirror and the description of what she
looks like is completely different than what the first two people said. The friends said they saw an
old woman with cuts on her face and chains were around her neck and she was looking right at them
(museum Occult). This young man played Bloody Mary and looked in the mirror and saw a girl that
looked to be in her early twenties and she was looking the other way and slowly started to turn
towards him (Your Ghost Stories). Bloody Mary's descriptions all vary and some say they don't even
remember what she looked like because they were in so much fear and just ran out of the room.
There are many people who
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Essay about Bloody Queen Mary: What's in a Name?
Nicknames are generally defined as subterfuge given to a person to better understand their
personalities. In order to understand whether Queen Mary deserves her nickname we must first look
at her history. Mary I of England was born on February 18th 1516. She was the only surviving child
of Henry VIII's first wife, Catherine of Aragon. Due to her gender and her mother's incapability to
produce a male heir, they were both cast away. It was after the death of Edward VI in which Mary
made a bid for her birthright as heir to the throne. Edward VI and his council intended for his cousin
Lady Jane Grey to succeed him because of her protestant faith. However, after only nine days Jane
Grey was dethroned by Mary by popular support. During her reign ... Show more content on
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One would argue that this was a book simply retelling of the burnings that were in fact ordered by
Queen Mary. Therefore, the nickname Bloody Queen Mary would be appropriate. This is a strange
assumption because monarchs have ordered the deaths of people long before Mary even existed.
William the Conqueror's army killed around 5000 Anglo–Saxons during the battle of Hastings. This
staggering number is almost 16 times larger than the 283 Protestants Mary had executed. However,
one would argue that the Battle of Hastings was in fact a battle. Its death tolls could not possibly be
compared to the Protestants who were burned during Mary's reign. However, here the lies the real
question. What is so different between those who were slaughtered during a battle and those who
were slaughtered during peacetime? In both circumstances, the head of the state was doing what
they thought best for their country. William wished to expand Normandy's borders and Queen Mary
wanted to restore England to the Roman Catholic church so that England would be spiritually
restored in the eyes of God. Although William had around 5000 people butchered by his men in one
day, it is Queen Mary that earns such a disgraceful nickname for having only 283 Protestants
burned. The reason for this is simple; Queen Mary was succeeded by a protestant. If it were a
Catholic who succeeded Mary, there would not be a Bloody Queen Mary. Queen Mary the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Bloody Mary Short Story
Bloody Mary
I was having some friends over on Friday night. Friday the thirteenth of october to be exact. Me and
my four best friends. It was Erick, Jeff, Brady, and Trevor. We made food and watched movies and
talked where we were going hunting tomorrow. By midnight, we'd run out of things to do. We were
so bored. "Let's try that Bloody Mary thing," Trevor said. Erick, was sitting crossed–legged on his
sleeping bag, said, "What's the Bloody Mary thing?" Brady, who was laying on top of his own
sleeping bag on the far side of the room, said: "Come on, Erick. everyone knows the Bloody Mary
thing! You stand in front of the bathroom mirror with a lighted candle and say the Mary's name three
times. Then her ghost appears, looking just the way she did when she died; all horrible and bloody
with scars all over her face!" . "She sounds gorgeous. Just why, exactly, do you think I would want
to see the ghost of Bloody Mary?" Erick asked. "Why not?" I said from my spot on the air mattress
in the living room. "I've always wanted to see a ghost! It could be fun. Besides, I've heard she can
tell your future if you summon her correctly." "And if you don't summon her correctly, or if she's in
a bad mood, the ghost of Bloody Mary will rip your eyes out and leave your face horribly scarred,"
Jeff said dramatically. "Or you will be found dead with claw marks all over your face and body."
"Or you could be trapped in the mirror with Bloody Mary for eternity," Trevor
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Bloody Mary and "The Virgin Queen"
"Bloody Mary and the "Virgin Queen"
Mary and Elizabeth Tudor were both, by all accounts, strong and intelligent women endowed with
many of the qualities that mark a successful ruler. However, only Elizabeth's legacy is a positive
one; her reign has been called the "Golden Age" of England, and she remains a heroine in popular
history and even modern film. Mary's reign is scowled at, and seen by most as a brief unpleasant
period preceding the glorious ascension of Elizabeth. To account for this, one can examine each
sovereign's maternal influences, governing styles, and choices regarding marriage.
Maternal Influence Mary's mother, Katherine of Aragon, has been described as a "staunch woman of
misguided principles" (Weir 3). ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
She contracted a matrimonial alliance with her nephew Philip, another Catholic monarch (Erickson
331). Their marriage caused a general outcry; the British did not favor Spaniards and feared that,
upon their union, Philip would rule England as king; or that, if she died childless, he would seek to
seize the throne for himself and his future heirs (337). This seemed a valid fear in light of Mary's
traditional feminine deference to male authority, but Mary declared that she would "wholly love and
obey the man she married, following the divine commandment, and would not in any way act
against his will, but if he tried to interfere with the government of the kingdom she would have to
prevent it at all costs" (Erickson 333). For some, this was not enough; and the marriage contract
specified that Phillip could not succeed. Thus, Mary was determined to have a say in her own
government. However, faith could guide Mary even if her husband could not, and she began to be
very influenced by Catholic Cardinal Pole (Erickson 390). "For all men who minimized her
authority, Pole was the most blatant" (Erickson 390). Pole gave Mary misguided advice concerning
the religious conversion of her realm. "He assumed that the religious situation in England was not
unlike that in Italy, where the Protestant heresy had taken rather shallow root and had been
decisively crushed by the Papal inquisition" (Erickson 390). He failed to recognize the importance
of the fact that a whole
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Urban Legend Bloody Mary
Children are constantly searching for news ways to have fun. "This is the period when children need
to satisfy their craving for excitement by participating in ritual games and playing in the dark.They
are constantly looking for a safe way to extract pleasure and release anxiety and fears" (Mikkelson).
Many children find themselves jumping into mischievous behavior to keep themselves busy whether
it is being destructive, pranking a friend, or being apart of ritual games. These are some ways for
children to cope with their boredom.. This is also probably one of the reasons why kids would risk
conjuring up a evil spirit looking for revenge."Mirrors and reflections in general have always been
held in fear and awe, and consequently been linked ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Even though some aspects of the original story have changed the story is still being told in countless
versions. Bloody Mary has played on people's desire for excitement and it is also a way to release
anxiety and experience some safe fear.With so much talk about the "Bloody Mary" legend over the
many decades and versions, it's a challenge to really analyze its cultural symbolism, because it's
different from culture to culture. However, it is possible to theorize a single interpretation by
examining the more pointed points thatcomprise the legend together. The ritual is almost always
carried out by children, most commonly girls, in a dark bathroom, by means of a chant. A woman
then appears in the mirror, most typically with malicious intentions. The legend of "Bloody Mary"
seems to resurrect with children's comingof age. The children most enticed by the myth are
adolescent children from the ages of nine to twelve. Children at this age look for excitement and try
to find independent freedom, sometimes in the wrong places. "Bloody Mary" is the true meaning for
exciting fun and a feel good rush. The way for satisfying this newfound craving for excitement
sometimes means breaking the rules a little. Opposite of the rules we are taught as children. We are
taught as children that when somebody break
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Mary Tudor 's Bloody Mary
"Mary Mary quite contrary. How does your garden grow? With silver bells and cockleshells. And
pretty maids all in a row." This is a nursery that is believed to be associated with Mary Tudor, most
commonly known as "Bloody Mary". Sounds like an innocent nursey rhyme, right? But really,
according to Gillies, the garden in the nursery rhyme is a reference to graveyards which were
increasing in size, with those who dared to continue to follow the Protestant faith. The silver bells
and cockleshells were said to be used as torture devices and the pretty maids mentioned in the
nursery rhyme were in rows for guillotines. There are stories out there that dig deeper into the
nursey rhyme and tell about the history and background of this nursery rhyme. Mary "Bloody Mary"
Tudor failed her duties as queen, due to the forces– some of which were not in her control– effecting
her life. Mary Tudor, according to Hope, has been known as a catholic dictator who killed nearly
three hundred Protestants, all including men, women, and even children, during her short reign that
lasted five years. Jessica Hope states that historians tried to re–evaluate Mary's reputation and they
have argued that Mary deserves more appreciation for her work than previously thought. This shows
that Mary Tudor was not a bad person, but she did good things throughout her lifetime. Mary Tudor
was born February 18, 1516 in a palace– Palace of Placentia– located in Greenwich, England. Mary
was born to King Henry VIII
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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How Did Monticello Fight In The Bloody Mary

  • 1. How Did Monticello Fight In The Bloody Mary 1690, the era of the golden age of piracy, the wave's lapped at the hull of the galleon of the Bloody Mary. Captain Susan Monticello stood behind the helm listening to the rustle of the sail's in the Caribbean breeze. Her tan skin glistened underneath the hot sun, her cinnamon hair was neatly tied back to keep her eye's clear. So that she wouldn't lead her crew into unknown reef's that lurked in the uncharted water's. Her flintlock pistol's shone brightly from their daily polishing, her rapier clicked against her leg as her ship rolled between the wave's. She was very fond of the weapon earned from the dead body, of the most arrogant English captain she had the misfortune to meet. It was one of the main reasons she had set her base within those ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... They learned the one and only time that some fool thought to take what wasn't theirs. For you see Susan knew her women would gut any man faster then they could blink if they thought to ever touch them without consent. She had personally executed the one fool who didn't heed her warning. It wasn't only the women she was protective of she would die for any man that sailed under her command. Yet she felt something was missing from her life as she stared out on to the blue water's of the Caribbean. For Susan the life of a captain was a lonely one, sure she could take any number of men to her bed. However that would only ensue that she was placing favoritism onto one of her crew. That was something she just couldn't afford, they needed to act as one when the time came for the call of battle. Not worrying which one of them was spending his night's in her bunk. "Captain, lifeboat off the starboard bow," her lookout called down from the crow's nest. "Lower the mizzenmasts, secure the jibs, let loose the topsail," Susan barked out her command's as she turned her ship. Wondering if anyone was alive on board that small boat. Pondering how anyone could survive in the heat of the summer sun without water to sustain them. "Ready the pole hooks, and the ladder," she bellowed out as the small lifeboat drew near. "Hook on Captain," called ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2.
