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In the Heart of the Sea
In the Heart of the Sea The novel "In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex," by
Nathaniel Philbrick, successfully tells the story of the whale ship Essex that was attacked by a sperm
whale 1,500 nautical miles west of the Galapagos, 40 miles south of the equator. Many people know
this as the story of "Moby Dick", which was based off this event. The novel highlights three themes:
man versus nature, survival, and suffering. The novel starts out in the town of Nantucket, an island
off the eastern coast of New England. Nantucket, at this time, is known as one of the most
successful whaling ports. Docked on the port was the famous Essex, a 20 year whaling boat. The
Essex is the pride of Nantucket. It is 87 feet long, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In chapter 5, on November 20, the crew spots whales 40 miles south of the equator. Chase and his
crew go after a whale, which destroys their boat with its tail. When they bring their boat back to the
Essex, they spot a huge sperm whale near the bow of the ship calmly and quietly floating along the
surface of the water. The whale began to move quickly towards the ship. The men try to steer Essex
away from the whale, but are unsuccessful. The whale rams the ship with its head, and the men are
amazed. After the whale revives itself, it struck the ship again, causing the Essex to sink bow–first.
The men board their whaleboats after a night of preparation of leaving the Essex. They stripped the
sails of the ship and attached them to their boats. The waves splashed over the boat, causing the
work to be more difficult. The next morning, the boats take off. Chase and Pollard talk of where to
go now that their ship has sunk. They speak about going to the Galapagos Islands, but Pollard
noticed the wind direction would not allow them to go there. Next, they speak about the Marquesas,
in the west. The men had heard that the inhabitants of the island were cannibals. South of the
Marquesas were the Tauamotu Archipelago Islands, but the men had also heard that the islands have
a bad reputation. In this conversation, we notice the colonist's outlook on the unknown. They share a
sense of togetherness within each other and no one else. We see this in the attitude of the
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Optimism And Pessimism Exposed In Stephen Crane's The Open...
"The Open Boat" by Stephen Crane is a harrowing story revolving around four men who face
impending doom both literally and philosophically. The superficial tale of four men lost at sea in a
small boat acts as a thin mask for a much more complex underpinning. The general theme of this
story is the indifference of nature's brutality and man's inability to influence it. The characters
express both optimism and pessimism simultaneously whilst facing the gravest of tasks; survival.
The central theme is also coupled with an equally perplexing idea that man's free will can help
overcome adversity, thus negating nature's whims. This story questions and exposes a very deep
concern with the natural order of the universe; despite our efforts, humans are ... Show more content
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Stephen Crane's direct relation to this experience has sparked a much more intense reality. Four
characters are placed in a life or death situation, which births an analytical perspective of existence
and man's place in the universe. These men, all of which are unique in their respective roles, unified
under a common purpose. This attribute speaks volumes regarding humanity as a whole. The most
important aspect of living beings is to survive and we will band together to resist extinction. The
remnants of this story asks a plethora of questions: What is humanity's true role in the universe? If
man is part of nature, why is there a resistance to his fate? Is life random or is there a method or
order that governs all things? Can we view this story as an example of man's triumph over his
destiny? These questions, coupled with a sense of deeper meaning, are just another way of asking
life's most common and perplexing question, "Why are we here?" "The Open Boat" appears to be
superficial but actually stirs questions within the human subconscious for a deeper sense of
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Ernest Shackleton Research Paper
The voyage started in August 1914, its leader Ernest Shackleton. Shackleton had already been to
two different expeditions going to the Antarctic. The first one was when he went with the National
Antarctic Expedition, the leader of that was by Robert F. Scott. The second voyage was when he
traveled with three companions to go to the Pole, but because of the shortage of food, they had to
turn back. This time was going to plan an expedition to cross the Antarctic all the way by foot.
Shackleton was an incredible, born leader, who came up with this wild idea. Shackleton started
getting the two largest items need for the party, the ships. The first ship he got was Aurora, which
was from Sir Douglas Mawson. This ship had already been one expedition. The second ship he got
was one from Lars Christensen and bought it for the mere price of $67,000 dollars, less than what
Christensen had paid. Shackleton then went into the deal of getting financial aid and grants, most of
it was the $120,000 from James Caird who was a jute manufacturer. He got $55,000 altogether from
the government and the National Geographic Society. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
They were seeing the floes cracking and decided that they were going to launch the three boats; the
Dudley Docker, the Stancomb Wills, and the James Caird. They were either going to Clarence or
Elephant Island. They changed their mind three times but decided to go to Elephant Island. Snow
began to fall, and they were all frozen, pale, with eyes that were bloodshot. Ordes–Lees, the motor
expert, later storekeeper, grumbles of how hungry he his and even tries to steal the best spot for
sleeping. Shackleton decides for all of them to remain together and not to get separate. Late in the
afternoon, they saw the 3,500 peaks of Elephant Island. They all jumped out and chewed and sucked
water from the fresh–water glaciers. They set their tents and got the blubber stove on. Shackleton
ordered five men to look at the perimeter of the
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Natucket Dbq
The make–up of the Essex may not have seemed important during that dreadful voyage; after all,
how could a difference among men affect the fact that a whale had stove the Essex? In actuality it is
the composition of those whalers that had everything to do with the outcome of their voyage. These
differences include social status, race, rank, and personality differences. Social status in Nantucket
was mainly based on if someone was born and raised a Nantucketer, an orphan, outsider or worse a
slave. Nantucket was not a racist location; however there was still a disadvantage for African
Americans when it came to the whaling world. Along with that came the struggle of command
between the Captain and his Shipmates. His struggle of authority ultimately ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
This word was used to describe the "close–knit familial community" that the native people of
Nantucket formed. This community was so close that many people in the community were split into
three social classes; the Nantucketers, outsiders (including orphans), and African Americans. The
Extent of this social classing was so bad that outsiders were often called "coofs". African Americans
usually did not live in Nantucket; they came from the Marine Insurance Company which would let
Captains hire blacks as sailors. These black sailors were called "green hands" . Now the Nantucket
community was not racist, or even hate–full towards these coofs and green hands, Nantucket was
actually a community of Quakers. Quakers were known for their pacifist ways, except when it came
to whale killing, some considered themselves, "Quakers with a vengeance" Meaning they didn't see
anything sinful about whale killing because the lord made it that way. So the Nantucketers had no
hateful aggression towards different races or social classes, however there was a small change on the
open sea. This change is due to the ship's setup and the food provisions. On page 35 there is an
illustration showing the internals of the Essex, it shows there are three different living quarters. One
for the officers (almost always Nantucketers), one for common people (few Nantucketers and the
outsiders), and last was the Blacks living quarters. The fact that people were split up shows how
blacks and the outcast were still not seen as equals. And since they weren't seen as equals they were
not equally fed, Philbrick said, "At no time were the differences that existed between the officers
and the men more pronounced than at mealtime" . For example the officers were said to eat roughly
3,800 calories a day, while others ate "even close to that amount". Overall it comes down to the fact
that the Nantucketers ate more than
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Leo Tolstoy The Three Hermits
In the short story "The Three Hermits" Leo Tolstoy illustrates how faith in God does not derive from
the complexity of one's prayer or doctrine, but rather from the simplicity and humbleness in one's
heart to be genuinely faithful and all serving to him. The story consists of three religious hermits,
who have chosen a life of simplistic isolation. Also, there is this bishop on a pilgrimage to spread the
word of god, he hears about these hermits that live on a small island in search of the "salvation of
their souls" (275). As a holy man himself, the priest had no choice but to see these hermits for
himself and educate them about true doctrine. The three hermits were men who had sacrifice their
entire lives to God. Tolstoy portrays their sacrifice by the men's descriptions. They were extremely
old, the fisherman stated that one's must have been at least hundred years old. They were wearing
tattered peasant clothes. One was even described to have a beard to his knees. They lived in their
humble island without the need of materialistic possessions. They showed no signs of greed, lust,
gluttony, they were true men of god. Also, the men showed great humbleness through their charity.
When the fisherman got stranded on the Hermit's island they welcomed him. The hermits "helped
him mend his ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The bishop believed the only right way to serve God was through the holy scriptures. The humble
men repeated each doctrine until it was implanted in their brains, but they did not understand why
they were saying those things. They repeated, but did not truly feel it in their hearts. They only knew
one way to pray, a simple verse "three are ye, three are we, have mercy upon us" (277). It was
simple, yet it was something they truly believed in. They wanted a greater connection to God,
unknowing that they were one with God already through their pure hearts and genuine
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Essay On The Journey Of The Chapter 4
"Let's see where they are headed," suggested David The two agreed and began following the deep
boot prints. They went on for awhile before they disappeared into the desert side of the island. They
strained their eyes and saw what appeared to be the group's camp. They were still looking when a
faint whistle came floating down from a tree and a band of men came storming out of the
underbrush. John, Mark and, David spun around and took off. They were about a fourth of a mile
away from the safety of their new home when a gun fired and Mark fell to the ground with blood
oozing out of his leg. John and David stopped to try and carry him but with the large group coming
they had to lay him down and get poised for a fight. The mad gang of men ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
John hurried over and scoped him up in his arms and lay his head on his lap. John tore his shirt and
wrapped it around his head. David did the same and John used his shirt to separated Mark's skin
from the cold concrete they were lying on. David stood up and walked around the room looking for
some hope of escape. "Nothing, just a big concrete box" John lay Mark's head down and stood up.
He went to the side of the prison and put his ear on the wall. "That is not how I planned on dying."
he said David looked at him with a questioning face. A deep voice from suddenly erupted from
outside the prison." There is no way out" Mark jumped to his feet. In a hushed voice he half
whispered half shouted, "That was the voice from the phone on the plane telling the pilots to kill us
and now we are going to die!" "We won't die let's just, just" "Just what....... die?" said David
sarcastically. "No we don't do that we just don't die, pretty simple." The three went into a corner and
started making a plan of escape making sure that no one on the outside could hear them. After about
two hours of making and going over the plan the three slowly began drifting off and waited for the
day. "Come on you fools get up, you don't want to look sleepy when you die!" the big voice shouted.
The three slowly got to their feet still half sleeping. The tall man whistled and three men appeared.
"Lock them up......more." The men put handcuffs on them
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Open Boat Compare and Contrast Essay
ENG 101
Feb. 3, 2011
The Open Boat Compare and Contrast Essay Rough Draft
This paper is about the story "The Open Boat" written by Stephen Crane. In this paper, I will try to
provide the similarities of the original story with the newspaper account. The differences in each
article will also be discussed. Lastly, I will provide a conclusion based on the facts of both articles.
"The Open Boat'' begins with a description of men aboard a small boat on a rough sea. These men
are all survivors of a shipwreck. There is the cook, overweight and sloppily dressed, who is trying to
remove water from the bottom of the boat. The oiler, a physically powerful man named Billie who is
rowing with one oar. There is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He shares this thought with the other men, and the oiler smiles in sympathy. The men smoke cigars
drink their water and wait to be spotted by the lighthouse rescue crew, unwilling to run their boat
ashore in the rough waves. The lighthouse appears deserted. The men discuss rowing toward land
swimming through the surf once the boat finally capsizes in the rougher water that is closer to shore.
The crew knows that, over time, they will grow weaker and things will get worse, not better. They
exchange with each other "addresses and admonitions", in case all of them do not live through this
whole ordeal Later, someone is seen on the shore waving to them. A while later, a crowd gathers,
disembarking from a bus. Despite their efforts to let the people know on shore they were in distress,
they realize that the people on shore are tourists and that they think they are just simple fisherman.
Thoughts of drowning run rampant in every man's mind on that boat. At dawn, the men decided that
their only chance is to row toward the distant shore again and swim when the boat finally capsizes.
On the Captain's order, the oiler rows the boat directly toward the shore. The boat capsizes and the
people on the boat are so weak that it is hard for them to even keep their heads above water.
Suddenly, a man appears on shore stripping his clothes off and running into the water. The rescuer
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The Open Boat by Stephen Crane Essay
The Open Boat by Stephen Crane
"The Open Boat" Four men drift across a January sea in an open boat, since they lost their ship some
time after dawn. Now, in the clear light of day, the men begin to grasp the full gravity of their
situation. Realizing that their main conflict will be man versus nature, in this case, the raging sea. In
the short story "The Open Boat," Stephen Crane gives an itemized description of the two days spent
on a ten–foot dinghy by four men a cook, a correspondent, which is Crane himself, the injured
Captain and Billy Higgens, the oiler. The men in the open boat show us that compassion for one's
comrade, unfeeling endurance, and courage are the true moral standards in a neutral universe.
Characterization ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
It is explained in the story that many men should have a bathtub bigger than the boat they were
riding in. This is amazing at the beginning of the story, when Crane mentions that they were the only
ones to survive how ungrateful these characters are to be alive in this big hateful world. During the
story the correspondent realizes how lucky he is to be alive and how this was the best experience of
his life. He learns how not to be cynical of men because we are all in the war against nature together.
While the men are afloat they learn a highly momentous lesson about man versus nature. The natural
world does not play favorites among men. The captain realizes this when all of his crew goes down
with the ship except him and three other men. The correspondent found this to be true when the
shark was hunting him while he rowed. The war with nature raged on in the story showing no signs
of letting go. With nature playing tricks on them as they go. For example, The people on the beach,
waving at them. Also, the man swinging his coat continuously. Then when the thought it could not
get worse the boat capsizes. When the exhausted passengers eventually drifted to shore the oiler
finds himself a victim of man versus nature. Another conflict in this story was with man versus self.
An example of this conflict is, "If I am going to be drowned – if I am going to be drowned – if I am
going to be drowned, why, in the name of the seven mad gods who rule the sea, was I
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Movie Review Of ' Doc '
Doc. 1 Scene 1 (TT 61 – Amenuser (User) usr)
This scene is represented in the inner room especially on the lower part of the northern wall which is
largely damaged. This part carries a large list of offerings, beneath which to the left hand side, there
are the final scene of the opening of the mouth ritual with sacrifice offerings to the right hand side.
This scene represents three men holding offerings like a goose, a heart and a bull 's leg.
Doc. 2 Scene 2 (TT 83 – aAmethu aAmTw aAhmos iaH ms)
On the west wall of inner room IJ, most of the scenes are extremely damaged near side I except for
the scene which represents funeral Procession facing the goddess of the west. The goddess in this
scene is the personification of Hathor. The scene is divided into two registers containing men in
boats preceded by shrines while the lower part of the wall is completely ruined. The first register
represents two men on a boat, one of them holding a bull 's leg with his right hand trying to pull
some water and holding a heart in a vase on his left hand. This scene perhaps refers to removing
both the heart and the leg of Osiris from the water.