  • 3. Bloody Mary: Urban Legends You would be sitting around a campfire maybe surrounded by friends out camping for a weekend to celebrate just finishing the school year, or maybe you are with your family out on a yearly family bonding camping trip. It is getting pretty boring and everyone has run out interesting of things to say when someone speaks up. They say they have a story to tell you. It is a story about this witch who lives in these woods. The story goes that a girl named Elly Kedward was accused of witchcraft and banished into the Blair Woods and now she goes after anyone that enters the woods. The story is something that gets your blood pumping and adrenaline rushing. You know the story already because you have heard it a thousand times before and will hear it again. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Kennedy said Ich bin ein Berliner during a speech showing the US support for West Germany 22 months after Soviet–Pro East Germany built the Berlin Wall. The saying 'Ich bin ein Berliner' translates to 'I am a Berliner,' in English. A Berliner in German does in fact mean Berliner but is also a popular jelly filled pastry similar to a donut in that region. That would mean the president had just called himself a jelly donut. American for the longest time had been under the impression that Kennedy had been laughed off the stage by the locals but in fact no misunderstood what he said he he finished his speech without a single person even raising an eyebrow. You can still find some people today who still didn't know that no one laughed him off the stage and that he did say the correct ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4.
  • 5. Serial Killers : A Bloody Trail Of Death Throughout history, serial killers have sparked interest in the minds of many. Serial killers researched today are generally single people who murder for many different psychological reasons, still not fully understood. What happens when you get a group of four psychopaths in the same house, all with the same drive for murder, leads to a bloody trail of death. In the 1800's, on a remote trail in Kansas, a so called 'family' started killing travelers. Working as a unit to execute their murders, these four 'family' members would continue their rampage from the same location, killing approximately 11 victims. This deadly 'family' consisted of Ma, Pa, John, and Kate Bender. Although they are thought to be a family, the only two related are ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... With all their new land, they would only build a tiny, one bedroom house. In order to make money, they divided their house into two sections; living quarters, and a general store and inn. Travelers would pass through, refilling their carriages with traveling needs, and staying for a good night's rest and meal before continuing their journey. It is unsure how long they went on before becoming greedy, murdering and robbing their tenants. Travelers would only come around every so often, but Kate would end up attracting the attention from many outsiders. She was an attractive and outgoing 23 years old lady, practicing in the art of spiritualistic shows. She would often perform séances and do demonstrations of her 'healing' powers and psychic medium abilities. She was very well spoken and attracted many people to their little cottage for private readings, where people were never seen again. This would give these killer family members more victims to prey on. When people would arrive at their house, they were treated to a nice meal. They were placed in the seat of honor at the head of the table. This seat of honor was positioned to where the guest would have their back to the canvas curtain separating the inn from the living quarters on the other side. They would make it through the first part of dinner, when John would retreat to the living quarters to retrieve something. He would sneak out, behind the victim, and smash him over the head with a sledge ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6.
  • 7. In the short stories in ‘The Bloody Chamber’, Carter is... In the short stories in 'The Bloody Chamber', Carter is excessively interested in violent instincts'. How far do you agree with this view? In the short stories in 'The Bloody Chamber', Carter is excessively interested in violent instincts, this viewpoint is correct to an extent but Carter has a feministic approach to her stories, which at some points more apparent. I find that her stories are in a literal sense driven by violent instincts but optimistic outlook of Carter that humans are capable of change is still evident. Violence is already embedded in fairytales and by bringing this to the surface; she is only catering to her adult audience. The violent instincts portrayed by the characters shows what happens when we give in to the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Carter comments on this often in her short stories in 'The Bloody Chamber'. Secondly, Carter is suggesting that while society remains its patriarchal self, violence will always be present and this is reflected in her short stories. Carter appears to be excessively interested in violent instincts because she wanted to explore the human nature. In the Company of Wolves, the narrator addresses the reader, from the perspective of someone involved in the story In 'granny's bed between the paws of the tender wolf' suggests that this story is based on little red riding hood. The juxtaposition of tender and wolf, shows how Carter creates dominant male characters which though are presented as evil are also seen to be partly victimised by their role which they are trapped within. Although carter uses intertexuality and makes exospheric references to other folk tales, in 'the company of wolves', it is actually hinting at what it is like for females to go out into the world and immediately be in danger from men and the traps that they lay for them, 'You are always in danger in the forest'. The forest is perhaps an allegory for society and in a sense women must use the strength that has derived through their female lineage e.g. Mothers, Grandmothers to face obstacles. Angela Carter presents a feminist agenda in which women are presented as controlling their own ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8.
  • 9. Bloody Mary Research Paper Bloody Mary By:Savanah Schafroth Have you witnessed the gruesome game of Bloody Mary? Despite the fact that this individual was evoked for her disturbance, she used to be sophisticated monarch, legally named Mary. Bloody Mary is a legend consisting of a spirit christened Bloody Mary. This mythology consists of a speculum, a dark area, a torch, and a human to play the game. Who Was She? Bloody Mary is the phantom of Queen Mary. Queen Mary was brought to life ,by Catherine of Aragon, on February 18, 1516. Her existence was marked by a total of miscarriages or deceitful pregnancies. Additionally, she was known for her brutal ways such as hollering, blasphemy, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10.
  • 11. Mary Tudor: Bloody Mary At exactly midnight tomorrow, go into your bathroom with a lit up candle in your hand. Place the candle right in front of the mirror, and start chanting Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary, and etc. Do it 3 to 30 times and legend has it that you will see a ghost in the mirror and then that ghost will kill you or bruise you emotionally or physically really abominably. This legend is called "Bloody Mary" and many people are assured that the legend is not true because they allege that their friends did it before and nothing happened. This legend came to be because of one infamous queen, Mary Tudor or known as Mary I of England. The article, "The bloody history of Bloody Mary: Part 1" states clearly on how Mary got her Bloody Mary nickname, "Mary's 'Bloody' moniker is related to some of her first acts as Queen: first came the execution of Dudley and then the reinstitution of the Heresy Acts in 1554. Under the Acts many, many protestants were killed under the Marian Persecutions, the main method of execution being death by fire. It's believed many of the 283 killed under the Heresy Act died this way and gave Mary the unofficial title Queen "Bloody" Mary." (McGarry 1) Mary Tudor agonized many people because she wanted Catholicism back into her kingdom and not many people supported her. They didn't support her because many people thought of her as a bastard for the things she did to her fellow citizens and many people headed towards the direction of Protestantism. Many people say ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12.
  • 13. Queen Mary Of A Bloody Mary Essay Thomas Salter Mrs. Lusk Parrish English 11 Accelerated 11 March 2016 Queen "Bloody" Mary Did you know that the legend of "Bloody Mary" is real and originated with Queen Mary I of England, the source of over 300 deaths? Over 400 years ago, Queen Mary Tudor ruled in England from 1553, until her death in 1558. Mary was a Catholic and so were her parents, but when her Mother and father got divorced, her father switched to a Protestant faith. When she became Queen she quickly reformed her Father religious laws so she could return England back to its Catholic faith. In doing so she had hundreds of Protestants burnt alive to prove that she was not playing and really want some change in England. By doing this she gained the nickname Bloody Mary. Mary really had no one to blame for her actions as Queen, her childhood was great, her reign was short, and death will always be remembered in the history of the Tudor dynasty. Childhood Mary Tudor was born on February 18, 1516. Her parents were Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon. She was the oldest of two half siblings. Everything was going well for the family until; Mary 's father realized that he had to divorce Catherine. The reason for the divorce Mary 's father knew that "In Marrying her he had sinned twice over: once by committing incest and again by disobeying the injunction in the book of Leviticus against 'uncovering the nakedness of thy brother 's wife '" (Erickson 78). After the divorce, Mary 's father broke all relations with the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14.
  • 15. Bloody Mary Essay Bloody Mary Mary I, Queen of England was a very prominent figure in European history. Her reign as queen was filled with many trials and tribulations that were not accepted by most of England. Many of Mary's rash decisions were most likely do to her upbringing and her lack of will power. Whether it is being declared a bastard as a young child by her tyrannical father, Henry VIII, or her marriage to Phillip of Spain, Mary was easily influenced by others and it showed as she grew older and took over the thrown. Mary was born the daughter of Henry VIII and Katherine. Henry had failed again to bear a son to retain the thrown after him. His annulment from Katherine was not granted so Henry decreed that the Church of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Philip returned to England with two friars, leaders of the Spanish Inquisition. They encouraged Mary to take charge of her own desire and reestablish Catholicism in England(Liston 193). For what Mary thought was for the good of all the English people, she mercilessly killed more than three hundred of her subjects. Most of these victims were burned at the stake by incompetent executors. Gunpowder bags wouldn't explode, wet wood would burn slowly, and spectators were forced to watch innocent Protestants become martyrs. This all only strengthened the religion Mary hoped to destroy(Weir 219). Mary was further weakened by famine that set in while the burnings continued. All of England grew to hate her and she adopted the name "Bloody" Mary which is still commonly known today. She then became a laughing stock when she begged for Philip's return and claimed more pregnancies. She faced death realizing that Elizabeth would succeed her, she imprisoned her and threatened her with execution, but much like Henry VIII did not want Mary to inherit the thrown; her wishes ceased to matter when she died(Trease 227). Mary's sheer naivety made her very gullible for anyone who wanted something from her. The influence of her mother was simply exploited by Philip and the leaders of Spain, she would have never ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16.
  • 17. Urban Legend Of The Bloody Mary I'm here to tell you about the urban legend of the Bloody Mary. "Bloody Mary" is a urban legend that first originated in in the early 1960s as an adolescent party game, and the person would take a candle or a flashlight and go into a dark room and look into a mirror and say a chant," The exact chant is unknown". After you say the chant a unknown amount of times something would appear and or happen. For example in the Poems of Robert Burns, published in 1787: Is a great example of a bloody mary ritual. "Take a candle, and go alone to a looking glass; eat an apple before it, and some traditions say, you should comb your hair all the time; the face of your conjugal companion, to be, will be seen in the glass, as if peeping over your shoulder." I'm going to explain to you where this urban legend originated from and why i believe its story has been altered and changed so many times over the years. Also how the legend stands in today's world. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... And this is because folklorists did not really start recording examples of urban legends until 1970s. But this Urban legend is based around the idea of piering into a mirror and being able to see or feel something that is not normal. And this can be traced back as told in the Bible (I Corinthians 13) as "see[ing] through a glass, darkly."There are mentions of looking–glass divination in Chaucer's Squire's Tale (c. 1390), Spenser's The Faerie Queen (1590), and Shakespeare's Macbeth ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18.
  • 19. Did Mary I deserve the title 'bloody mary'? Did Mary I deserve the title 'Bloody Mary'? The question of this essay is 'Did Mary I really deserve the nickname 'Bloody Mary'? This essay will show the reasons why she does and why she doesn't deserve the nickname. Mary I was the daughter of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon. She was claimed illegitimate by her father and was forced to sign papers saying that he had never married her mother (Catherine of Aragon). Mary wasn't allowed to see her mother and was sent away by Henry VIII. She followed the Catholic ways of her mother and became quite religious. Mary was angered that her father was turning Britain into Protestants. When her father finally died, at the age of 55, Mary tried to convince her 10–year–old brother– Edward– to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This was a very bad move for Mary, as the French invaded Calais and reclaim the town once again. The town had been hung onto during the Hundred Years War, and was a major blow on England. This turned even more people against Mary I. I have gained this knowledge from a modern textbook. I have also searched on the internet to make sure that this knowledge is correct. On the other hand, there are a number of reasons why Mary I did not deserve her name. The next bit of this essay will tell you why. Mary was often mistreated for her beliefs. She was criticised by the likes of Hugh Latimer and Nicholas Ridely. People started to call the Queen 'Bloody Mary' and called her 'The Monstrous Murderer'. I can gain this information from Source B. This tells me that Latimer criticised rich people as well as Catholic people and was a preacher. Ridely was a Bishop of London. This source is reliable as Source C shows Latimer and Ridely getting killed in the woodcut. I also know from my own knowledge and other internet resources that Mary was called 'The Monstrous Murderer'. Mary was also accused of being a witch. The source that tells me this is Source H. This shows a picture of Mary blessing rings which are supposed to cure sickness. I feel this image is trying to portray that Mary had powers. This piece should not be trusted. We know that witches are not actually real. However, the person who has created it surprised me. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20.
  • 21. The Impact of Bloody Sunday on Northern Ireland Essay The Impact of Bloody Sunday on Northern Ireland Bloody Sunday has made a very big impact on Irelandand events occurring there since 1972. According to Lord Widgery, the soldiers acted in self–defence, therefore it was not their fault and could not be blamed. Republicans were very annoyed by this verdict, so in 1998 a new inquiry was started called "The Saville Inquiry". The inquiry has so far cost £130m. The final cost will be in the region of £150m. An estimated £15 million of net additional costs arose from the transfer of the hearings to London from Londonderry. The point of this inquiry was to re–examine the evidence of what happened on Bloody Sunday. There is an ongoing debate about ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... * Laws against discrimination. * Fair allocation of housing. * The repeal of the Special Powers Act which allowed internment. * The disbanding of the B specials. The Protestants were suspicious of the Civil Rights Movement. They suspected the IRA may be involved. The Unionists got the RUC to stop one of their marches and this led to serious rioting. In the end the British troops were sent over to Northern Ireland to try and keep order. The IRA split into two groups; The official IRA who wanted to achieve a United Ireland, and the Provisional IRA who thought of the British Army as an army of occupation and believed violence was the answer and would achieve their goal. The Provisional IRA shot Gunner Curtis. He was the first British soldier to be killed in the Northern Ireland. The Civil Rights Movement planned a march in Londonderry. British troops fired into the crowd and killed thirteen people! This day became famously known as 'Bloody Sunday'. After this, Northern Ireland lost its parliament.
  • 22. Loyalist fears: The Catholics in Northern Ireland had a lot of reasons to make them feel displeased. The Protestants made their lives very miserable, mainly I think because they felt very apprehensive of them. They were afraid that in a United Ireland Catholics would outvote them and they would lose control over the education of their ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23.