Doc. 3 Scene 3 (TT 84 Amunedjeh iAm.w–nDH)
The western wall of the passage is decorated with a scene divided into three registers. The first one
represents crossing the Nile to the west bank during the funeral Procession directed to the goddess
of the west including a boat, a bull 's leg, a heart as well as a shrine at the
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Reaction Paper On The Perfect Storm
Sebastian Junger began to write The Perfect Storm "without even knowing it" (Junger XIV). His
personal experience with the storm was "...standing on Gloucester's Back Shore watching thirty foot
swells advance on Cape Ann..." (Junger XIV). The next day, Junger read an article in the newspaper
about a Gloucester boat (The Andrea Gail) that was believed to be lost at sea. He saved a clipping of
that article and from then on, Junger began unknowingly writing the book. Junger witnessed this
destructive storm in action. He also watched the 30 foot swells crash on the Gloucester shore. These
personal connections persuaded Junger to write The Perfect Storm. Also, throughout the book,
Junger states that fishermen do not get the respect they deserve for their dangerous jobs. Upon
further research, it was found that Sebastian Junger used to work in a labor intensive job as well. He
was a climber for a tree company. After he was hurt on the job, Junger realized that dangerous work
was not written about a lot. As the terrible storm hit Gloucester and a fishing boat was lost at sea,
Sebastion decided he would shine light on another dangerous business, the open seas fishing
industry.
The subject of The Perfect Storm is the Andrea Gail and the storm that it was trapped and eventually
perished in. The subject is stated at the beginning of the book in the Forward. Here, Junger describes
his writing process, his inspiration, and the subject of his book. Throughout the book, Junger
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Naturalism in "The Open Boat"
February 24 2012
Essay 1
Word Count: 1515
Olivia Calder
"The Open Boat"
"The Open Boat" is a short story written by Steven Crane about four men stranded on a dinghy after
their boat had sunk over night. The men were struggling to stay alive because it seemed as if they
had no hope for survival. The four stranded shipmen were a correspondent, an oiler, a cook, and a
captain. The theme of the story is that man has no control over his destinies and that nature controls
everything. Naturalist themes prevail in Stephen Crane's "The Open Boat" as it demonstrates
naturalist literature through the struggle that nature throws at the men. Naturalism arises throughout
the men's constant battle between their surrounding environment and keeping ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
The men came to the conclusion that "fate" must be the reason that they are experiencing this
deathly situation. It is the understanding of this fact that brings the men to the edge of their misery.
At this point the men feel like their lives are coming to an end, so much so that they even ask the
captain if they have a chance at survival, to which the captain replies "If this wind holds and the
boat don't swamp, we can't do much else." This quote shows the uselessness that the men feel, but it
also makes apparent there is still a possibility of hope.
Steven Crane really emphasizes the uselessness and the hopelessness they feel against the universe,
"If I am going to be drowned – if I am going to be drowned – if I am going to be drowned, why, in
the name of the seven mad gods who rule the sea, was I allowed to come thus far and contemplate
sand and trees? Was I brought here merely to have my nose dragged away as I was about to nibble
the sacred cheese of life? It is preposterous." At this point the men actually made sight to land yet
are too far to even make the effort to swim. How could the universe be so unfair that it would let
them have a small taste or "nibble of the sacred cheese of life" at surviving? They had been through
a drastic environment to get to where they are. If the universe cared about them at all, it would find a
way for the men to make it to land, although when it comes
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Distinctively Visual Analysis Poem
The image presents an interaction between to males. The two men are naked and struggling with one
another. They are placed on a ground that looks made out of concrete. There are cracks on it and it
looks uneven; parts that are rougher than others. The texture of the ground and the ways the painter
presents it suggest the two men are in an uncomfortable setting. The background is dark red, giving
the background images no focus. There are two onlookers on the left side of the two men, there is a
bat–like human creature on the center, there is a group of intertwined humans on the right side, and
just below the group of individuals and two men, there is a man laying on the rough ground. The
two onlookers are wearing drapes and observe the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
His body is in a squat form and he seems to be fighting against the waves and wind to balance
himself. There is an expression of fear on his face. His hands are both up, the right hand is far up as
if he is waving at someone and his left arm is placed toward the man next to him. The way the body
is presented causes the viewer to assimilate the conditions they are under. The fear in the mans face
causes viewers to assume they are trying to survive a storm or a natural disaster approaching. The
man next to the man in a red scarf expresses fear as well, but not quite as much as the man in a red
scarf. His face looks disgusted and as though he is uncomfortable being around people who are in
the verge of dying. He is wearing a camel color drape. The way the cloth is painted shows the power
of the wind against them. The left hand is covered with the drape while the right one seems to be
reaching out for the man in the red scarfs hand. It's as though he is looking for comfort from the man
next to him. The man on the far right of the boat is rowing it. He seems to be struggling to row the
boat against the strong waves and wind. His clothes are falling off of him and the only part of his
body covered is his behind
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Three Men in a Boat Chapter Summary
Chapter 11 How George once woke up early in the morning accidentally George, who is known for
sleeping till late, cites an incident of waking up early one morning by chance. Once, his watch went
out of order and the time it showed was quarter–past eight. Mistakenly, he woke up at three and
rushed to get ready for work. Only when a policeman told him that it was just three o'clock in the
morning, he realized his watch was showing the wrong time. George, Harris and Montmorency keep
off the cold water George, Harris and Montmorency keep away from the water as it is too cold and
the wind is chilly. J, however, does not give in but he isn't very keen on getting into the water either.
He thinks he would not throw the water over himself but ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
They were followed by the Cistercian monks who wore no clothes, ate no flesh, fish or eggs. The
difference of opinion between J and Montmorency Narrator considers that the only difference
between him and Montmorency is their difference of opinion about cats. J, being very fond of cats,
would caress them gently with love and care. On the other hand, Montmorency would go wild at the
sight of cats and the 'whole street would come to know about it'. J says that he does not blame
Montmorency for this but the natural tendency of the fox–terrier breed. It is nearly impossible to
train them to be gentler. J narrates a past incident at Haymarket Stores where a fox–terrier created a
great havoc among the dogs and then went away with his master pretending to be modest. While
returning from a dip, at high Street, Montmorency saw a large cat, Tom, and ran after it. But as he
reached near it, he did not act violently but surrendered to the gentleness of the cat. Departure from
Marlow J considers their departure from Marlow to be dignified and impressive. They purchased a
lot of things and had boys to carry the things along with them. Montmorency, 'carrying a stick',
headed the procession with 'two disreputable looking curs' following him. J's disgust over steam
launches J, being the man rowing the boat, expresses his disgust over steam launches. The three of
them make every possible effort to irritate the people in steam
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Symbolism And Figurative Language In The Open Boat By...
In the short story "The Open Boat," author Stephen Crane displays symbolism and figurative
language as an important key element. Such elements encourage readers to create certain mental
images from the figurative language the author provides. The significance of these details can be
interpreted in many ways. Stephen Crane uses many symbols to unify the story's plot, theme, and
setting. The first important symbol Crane describes in his story is the boat the characters float upon.
This boat, which seems to be no larger than a bathtub, seems quite small against the vast ocean. As
the characters cling to the boat to survive the dangerous sea, it symbolizes how human life can bob
along the world's uncertainties. Crane describes the boat as "open," which supports the interpretation
of how being unprotected can expose people to the unexpected turns of life (Crane 339). The open
boat becomes a sanctuary and reality for the characters; this reality helps them comprehend how
little control they have over everything they do. The open boat symbolism helps convey the short
story's theme. The symbol conveys a message of loneliness that comes from the character's
understanding of how insignificant they are in the universe. Underneath the men's rants at fate, they
have the egotistical belief that their existence should be important and have meaning. When the men
realize their cries for salvation are not answered, they settle into despair. However, near the end of
the story, the characters new awareness of the universe and the idea of loneliness causes them to
become spiritually weary. At this point, all sensations and thoughts of pain and pleasure lose their
meaning as well. Crane also uses the eight cigars as a symbol. "The correspondent...found therein
eight cigars. Four of them were soaked with sea–water; four were perfectly scatheless. ...somebody
produced three dry matches; and thereupon the four waifs rode impudently in their little boat and,
with assurance of impending rescue shining in their eyes puffed at the big cigars, and judged well
and ill of all men" (Crane 344). This excerpt describes how the four dry cigars and the four wet
cigars serve as a symbol of hope for being rescued, and ultimately the loss of
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Examples Of Naturalism In The Open Boat
Naturalism arose in the late nineteenth century as a movement, however, today naturalism is literary
genre known as extreme realism. Naturalism shapes the characters, settings and roles in the families.
The purpose of naturalism is for the characters in the story to use nature to form who they are or
what actions they make. Naturalism is useful for writers who want to make a deeper connection with
the humans and the earth in their stories. Because of naturalism, readers see the relationship the
characters and their surroundings in the stories. Readers also see how nature affects the characters
throughout their lives. This allows the reader to understand what is taking place in the story. In
Stephen Crane's, "The Open Boat," naturalism appears ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Authors use naturalism in a lot of their writings. The purpose for naturalism is to help readers see
the relationship between nature and the characters. Naturalism allows the characters to grow, and it
allows the setting to be seen clearly as well. In Stephen Crane's "The Open Boat," naturalism affects
the characters and the setting. The characters are given challenges by nature throughout the story,
and towards the end, nature actually saves their lives. However, it kills one of the four men.
Naturalism affects the characters in helpful and hurtful ways. The author, Stephen Crane uses
naturalis, in two ways to allow the reader to understand how useful the literary genre is. The author
also uses naturalism to show how nature affects the actions of the characters in his story, "The Open
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Open Boat
It is clearly visible that nature has the advantage in both "The Open Boat" and "To Build a Fire." All
the young men within the stories fight with great effort against her, but only select ones survive.
Another similar incident as this is seen in the bible. "As evening came, Jesus said to his disciples,
'Let's cross to the other side of the lake.' So they took Jesus in the boat and started out, leaving the
crowds behind (although other boats followed). But soon a fierce storm came up. High waves were
breaking into the boat, and it began to fill with water. Jesus was sleeping at the back of the boat with
his head on a cushion. The disciples woke him up, shouting, 'Teacher, don't you care that we're
going to drown?' When Jesus woke up, he rebuked ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Within this short passage, nature has full control over the disciples. Just as the men fear her in the
two stories, the disciples do as well. The ultimate fear seen in all three stories is death. In the
passage, the only thing that saves the disciples is Jesus. He is the only one who can "calm the
storm," physically, mentally, and emotionally. If the men in the stories would have called upon him,
and have faith in him and not their own selves, there is a possibility death would not have beat them
down. Yes, they still would have been in war against nature, but just as it is seen above, Jesus can
conquer any storm, if it is part of his will for ones' life. With this being said, sometimes death will
happen, it is part of life and flows with nature as well. Also seen within the two stories, there are a
few survivors. Three of the four men survived the stranded boat in the sea, and the dog survived out
in the snowy Yukon. Both the men and the dog use their inner instincts to survive, sometimes
working along with nature and other times against her. Their efforts do indeed result in life. For the
dog, one will notice its' instincts from the
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Literary Naturalism In Stephen Crane's The Open Boat
Stephen Crane's "The Open Boat:" An Analysis According to Literary Naturalism "The Open Boat"
by Stephen Crane is a short story included in The Norton Introduction to Literature. In it, we embark
on the journey of four men, whose ship has sunk and are now adrift. The characters fight for
survival throughout the whole tale, trying to withstand nature. As the story passes, they realize that
nature is indifferent and uncaring. Moreover, they begin to question the existence of God.
Ultimately, three of the men survive and one of them dies. Stephen Crane's "The Open Boat" shows
the struggle of men attempting to understand nature and desiring to survive against this invincible
and indifferent force. I will analyze literary elements of character, plot, and symbol, using Literary
Naturalism to demonstrate this constant conflict between man and nature that plays out in "The
Open Boat." ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The narrator begins this story stating, "None of them knew the color of the sky" (338). He refers to
the cook, the correspondent, the captain, and the oiler, the main characters. This quote means that all
of them are focused on fighting for survival, paying all of their attention to the waves. They fight
against the waves, trying to stay alive. However, the author states, "A singular disadvantage of the
sea lies in the fact that after successfully surmounting one wave you discover that there is another
behind it just as important and just as nervously anxious to do something effective in the way of
swamping boats" (339). The waves are a symbol of the uncaring nature; it does not matter how hard
the protagonists try to fight against the waves because nature continues its course; the waves
continue to flow. However, the characters are determined to stay alive. They continue to face this
external conflict that is nature, even when they realize that nature is
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Figurative Language In The Open Boat
Naturalism is a style and theory of representation based on the accurate description of detail.
Stephan Crane's "The Open Boat" is a good interpretation of naturalism. This story is naturalistic
due to the fact these men's lives are controlled by the sea and little mercy is shown.
The sea is breaking the men down to little or nothing and showing their true flaws. In the story
Crane uses imagery, figurative language, and mood to make naturalism more obvious throughout the
story.
Crane uses imagery in "The Open Boat" to show multiple perspectives and to give a better visual
description of naturalism within the story. In the story Crane uses many examples to show the
beauty and depth in his story. When the sun was rising, Crane described the ocean, ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
By Crane giving the men hope in the story, the mood changes from grim, to a more optimistic
outlook for a brief while. Yet the mood changes again when the crew is at open sea. Crane describes
the men as fearful when the shark slowly circled the boat for a prolonged amount of time. Crane
goes more in depth in this situation by saying, "The presence of this biding thing did not affect the
man with the same horror that it would if he had been a picnicker." This means that he had already
been so scared of what could and what did happen, that it was impossible for him to become more
frightened.
In conclusion by Crane using these three literary devices he brought us into the story mentally and
emotionally. By using imagery, Crane showed us the world of open sea survival and the struggles of
finding land with no help whatsoever. The way Crane used figurative language was a way to explain
the emotions and characteristics of the environment. It made the crews struggles more intense and
dignified, so we could experience their pain. Finally, the mood of the story was very powerful and
changes drastically. The mood seemed to be controlled by nature, not
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Analysis Of The Open Boat By Stephen Crane
Memories from life–altering experiences, sometimes changes the way that individual may perceive
or even think throughout their everyday life. The short story, "The Open Boat," causes readers to
change their perception of life and look at the big picture. Humans tend to think of themselves as the
"superior" race, when in reality they are not. Stephen Crane displays what little worth a human's life
actually is, when compared to nature. Being the youngest of fourteen children, Crane was born in
Newark, New Jersey in 1871. His father Jonathan Crane, "was a Methodist minister and religious
tract writer who advocated temperance and denounced the theater, frivolous novels, and dancing,"
he died suddenly when Crane was only 9 years old (Marren ... Show more content on
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Along the way, Crane was shipwrecked off the coast of Florida with three other men "and lost at sea
on a 10–foot lifeboat for 30 hours" (Eye 65). One of the men, an oiler named Billy Higgins,
drowned in the surf while trying to swim to shore. After being saved, Crane used his experiences as
his basis for fiction and wrote the short story, "The Open Boat" and continued working as a
correspondent and journalist. He spent the last of his years in England, and in 1900, Crane died due
to Tuberculosis at the age of twenty–eight.