  • 24. Essay on Different Historical Interpretations of Bloody... Different Historical Interpretations of Bloody Sunday On January 30th 1972, civil rights activists were involved in a protest march against internment through Londonderry. British paratroopers, who were deployed on the streets, shot and killed 13 of the marchers and wounded others. Many people have different views on what happened and why. The main conflicting views are those of the paratroopers and their supporters and the views of the marchers and the friends and family of those killed. Source A is a newspaper report form the Daily Mail in September 1999. It is a report on new evidence released from the second enquiry into Bloody Sunday, led by Lord Saville. The headline reads "PARAS IN ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... However, this would be welcomed by the marchers and families of those killed, as they have always insisted that those killed were innocent victims of British paratroopers. They were greatly angered at the findings of the Widgery enquiry and believed that it was a whitewash by the British government. This new evidence presents a new chance for those who they believe are murderers to be put on trial. Another change, which discredits the original evidence, is that "forensic scientist Dr. John Martin, who gave evidence to the Widgery hearing that Mr. Wray had been handling guns or explosives, has reversed his opinion". This is bad for the Paratroopers side of the story, but could suggest that Dr. Martin had been under pressure to support the soldiers in the enquiry, as their story was based on the protestors firing guns at them. Source B is another newspaper report, from the Guardian. The headline reads "BLOODY SUNDAY REVELATION. This backs up what we have been saying all these years: the victims were innocent." This immediately indicated that the writer of the article supports the view of the protesters and the families of those killed. This also shows that the article may be biased. The article also does not include the opinion of the Paratroopers or their supporters on the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25.
  • 26. Harry 's Death Harry lunched to life as he heard the springs of his military crib rattle beneath him. His hands reached blindly in the dark for his gun, gritting his teeth together. He was about five seconds away from pulling the trigger when Louis' slightly shrill voice filled his ears. "Bloody hell Harry, put that thing down it's me." Harry did just that. "What are you doing? Your bed is over the other side of the room. I wasn't expecting to see you." "I couldn't sleep. Figured I would talk to you." Harry fell silence in the darkness before scrubbing his eyes with the backs of his fists feeling exhaustion rear its ugly head and creep in bed beside him. His lids and head hung heavy. He wanted sleep, needed it. Though it was rare for he and Louis ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This felt both new and familiar. He couldn't help but ask, "What are you doing?" Louis' breath grew closer until his lips were pressing into Harry's neck, soft and warm, though slightly cracked from the blistering winter. "Nothing... sorry." Louis didn't pull back. "Someone is going to see us and we are going to be bloody arrested." Harry wasn't sure when but sometime between him starting to speak to Louis and him concluding to speak, Louis' hand had found his waist and stayed there. "What are they going to arrest us for Harry? We're just two friends talking to one another." "Talking to one another while bloody snuggling in bed Louis, you know what it will look like if we get caught. We look like–" Harry cut himself off, saying no more. "We look like a couple?" Louis finished it for him with the inclination of his brow. "But we aren't"
  • 27. "But we could be." Again there was nothing but silence. This silence was killing Louis. He needed something, anything to go off because right now god only knew where they stood. It was clear Harry's shocked silence wasn't ending any time soon, so Louis filled it the only way he could. "Say something," He begged. Louis could hear Harry sucking in a breath through his teeth, a nervous habit he had since he was young. Harry never told Louis this, but his mother had shared it with Louis once when she came down to see Harry in Paris for a weekend. Her name was Anne and she seemed to like Louis very much. She said she was ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28.
  • 29. Bloody Mary Research Paper Bloody Mary In 1516 a young princess was born at the Palace of Placentia who would later be an evil, cruel queen. Mary Tudor also known as Mary I was one of the first queens of England."Ruled England as Queen from 1553 & earned the epithet Bloody Mary for the executions of protestants that occurred during her reign."(Erickson pg.185.) Mary inherited power from King Henry VIII in 1553 and ruled until her death at St. James Palace in London on November 17, 1558. Mary had stricken fear into the lives of all under her repressive rule as Queen of England. During her supremacy Mary had opted to reestablish Catholicism, and in doing so, she executed any who opposed her and protested against her, in my final point that she was an evil queen and repressive tyrant. Furthermore, during Mary's reign she had killed protestants and anti conformists publicly as said in the UXL Biographies "Just under 300 non–conformists were publicly burned during Mary's reign".(UXL Biographies). When she wed to Philip, King of Spain only more conflicts arose as he never spent time in England or his knowledge about world trade,which brought more conflicts to how her people felt about her and only made them go against her is more death brought onto ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... As said in the quote in the UXL Biographies "She continued burning heretics to the last, while England grew more hardened against Catholicism than it have ever been". Mary in her process of reestablishing the Catholic religion to England would publicly burn or execute anyone who spoke out about being against her reformation. In the end she eventually came to reintroduce Catholicism to England. As said in the article Mary I"Mary soon proceeded to restore Catholicism, reestablishing the traditional services & the authority of the pope".(Erikson 185). She had completed what she had wanted to do, but at a price of being loathed by her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30.
  • 31. Essay on The Bloody Chamber by Angela Carter There is plenty of opportunity for interpretation in Carter's writing, particularly in her book 'The Bloody Chamber' which is commonly considered to be her masterwork, brimming with intertextualities and ambiguities. Some may find her work to be excessively violent or savage, perhaps even alienating. Yet others may have found this no–holds–barred approach to be exhilarating and refreshing in comparison to other authors of her time. In her re–writing of Perrault and Beaumont's classic tales, Carter proposes a reading of several well–known stories with intent to unveil through a feminist perspective the ideological content they present. "The Bloody Chamber" is her take on the tale of Bluebeard; "The Werewolf" is her variation of the tale of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This in itself begins to uncover a deeper meaning to her literature; both obvious and latent in ways which create a curiosity to analyse the text in–depth. With 'The Bloody Chamber' collection, Carter made a clear attempt to demythologise classic fairy tales, using them not only to deconstruct traditional masculinity, but also to highlight liberation and re–evaluate the female standpoint within a patriarchal society. Carter herself argued that although 18th century aristocratic writers who penned these tales sprinkled in some morality in order to convert them into suitable parables for children, the darkness of their content and belittlement towards women remained. Carter (2013, page unknown) To counter this, her stories restored the female psyche of her protagonists by rewarding their active sexuality rather than punishing it into passiveness or misogynistic suppression. It would be unfair to disregard the notion of 'gross repellence' altogether, as the book is most certainly populated with surreal and grotesque material. Carter's baroque and parodist take on fairy tales outlines the darkness of grotesque literature. She uses vulgar language "..his prick, curved upwards like the scimitar he held" Carter (1995, page 17] to coincide with scenes of perverseness, torture, incest, murder, sadomasochism, among other themes which in general are considered to be ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32.
  • 33. Analysis Of Angela Carter 's ' The Bloody Chamber ' Most of Angela Carter's work revolves around democratic feminism and her representation of the patriarchal roles subjugated to women. (Evangelou, 2013) 'The Bloody Chamber' by Angela Carter suggests many substitutions to infamous depictions of femininity. Angela Carter manipulates old– fashioned fairy tales in order to subvert conformist gender roles like submissive wives and male dominance. (Makinen, 1992) While Carter receives commendation for her work, Patricia Duncker critiques her as well, for maintaining traditionally told tales that female relationships are doomed to rivalry and competition. Duncker basically analyses the story, 'The Snow Child' and then promptly states that Carter does not explore the masculine desire evident in the fairy tale and which, for the most part, forms this division between women, leading to their 'destruction'. (Duncker, 1984: 75) This essay will discuss the cogency of Patricia Dunker's statement as shown in the ENG3705 Tutorial Letter. My argument is in favour of this statement and a discussion will be engaged in hereunder, using 'The Snow Child' by Angela Carter as a reference point to substantiate it. In the subversive modification of one of the most common fairytales, The Snow Child, Angela Carter addresses many feminist issues whilst drawing inspiration from the story of Snow White (Aziz Mohammadi, 2015). I would suggest that this particular story from The Bloody Chamber is significant in Duncker's argument based on the fact that she ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34.