"The Open Boat," tells the story of four men who survived a shipwreck off the coast of Florida. Left
on a small life–boat, the four men must keep the boat floating or else the waves will capsize the
boat. Up against winter waters, each man works tirelessly to stay alive. With each person given a
task, following the directions from their injured captain, the correspondent and the oiler row the
boat, while the cook scoops the water out of the boat. The captain was still in shock from witnessing
the death all of his men in the shipwreck, he was never the same after that. Over time, the men begin
to make progress towards land, the captain spots a lighthouse in the distance. Believing it was a
lifesaving station the men begin to row towards the lighthouse, but soon realize it was abandoned.
After losing hope, the correspondent finds four dry cigars in his pocket and the four men smoke
them together. The captain advises the men to row back into the
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Stephen Crane's The Open Boat
"The Open Boat" is a short story written by poet and author Stephen Crane (1871–1900). In a sense,
the story is about survival. The author, who serves as the story's narrator, is retelling his real life
experience of sharing a small dinghy in the middle of the ocean with three other men after the boat
they were sailing in hit a sandbar and sunk. The story is relentless because it begins and ends in
what seems to be frantic desperation. The men are up against the forces of nature and the
relentlessness of the wind and ocean squalors. They are specks to the vastness of the watery
landscape and, as such, they each are forced to reckon with the fact that if the ocean were to
swallow them it wouldn't make a bit of difference. As the men work beyond the point of exhaustion
they are ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The movement arrived during a time in American history when almost everything had changed.
Appearing in the 1890s, naturalism was the end–product of a generation brought up after the Civil
War who recognized that the so–called American Dream of the period held little significance in their
life and the future, "The realization by the generation coming of age in the 1890s that American life
had changed radically since the Civil War helped compromise a key aspect of the American Dream–
the faith that America guaranteed all men the free and just pursuit of self–fulfillment and of the good
life" (Pizer 3). In effect, man was not the ruler of his own destiny but was subject to forces beyond
him. Naturalist writers, such as Crane, viewed humanity as objects. In previous works such as the
book The Red Badge of Courage, Crane had written about how environments play pivotal roles in
shaping individuals (Pizer 4). Influenced by the likes of Charles Darwin as well as social scientists
who prophesied that the course of humanity was not predicated on the self but of the things existing
all around, the naturalist writer set about carving a pessimistic world
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Personal Narrative: The LCVP Team
The date was June 6, 1944, we woke up before Midnight and headed out. My team and I were a
LCVP team and there were 36 of us on the LCVP. We were almost there; I yelled back to my team
that there were two minutes until the door lowered on the LCVP. Some of them were crying and
some were vomiting from sea sickness, but I was also scared because I saw two bunkers and I didn't
know what was in them. There could be .50 Caliber Machine Guns, although there could also be
nothing. The bunkers could just be abandoned. We were one minute out until we lowered the door
and then we were receiving heavy mortar fire and LCVP's were sinking everywhere around us. We
were also taking very heavy .50 Caliber fire, bullets were hitting the LCVP and bullets were flying
into ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Two of my men just got shot. I told everyone to crouch down. A mortar hit the back of the boat and
the boat flew into the air and onto the shore. I just stayed under the boat for about twenty–five
minutes, because I couldn't move, I was in too much shock. All my men were everywhere, some
were under the boat with me, some were in the water, and some were even lying on the battlefield. I
told my men to be ready, on my mark we were all going to go out from under the boat and lay down
fire for the oncoming ships that carried more men for our reinforcements. I counted down until we
crawl out from under the boat. 3, 2, 1, GO, GO, GO! We all crawled from under the boat and laid
down heavy fire toward the bunkers that were on the hill straight from the ocean. We were also
taking very heavy machine gun fire. I turned and yelled and told my team to lie on the bank where
there was barbed wire at the top. We got some heavy explosives and stuck them into the bank to
blow the bank away. I tell my team to blow it in 3, 2, 1 NOW! The explosion is huge sand goes
everywhere and so doesn't barbed wire. We have to all move up to the side of one of the bunkers.
When we got there I ordered
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In The Heart Of The Sea Summary
The book I read was called In the Heart of the Sea by Nathaniel Philbrick. This book tells the story
of brave men on a whaling ship called the Essex who were lost at sea. It tells about how starvation,
dehydration, and how psychologically the human brain breaks down. This story is told from the
third person view explaining the lives of the men and the troubles they went through. This story is
about 20 men who were lost at sea after their boat was destroyed by a feral whale. Many of these
men were nantucketers, "spartans of the sea," but instead of killing men they killed whales.
Nantucketers were bred for hunting whales; it's almost a religion for the people of Nantucket Island.
It is ironic that the Nantucketers have such a blood lust for ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
A few days after the crew left Henderson island the first casualty of the journey Mathew Joy. They
continue on together but one night Chase the first mate's boat gets separated from the other two and
Chase scared of what might happen is forced to cut provisions even farther and after a couple days it
makes the men look like living skeletons who can barely speak or crawl around. Chase realizing this
raises the provisions again. They run out of food but before they have to resort to cannibalism there
saved by the whaleship Indian. The other two boats weren't so lucky the men on Joy's boat took
advantage of having a weak crew and ate more than they should have forcing captain Pollard to
share some of his food with them. Therefore they ran out of food much faster and had to resort to
drawing lots for who would die and be harvested for the rest to live until only two were left found in
the bottom of there boat sucking the bone marrow out of there fellow crews
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Flood Myth of Epic of Gilgamesh and Book of Genesis of...
A Comparison of the Flood of Gilgamesh and the Bible
People grow up listening to the story of Noah and the flood. They remember the length of the flood,
the dove, and the rainbow very vividly. However, most people do not realize that the story is told
throughout many different cultures and with accounts older than Genesis¹s version in the Bible.
Although each of the accounts tells of the flood, there are many variations to the story. One such
story can be found in the Epic of Gilgamesh. Although the Epic of Gilgamesh is similar to the
Genesis version, there are some differences in the days leading to, during, and after the flood.
The days leading to the flood are different as well as similar in the Epic of Gilgamesh and the ...
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After 7 days, Noah¹s flood began.
During the flood there are several similarities between the two stories. In the Epic of Gilgamesh, the
flood lasted six days and nights. The whole world looked like an ocean except for the top of a
mountain where the boat ultimately landed. In Genesis, ³the rain was upon the earth forty days and
forty nights² (p. 69). The water covered the entire earth including the mountains for 150 days.
Eventually the ark rested on a mountaintop, but the mountaintops were not shown for three months.
To test to see if the waters had receded, Utnapishtim waited for six days to see if his boat would
hold onto the mountaintop. Then on the seventh day, Utnapishtim released a dove from a hatch in
the boat. The dove came back. Then he released a swallow that also came back. Lastly, he ³loosed a
raven...and she did not come back² (p. 38). After the flood ended, Noah also released birds. First, he
sent a raven, which flew around until the water dried up. Then he sent a dove, which came back.
Noah waited seven days and released it again. This time the dove came back with an olive leaf.
Noah waited seven more days; he released the dove again, which did not return.
After testing the earth to see if it was dry, both men disembarked and began their new lives.
Utnapishtim made sacrifices to his gods on the mountaintop. Noah also made sacrifices to his god.
Utnapishtim¹s gods decided that a flood as a means of destruction was not a good idea. They also
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The Open Boat Analysis Essay
The Open Analysis of The Open Boat Fate is defined as the universal principle or ultimate agency
by which the order of things is presumably prescribed, or in other words, the reason for an
individual's personal downfall. Most people in today's society tend to rely on their particular
religious figure to take control of and guide how their lives develop and eventually end. Contrary to
this outlook, there are some that believe that the natural world has complete jurisdiction of
individual destiny and fate. In Stephen Crane's "The Open Boat," the author develops his characters
and includes symbolism and irony to suggest the theme of all people ultimately being indifferent and
powerless to nature, learning to respect it and its choice of destiny in the end. To begin, the bathtub
sized dinghy, being the only object to keep the men afloat in the gruesome seas, symbolizes just how
uncontrollable life really is, taking the crewmembers wherever nature decides. For instance, Crane
describes the dinghy as "scornfully bumping a crest, she would slide and race and splash down a
long incline, and arrive bobbing and nodding in front of the next menace" (339). Vivid imagery
displays the boat as ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Crane's short story "The Open Boat" gives readers an in–depth depiction of how the natural world
has the ability to take the life of someone who may not deserve it. Throughout his story, he provides
a symbolic meaning of the boat to represent everyday people having little control over their lives,
implying that there are very few things we are able to do to direct it, like the men having a difficult
time guiding the dinghy in the open sea. Crane also incorporates the oiler being the one to die to
ironically attest his point of view towards destiny, being that we as individuals are unable to predict
or control Mother Nature's
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Open Boat Naturalism Essay
Naturalism is a basic style of representation based on the accurate depiction of detail. This meaning
that anything told in the story is based on the real and natural world. In naturalist' stories, the
characters are usually up against a force of nature. In Stephen Crane's "The Open Boat," he
expresses the three basic characteristics of naturalism. His story expresses pessimism, detachment
from the story, and determinism. Crane's characters are often considered to be pessimistic. This
meaning that they see the worst aspect of things or believe that the worst will happen. While the four
men in the boat are stranded at sea, they find a lighthouse. The waves of the sea are overpowering
their small dinghy making it hard to reach the shore. "We'll never be able to make it to ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
The story is more plot centered and not character centered. Throughout the whole entire story, not a
single one of the characters becomes the main focus. The focus is on the plot of the story and how
the men as a whole will make it back to the shore. Crane expresses this mainly when his characters
speak. The men repeat each other's words after one says, "Funny they don't see us" (586). The men
all think the same thing now at this point. They believe that the man on the shore doesn't see them.
They focus mainly on how they will not be rescued and will die at sea. While Crane expresses the
men's feelings, he mentions how the men become friends that were bound by the sea. Crane states,
"They were a captain, an oiler, a cook, and a correspondent, and they were friends, friends in a more
curiously iron–bound degree than may be common" (584). Because of the friend's binding, the story
is able to be focused on the plot rather than a main character's story. The whole story is about all
four men, rather than just one. These four men all have something in common though. They are
determined to reach
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Creative Writing: Alma's Journal
Gabe came down to see her and patted the mule. Amos had quit grumbling when the blindfold came
off. Now he held his head up, his chin on the edge of the roof. "Thinks he's on a sight–seeing tour."
Alma smiled, "It is beautiful. I never imagined riding down a big river like this. I've floated sticks
down the creek, guess if an ant rode the stick, this is what he'd feel like." "Kind of. Captain Jones
says we should make fifty to sixty miles today. Water's flowing good and there's not that much
traffic." "How long 'til we get to this here, Cairo?" "Cairo, Illinois. I don't know," he looked up and
asked the boatman who was listening anyway. Alma was glad they hadn't tried to whisper, wouldn't
have done any good. "Three days, maybe more. Sometimes ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Then she looked coyly at Gabe. He lifted her up to sit on the edge of the roof with the other two men
and ordered the hound down. When Gabe scrambled up beside her, she looked at the men who were
waiting patiently. She bowed her head, whispered, "Thank you God for your bounty, and please
protect us on our perilous journey." She raised her head, pushing back her bonnet to feel the breeze
on her heated face. "Go on, use your knives or fingers," she said as she took a bite of her bread.
Minutes later, it was the Captain who handed the rudder to Steve and stepped down to pass the
dipper of water. Alma drained it and handed it back. Gabe smiled at her, amazed at how pretty she
looked with her eyes shining and her smile appearing between every bite. It was good, and he
noticed the men were enjoying it too. It looked like the Captain had finished his already, which was
why he probably had jumped down. After everyone had washed down the food, the Captain asked.
"Reckon we could eat more bread now?" Alma looked as though she were pondering a deep
question then nodded. "Of course," she looked ready to jump down but the Captain said. "Let me."
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George Pocock Accomplishments
George Pocock is a name recognized amongst several people with connections to Seattle, the
University of Washington, and the rowing community around the United States. He is looked upon
as one of the greatest boat builders of all time and has numerous accolades because of his
astounding boat building skills. Despite George's successes and accomplishments throughout his
life, the journey that led him to such a successful career was one full of struggle and relentless desire
to chase a lifelong dream. "George was born March 23rd, 1891 in Teddington, Middlesex, England"
(cite). He was the youngest of four children with two older sisters and an older brother. As the son of
a prestigious boat builder, the love and passion for building, as well
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Diabolical Characterization In The Open Boat
In the Open Boat by Stephen Crane, the correspondent's seems to show a change through his nature
of being a cynical man from the beginning of the story to the changed man he becomes toward the
end. I believe this change was caused by the brotherhood that was formed between the four men
along with the situation of them being lost at sea, which caused him to change and grow as a
character. I will support this claim with both textual evidence from the story and my own character
analysis of the character.
In the beginning of the Open Boat, the correspondent is portrayed as a hard–bitten character that has
seen it all, and believes that no joy can be found in the world. This is hinted in the brief introduction
of his character that Crane gives us, "The correspondent, pulling at the other oar, watched the waves
and wondered why he was there." (Crane 1048). We meet this character when he is rowing the boat,
something he complains about doing and is shown to detest. "The correspondent wondered
ingenuously how in the name of all that was sane could there be people who thought it amusing to
row a boat. It was not an amusement; it was a diabolical punishment" (Crane 1052). What the others
viewed as a small form of amusement, The correspondent made opposite opinion known when he
compared it to "diabolical punishment", however even though the correspondent has made his
hatred known for rowing. He is shown to be willing to do it to the point of exhaustion so he could
allow his fellow
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Miz Bridger Epilogue
Alma realized she should have stayed hidden behind the building. Now she might have to bite her
tongue in two to keep quiet. Gabe had asked each man, including the ones with the big boat that had
just been launched, about riding down river to Cairo with them. Only one had said yes, if they paid
five each to ride. Alma knew they still had all three of her dowry coins, but Gabe laughed at the man
and moved on. They were in front of a big flat boat near the paddlewheel river boat. Insects
swarmed up and the mule's tail lashed her as he tried to swish them away. Alma liked the look of
this boat. It was already sitting pretty heavy in the water and there were squealing pigs and chickens
crated and stacked in the back of the boat while the front ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
Captain Jones to you Miz? "Miz Bridger to you," she said with a curtsy to his bow. "Can I give him
some of this hay?" "Sure can, Miz. There's a bucket by the fire barrel to pull water from the river for
us and all the animals. I wouldn't get any, until we're plumb clear of town." Gabe dropped the last
plank on top with the others and extended a hand, Gabriel Bridger, Gabe to my friends. He snapped
his fingers and Boomer leapt down on the other side of Alma. The man who'd insulted her was
named Steve and he apologized as he freed and wound the hawser on board. It was a thick, heavy
rope that rolled around a reel anchored on the roof of the funny boat house. Even over the smell of
the animals, Alma could tell the wood of the boat was green. She wondered if it had been hauled in
the same as the other boat on their arrival. There wasn't time for all her questions. It took all Gabe
and Steve's strength on one of the big 'oars or horns' and the Captain on the other one to get the boat
pushed off from the sticky bottom of the loading dock. As the heavily laden boat moved into the
open water, Alma noticed water seeped between the top of the bottom two boards. She took a
moment to bend her head in prayer while the Captain steered with the long aft pole and both men
worked the long sweeps to get the 16' wide boat righted into the channel. She wasn't sure, but
guessed it was over three times as long as its
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The Maze Of Life In Three Men In A Boat
The maze of life is a series of twists and turns that each person must navigate, everyone takes a
different path and has a different end result. Some people get lost in the mazer because they are not
taking the right path for them, while others know exactly what they need to do in order to get free.
In the book Three Men in a Boat the three lifelong friends, Jerome, Harris, and George, become
trapped in the maze of life due to everyday stress, problems, and stereotypes. In the book Three Men
in a Boat, the stress of the three lifelong friends is very detrimental to their help. In the beginning of
the book the narrator, Jerome, talks about how he was reading symptoms for all of these diseases
and he realized that he had every single one except for housemaid's knee. When he went to the
doctor all he was prescribed was a pound of beefsteak and a pint of beer every six hours. Because of
the stress the narrator put on his body it made him think that he had all of these diseases. The
narrator's friends Harris and George agreed with Jerome and said that they were all over worked and
this is causing their stress and will end up making them sick. This breakthrough made all of them
realize that a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
While everyone, including his two lifelong friends, thinks George is lazy, he is actually the senior
manager at Barclays Bank. George is calm, educated, practical, and helpful but many people do not
perceive him to be that way. This is one of the consequences of life, people with see a person as the
stereotype for the certain way they look. If someone sees a skinny person they will probably think
they are one of two people, an anorexic or a very fit/athletic person. If someone is on the bigger side
people will automatically think they are lazy and have no self–motivation. The way we live is often
perceived differently by everyone
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Narrative Essay On A Tsunami
I was on a ship fishing on the coast of Greece and just before sunrise there was a violent shake in the
water that almost filliped the boat over, I soon realized that it was an earthquake. me and other
workers ran down to the hull of the boat. I could start to fill the boat lean towards its nose and herd
lighting outside of the hull. I quickly ran to the back of the boat and wrapped my arm around a pipe,
the boat start to tip more and more to the point where the boat flipped over. I could not keep my grip
and I fell on the roof of the boat. I landed on my shoulder hard on the wood. The boat then started to
feel airborne. Then I knew for certain than we were in a tsunami. The boat started to make a
crackling noise then the wood started to cave in on itself. The boat started to implode on itself and
water started to leek in the boat. I started to craw away from the side of the boat that the sea water
was coming in at. The water started to fill the bout up fast, men were pleading for oxygen and help.
Before I knew it I was swimming in the water that flooded in the boat, I took one huge gasp of air
and went under the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
I slowly got up and saw that the Alexandra was destroyed. I slowly walk along the sea shore and
saw many ships stranded on the dry sand. As other people walk on the shoal I notice that the tsunami
picked up a lot of fish and things of that kind in the people's hand. Other vessels of great size were
washed up on the sea shore by the strong and violent wind. I was the few who didn't lose their life
on July 21st. I start to walk through the water that was on the ground to what was left of my house,
the house was fill to the brim with sea salt water. All of my belongings were ruined, nothing was
salvageable. I look around and see many of other people crying and sobbing. The ground was
flooded with three inches of water as far as the eye can see. Mediterranean Sea toward the Egyptian
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
A Comparison of The Perfect Storm Movie and Novel Essay
A Comparison of The Perfect Storm Movie and Novel
The Perfect Storm is a novel written by Sebastian Junger, that retells the horrific story of fishermen
and sailors who were caught in the eye of the worst storm in history. The book mainly focuses on
the Andrea Gail, a swordfishing boat, with a crew of 6 men, who disappeared without a trace deep
into the northern atlantic sea. In the year 2000, almost 10 years after the tragic event took place, a
motion picture, perfectly titled, The Perfect Storm which was based on the novel was released.
There were subtle to few changes in the plot line of the story, however there were many differences
among the book and movie. The movie is very intact with the plot and ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
The movie didn`t portray an important aspect, when the Andrea Gail was replacing and upgrading
its gears in the beginning, but the book did. That played a key role in why the Andrea Gail was
caught in the storm in the first place. The ice machine had broken down leaving the crew with no
choice but to return home, which meant heading into the storm, otherwise the fish they had worked
so hard to catch would spoil, making a whole waste of the trip. There were also details within the
book that offered much enlightment about the sea, the life of a fisherman, how a person dies, and
storms, yet the movie failed to offer that. That`s just one more argument for the debate of whether its
better to read the book or watch the movie.
There were certain plots that took place in the movie, but wasn`t mentioned in the book, if not then
it was only briefly brought about. When the 6 men were out in the bar drinking and partying the
night before they were off to sea once again, the book mentioned only briefly about Murph, one of
the crewmen, ?he has an ex–wife Debra, and a three–year–old baby, also named Dale, whom he
openly adores?. In the movie, it showed Murph and his son, who wasn`t three years old, but older, in
the movie, bonding that last night. However, the book never mentioned this event taking place. The
movie creator
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Creative Writing: Thick
Thick fog covered their campsite. It was about 10:30 P.M., and there was a chill in the air that could
cut right through your clothes and down to the bone. Three men gathered around a fire discussing
their plans to go carp shooting. One man carefully poured sand over the fire then headed over to
where the other men were rummaging through their bags. Collectively they gathered a trolling
motor, two batteries, a spotlight, a packet of knives, extra gloves for each man, three bows, and a
quiver of arrows. They were bundled tightly, each in multiple layers. They trudged about a mile
upstream of their campsite to the river where they had previously tied up their boat. The boat was a
thin two–man aluminum boat that was painted in many shades of green, ... Show more content on
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He caught the side of the ledge and hastily sloshed his way up the bank. Shawn instructed Kent to
help him flip the boat over. They both lifted the same side of the boat. It took three tries, but
eventually they broke the seal of the water. The two men squinted into the boat with the teeniest
glimmer of hope that anything had been saved, but to no avail. They had lost everything including
their one source of light, their spotlight and their trolling motor. They tried to think of plans of how
to get back to camp. Kent had wanted to go back to the highway that was a good 2 mile trek. Shawn
convinced him that the quickest way back to camp would be to ride the boat back down to camp.
Kent and Shawn quickly gathered the largest, flattest branches they could find. Shawn climbed into
the boat. Kent jogged over to pick up Steve who was still in a shocked state. Kent ran back to the
boat and Steve slowly meandered behind. Steve climbed sluggishly into the boat and Kent pushed
the boat off and hopped in. Kent and Shawn started rowing with their makeshift paddles as Steve
stayed silent in the back. The two men squinted into the thick, early January fog. They silently
rowed for twenty minutes until they saw the bank that was right below their campsite. They rowed
toward the shore. Once they were in shallow enough water, Shawn hopped out and dragged the boat
out of the water and onto the wide bank. Kent tapped Steve on the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Examples Of Three Men In Rasing A Boat
Three boy's with one with one motive to raise up a boat but someone in the way stopes them that
someone is Keet wilson. All of these boys contributed to rasing the boat helping or preventing.
Enemy or not they all had specail personalities that contributed to raising the boat or not rasing the
boat. The first boy is Rico, Rico has a very caring, Loyal, and Tough. An example of Rico being
caring was when he told Mr.Ramos about Tomi rasing the boat because he didn't want Tomi to be in
trouble if he got caught by the cops. "He came to me because he is a good friend and his worried"
(pg 141). One example of Rico being Tough is when he got beaten up by Keet he said he was "fine"
and he didn't need help because he stood there the whole night through."Yellow Bruisies spotched
on his neck and arms"(pg 251).The final personalitiy of Rico is Loyal. During the night when Rico
had the pontoons Keets gang beat him up to get the pontoons, instead if running Rico fought back.
(pg 251) ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
One moment that could've stopped the whole operation was when mose, Rico, Billy, and Tomi were
at school Mose suggested that they sould not raise the boat because they might get in trouble by
military or BMTC. Another personality Mose has is being loyal because in the final fight with Keet,
Mose didn't back away instead he stood with him."Go tell your mommy and daddy" Mose
shrouded"(pg 274). The final personality of Mose is he is caring because he told Mr.Ramos about
the Tomi rasing the boat because he was scared for Tomi because Mose Thought Tomi might get in
trouble. "He came to me because he is a good friend and his worried"(pg
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Perfect Storm
The Perfect Storm Compare & Contrast :: Movie to Book The Perfect Storm is a novel written by
Sebastian Junger, that retells the horrific story of fishermen and sailors who were caught in the eye
of the worst storm in history. The book mainly focuses on the Andrea Gail, a swordfishing boat,
with a crew of 6 men, who disappeared without a trace deep into the northern atlantic sea. In the
year 2000, almost 10 years after the tragic event took place, a motion picture, perfectly titled, The
Perfect Storm which was based on the novel was released. There were subtle to few changes in the
plot line of the story, however there were many differences among the book and movie. The movie
is very intact ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Unlike the book, which ended on the note that no trace of the Andrea Gail was ever found after its
last signal was made, the movie had a different ending. The movie depicted that all of the men on
board the Andrea Gail had died in the boat, gasping for their last breathes as the water deprived
them of air. All except Bobby Shatford, the main character, who managed to swim out of the boat
and float amongst the water. The movie ended at the funeral of the six men who died on the Adrea
Gail, where their family members shed tears and talked to embrace and reminisce the lives of those
men. Although there were many differences, as far as the book to the movie, the main idea of both
was to demonstrate the brave struggle between the 6 men aboard the Andrea Gail, and "the perfect
storm". Neither the both nor the movie failed to achieve their
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Stephen Crane 's The Open Boat
While taking a cruise to Jamaica for vacations, the ship you are at starts to sink. How do you think
people in the ship would react to this scenario? Stephen Crane, an American author, wrote the story
"The Open Boat". The story is about a boat sinking in the middle of the ocean with four men. The
characters presented by Crane in the story are a cook, an oiler, a correspondent, and the captain.
Although the story is narrated from the view of the correspondent; Crane gives the reader some
particular characteristics of the captain. The goal of this paper is to interpret the character of the
captain by discussing his actions, feelings, and quotes presented by Crane. A captain is an individual
who takes leadership and responsibility in a vessel. People think that a captain can just be found in
large ships; however, captains are necessary in any kind of boat, ship, or yacht. Therefore, in the
story Crane gives the authority to the captain. The captain is the one in charge in the boat and the
one that gives directions to the other three men. Throughout the story we can see that the other three
men respected the captain and his decisions. If the three men wanted to something, they would first
consulted with the captain before doing it. After the sinking of the boat, the captain was really
devastated because it was his responsibility and he fail. In the beginning of the story Cranes defines
the captain very sad and with the impotence of not being able to do anything. (Crane, page
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Ww1 Essay
Submerged Struggle for Superiority "A missing German U–boat is lost no longer"(Washington
Post). This recent headline appeared in the Washington Post on 19 September 2017. A once lost
German U–boat was found off the coast of Belgium at the bottom of the North Sea. This U–boat
contained the bodies of the twenty three commanding men of the submarine. Authorities say the
submarine was hit and sunk by a naval mine on the upper deck. Throughout the course of World War
1, U–boats were used to their full capacity sinking more than three hundred and fifty ships, while
only 13 U–boats were destroyed. According to the Washington Post, they have over seventy six
million months users. As a result of these monthly subscribers, seventy six million ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
Even at the beginning of the war, in the 1914, the U–boat could immerse itself in under two minutes,
and the time only improved as later models were made allowing a U–boat to become invisible in
twenty– five seconds (Kennett 197). "... by mid 1977, sinkings had reached a catastrophic
proportions: in the month of April alone... the U–boat sent more than 350 ships to the bottom[of the
ocean]"(Kennett 195). The U–boat quickly became a key element to the success of World War 1,
and a highly desired weapon. "The diminutive U–boat demonstrated it's powers of destruction early
[on] in the war" (Kennett 194). The unsuspecting u–boat caused many repercussions on World War
1. The U–boats demonstrated destruction on the sinking of ships, but it particularly made an impact
on the war by sinking the RMS Lusitania. A German u–boat, the U20, sank the seven hundred
seventy feet long passenger ship three hundred feet off the coast of Ireland one hundred and two
years ago. The sinking of this ship altered the outcome of World War 1, as it was the catalyst which
pulled America into the war. America originally against joining World War 1 because business was
booming for the new nation, this was not their war, and they had many immigrants flocking to their
land. Despite America's desire to stay neutral throughout the war, Germany's persistence finally
prevailed in the sinking of the RMS Lusitania. Germany was trying to cripple Britain, and instill a
sense of fear by hitting the ship
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Open Boat by Stephen Crane Essay
In the story "The Open Boat," by Stephen Crane, Crane uses many literary techniques to convey the
stories overall theme. The story is centered on four men: a cook, a correspondent, Billie, an oiler
who is the only character named in the story, and a captain. They are stranded in a lifeboat in stormy
seas just off the coast of Florida, just after their ship has sunk. Although they can eventually see the
shore, the waves are so big that it is too dangerous to try to take the boat in to land. Instead, the men
are forced to take the boat further out to sea, where the waves are not quite as big and dangerous.