  • 35. A CRITIQUE OF THE SNOW CHILD, TAKEN FROM ANGELA CARTER’S... A CRITIQUE OF THE SNOW CHILD, TAKEN FROM ANGELA CARTER'S THE BLOODY CHAMBER. Throughout 'The Bloody Chamber', Angela Carter takes the highly successful conventions that belong to once innocent fairy tales, and rips them unremorsefully from their seemingly sound foundations to create a variety of dark, seductive, sensual stories, altering the landscapes beyond all recognition and rewarding the heroines with the freedom of speech thus giving them license to grab hold of the reigns of the story. The Snow Child is one such story by Carter, where connotations seen in fairytales such as 'Sleeping Beauty' and 'Little Red Riding Hood' are in evidence and are fused together accompanied by the emergence of feminism to the foreground ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The first example can be seen in the title of this story – the aspect of snow suggests purity that audiences have come to associate with the colour white whilst the word 'child' suggests the innocence that can only be possessed by children so young. The connotations carried by colour are used to give us an insight into the personalities of both the Count and the Countess. For we are told that the Count rides 'on a grey mare' and the Countess 'on a black one'. Therefore, if the colour white is associated with purity and goodness as previously mentioned, the colour black is at the opposite end of the spectrum, seeming to suggest evil whilst the colour grey is in between – not totally good but not totally evil either. This begs the question, certainly in mind, as to whether or not we are supposed to feel some sort of ambivalence towards the Count, given his associated colours – however, his language and his later actions seem to deter this thought. 'Oh how I long for a girl as white as snow'. At face value, this certainly seems to suggest sexual desire yet the words 'girl', suggests innocence and the colour 'white' used in the simile suggests purity, possibly virginal purity which in today's context ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36.
  • 37. Informative Essay On Bloody Mary Would you ever go in front of your mirror in pure darkness and repeat Bloody Mary 3 times to see if this ghost will hurt you or not? If you found out the legend was true would you still dare to do it at your own risk? Well Bloody Mary is one of the most popular ghost in the world. People say that she was a widow who killed her children, while some say she was a young child who got killed and is wandering around her grave. Meanwhile legends also portray her as a good ghost, but mostly she is an evil spirit. While there is events that appear to be true about this legendary ghost it has inspired people around to cover if these events are really true. Queen Mary I was born unwanted. She was the only living child of Henry VIII and his first wife, Catherine of Aragon. While loved by her parents, and by all accounts remarkably intelligent, the fact that she was born female meant she was openly and constantly regarded as a disappointment – not merely to her royal family, but all of England.Mary married ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Here is an actual event that appeared online in 1994 with the legendary ghost Bloody Mary at a slumber party. "After hearing this story, which was told very scarily, we decided to turn out all of the lights and try it. We all huddled around the mirror and starting repeating "Mary Worth, Mary Worth, I believe in Mary Worth." About the seventh time we said it, one of the girls that was in front of the mirror started screaming and trying to push her way back away from the mirror. She was screaming so loud that my friend's mom came running into the room. She quickly turned on the lights and found this girl huddled in the corner screaming. She turned her around to see what the problem was and saw these long fingernail scratches running down her right cheek. I will never forget her face as long as I live!" David, Emery."Explaining the Legend of Bloody Mary in the Mirror"September 25, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38.
  • 39. Bloody Mary Research Paper Mary I of England, commonly known as "Bloody Mary", was the only surviving child of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon. When she was 17 years old, the marriage of her parents was officially annulled, but records of her presence started to decline as early as age 11. Henry's attentions had been averted by Anne Boleyn, causing him to break England from the Catholic Church in order to divorce Catherine and marry Anne. When Mary fell out of favor as the daughter of Catherine, she was distanced from both of her parents, especially her father. When Mary was queen, she tried desperately to restore Catholicism in England, going so far as to have numerous people killed for speaking against the Catholic Church. It is difficult to define one cause ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He was Spanish and ardently Catholic, not unlike Mary's mother. Mary adored and craved the attention of Philip, but he did not reciprocate her feelings, and considered her unattractive and old. Rejected by Philip, just as by her father, Mary wanted desperately to produce a male heir. It is unsurprising that she would believe producing an heir would win Philip's affections, as Henry's affections tended to stray from any woman who was "unable" to do so. Mary had numerous "phantom pregnancies", scientifically known as pseudocyesis, in which there was no real pregnancy, but she experienced the physical symptoms of one. (Gold 124) Pseudocyesis is classified as a somatic mental disorder, meaning that she experienced the symptoms of pregnancy simply because she convinced herself that she was pregnant. After her first false pregnancy, she experienced another about two years later. This time, only Mary believed it to be real. (Crofton 144) It soon became clear that Mary was not going to produce an heir. It was around this time that the burnings of Protestants occurred. Some say that the reason so many were burned was that Mary was simply too depressed and apathetic to stop. (Gold 125) As Mary saw it, Protestantism was the tool that Henry used to cast her aside. Although Philip's rejection had nothing to do with religion, it seems that she expressed her distress by enacting violence towards the Protestants of the country. The only logical conclusion, therefore, is that her frustration was, at the root, due more to the rejection of Henry than that of her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40.
  • 41. Mary Tudor (Bloody Mary): The True Story Essay "She was a king's daughter, she was a king's sister, she was a king's wife, she was a queen, and by the same title a king also" # Mary Tudor was an influential women of her time period. Many in modern society know her for her particularly bad reputation as Bloody Mary, however they do not realize the contributions she made, or her influence on history . The story behind Mary's reputation gives insight as to her true accomplishments as England's first queen. When Mary Tudor was born on February 18, 1516, she was the only child that King Henry VIII and his wife Catherine of Aragon had successfully conceived together. She was widely celebrated and raised well in the kingdom. She was well–educated and privileged. However, her father wanted ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Mary and Edward did not get along and when Edward became sick he was convinced by the Duke of Normandy and Henry Grey to make Jane Grey his heir. Jane was only considered queen for nine days before the Privy Council declared Mary the true Queen of England on July 19th, 1554. Mary immediately started passing acts and reforms to bring back the Catholic religion. She also realized, in order to maintain her power she must get married, and she chose Phillip of Spain to be her husband. Many were apprehensive and upset about her choosing Phillip as a husband, but she argued it would be best not only for her, but also for England. However, in 1554, Sir Thomas Wyatt led a rebellion to prevent their marriage, he thought it would cause England to be controlled by Spain. This rebellion was known as the Wyatt's Rebellion. During this rebellion, 3000 followers marched from Mainstone to West Minister, but they had to surrender to Mary's troops. Many of the rebels were arrested for treason and hanged and 300 were burned at the stake. This mass execution is what caused Mary to gain her nickname Bloody Mary. Though Mary thought Elizabeth was involved and came close to executing her half–sister, she instead put Elizabeth in the tower. Eventually, she reconciled with Elizabeth and she became the next heir to England after Mary's death. Mary suffered many terrible misfortunes over her lifetime from her parent's divorce to her belief she was pregnant twice. One of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 42.
  • 43. Bloody Mary Tudor Research Paper Mary Tudor became known as "Bloody Mary" during her reign as Queen of England and her insistence upon returning England to Roman Catholic faith. Although her cruel acts cannot be excused, Henry VIII played a major role in her violent and angry tendencies. Mary continued the displeasure of her father up until the last of her life, due to his minescule participation in curing her rampant illness. From the moment of Mary Tudors conception, her chances of ever successfully holding the throne were sabotaged due to Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon placing her birth out of wedlock. Although her illegitimacy remained a secret for some time, it came to haunt her after she finally received the throne, and obtained the much yearned for title as The Queen of England. Once she admitted to being born to unmarried parents, she was stripped of her crown and forced to be called "Lady Mary" in the time outside of her queenship, rather than having the title of "Princess Mary" (Mary I). Mary's hatred for Protestants stemmed from her father's ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Anorexia thrived among the many different trials of her well–being. Along with the eating disorder came sleep disorders, combined with stomach pains and frequent headaches. She also experienced frequent swelling of the abdomen and poor digestion; she admitted that "my health is more unstable than that of any creature." Her father often sought out remedies for his daughter but found little success for her. Henry stated that Mary was "sick in the head and the stomach." Mary found herself to be immensely displeased in her father's lack of success in discovering a cure for her. The cause of Mary's mortality came from influenza; however, the illness was greatly accelerated by her poor mental health caused by her anger towards her father along with the disappointment from her false pregnancies. Along with influenza, amenorrhea played a large role in the death of the 42 year old queen (QUEEN "BLOODY" MARY ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 44.
  • 45. Symbolism In The Bloody Chamber Angela Carter's "The Bloody Chamber" depicts a woman as the heroic figure who represents persistence, vigor, and passion as she continually encourages and inevitably saves her daughter from the grips of death. Carter's attempt to effectively portray a woman as an animal like hero is done so by the mother as seen progressively throughout the story. At the same age as her daughter now, the heroine already accomplished so much and created an identity illustrating her beastliness, power, womanhood, and strength. In "The Bloody Chamber", Carter's nameless heroine is in fact the mother due to her fierce and ferocious attitude as she is explored throughout the story from her daughters admiring descriptions and her own fearless actions. The girl is eager to marry the marquis so she can transform into a woman and develop a strong identity as her mother has. The girl admiringly notices that her mother is "eagle–featured, indomitable," which illustrates a fierce and tough exterior that correlates to her personality (Carter 2). Boasting that her mother "outfaced a junkful of Chinese pirates, nursed a village through a visitation of the plague, shot a man–eating tiger with her own hand," as this depicts the girl's mother as a strong independent character who stands tall in the face of adversity (Carter 2). Her beastliness is evident as we are now aware that the mother has killed a tiger with her very own hands and she would not mind doing it again. After the father died, the mother was distraught but prevailed through her misery able to grow into an even stronger woman and mother for her daughter. As the girl reflects on such a difficult period in their lives we are able to see how much her mother's growth also affected her as she states, "my mother... had gladly, scandalously, defiantly, beggared herself for love... grown magnificently eccentric in hardship" which illustrates her mother did not allow her grief to control her or inhibit her abilities to be a mom (Carter 2). Being a single parent helped her flourish as a mother and as a person. The mother is already portrayed as a strong female figure before this information is introduced but after the audience gains this knowledge about her, it is clear that the mother is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 46.
  • 47. Bloody Mary Myths Creepy urban legends. 1) Bloody Mary: There are numerous origins of this tale. Mary was supposedly a witch who lived in the woods in the outskirts. She wasn't allowed inside the village. The villagers didn't like her for obvious reasons. Mary kidnapped all their kids, one night and burnt her house down along with all the kids. The villagers, naturally, did not spare her and burnt her down the same way after beating her black and blue. Now, according to the legend, if one stands in front of a mirror in a dark room, with a candle lit in their hand, and chants "Bloody Mary" thrice, they will have summoned her and will see her in the mirror. She, then, may either kill them, drink their blood or gouge their eyes out. Fancy ways of killing someone. Talk about creativity! ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Hanako–san is said to reside in the third stall of the toilet, on the third floor. Unlike other spirits, Hanako has to be summoned by knocking three times on the third stall of the toilet and asking, "Are you there, Hanako?" If you are replied with a "Yes, I'm here," you may open the door and see Hanako, who is a girl in red skirt and bobbed hair. If you do not get any reply, then it's your lucky day and you may and must walk away! 3) Kuchisake–onna: When it comes to creepy legends, Japan could be the one with the most number of them. This one began around the 1970s. Kuchisake–onna, the slit mouthed woman, is a spirit of a woman who walks around wearing a mask. She stops people on her way and strikes the same conversation which goes something like this; She: Am I pretty? Person: No. (Wrong answer. You're dead. She'll stab you with a pair of scissors.) If the person says yes, she takes off her mask, unveiling her mouth slit from ear to ear. She asks then, "How about now?" If the answer is no, she kills them, if it's yes, she slits their mouth the same way. There's no ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 48.
  • 49. Bloody Mary Rumor Rumor has it that now everything you read, see, or hear is true. This statement can be told at any point of history, yet we still believe in them. Why is that and what is the reasons for believing in some of the most outlandish things? Take for example, that if you walk under a ladder you will get some amount of years of bad luck. To moss people they won't walk under a ladder for that very reason and not for the fact that walking under a ladder in the first place is not the safest walking path. That is what I will be talking about. The way these rumors are spread and also the reason we tend to believe these false claims of flushing ice cubes down the toilet for snow or a black cat having evil intent. For the first set of rumors that we'll be looking at are most or the rumors that hold a dark or sinister meaning behind them. First rumor that will be looked at is the Bloody Mary rumor. A quick recap if you say bloody Mary 13 times in a candlelit room in front of a mirror Bloody Mary will appear. For many this is a game that would be played as a little kid at a sleepover or party. I think that this rumor is so widespread is the fact that we learn this as kids. Along with being kid we are naive and will believe most things we hear. Along with that many kids like to play jokes with one another and as kid the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The reason people will believe in these "cleansings" might be in the wording and the types of marketing that these diets use to persuade you into buying the diet plans. Also, in most cases there is the placebo effect where it does nothing but conveys the feeling that it is doing work. Then you take these people and they will post an article on how this miracle of a diet help them so much and this leads into more people thinking that it works. Then you set off a chain reaction in which leads to the masses believing in these diets and body ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 50.
  • 51. Bloody Mary Research Paper The Real Story Behind Bloody Mary Queen Mary, the real story behind the infamous legend of Bloody Mary. Queen Mary or Mary Tudor was the 1st queen regnant of England, she was born on February 18, 1516 and the only child of Henry the 8th and Catherine of Aragon to live to adulthood. Queen Mary was a courageous queen, rising above all and taking what she wanted no matter the consequence. When Mary was younger she was treated like a princess, her father made sure that Mary was surrounded with jewels, furs, and many other luxuries. Mary was betrothed to her cousin, Charles V, the Holy Roman Emperor, he wanted Mary to come to Spain to train as a spanish queen, her father said no and said that she will stay in the castle till the age of 12, the engagement was called off by Charles V soon after. Mary received a high education, knowing Spanish, Latin, and French, she was also a very talented dancer and showed her talents to ambassadors when they visited her father at court. When Mary was nine years old, Henry sent her to Wales with her own personal court to act as a royal representative, many believed that she would succeed her father despite being a woman. Later on there were allegations of incest made by Henry, between him and Catherine since she was married to Henry's ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The reason why Mary is still a big topic in the middle ages is because of her name, Bloody Mary, which inspired many legends told around campfires or games involving candles and a mirror, without her name and what she had done to get it, the legends would have never been told. Mary had a large number of miscarriages, she never had any children and her husband soon became bored of her and spent little time with her in the castle, because of this she fell into a deep depression, she also may have suffered from uterine or ovarian cancer and died on November 17, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 52.
  • 53. Urban Legend Of Bloody Mary "I will never forget her face as long as I live!" The urban legend of bloody mary is terrifying, many will see this as morbid but I see this a story as explaining why parents tell us never to never do this challenge. This story is explaining why our parents say not to do this challenge known as the "Bloody Mary". This urban legend is one of my favorites, it is very paranormal and that is something I would like to study one day. Bloody mary was a beautiful woman who was in a car accident in the 1700s. She spent hours a day looking at herself in the mirror. One day she was in a severe car wreck, after this wreck she wasn't able to look at herself in the mirror, even the kids at school could not look at her. One night she was done thinking ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 54.
  • 55. Bloody Mary Myths The mysteries of urban legends, almost everyone has heard of this bloody woman. Some people fear mirrors because the urban legend of her appearing. The legend is if you say "Bloody Mary" 3 times, she appears in the mirror, usually covered with blood. I know most urban legends are fiction, but could this one be true? I've tried to do this before and nothing has happened, I still do believe in the conspiracy of bloody mary. As a little kid I was always scared of the chances of ghost and monsters being real but are they? Urban legends have always been a thing I enjoy, the mysteries of knowing or seeing the things that people say are true really interests me. There were different things you could say for her to appear in different ways. If you ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 56.
  • 57. The Bloody Chamber As a feminist, it is almost to be expected that many of Angela Carter's happy ever after endings will strike the reader with a bold feminist message. However, in The Bloody Chamber, this is not necessarily the case. Although there are several feminist messages in the stories' resolutions, these messages are not always presented in the way one would expect, and not every female protagonist is presented as a feminist character. By taking the roles of typically Gothic women and toying with the presentation of female characters, many of Carter's feminist messages are not as one would expect. The eponymous story The Bloody Chamber ends with a sense of resolution, love and happiness. The antagonist of the story is no more, and the narrator is able to live a happy and fulfilling life with Jean–Yves. Whether the ending is truly feminist, however, is open to discussion. In one respect, the actual resolution to the story is all down to the narrator's mother, who is presented at the story's climax as an incredibly powerful female figure. Carter uses masculine and bestial imagery to describe the mother, in a way that is not dissimilar to earlier imagery to describe the Marquis. The narrator refers to her mother's hair as "her white mane"; just as earlier she had referenced the Marquis's "dark mane". The juxtaposition between light and dark here is a typical example of Gothic extremes; while the Marquis seems to represent darkness – the supernatural and evil – the mother is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 58.