They spend the night in the lifeboat and take turns rowing and then resting. In the morning, the men
are weak and exhausted. The captain ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
They are so consumed with their struggle against the waves they do not even have the time to notice
something as simple as the color of the sky. From the very beginning the reader is filled with the
suspense that each individual character feels. Despite the crews struggle with Mother Nature, they
are continually struck by the fierce waves. With each passing wave the reader is lead to believe that
this one will surely be the one that capsizes the little dingy. "As the salty wall of water approached,
it shut all else from the view of the men in the boat, and was not difficult to imagine that this
particular wave was the final outburst of the ocean (256)." Crane creates suspense between the
reader and the characters that allow both to feel the relentlessness of nature's indifference of their
struggled attempts to survive. It seems that no matter how hard the crew works to keep the dingy
from capsizing "... the waves continued their old impetuous swooping at the dingy, and the little
craft, no longer underway struggled woundily over them (259)." The narrator describes the waves as
acting carefree and rather impulsive as if they had no obligation to the men for their survival. Nature
does not care that this crew of men were working to survive, but nor does it mean to cause the men
any harm. The waves are merely there, doing as nature intends the waves
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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In The Heart Of The Sea

  • 1. In the Heart of the Sea In the Heart of the Sea The novel "In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex," by Nathaniel Philbrick, successfully tells the story of the whale ship Essex that was attacked by a sperm whale 1,500 nautical miles west of the Galapagos, 40 miles south of the equator. Many people know this as the story of "Moby Dick", which was based off this event. The novel highlights three themes: man versus nature, survival, and suffering. The novel starts out in the town of Nantucket, an island off the eastern coast of New England. Nantucket, at this time, is known as one of the most successful whaling ports. Docked on the port was the famous Essex, a 20 year whaling boat. The Essex is the pride of Nantucket. It is 87 feet long, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In chapter 5, on November 20, the crew spots whales 40 miles south of the equator. Chase and his crew go after a whale, which destroys their boat with its tail. When they bring their boat back to the Essex, they spot a huge sperm whale near the bow of the ship calmly and quietly floating along the surface of the water. The whale began to move quickly towards the ship. The men try to steer Essex away from the whale, but are unsuccessful. The whale rams the ship with its head, and the men are amazed. After the whale revives itself, it struck the ship again, causing the Essex to sink bow–first. The men board their whaleboats after a night of preparation of leaving the Essex. They stripped the sails of the ship and attached them to their boats. The waves splashed over the boat, causing the work to be more difficult. The next morning, the boats take off. Chase and Pollard talk of where to go now that their ship has sunk. They speak about going to the Galapagos Islands, but Pollard noticed the wind direction would not allow them to go there. Next, they speak about the Marquesas, in the west. The men had heard that the inhabitants of the island were cannibals. South of the Marquesas were the Tauamotu Archipelago Islands, but the men had also heard that the islands have a bad reputation. In this conversation, we notice the colonist's outlook on the unknown. They share a sense of togetherness within each other and no one else. We see this in the attitude of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2.
  • 3. Optimism And Pessimism Exposed In Stephen Crane's The Open... "The Open Boat" by Stephen Crane is a harrowing story revolving around four men who face impending doom both literally and philosophically. The superficial tale of four men lost at sea in a small boat acts as a thin mask for a much more complex underpinning. The general theme of this story is the indifference of nature's brutality and man's inability to influence it. The characters express both optimism and pessimism simultaneously whilst facing the gravest of tasks; survival. The central theme is also coupled with an equally perplexing idea that man's free will can help overcome adversity, thus negating nature's whims. This story questions and exposes a very deep concern with the natural order of the universe; despite our efforts, humans are ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Stephen Crane's direct relation to this experience has sparked a much more intense reality. Four characters are placed in a life or death situation, which births an analytical perspective of existence and man's place in the universe. These men, all of which are unique in their respective roles, unified under a common purpose. This attribute speaks volumes regarding humanity as a whole. The most important aspect of living beings is to survive and we will band together to resist extinction. The remnants of this story asks a plethora of questions: What is humanity's true role in the universe? If man is part of nature, why is there a resistance to his fate? Is life random or is there a method or order that governs all things? Can we view this story as an example of man's triumph over his destiny? These questions, coupled with a sense of deeper meaning, are just another way of asking life's most common and perplexing question, "Why are we here?" "The Open Boat" appears to be superficial but actually stirs questions within the human subconscious for a deeper sense of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 5. Ernest Shackleton Research Paper The voyage started in August 1914, its leader Ernest Shackleton. Shackleton had already been to two different expeditions going to the Antarctic. The first one was when he went with the National Antarctic Expedition, the leader of that was by Robert F. Scott. The second voyage was when he traveled with three companions to go to the Pole, but because of the shortage of food, they had to turn back. This time was going to plan an expedition to cross the Antarctic all the way by foot. Shackleton was an incredible, born leader, who came up with this wild idea. Shackleton started getting the two largest items need for the party, the ships. The first ship he got was Aurora, which was from Sir Douglas Mawson. This ship had already been one expedition. The second ship he got was one from Lars Christensen and bought it for the mere price of $67,000 dollars, less than what Christensen had paid. Shackleton then went into the deal of getting financial aid and grants, most of it was the $120,000 from James Caird who was a jute manufacturer. He got $55,000 altogether from the government and the National Geographic Society. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... They were seeing the floes cracking and decided that they were going to launch the three boats; the Dudley Docker, the Stancomb Wills, and the James Caird. They were either going to Clarence or Elephant Island. They changed their mind three times but decided to go to Elephant Island. Snow began to fall, and they were all frozen, pale, with eyes that were bloodshot. Ordes–Lees, the motor expert, later storekeeper, grumbles of how hungry he his and even tries to steal the best spot for sleeping. Shackleton decides for all of them to remain together and not to get separate. Late in the afternoon, they saw the 3,500 peaks of Elephant Island. They all jumped out and chewed and sucked water from the fresh–water glaciers. They set their tents and got the blubber stove on. Shackleton ordered five men to look at the perimeter of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 7. Natucket Dbq The make–up of the Essex may not have seemed important during that dreadful voyage; after all, how could a difference among men affect the fact that a whale had stove the Essex? In actuality it is the composition of those whalers that had everything to do with the outcome of their voyage. These differences include social status, race, rank, and personality differences. Social status in Nantucket was mainly based on if someone was born and raised a Nantucketer, an orphan, outsider or worse a slave. Nantucket was not a racist location; however there was still a disadvantage for African Americans when it came to the whaling world. Along with that came the struggle of command between the Captain and his Shipmates. His struggle of authority ultimately ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This word was used to describe the "close–knit familial community" that the native people of Nantucket formed. This community was so close that many people in the community were split into three social classes; the Nantucketers, outsiders (including orphans), and African Americans. The Extent of this social classing was so bad that outsiders were often called "coofs". African Americans usually did not live in Nantucket; they came from the Marine Insurance Company which would let Captains hire blacks as sailors. These black sailors were called "green hands" . Now the Nantucket community was not racist, or even hate–full towards these coofs and green hands, Nantucket was actually a community of Quakers. Quakers were known for their pacifist ways, except when it came to whale killing, some considered themselves, "Quakers with a vengeance" Meaning they didn't see anything sinful about whale killing because the lord made it that way. So the Nantucketers had no hateful aggression towards different races or social classes, however there was a small change on the open sea. This change is due to the ship's setup and the food provisions. On page 35 there is an illustration showing the internals of the Essex, it shows there are three different living quarters. One for the officers (almost always Nantucketers), one for common people (few Nantucketers and the outsiders), and last was the Blacks living quarters. The fact that people were split up shows how blacks and the outcast were still not seen as equals. And since they weren't seen as equals they were not equally fed, Philbrick said, "At no time were the differences that existed between the officers and the men more pronounced than at mealtime" . For example the officers were said to eat roughly 3,800 calories a day, while others ate "even close to that amount". Overall it comes down to the fact that the Nantucketers ate more than ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 9. Leo Tolstoy The Three Hermits In the short story "The Three Hermits" Leo Tolstoy illustrates how faith in God does not derive from the complexity of one's prayer or doctrine, but rather from the simplicity and humbleness in one's heart to be genuinely faithful and all serving to him. The story consists of three religious hermits, who have chosen a life of simplistic isolation. Also, there is this bishop on a pilgrimage to spread the word of god, he hears about these hermits that live on a small island in search of the "salvation of their souls" (275). As a holy man himself, the priest had no choice but to see these hermits for himself and educate them about true doctrine. The three hermits were men who had sacrifice their entire lives to God. Tolstoy portrays their sacrifice by the men's descriptions. They were extremely old, the fisherman stated that one's must have been at least hundred years old. They were wearing tattered peasant clothes. One was even described to have a beard to his knees. They lived in their humble island without the need of materialistic possessions. They showed no signs of greed, lust, gluttony, they were true men of god. Also, the men showed great humbleness through their charity. When the fisherman got stranded on the Hermit's island they welcomed him. The hermits "helped him mend his ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The bishop believed the only right way to serve God was through the holy scriptures. The humble men repeated each doctrine until it was implanted in their brains, but they did not understand why they were saying those things. They repeated, but did not truly feel it in their hearts. They only knew one way to pray, a simple verse "three are ye, three are we, have mercy upon us" (277). It was simple, yet it was something they truly believed in. They wanted a greater connection to God, unknowing that they were one with God already through their pure hearts and genuine ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 11. Essay On The Journey Of The Chapter 4 "Let's see where they are headed," suggested David The two agreed and began following the deep boot prints. They went on for awhile before they disappeared into the desert side of the island. They strained their eyes and saw what appeared to be the group's camp. They were still looking when a faint whistle came floating down from a tree and a band of men came storming out of the underbrush. John, Mark and, David spun around and took off. They were about a fourth of a mile away from the safety of their new home when a gun fired and Mark fell to the ground with blood oozing out of his leg. John and David stopped to try and carry him but with the large group coming they had to lay him down and get poised for a fight. The mad gang of men ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... John hurried over and scoped him up in his arms and lay his head on his lap. John tore his shirt and wrapped it around his head. David did the same and John used his shirt to separated Mark's skin from the cold concrete they were lying on. David stood up and walked around the room looking for some hope of escape. "Nothing, just a big concrete box" John lay Mark's head down and stood up. He went to the side of the prison and put his ear on the wall. "That is not how I planned on dying." he said David looked at him with a questioning face. A deep voice from suddenly erupted from outside the prison." There is no way out" Mark jumped to his feet. In a hushed voice he half whispered half shouted, "That was the voice from the phone on the plane telling the pilots to kill us and now we are going to die!" "We won't die let's just, just" "Just what....... die?" said David sarcastically. "No we don't do that we just don't die, pretty simple." The three went into a corner and started making a plan of escape making sure that no one on the outside could hear them. After about two hours of making and going over the plan the three slowly began drifting off and waited for the day. "Come on you fools get up, you don't want to look sleepy when you die!" the big voice shouted. The three slowly got to their feet still half sleeping. The tall man whistled and three men appeared. "Lock them up......more." The men put handcuffs on them ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 13. The Open Boat Compare and Contrast Essay ENG 101 Feb. 3, 2011 The Open Boat Compare and Contrast Essay Rough Draft This paper is about the story "The Open Boat" written by Stephen Crane. In this paper, I will try to provide the similarities of the original story with the newspaper account. The differences in each article will also be discussed. Lastly, I will provide a conclusion based on the facts of both articles. "The Open Boat'' begins with a description of men aboard a small boat on a rough sea. These men are all survivors of a shipwreck. There is the cook, overweight and sloppily dressed, who is trying to remove water from the bottom of the boat. The oiler, a physically powerful man named Billie who is rowing with one oar. There is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He shares this thought with the other men, and the oiler smiles in sympathy. The men smoke cigars drink their water and wait to be spotted by the lighthouse rescue crew, unwilling to run their boat ashore in the rough waves. The lighthouse appears deserted. The men discuss rowing toward land swimming through the surf once the boat finally capsizes in the rougher water that is closer to shore. The crew knows that, over time, they will grow weaker and things will get worse, not better. They exchange with each other "addresses and admonitions", in case all of them do not live through this whole ordeal Later, someone is seen on the shore waving to them. A while later, a crowd gathers, disembarking from a bus. Despite their efforts to let the people know on shore they were in distress, they realize that the people on shore are tourists and that they think they are just simple fisherman. Thoughts of drowning run rampant in every man's mind on that boat. At dawn, the men decided that their only chance is to row toward the distant shore again and swim when the boat finally capsizes. On the Captain's order, the oiler rows the boat directly toward the shore. The boat capsizes and the people on the boat are so weak that it is hard for them to even keep their heads above water. Suddenly, a man appears on shore stripping his clothes off and running into the water. The rescuer ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14.
  • 15. The Open Boat by Stephen Crane Essay The Open Boat by Stephen Crane "The Open Boat" Four men drift across a January sea in an open boat, since they lost their ship some time after dawn. Now, in the clear light of day, the men begin to grasp the full gravity of their situation. Realizing that their main conflict will be man versus nature, in this case, the raging sea. In the short story "The Open Boat," Stephen Crane gives an itemized description of the two days spent on a ten–foot dinghy by four men a cook, a correspondent, which is Crane himself, the injured Captain and Billy Higgens, the oiler. The men in the open boat show us that compassion for one's comrade, unfeeling endurance, and courage are the true moral standards in a neutral universe. Characterization ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It is explained in the story that many men should have a bathtub bigger than the boat they were riding in. This is amazing at the beginning of the story, when Crane mentions that they were the only ones to survive how ungrateful these characters are to be alive in this big hateful world. During the story the correspondent realizes how lucky he is to be alive and how this was the best experience of his life. He learns how not to be cynical of men because we are all in the war against nature together. While the men are afloat they learn a highly momentous lesson about man versus nature. The natural world does not play favorites among men. The captain realizes this when all of his crew goes down with the ship except him and three other men. The correspondent found this to be true when the shark was hunting him while he rowed. The war with nature raged on in the story showing no signs of letting go. With nature playing tricks on them as they go. For example, The people on the beach, waving at them. Also, the man swinging his coat continuously. Then when the thought it could not get worse the boat capsizes. When the exhausted passengers eventually drifted to shore the oiler finds himself a victim of man versus nature. Another conflict in this story was with man versus self. An example of this conflict is, "If I am going to be drowned – if I am going to be drowned – if I am going to be drowned, why, in the name of the seven mad gods who rule the sea, was I ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 17. Movie Review Of ' Doc ' Doc. 1 Scene 1 (TT 61 – Amenuser (User) usr) This scene is represented in the inner room especially on the lower part of the northern wall which is largely damaged. This part carries a large list of offerings, beneath which to the left hand side, there are the final scene of the opening of the mouth ritual with sacrifice offerings to the right hand side. This scene represents three men holding offerings like a goose, a heart and a bull 's leg. Doc. 2 Scene 2 (TT 83 – aAmethu aAmTw aAhmos iaH ms) On the west wall of inner room IJ, most of the scenes are extremely damaged near side I except for the scene which represents funeral Procession facing the goddess of the west. The goddess in this scene is the personification of Hathor. The scene is divided into two registers containing men in boats preceded by shrines while the lower part of the wall is completely ruined. The first register represents two men on a boat, one of them holding a bull 's leg with his right hand trying to pull some water and holding a heart in a vase on his left hand. This scene perhaps refers to removing both the heart and the leg of Osiris from the water. Doc. 3 Scene 3 (TT 84 Amunedjeh iAm.w–nDH) The western wall of the passage is decorated with a scene divided into three registers. The first one represents crossing the Nile to the west bank during the funeral Procession directed to the goddess of the west including a boat, a bull 's leg, a heart as well as a shrine at the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18.
  • 19. Reaction Paper On The Perfect Storm Sebastian Junger began to write The Perfect Storm "without even knowing it" (Junger XIV). His personal experience with the storm was "...standing on Gloucester's Back Shore watching thirty foot swells advance on Cape Ann..." (Junger XIV). The next day, Junger read an article in the newspaper about a Gloucester boat (The Andrea Gail) that was believed to be lost at sea. He saved a clipping of that article and from then on, Junger began unknowingly writing the book. Junger witnessed this destructive storm in action. He also watched the 30 foot swells crash on the Gloucester shore. These personal connections persuaded Junger to write The Perfect Storm. Also, throughout the book, Junger states that fishermen do not get the respect they deserve for their dangerous jobs. Upon further research, it was found that Sebastian Junger used to work in a labor intensive job as well. He was a climber for a tree company. After he was hurt on the job, Junger realized that dangerous work was not written about a lot. As the terrible storm hit Gloucester and a fishing boat was lost at sea, Sebastion decided he would shine light on another dangerous business, the open seas fishing industry. The subject of The Perfect Storm is the Andrea Gail and the storm that it was trapped and eventually perished in. The subject is stated at the beginning of the book in the Forward. Here, Junger describes his writing process, his inspiration, and the subject of his book. Throughout the book, Junger ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 21. Naturalism in "The Open Boat" February 24 2012 Essay 1 Word Count: 1515 Olivia Calder "The Open Boat" "The Open Boat" is a short story written by Steven Crane about four men stranded on a dinghy after their boat had sunk over night. The men were struggling to stay alive because it seemed as if they had no hope for survival. The four stranded shipmen were a correspondent, an oiler, a cook, and a captain. The theme of the story is that man has no control over his destinies and that nature controls everything. Naturalist themes prevail in Stephen Crane's "The Open Boat" as it demonstrates naturalist literature through the struggle that nature throws at the men. Naturalism arises throughout the men's constant battle between their surrounding environment and keeping ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The men came to the conclusion that "fate" must be the reason that they are experiencing this deathly situation. It is the understanding of this fact that brings the men to the edge of their misery. At this point the men feel like their lives are coming to an end, so much so that they even ask the captain if they have a chance at survival, to which the captain replies "If this wind holds and the boat don't swamp, we can't do much else." This quote shows the uselessness that the men feel, but it also makes apparent there is still a possibility of hope. Steven Crane really emphasizes the uselessness and the hopelessness they feel against the universe, "If I am going to be drowned – if I am going to be drowned – if I am going to be drowned, why, in the name of the seven mad gods who rule the sea, was I allowed to come thus far and contemplate sand and trees? Was I brought here merely to have my nose dragged away as I was about to nibble the sacred cheese of life? It is preposterous." At this point the men actually made sight to land yet are too far to even make the effort to swim. How could the universe be so unfair that it would let them have a small taste or "nibble of the sacred cheese of life" at surviving? They had been through a drastic environment to get to where they are. If the universe cared about them at all, it would find a way for the men to make it to land, although when it comes ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 23. Distinctively Visual Analysis Poem The image presents an interaction between to males. The two men are naked and struggling with one another. They are placed on a ground that looks made out of concrete. There are cracks on it and it looks uneven; parts that are rougher than others. The texture of the ground and the ways the painter presents it suggest the two men are in an uncomfortable setting. The background is dark red, giving the background images no focus. There are two onlookers on the left side of the two men, there is a bat–like human creature on the center, there is a group of intertwined humans on the right side, and just below the group of individuals and two men, there is a man laying on the rough ground. The two onlookers are wearing drapes and observe the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... His body is in a squat form and he seems to be fighting against the waves and wind to balance himself. There is an expression of fear on his face. His hands are both up, the right hand is far up as if he is waving at someone and his left arm is placed toward the man next to him. The way the body is presented causes the viewer to assimilate the conditions they are under. The fear in the mans face causes viewers to assume they are trying to survive a storm or a natural disaster approaching. The man next to the man in a red scarf expresses fear as well, but not quite as much as the man in a red scarf. His face looks disgusted and as though he is uncomfortable being around people who are in the verge of dying. He is wearing a camel color drape. The way the cloth is painted shows the power of the wind against them. The left hand is covered with the drape while the right one seems to be reaching out for the man in the red scarfs hand. It's as though he is looking for comfort from the man next to him. The man on the far right of the boat is rowing it. He seems to be struggling to row the boat against the strong waves and wind. His clothes are falling off of him and the only part of his body covered is his behind ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24.
  • 25. Three Men in a Boat Chapter Summary Chapter 11 How George once woke up early in the morning accidentally George, who is known for sleeping till late, cites an incident of waking up early one morning by chance. Once, his watch went out of order and the time it showed was quarter–past eight. Mistakenly, he woke up at three and rushed to get ready for work. Only when a policeman told him that it was just three o'clock in the morning, he realized his watch was showing the wrong time. George, Harris and Montmorency keep off the cold water George, Harris and Montmorency keep away from the water as it is too cold and the wind is chilly. J, however, does not give in but he isn't very keen on getting into the water either. He thinks he would not throw the water over himself but ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... They were followed by the Cistercian monks who wore no clothes, ate no flesh, fish or eggs. The difference of opinion between J and Montmorency Narrator considers that the only difference between him and Montmorency is their difference of opinion about cats. J, being very fond of cats, would caress them gently with love and care. On the other hand, Montmorency would go wild at the sight of cats and the 'whole street would come to know about it'. J says that he does not blame Montmorency for this but the natural tendency of the fox–terrier breed. It is nearly impossible to train them to be gentler. J narrates a past incident at Haymarket Stores where a fox–terrier created a great havoc among the dogs and then went away with his master pretending to be modest. While returning from a dip, at high Street, Montmorency saw a large cat, Tom, and ran after it. But as he reached near it, he did not act violently but surrendered to the gentleness of the cat. Departure from Marlow J considers their departure from Marlow to be dignified and impressive. They purchased a lot of things and had boys to carry the things along with them. Montmorency, 'carrying a stick', headed the procession with 'two disreputable looking curs' following him. J's disgust over steam launches J, being the man rowing the boat, expresses his disgust over steam launches. The three of them make every possible effort to irritate the people in steam ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 27. Symbolism And Figurative Language In The Open Boat By... In the short story "The Open Boat," author Stephen Crane displays symbolism and figurative language as an important key element. Such elements encourage readers to create certain mental images from the figurative language the author provides. The significance of these details can be interpreted in many ways. Stephen Crane uses many symbols to unify the story's plot, theme, and setting. The first important symbol Crane describes in his story is the boat the characters float upon. This boat, which seems to be no larger than a bathtub, seems quite small against the vast ocean. As the characters cling to the boat to survive the dangerous sea, it symbolizes how human life can bob along the world's uncertainties. Crane describes the boat as "open," which supports the interpretation of how being unprotected can expose people to the unexpected turns of life (Crane 339). The open boat becomes a sanctuary and reality for the characters; this reality helps them comprehend how little control they have over everything they do. The open boat symbolism helps convey the short story's theme. The symbol conveys a message of loneliness that comes from the character's understanding of how insignificant they are in the universe. Underneath the men's rants at fate, they have the egotistical belief that their existence should be important and have meaning. When the men realize their cries for salvation are not answered, they settle into despair. However, near the end of the story, the characters new awareness of the universe and the idea of loneliness causes them to become spiritually weary. At this point, all sensations and thoughts of pain and pleasure lose their meaning as well. Crane also uses the eight cigars as a symbol. "The correspondent...found therein eight cigars. Four of them were soaked with sea–water; four were perfectly scatheless. ...somebody produced three dry matches; and thereupon the four waifs rode impudently in their little boat and, with assurance of impending rescue shining in their eyes puffed at the big cigars, and judged well and ill of all men" (Crane 344). This excerpt describes how the four dry cigars and the four wet cigars serve as a symbol of hope for being rescued, and ultimately the loss of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 29. Examples Of Naturalism In The Open Boat Naturalism arose in the late nineteenth century as a movement, however, today naturalism is literary genre known as extreme realism. Naturalism shapes the characters, settings and roles in the families. The purpose of naturalism is for the characters in the story to use nature to form who they are or what actions they make. Naturalism is useful for writers who want to make a deeper connection with the humans and the earth in their stories. Because of naturalism, readers see the relationship the characters and their surroundings in the stories. Readers also see how nature affects the characters throughout their lives. This allows the reader to understand what is taking place in the story. In Stephen Crane's, "The Open Boat," naturalism appears ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Authors use naturalism in a lot of their writings. The purpose for naturalism is to help readers see the relationship between nature and the characters. Naturalism allows the characters to grow, and it allows the setting to be seen clearly as well. In Stephen Crane's "The Open Boat," naturalism affects the characters and the setting. The characters are given challenges by nature throughout the story, and towards the end, nature actually saves their lives. However, it kills one of the four men. Naturalism affects the characters in helpful and hurtful ways. The author, Stephen Crane uses naturalis, in two ways to allow the reader to understand how useful the literary genre is. The author also uses naturalism to show how nature affects the actions of the characters in his story, "The Open ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30.
  • 31. The Open Boat It is clearly visible that nature has the advantage in both "The Open Boat" and "To Build a Fire." All the young men within the stories fight with great effort against her, but only select ones survive. Another similar incident as this is seen in the bible. "As evening came, Jesus said to his disciples, 'Let's cross to the other side of the lake.' So they took Jesus in the boat and started out, leaving the crowds behind (although other boats followed). But soon a fierce storm came up. High waves were breaking into the boat, and it began to fill with water. Jesus was sleeping at the back of the boat with his head on a cushion. The disciples woke him up, shouting, 'Teacher, don't you care that we're going to drown?' When Jesus woke up, he rebuked ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Within this short passage, nature has full control over the disciples. Just as the men fear her in the two stories, the disciples do as well. The ultimate fear seen in all three stories is death. In the passage, the only thing that saves the disciples is Jesus. He is the only one who can "calm the storm," physically, mentally, and emotionally. If the men in the stories would have called upon him, and have faith in him and not their own selves, there is a possibility death would not have beat them down. Yes, they still would have been in war against nature, but just as it is seen above, Jesus can conquer any storm, if it is part of his will for ones' life. With this being said, sometimes death will happen, it is part of life and flows with nature as well. Also seen within the two stories, there are a few survivors. Three of the four men survived the stranded boat in the sea, and the dog survived out in the snowy Yukon. Both the men and the dog use their inner instincts to survive, sometimes working along with nature and other times against her. Their efforts do indeed result in life. For the dog, one will notice its' instincts from the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32.
  • 33. Literary Naturalism In Stephen Crane's The Open Boat Stephen Crane's "The Open Boat:" An Analysis According to Literary Naturalism "The Open Boat" by Stephen Crane is a short story included in The Norton Introduction to Literature. In it, we embark on the journey of four men, whose ship has sunk and are now adrift. The characters fight for survival throughout the whole tale, trying to withstand nature. As the story passes, they realize that nature is indifferent and uncaring. Moreover, they begin to question the existence of God. Ultimately, three of the men survive and one of them dies. Stephen Crane's "The Open Boat" shows the struggle of men attempting to understand nature and desiring to survive against this invincible and indifferent force. I will analyze literary elements of character, plot, and symbol, using Literary Naturalism to demonstrate this constant conflict between man and nature that plays out in "The Open Boat." ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The narrator begins this story stating, "None of them knew the color of the sky" (338). He refers to the cook, the correspondent, the captain, and the oiler, the main characters. This quote means that all of them are focused on fighting for survival, paying all of their attention to the waves. They fight against the waves, trying to stay alive. However, the author states, "A singular disadvantage of the sea lies in the fact that after successfully surmounting one wave you discover that there is another behind it just as important and just as nervously anxious to do something effective in the way of swamping boats" (339). The waves are a symbol of the uncaring nature; it does not matter how hard the protagonists try to fight against the waves because nature continues its course; the waves continue to flow. However, the characters are determined to stay alive. They continue to face this external conflict that is nature, even when they realize that nature is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34.
  • 35. Figurative Language In The Open Boat Naturalism is a style and theory of representation based on the accurate description of detail. Stephan Crane's "The Open Boat" is a good interpretation of naturalism. This story is naturalistic due to the fact these men's lives are controlled by the sea and little mercy is shown. The sea is breaking the men down to little or nothing and showing their true flaws. In the story Crane uses imagery, figurative language, and mood to make naturalism more obvious throughout the story. Crane uses imagery in "The Open Boat" to show multiple perspectives and to give a better visual description of naturalism within the story. In the story Crane uses many examples to show the beauty and depth in his story. When the sun was rising, Crane described the ocean, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... By Crane giving the men hope in the story, the mood changes from grim, to a more optimistic outlook for a brief while. Yet the mood changes again when the crew is at open sea. Crane describes the men as fearful when the shark slowly circled the boat for a prolonged amount of time. Crane goes more in depth in this situation by saying, "The presence of this biding thing did not affect the man with the same horror that it would if he had been a picnicker." This means that he had already been so scared of what could and what did happen, that it was impossible for him to become more frightened. In conclusion by Crane using these three literary devices he brought us into the story mentally and emotionally. By using imagery, Crane showed us the world of open sea survival and the struggles of finding land with no help whatsoever. The way Crane used figurative language was a way to explain the emotions and characteristics of the environment. It made the crews struggles more intense and dignified, so we could experience their pain. Finally, the mood of the story was very powerful and changes drastically. The mood seemed to be controlled by nature, not ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36.