  • 59. The Causes Of Sunday : The Events Of Bloody Sunday The events of Bloody Sunday On January 30, 1972 in the Bogside area of Derry, Northern Ireland an incident occurred, "The Bloody Sunday." The major massacre dealt with The British Army and public responses, critics of Widgerys findings, and the exoneration of the British Army documented in the Widgery tribunal report. One Sunday morning a civil rights march took place in Londonderry, January 30, 1972. There were around 10,000 people who gathered for this march. In the nationalist Bogside area of the city, the route for the march took place where organizers were sealed off by the British Army which led demonstrators towards "Free Derry Corner". Stones were thrown at soldiers and though there was an army barricade, people continued on this march. The soldiers responding with water cannons, rubber bullets and a gas known as CS which causes a "burning sensation and tearing of the eyes to the extent that the subject cannot keep their eyes open, and a burning irritation of the nose, mouth and throat mucous membranes causing profuse coughing," (the stationery office, 2010) When this uprising began to take place, the 1st Parachute Regiment soldiers moved in and captivated as many rioters as possible. Within minutes, open gun fire went into the crowd, killing 13 men and injuring 13 others. The dead were all male, aged between seventeen and forty–one. Another man, aged fifty–nine, died some months later from injuries sustained on that day. The wounded included a fifteen–year–old boy ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 60.
  • 61. The Bloody Mary Research Paper There was a substantial assortment of 33 cocktails, all estimated at just $15, and all having sexy– sounding ingredients like cypress essence, myrrh, and smoked salt. The sangria assumes an imaginative part on rose with rosé syrup. The Bloody Mary consists of such flavor that it needs a paragraph to portray the elaborate flavors combined of bacon vodka, pickled quail eggs, and homemade beef jerky. The Dark Chocolate Citrus Protein, which includes rum, honey, chocolate protein, orange bitters, orange essence, and smoked salt sounds like it would wake you up with vibrant flavors to leave you feeling refreshed with a sense of vitality. We ultimately ordered something that reminded us of a dessert we ate as children and it made for a pleasant unexpected ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 62.
  • 63. Angela Carter’s The Bood Chamber Essay In Angela Carter's The Bloody Chamber, the theme of transformation appears throughout the short story cycle. The hero/heroine's virginity acts as a source of strength that protects them from harm. Their lack of fear also saves them from death. Virginity acts as power of potentia, either literally or symbolically and results in a release of an observed transformative power. The bloody chamber serves a different symbolic purpose of transformation for Beauty in "The Courtship of Mr Lyon", the heroine in "The Tiger's Bride" and the Countess in "The Lady of the House of Love". Each of these characters will embark on a journey that questions their selfhood in circumstances that are presented to them and ultimately each will go through a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This foregrounds potential of narcissism within Beauty. The Beast allows Beauty to go back to London to be with her father under the condition that she must return before winter is over. While in London, she, "[sends] him flowers, white roses in return for the ones he had given her; and when she left the florist, she experienced a sudden sense of perfect freedom, as if she had jus escaped from an unknown danger" (48). With this gesture, Beauty feels all her debts are settled and she no longer has an obligation to the Beast. When she puts on her robe of fur, she becomes her own beast, showing a parallel between her and the Beast. Beauty undergoes a physical alteration essential for her negative transformation, due to her susceptibility to corruptibility. Since "she was learning at the end of her adolescence, how to be a spoiled child and that pearly skin of hers was plumping out, a little, with high living and compliments" (48–49). Beauty transformed into a snobbish woman who became obsessed with materialistic objects and her looks. Her epiphytic moment for redemption occurs when the spaniel is at the door, thinking the Beast has come to collect her. She acts as a supplementary element, who offers companionship to the Beast. She is a loyal hybrid figure, half human half beast and despite being, "[a] well brushed, jewelled dog" (49) she demonstrates human capacity for compassion, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 64.
  • 65. The Urban Legend of Bloody Mary Essay Bloody Mary Version 3 The story of Bloody Mary is told in different versions all around the world has been included in nine different movies (three in the past two years) (The Internet Movie Database). This particular version of the popular urban legend of Bloody Mary originates locally from North Potomac, Maryland. The storyteller is a female 19–year–old Caucasian sophomore student, currently studying psychology at the University. The story was collected in the spring on the University campus. After dinner, in a one–on–one environment, she began the story of an urban legend from her childhood. I remember this from back in second grade. It scared me so much. It was Friday the 13th. Back in elementary school, we always ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The stories that speak of Bloody Mary's origins, surprisingly, tend to be more similar on their history of the ghost than the accounts of ghost summoning ritual. One full version of the urban legend posted on urbanlegendsonline.com begins with a little girl named Mary who became ill and fell into a deep coma (Urban Legends & Superstitions). The doctor and family members, believing she was dead, buried her alive in a family plot next to their house. The first night, Mary's mother heard a scream from Mary's grave, but no one else believed her. Days later, the family finally dug up young Mary's grave to find Mary dead along with scratches on the top of the coffin. Mary's fingernails were also covered in blood. This version of the tale is similar to the version given by the storyteller at the beginning of this article. Both accounts speak of a girl named Mary who was buried alive. The version offered by the storyteller tells of a hateful motive that led to the return of the vengeful spirit. The version given by urbanlegendsonline.com explains that what had happened was an accident due to negligence. The second half the urban legend, or in most cases, the entire urban legend itself, tends to be much more varied in explaining how to summon the ghost. The simple organization of these variations leads to easily comparable details of the ghost story. Certain instructions require the date to be Friday the 13th, while others do not. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 66.
  • 67. The Bloody Mary Ritual Analysis "The Bloody Mary Ritual" told by Bianca. I was the most affected in this story and here's why. It all started on a saturday night and one friends house when we had all ran out of ideas on what to do. It was around midnight and we had ran out of things to do so another friend Lacey suggested "Let's do the Bloody Mary Ritual." When Lacey suggested this I was for sure it was fake I just thought it was something people told little kids to make them scared. We lit a candle and all of us stared at the mirror in the bathroom and waited patiently. Finally I said "Nothing's happening. Let's just get out of here." I reached for the doorknob but it was locked, but no one locked it, at this point we knew someone or something was holding the door shut. Suddenly, Alex (another girl at the sleepover) screamed and pointed at the mirror. I whirled away from the locked door and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The ghost had scratched a message deep into the flesh of my right forearm. It said "I AM REAL." When I woke up I saw the message and I wanted to throw up, when I woke up the girls asked me what happened I said. "After that...that horrible ghost knocked the four of you down, it grabbed me by the hair and pulled me through the mirror," Bianca said with a shudder. "I felt something scratching my face and hands, and I tried to fight back but I was knocked to the ground and dragged along a cold floor by my hair. The ghost tossed me into a dark room. I couldn't see anything, but I felt the ghost clutched my arm and there was this terrible pain. That's all I remember until I heard your voices and the light came on." We still have sleepovers but we will never ever do the Bloody Mary ritual again who knows what might ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 68.
  • 69. The Mary Summary : Bloody Mary "Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary." Have you ever said these three words in front of a mirror in the dark? Well you don't want to see what happens if you do. Bloody Mary has many things involved in her such as her looks, where she lives and how she got her name, how she died, the legend and the curse, the different versions of her, and even people's own experiences. There are a lot of facts about Bloody Mary but those are the main ones. Bloody Mary was always a mysterious woman. Everyone was afraid of Mary and no one would cross paths with her because they were scared that if they did their cows would go dry, the food in their shops would rot before winter, and that their children would get sick (Bloody Mary: From Scary stories at ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... They found out she was using the young girl's blood to keep her young the whole time. The Curse that Mary put on the village was harsh. If you chant her name three times in a mirror and in the dark with a lit candle she will pop up (Haunted Rooms). Many say it takes about twelve to thirteen times chanting her name and she will show up. There are many different descriptions of Bloody Mary and many people have witnessed her and they all have different descriptions of her. This girl and her friend called for Bloody Mary and when she showed up in the mirror, it was a clear image of a woman in black and white, her mouth was wide open but no sound was coming out. She had a black around her eyes, her hands were bright red and some of her fingernails were missing (Museum Occult). Two other friends called for Bloody Mary in the Mirror and the description of what she looks like is completely different than what the first two people said. The friends said they saw an old woman with cuts on her face and chains were around her neck and she was looking right at them (museum Occult). This young man played Bloody Mary and looked in the mirror and saw a girl that looked to be in her early twenties and she was looking the other way and slowly started to turn towards him (Your Ghost Stories). Bloody Mary's descriptions all vary and some say they don't even remember what she looked like because they were in so much fear and just ran out of the room. There are many people who ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 70.