  • 37. Analysis Of The Open Boat By Stephen Crane Memories from life–altering experiences, sometimes changes the way that individual may perceive or even think throughout their everyday life. The short story, "The Open Boat," causes readers to change their perception of life and look at the big picture. Humans tend to think of themselves as the "superior" race, when in reality they are not. Stephen Crane displays what little worth a human's life actually is, when compared to nature. Being the youngest of fourteen children, Crane was born in Newark, New Jersey in 1871. His father Jonathan Crane, "was a Methodist minister and religious tract writer who advocated temperance and denounced the theater, frivolous novels, and dancing," he died suddenly when Crane was only 9 years old (Marren ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Along the way, Crane was shipwrecked off the coast of Florida with three other men "and lost at sea on a 10–foot lifeboat for 30 hours" (Eye 65). One of the men, an oiler named Billy Higgins, drowned in the surf while trying to swim to shore. After being saved, Crane used his experiences as his basis for fiction and wrote the short story, "The Open Boat" and continued working as a correspondent and journalist. He spent the last of his years in England, and in 1900, Crane died due to Tuberculosis at the age of twenty–eight. "The Open Boat," tells the story of four men who survived a shipwreck off the coast of Florida. Left on a small life–boat, the four men must keep the boat floating or else the waves will capsize the boat. Up against winter waters, each man works tirelessly to stay alive. With each person given a task, following the directions from their injured captain, the correspondent and the oiler row the boat, while the cook scoops the water out of the boat. The captain was still in shock from witnessing the death all of his men in the shipwreck, he was never the same after that. Over time, the men begin to make progress towards land, the captain spots a lighthouse in the distance. Believing it was a lifesaving station the men begin to row towards the lighthouse, but soon realize it was abandoned. After losing hope, the correspondent finds four dry cigars in his pocket and the four men smoke them together. The captain advises the men to row back into the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38.
  • 39. Stephen Crane's The Open Boat "The Open Boat" is a short story written by poet and author Stephen Crane (1871–1900). In a sense, the story is about survival. The author, who serves as the story's narrator, is retelling his real life experience of sharing a small dinghy in the middle of the ocean with three other men after the boat they were sailing in hit a sandbar and sunk. The story is relentless because it begins and ends in what seems to be frantic desperation. The men are up against the forces of nature and the relentlessness of the wind and ocean squalors. They are specks to the vastness of the watery landscape and, as such, they each are forced to reckon with the fact that if the ocean were to swallow them it wouldn't make a bit of difference. As the men work beyond the point of exhaustion they are ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The movement arrived during a time in American history when almost everything had changed. Appearing in the 1890s, naturalism was the end–product of a generation brought up after the Civil War who recognized that the so–called American Dream of the period held little significance in their life and the future, "The realization by the generation coming of age in the 1890s that American life had changed radically since the Civil War helped compromise a key aspect of the American Dream– the faith that America guaranteed all men the free and just pursuit of self–fulfillment and of the good life" (Pizer 3). In effect, man was not the ruler of his own destiny but was subject to forces beyond him. Naturalist writers, such as Crane, viewed humanity as objects. In previous works such as the book The Red Badge of Courage, Crane had written about how environments play pivotal roles in shaping individuals (Pizer 4). Influenced by the likes of Charles Darwin as well as social scientists who prophesied that the course of humanity was not predicated on the self but of the things existing all around, the naturalist writer set about carving a pessimistic world ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40.
  • 41. Personal Narrative: The LCVP Team The date was June 6, 1944, we woke up before Midnight and headed out. My team and I were a LCVP team and there were 36 of us on the LCVP. We were almost there; I yelled back to my team that there were two minutes until the door lowered on the LCVP. Some of them were crying and some were vomiting from sea sickness, but I was also scared because I saw two bunkers and I didn't know what was in them. There could be .50 Caliber Machine Guns, although there could also be nothing. The bunkers could just be abandoned. We were one minute out until we lowered the door and then we were receiving heavy mortar fire and LCVP's were sinking everywhere around us. We were also taking very heavy .50 Caliber fire, bullets were hitting the LCVP and bullets were flying into ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Two of my men just got shot. I told everyone to crouch down. A mortar hit the back of the boat and the boat flew into the air and onto the shore. I just stayed under the boat for about twenty–five minutes, because I couldn't move, I was in too much shock. All my men were everywhere, some were under the boat with me, some were in the water, and some were even lying on the battlefield. I told my men to be ready, on my mark we were all going to go out from under the boat and lay down fire for the oncoming ships that carried more men for our reinforcements. I counted down until we crawl out from under the boat. 3, 2, 1, GO, GO, GO! We all crawled from under the boat and laid down heavy fire toward the bunkers that were on the hill straight from the ocean. We were also taking very heavy machine gun fire. I turned and yelled and told my team to lie on the bank where there was barbed wire at the top. We got some heavy explosives and stuck them into the bank to blow the bank away. I tell my team to blow it in 3, 2, 1 NOW! The explosion is huge sand goes everywhere and so doesn't barbed wire. We have to all move up to the side of one of the bunkers. When we got there I ordered ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 42.
  • 43. In The Heart Of The Sea Summary The book I read was called In the Heart of the Sea by Nathaniel Philbrick. This book tells the story of brave men on a whaling ship called the Essex who were lost at sea. It tells about how starvation, dehydration, and how psychologically the human brain breaks down. This story is told from the third person view explaining the lives of the men and the troubles they went through. This story is about 20 men who were lost at sea after their boat was destroyed by a feral whale. Many of these men were nantucketers, "spartans of the sea," but instead of killing men they killed whales. Nantucketers were bred for hunting whales; it's almost a religion for the people of Nantucket Island. It is ironic that the Nantucketers have such a blood lust for ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... A few days after the crew left Henderson island the first casualty of the journey Mathew Joy. They continue on together but one night Chase the first mate's boat gets separated from the other two and Chase scared of what might happen is forced to cut provisions even farther and after a couple days it makes the men look like living skeletons who can barely speak or crawl around. Chase realizing this raises the provisions again. They run out of food but before they have to resort to cannibalism there saved by the whaleship Indian. The other two boats weren't so lucky the men on Joy's boat took advantage of having a weak crew and ate more than they should have forcing captain Pollard to share some of his food with them. Therefore they ran out of food much faster and had to resort to drawing lots for who would die and be harvested for the rest to live until only two were left found in the bottom of there boat sucking the bone marrow out of there fellow crews ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 44.
  • 45. Flood Myth of Epic of Gilgamesh and Book of Genesis of... A Comparison of the Flood of Gilgamesh and the Bible People grow up listening to the story of Noah and the flood. They remember the length of the flood, the dove, and the rainbow very vividly. However, most people do not realize that the story is told throughout many different cultures and with accounts older than Genesis¹s version in the Bible. Although each of the accounts tells of the flood, there are many variations to the story. One such story can be found in the Epic of Gilgamesh. Although the Epic of Gilgamesh is similar to the Genesis version, there are some differences in the days leading to, during, and after the flood. The days leading to the flood are different as well as similar in the Epic of Gilgamesh and the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... After 7 days, Noah¹s flood began. During the flood there are several similarities between the two stories. In the Epic of Gilgamesh, the flood lasted six days and nights. The whole world looked like an ocean except for the top of a mountain where the boat ultimately landed. In Genesis, ³the rain was upon the earth forty days and forty nights² (p. 69). The water covered the entire earth including the mountains for 150 days. Eventually the ark rested on a mountaintop, but the mountaintops were not shown for three months. To test to see if the waters had receded, Utnapishtim waited for six days to see if his boat would hold onto the mountaintop. Then on the seventh day, Utnapishtim released a dove from a hatch in the boat. The dove came back. Then he released a swallow that also came back. Lastly, he ³loosed a raven...and she did not come back² (p. 38). After the flood ended, Noah also released birds. First, he sent a raven, which flew around until the water dried up. Then he sent a dove, which came back. Noah waited seven days and released it again. This time the dove came back with an olive leaf. Noah waited seven more days; he released the dove again, which did not return. After testing the earth to see if it was dry, both men disembarked and began their new lives. Utnapishtim made sacrifices to his gods on the mountaintop. Noah also made sacrifices to his god. Utnapishtim¹s gods decided that a flood as a means of destruction was not a good idea. They also ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 46.
  • 47. The Open Boat Analysis Essay The Open Analysis of The Open Boat Fate is defined as the universal principle or ultimate agency by which the order of things is presumably prescribed, or in other words, the reason for an individual's personal downfall. Most people in today's society tend to rely on their particular religious figure to take control of and guide how their lives develop and eventually end. Contrary to this outlook, there are some that believe that the natural world has complete jurisdiction of individual destiny and fate. In Stephen Crane's "The Open Boat," the author develops his characters and includes symbolism and irony to suggest the theme of all people ultimately being indifferent and powerless to nature, learning to respect it and its choice of destiny in the end. To begin, the bathtub sized dinghy, being the only object to keep the men afloat in the gruesome seas, symbolizes just how uncontrollable life really is, taking the crewmembers wherever nature decides. For instance, Crane describes the dinghy as "scornfully bumping a crest, she would slide and race and splash down a long incline, and arrive bobbing and nodding in front of the next menace" (339). Vivid imagery displays the boat as ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Crane's short story "The Open Boat" gives readers an in–depth depiction of how the natural world has the ability to take the life of someone who may not deserve it. Throughout his story, he provides a symbolic meaning of the boat to represent everyday people having little control over their lives, implying that there are very few things we are able to do to direct it, like the men having a difficult time guiding the dinghy in the open sea. Crane also incorporates the oiler being the one to die to ironically attest his point of view towards destiny, being that we as individuals are unable to predict or control Mother Nature's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 48.
  • 49. The Open Boat Naturalism Essay Naturalism is a basic style of representation based on the accurate depiction of detail. This meaning that anything told in the story is based on the real and natural world. In naturalist' stories, the characters are usually up against a force of nature. In Stephen Crane's "The Open Boat," he expresses the three basic characteristics of naturalism. His story expresses pessimism, detachment from the story, and determinism. Crane's characters are often considered to be pessimistic. This meaning that they see the worst aspect of things or believe that the worst will happen. While the four men in the boat are stranded at sea, they find a lighthouse. The waves of the sea are overpowering their small dinghy making it hard to reach the shore. "We'll never be able to make it to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The story is more plot centered and not character centered. Throughout the whole entire story, not a single one of the characters becomes the main focus. The focus is on the plot of the story and how the men as a whole will make it back to the shore. Crane expresses this mainly when his characters speak. The men repeat each other's words after one says, "Funny they don't see us" (586). The men all think the same thing now at this point. They believe that the man on the shore doesn't see them. They focus mainly on how they will not be rescued and will die at sea. While Crane expresses the men's feelings, he mentions how the men become friends that were bound by the sea. Crane states, "They were a captain, an oiler, a cook, and a correspondent, and they were friends, friends in a more curiously iron–bound degree than may be common" (584). Because of the friend's binding, the story is able to be focused on the plot rather than a main character's story. The whole story is about all four men, rather than just one. These four men all have something in common though. They are determined to reach ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 50.
  • 51. Creative Writing: Alma's Journal Gabe came down to see her and patted the mule. Amos had quit grumbling when the blindfold came off. Now he held his head up, his chin on the edge of the roof. "Thinks he's on a sight–seeing tour." Alma smiled, "It is beautiful. I never imagined riding down a big river like this. I've floated sticks down the creek, guess if an ant rode the stick, this is what he'd feel like." "Kind of. Captain Jones says we should make fifty to sixty miles today. Water's flowing good and there's not that much traffic." "How long 'til we get to this here, Cairo?" "Cairo, Illinois. I don't know," he looked up and asked the boatman who was listening anyway. Alma was glad they hadn't tried to whisper, wouldn't have done any good. "Three days, maybe more. Sometimes ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Then she looked coyly at Gabe. He lifted her up to sit on the edge of the roof with the other two men and ordered the hound down. When Gabe scrambled up beside her, she looked at the men who were waiting patiently. She bowed her head, whispered, "Thank you God for your bounty, and please protect us on our perilous journey." She raised her head, pushing back her bonnet to feel the breeze on her heated face. "Go on, use your knives or fingers," she said as she took a bite of her bread. Minutes later, it was the Captain who handed the rudder to Steve and stepped down to pass the dipper of water. Alma drained it and handed it back. Gabe smiled at her, amazed at how pretty she looked with her eyes shining and her smile appearing between every bite. It was good, and he noticed the men were enjoying it too. It looked like the Captain had finished his already, which was why he probably had jumped down. After everyone had washed down the food, the Captain asked. "Reckon we could eat more bread now?" Alma looked as though she were pondering a deep question then nodded. "Of course," she looked ready to jump down but the Captain said. "Let me." ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 52.
  • 53. George Pocock Accomplishments George Pocock is a name recognized amongst several people with connections to Seattle, the University of Washington, and the rowing community around the United States. He is looked upon as one of the greatest boat builders of all time and has numerous accolades because of his astounding boat building skills. Despite George's successes and accomplishments throughout his life, the journey that led him to such a successful career was one full of struggle and relentless desire to chase a lifelong dream. "George was born March 23rd, 1891 in Teddington, Middlesex, England" (cite). He was the youngest of four children with two older sisters and an older brother. As the son of a prestigious boat builder, the love and passion for building, as well ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 54.
  • 55. Diabolical Characterization In The Open Boat In the Open Boat by Stephen Crane, the correspondent's seems to show a change through his nature of being a cynical man from the beginning of the story to the changed man he becomes toward the end. I believe this change was caused by the brotherhood that was formed between the four men along with the situation of them being lost at sea, which caused him to change and grow as a character. I will support this claim with both textual evidence from the story and my own character analysis of the character. In the beginning of the Open Boat, the correspondent is portrayed as a hard–bitten character that has seen it all, and believes that no joy can be found in the world. This is hinted in the brief introduction of his character that Crane gives us, "The correspondent, pulling at the other oar, watched the waves and wondered why he was there." (Crane 1048). We meet this character when he is rowing the boat, something he complains about doing and is shown to detest. "The correspondent wondered ingenuously how in the name of all that was sane could there be people who thought it amusing to row a boat. It was not an amusement; it was a diabolical punishment" (Crane 1052). What the others viewed as a small form of amusement, The correspondent made opposite opinion known when he compared it to "diabolical punishment", however even though the correspondent has made his hatred known for rowing. He is shown to be willing to do it to the point of exhaustion so he could allow his fellow ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 56.
  • 57. Miz Bridger Epilogue Alma realized she should have stayed hidden behind the building. Now she might have to bite her tongue in two to keep quiet. Gabe had asked each man, including the ones with the big boat that had just been launched, about riding down river to Cairo with them. Only one had said yes, if they paid five each to ride. Alma knew they still had all three of her dowry coins, but Gabe laughed at the man and moved on. They were in front of a big flat boat near the paddlewheel river boat. Insects swarmed up and the mule's tail lashed her as he tried to swish them away. Alma liked the look of this boat. It was already sitting pretty heavy in the water and there were squealing pigs and chickens crated and stacked in the back of the boat while the front ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Captain Jones to you Miz? "Miz Bridger to you," she said with a curtsy to his bow. "Can I give him some of this hay?" "Sure can, Miz. There's a bucket by the fire barrel to pull water from the river for us and all the animals. I wouldn't get any, until we're plumb clear of town." Gabe dropped the last plank on top with the others and extended a hand, Gabriel Bridger, Gabe to my friends. He snapped his fingers and Boomer leapt down on the other side of Alma. The man who'd insulted her was named Steve and he apologized as he freed and wound the hawser on board. It was a thick, heavy rope that rolled around a reel anchored on the roof of the funny boat house. Even over the smell of the animals, Alma could tell the wood of the boat was green. She wondered if it had been hauled in the same as the other boat on their arrival. There wasn't time for all her questions. It took all Gabe and Steve's strength on one of the big 'oars or horns' and the Captain on the other one to get the boat pushed off from the sticky bottom of the loading dock. As the heavily laden boat moved into the open water, Alma noticed water seeped between the top of the bottom two boards. She took a moment to bend her head in prayer while the Captain steered with the long aft pole and both men worked the long sweeps to get the 16' wide boat righted into the channel. She wasn't sure, but guessed it was over three times as long as its ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 58.
  • 59. The Maze Of Life In Three Men In A Boat The maze of life is a series of twists and turns that each person must navigate, everyone takes a different path and has a different end result. Some people get lost in the mazer because they are not taking the right path for them, while others know exactly what they need to do in order to get free. In the book Three Men in a Boat the three lifelong friends, Jerome, Harris, and George, become trapped in the maze of life due to everyday stress, problems, and stereotypes. In the book Three Men in a Boat, the stress of the three lifelong friends is very detrimental to their help. In the beginning of the book the narrator, Jerome, talks about how he was reading symptoms for all of these diseases and he realized that he had every single one except for housemaid's knee. When he went to the doctor all he was prescribed was a pound of beefsteak and a pint of beer every six hours. Because of the stress the narrator put on his body it made him think that he had all of these diseases. The narrator's friends Harris and George agreed with Jerome and said that they were all over worked and this is causing their stress and will end up making them sick. This breakthrough made all of them realize that a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... While everyone, including his two lifelong friends, thinks George is lazy, he is actually the senior manager at Barclays Bank. George is calm, educated, practical, and helpful but many people do not perceive him to be that way. This is one of the consequences of life, people with see a person as the stereotype for the certain way they look. If someone sees a skinny person they will probably think they are one of two people, an anorexic or a very fit/athletic person. If someone is on the bigger side people will automatically think they are lazy and have no self–motivation. The way we live is often perceived differently by everyone ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 60.
  • 61. Narrative Essay On A Tsunami I was on a ship fishing on the coast of Greece and just before sunrise there was a violent shake in the water that almost filliped the boat over, I soon realized that it was an earthquake. me and other workers ran down to the hull of the boat. I could start to fill the boat lean towards its nose and herd lighting outside of the hull. I quickly ran to the back of the boat and wrapped my arm around a pipe, the boat start to tip more and more to the point where the boat flipped over. I could not keep my grip and I fell on the roof of the boat. I landed on my shoulder hard on the wood. The boat then started to feel airborne. Then I knew for certain than we were in a tsunami. The boat started to make a crackling noise then the wood started to cave in on itself. The boat started to implode on itself and water started to leek in the boat. I started to craw away from the side of the boat that the sea water was coming in at. The water started to fill the bout up fast, men were pleading for oxygen and help. Before I knew it I was swimming in the water that flooded in the boat, I took one huge gasp of air and went under the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... I slowly got up and saw that the Alexandra was destroyed. I slowly walk along the sea shore and saw many ships stranded on the dry sand. As other people walk on the shoal I notice that the tsunami picked up a lot of fish and things of that kind in the people's hand. Other vessels of great size were washed up on the sea shore by the strong and violent wind. I was the few who didn't lose their life on July 21st. I start to walk through the water that was on the ground to what was left of my house, the house was fill to the brim with sea salt water. All of my belongings were ruined, nothing was salvageable. I look around and see many of other people crying and sobbing. The ground was flooded with three inches of water as far as the eye can see. Mediterranean Sea toward the Egyptian ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 62.
  • 63. A Comparison of The Perfect Storm Movie and Novel Essay A Comparison of The Perfect Storm Movie and Novel The Perfect Storm is a novel written by Sebastian Junger, that retells the horrific story of fishermen and sailors who were caught in the eye of the worst storm in history. The book mainly focuses on the Andrea Gail, a swordfishing boat, with a crew of 6 men, who disappeared without a trace deep into the northern atlantic sea. In the year 2000, almost 10 years after the tragic event took place, a motion picture, perfectly titled, The Perfect Storm which was based on the novel was released. There were subtle to few changes in the plot line of the story, however there were many differences among the book and movie. The movie is very intact with the plot and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The movie didn`t portray an important aspect, when the Andrea Gail was replacing and upgrading its gears in the beginning, but the book did. That played a key role in why the Andrea Gail was caught in the storm in the first place. The ice machine had broken down leaving the crew with no choice but to return home, which meant heading into the storm, otherwise the fish they had worked so hard to catch would spoil, making a whole waste of the trip. There were also details within the book that offered much enlightment about the sea, the life of a fisherman, how a person dies, and storms, yet the movie failed to offer that. That`s just one more argument for the debate of whether its better to read the book or watch the movie. There were certain plots that took place in the movie, but wasn`t mentioned in the book, if not then it was only briefly brought about. When the 6 men were out in the bar drinking and partying the night before they were off to sea once again, the book mentioned only briefly about Murph, one of the crewmen, ?he has an ex–wife Debra, and a three–year–old baby, also named Dale, whom he openly adores?. In the movie, it showed Murph and his son, who wasn`t three years old, but older, in the movie, bonding that last night. However, the book never mentioned this event taking place. The movie creator ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 64.
  • 65. Creative Writing: Thick Thick fog covered their campsite. It was about 10:30 P.M., and there was a chill in the air that could cut right through your clothes and down to the bone. Three men gathered around a fire discussing their plans to go carp shooting. One man carefully poured sand over the fire then headed over to where the other men were rummaging through their bags. Collectively they gathered a trolling motor, two batteries, a spotlight, a packet of knives, extra gloves for each man, three bows, and a quiver of arrows. They were bundled tightly, each in multiple layers. They trudged about a mile upstream of their campsite to the river where they had previously tied up their boat. The boat was a thin two–man aluminum boat that was painted in many shades of green, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He caught the side of the ledge and hastily sloshed his way up the bank. Shawn instructed Kent to help him flip the boat over. They both lifted the same side of the boat. It took three tries, but eventually they broke the seal of the water. The two men squinted into the boat with the teeniest glimmer of hope that anything had been saved, but to no avail. They had lost everything including their one source of light, their spotlight and their trolling motor. They tried to think of plans of how to get back to camp. Kent had wanted to go back to the highway that was a good 2 mile trek. Shawn convinced him that the quickest way back to camp would be to ride the boat back down to camp. Kent and Shawn quickly gathered the largest, flattest branches they could find. Shawn climbed into the boat. Kent jogged over to pick up Steve who was still in a shocked state. Kent ran back to the boat and Steve slowly meandered behind. Steve climbed sluggishly into the boat and Kent pushed the boat off and hopped in. Kent and Shawn started rowing with their makeshift paddles as Steve stayed silent in the back. The two men squinted into the thick, early January fog. They silently rowed for twenty minutes until they saw the bank that was right below their campsite. They rowed toward the shore. Once they were in shallow enough water, Shawn hopped out and dragged the boat out of the water and onto the wide bank. Kent tapped Steve on the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 66.
  • 67. Examples Of Three Men In Rasing A Boat Three boy's with one with one motive to raise up a boat but someone in the way stopes them that someone is Keet wilson. All of these boys contributed to rasing the boat helping or preventing. Enemy or not they all had specail personalities that contributed to raising the boat or not rasing the boat. The first boy is Rico, Rico has a very caring, Loyal, and Tough. An example of Rico being caring was when he told Mr.Ramos about Tomi rasing the boat because he didn't want Tomi to be in trouble if he got caught by the cops. "He came to me because he is a good friend and his worried" (pg 141). One example of Rico being Tough is when he got beaten up by Keet he said he was "fine" and he didn't need help because he stood there the whole night through."Yellow Bruisies spotched on his neck and arms"(pg 251).The final personalitiy of Rico is Loyal. During the night when Rico had the pontoons Keets gang beat him up to get the pontoons, instead if running Rico fought back. (pg 251) ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... One moment that could've stopped the whole operation was when mose, Rico, Billy, and Tomi were at school Mose suggested that they sould not raise the boat because they might get in trouble by military or BMTC. Another personality Mose has is being loyal because in the final fight with Keet, Mose didn't back away instead he stood with him."Go tell your mommy and daddy" Mose shrouded"(pg 274). The final personality of Mose is he is caring because he told Mr.Ramos about the Tomi rasing the boat because he was scared for Tomi because Mose Thought Tomi might get in trouble. "He came to me because he is a good friend and his worried"(pg ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 68.
  • 69. The Perfect Storm The Perfect Storm Compare & Contrast :: Movie to Book The Perfect Storm is a novel written by Sebastian Junger, that retells the horrific story of fishermen and sailors who were caught in the eye of the worst storm in history. The book mainly focuses on the Andrea Gail, a swordfishing boat, with a crew of 6 men, who disappeared without a trace deep into the northern atlantic sea. In the year 2000, almost 10 years after the tragic event took place, a motion picture, perfectly titled, The Perfect Storm which was based on the novel was released. There were subtle to few changes in the plot line of the story, however there were many differences among the book and movie. The movie is very intact ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Unlike the book, which ended on the note that no trace of the Andrea Gail was ever found after its last signal was made, the movie had a different ending. The movie depicted that all of the men on board the Andrea Gail had died in the boat, gasping for their last breathes as the water deprived them of air. All except Bobby Shatford, the main character, who managed to swim out of the boat and float amongst the water. The movie ended at the funeral of the six men who died on the Adrea Gail, where their family members shed tears and talked to embrace and reminisce the lives of those men. Although there were many differences, as far as the book to the movie, the main idea of both was to demonstrate the brave struggle between the 6 men aboard the Andrea Gail, and "the perfect storm". Neither the both nor the movie failed to achieve their ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 70.
  • 71. Stephen Crane 's The Open Boat While taking a cruise to Jamaica for vacations, the ship you are at starts to sink. How do you think people in the ship would react to this scenario? Stephen Crane, an American author, wrote the story "The Open Boat". The story is about a boat sinking in the middle of the ocean with four men. The characters presented by Crane in the story are a cook, an oiler, a correspondent, and the captain. Although the story is narrated from the view of the correspondent; Crane gives the reader some particular characteristics of the captain. The goal of this paper is to interpret the character of the captain by discussing his actions, feelings, and quotes presented by Crane. A captain is an individual who takes leadership and responsibility in a vessel. People think that a captain can just be found in large ships; however, captains are necessary in any kind of boat, ship, or yacht. Therefore, in the story Crane gives the authority to the captain. The captain is the one in charge in the boat and the one that gives directions to the other three men. Throughout the story we can see that the other three men respected the captain and his decisions. If the three men wanted to something, they would first consulted with the captain before doing it. After the sinking of the boat, the captain was really devastated because it was his responsibility and he fail. In the beginning of the story Cranes defines the captain very sad and with the impotence of not being able to do anything. (Crane, page ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 72.
  • 73. Ww1 Essay Submerged Struggle for Superiority "A missing German U–boat is lost no longer"(Washington Post). This recent headline appeared in the Washington Post on 19 September 2017. A once lost German U–boat was found off the coast of Belgium at the bottom of the North Sea. This U–boat contained the bodies of the twenty three commanding men of the submarine. Authorities say the submarine was hit and sunk by a naval mine on the upper deck. Throughout the course of World War 1, U–boats were used to their full capacity sinking more than three hundred and fifty ships, while only 13 U–boats were destroyed. According to the Washington Post, they have over seventy six million months users. As a result of these monthly subscribers, seventy six million ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Even at the beginning of the war, in the 1914, the U–boat could immerse itself in under two minutes, and the time only improved as later models were made allowing a U–boat to become invisible in twenty– five seconds (Kennett 197). "... by mid 1977, sinkings had reached a catastrophic proportions: in the month of April alone... the U–boat sent more than 350 ships to the bottom[of the ocean]"(Kennett 195). The U–boat quickly became a key element to the success of World War 1, and a highly desired weapon. "The diminutive U–boat demonstrated it's powers of destruction early [on] in the war" (Kennett 194). The unsuspecting u–boat caused many repercussions on World War 1. The U–boats demonstrated destruction on the sinking of ships, but it particularly made an impact on the war by sinking the RMS Lusitania. A German u–boat, the U20, sank the seven hundred seventy feet long passenger ship three hundred feet off the coast of Ireland one hundred and two years ago. The sinking of this ship altered the outcome of World War 1, as it was the catalyst which pulled America into the war. America originally against joining World War 1 because business was booming for the new nation, this was not their war, and they had many immigrants flocking to their land. Despite America's desire to stay neutral throughout the war, Germany's persistence finally prevailed in the sinking of the RMS Lusitania. Germany was trying to cripple Britain, and instill a sense of fear by hitting the ship ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 74.
  • 75. The Open Boat by Stephen Crane Essay In the story "The Open Boat," by Stephen Crane, Crane uses many literary techniques to convey the stories overall theme. The story is centered on four men: a cook, a correspondent, Billie, an oiler who is the only character named in the story, and a captain. They are stranded in a lifeboat in stormy seas just off the coast of Florida, just after their ship has sunk. Although they can eventually see the shore, the waves are so big that it is too dangerous to try to take the boat in to land. Instead, the men are forced to take the boat further out to sea, where the waves are not quite as big and dangerous. They spend the night in the lifeboat and take turns rowing and then resting. In the morning, the men are weak and exhausted. The captain ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... They are so consumed with their struggle against the waves they do not even have the time to notice something as simple as the color of the sky. From the very beginning the reader is filled with the suspense that each individual character feels. Despite the crews struggle with Mother Nature, they are continually struck by the fierce waves. With each passing wave the reader is lead to believe that this one will surely be the one that capsizes the little dingy. "As the salty wall of water approached, it shut all else from the view of the men in the boat, and was not difficult to imagine that this particular wave was the final outburst of the ocean (256)." Crane creates suspense between the reader and the characters that allow both to feel the relentlessness of nature's indifference of their struggled attempts to survive. It seems that no matter how hard the crew works to keep the dingy from capsizing "... the waves continued their old impetuous swooping at the dingy, and the little craft, no longer underway struggled woundily over them (259)." The narrator describes the waves as acting carefree and rather impulsive as if they had no obligation to the men for their survival. Nature does not care that this crew of men were working to survive, but nor does it mean to cause the men any harm. The waves are merely there, doing as nature intends the waves ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...