  • 71. Essay about Bloody Queen Mary: What's in a Name? Nicknames are generally defined as subterfuge given to a person to better understand their personalities. In order to understand whether Queen Mary deserves her nickname we must first look at her history. Mary I of England was born on February 18th 1516. She was the only surviving child of Henry VIII's first wife, Catherine of Aragon. Due to her gender and her mother's incapability to produce a male heir, they were both cast away. It was after the death of Edward VI in which Mary made a bid for her birthright as heir to the throne. Edward VI and his council intended for his cousin Lady Jane Grey to succeed him because of her protestant faith. However, after only nine days Jane Grey was dethroned by Mary by popular support. During her reign ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... One would argue that this was a book simply retelling of the burnings that were in fact ordered by Queen Mary. Therefore, the nickname Bloody Queen Mary would be appropriate. This is a strange assumption because monarchs have ordered the deaths of people long before Mary even existed. William the Conqueror's army killed around 5000 Anglo–Saxons during the battle of Hastings. This staggering number is almost 16 times larger than the 283 Protestants Mary had executed. However, one would argue that the Battle of Hastings was in fact a battle. Its death tolls could not possibly be compared to the Protestants who were burned during Mary's reign. However, here the lies the real question. What is so different between those who were slaughtered during a battle and those who were slaughtered during peacetime? In both circumstances, the head of the state was doing what they thought best for their country. William wished to expand Normandy's borders and Queen Mary wanted to restore England to the Roman Catholic church so that England would be spiritually restored in the eyes of God. Although William had around 5000 people butchered by his men in one day, it is Queen Mary that earns such a disgraceful nickname for having only 283 Protestants burned. The reason for this is simple; Queen Mary was succeeded by a protestant. If it were a Catholic who succeeded Mary, there would not be a Bloody Queen Mary. Queen Mary the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 72.
  • 73. Bloody Mary Short Story Bloody Mary I was having some friends over on Friday night. Friday the thirteenth of october to be exact. Me and my four best friends. It was Erick, Jeff, Brady, and Trevor. We made food and watched movies and talked where we were going hunting tomorrow. By midnight, we'd run out of things to do. We were so bored. "Let's try that Bloody Mary thing," Trevor said. Erick, was sitting crossed–legged on his sleeping bag, said, "What's the Bloody Mary thing?" Brady, who was laying on top of his own sleeping bag on the far side of the room, said: "Come on, Erick. everyone knows the Bloody Mary thing! You stand in front of the bathroom mirror with a lighted candle and say the Mary's name three times. Then her ghost appears, looking just the way she did when she died; all horrible and bloody with scars all over her face!" . "She sounds gorgeous. Just why, exactly, do you think I would want to see the ghost of Bloody Mary?" Erick asked. "Why not?" I said from my spot on the air mattress in the living room. "I've always wanted to see a ghost! It could be fun. Besides, I've heard she can tell your future if you summon her correctly." "And if you don't summon her correctly, or if she's in a bad mood, the ghost of Bloody Mary will rip your eyes out and leave your face horribly scarred," Jeff said dramatically. "Or you will be found dead with claw marks all over your face and body." "Or you could be trapped in the mirror with Bloody Mary for eternity," Trevor ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 74.
  • 75. Bloody Mary and "The Virgin Queen" "Bloody Mary and the "Virgin Queen" Mary and Elizabeth Tudor were both, by all accounts, strong and intelligent women endowed with many of the qualities that mark a successful ruler. However, only Elizabeth's legacy is a positive one; her reign has been called the "Golden Age" of England, and she remains a heroine in popular history and even modern film. Mary's reign is scowled at, and seen by most as a brief unpleasant period preceding the glorious ascension of Elizabeth. To account for this, one can examine each sovereign's maternal influences, governing styles, and choices regarding marriage. Maternal Influence Mary's mother, Katherine of Aragon, has been described as a "staunch woman of misguided principles" (Weir 3). ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... She contracted a matrimonial alliance with her nephew Philip, another Catholic monarch (Erickson 331). Their marriage caused a general outcry; the British did not favor Spaniards and feared that, upon their union, Philip would rule England as king; or that, if she died childless, he would seek to seize the throne for himself and his future heirs (337). This seemed a valid fear in light of Mary's traditional feminine deference to male authority, but Mary declared that she would "wholly love and obey the man she married, following the divine commandment, and would not in any way act against his will, but if he tried to interfere with the government of the kingdom she would have to prevent it at all costs" (Erickson 333). For some, this was not enough; and the marriage contract specified that Phillip could not succeed. Thus, Mary was determined to have a say in her own government. However, faith could guide Mary even if her husband could not, and she began to be very influenced by Catholic Cardinal Pole (Erickson 390). "For all men who minimized her authority, Pole was the most blatant" (Erickson 390). Pole gave Mary misguided advice concerning the religious conversion of her realm. "He assumed that the religious situation in England was not unlike that in Italy, where the Protestant heresy had taken rather shallow root and had been decisively crushed by the Papal inquisition" (Erickson 390). He failed to recognize the importance of the fact that a whole ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 76.
  • 77. Urban Legend Bloody Mary Children are constantly searching for news ways to have fun. "This is the period when children need to satisfy their craving for excitement by participating in ritual games and playing in the dark.They are constantly looking for a safe way to extract pleasure and release anxiety and fears" (Mikkelson). Many children find themselves jumping into mischievous behavior to keep themselves busy whether it is being destructive, pranking a friend, or being apart of ritual games. These are some ways for children to cope with their boredom.. This is also probably one of the reasons why kids would risk conjuring up a evil spirit looking for revenge."Mirrors and reflections in general have always been held in fear and awe, and consequently been linked ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Even though some aspects of the original story have changed the story is still being told in countless versions. Bloody Mary has played on people's desire for excitement and it is also a way to release anxiety and experience some safe fear.With so much talk about the "Bloody Mary" legend over the many decades and versions, it's a challenge to really analyze its cultural symbolism, because it's different from culture to culture. However, it is possible to theorize a single interpretation by examining the more pointed points thatcomprise the legend together. The ritual is almost always carried out by children, most commonly girls, in a dark bathroom, by means of a chant. A woman then appears in the mirror, most typically with malicious intentions. The legend of "Bloody Mary" seems to resurrect with children's comingof age. The children most enticed by the myth are adolescent children from the ages of nine to twelve. Children at this age look for excitement and try to find independent freedom, sometimes in the wrong places. "Bloody Mary" is the true meaning for exciting fun and a feel good rush. The way for satisfying this newfound craving for excitement sometimes means breaking the rules a little. Opposite of the rules we are taught as children. We are taught as children that when somebody break ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 78.
  • 79. Mary Tudor 's Bloody Mary "Mary Mary quite contrary. How does your garden grow? With silver bells and cockleshells. And pretty maids all in a row." This is a nursery that is believed to be associated with Mary Tudor, most commonly known as "Bloody Mary". Sounds like an innocent nursey rhyme, right? But really, according to Gillies, the garden in the nursery rhyme is a reference to graveyards which were increasing in size, with those who dared to continue to follow the Protestant faith. The silver bells and cockleshells were said to be used as torture devices and the pretty maids mentioned in the nursery rhyme were in rows for guillotines. There are stories out there that dig deeper into the nursey rhyme and tell about the history and background of this nursery rhyme. Mary "Bloody Mary" Tudor failed her duties as queen, due to the forces– some of which were not in her control– effecting her life. Mary Tudor, according to Hope, has been known as a catholic dictator who killed nearly three hundred Protestants, all including men, women, and even children, during her short reign that lasted five years. Jessica Hope states that historians tried to re–evaluate Mary's reputation and they have argued that Mary deserves more appreciation for her work than previously thought. This shows that Mary Tudor was not a bad person, but she did good things throughout her lifetime. Mary Tudor was born February 18, 1516 in a palace– Palace of Placentia– located in Greenwich, England. Mary was born to King Henry VIII ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...