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Descriptive Essay About Hiking
Trails of exhaust were propelled out of every single car in the bumper to bumper traffic, making the
recirculation button a necessity. The dull roar of hundreds of people walking, talking, shouting, and
blaring their car horns gradually blended into one unpleasant, continuous track that I was forced to
listen to. Litter and cigarette butts pooled around gutters and lined the curbs, so I redirected my gaze
upwards at the towering skyscrapers. I liked the view, so long as I kept my eyes above street level,
and I supposed I liked the city, so long as I did not breathe in too deeply. I tried to appreciate nicer
aspects of the busy city, but where I really wanted to be, was hiking somewhere in the mountains.
Although it may seem illogical, my love for hiking started before I could even walk. When I was
still quite young, I remember being put into a child carrier on my dad's back, my head bobbing in
rhythm to his steps. I am told that sitting in that backpack is the quietest I had ever been, as I was
enraptured by the passing trees give way to the sunny slopes of the alpine. Upon learning how to
walk, I began to pester my parents to free me from the prison that was the child carrier, and ever
since then, hiking has become one of my favorite hobbies. Hiking gives me a sense of
accomplishment and provides me with a place that I can find peace from the literal and metaphorical
noise in my life. My parents have fostered my love for hiking and nature, by bringing me on
vacation every year to hike for at least two weeks. In the Austrian Alps, tall and jagged cliffs rise out
of the ground, towering over bustling towns lying on the valley floor. In Iceland, the rhyolite
mountains are colored shades of red, golden yellow, and pink, and nestled between the mountains
are large, sweeping, raven–black lava fields. The impressive mountains in Utah are accompanied by
a lush canopy of greenery that slowly peters out as the mountains grow in height. In the spring and
summer, the greenery is widespread and the skies are blue. Come fall, the mountains seem to be lit
up with the magical colors of burnt sienna, fiery orange, crimson red, and bright yellow. In the
winter, the skies are stormy grey, the mountains covered in a thick
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The Beauty of Nature Essay examples
The Beauty of Nature
The sunset was not spectacular that day. The vivid ruby and tangerine streaks that so often caressed
the blue brow of the sky were sleeping, hidden behind the heavy mists. There are some days when
the sunlight seems to dance, to weave and frolic with tongues of fire between the blades of grass.
Not on that day. That evening, the yellow light was sickly. It diffused softly through the gray
curtains with a shrouded light that just failed to illuminate. High up in the treetops, the leaves
swayed, but on the ground, the grass was silent, limp and unmoving. The sun set and the earth
waited.
On the edge of a small wood, an ancient tree sat hunched over, the gnarled, old king of a once vast
domain that had long ago ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The bees still buzzed and hummed among the flowers; the deer still grazed softly among the
undulating waves of grass, yet in that moment, their movement seemed arrested, held in check by
the waning sun.
And the winds came.
The wild west wind came down through the fields, rousing the deer from their reverie, and swaying
the bee–studded flowers. From its highest bough to the loose sand on its mighty roots, the ancient
tree quivered lightly, yet was untroubled by the breeze. Many a storm had passed over the tree, yet
no rain had managed to drown those fathomless roots, no hail had managed to bite the iron bark.
As the stars hang, unchanging in the nighttime sky, and as the sun moves in ceaseless circles around
the earth, so the tree had endured. And even as the wind rustled in its outermost boughs, the tree
looked out to the sun, as if for reassurance about its own unchanging eternity. On the horizon, no
yellow eye looked back. The sun was gone.
In a tumult of wind and rain, a hail of twigs and leaves thundered through the trees and tore the
arching grasses out by the roots. The deer bolted and hid, quivering, in the darkest thickets. The sky
boiled, and the younger saplings were bent almost to the ground. Even as the shadows bounded up
the stalks and blades of weeping grass, and the soft plink of falling rain quickened to a constant hiss
and sputter, the sun found its equal. A thousand stars came down to earth and unleashed their pent–
up fury on that wood.
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Anticlea In The Odyssey
Death frequents classical literature. The ancients did not like to sugarcoat things; they knew death
was a part of life and accepted that fact. Often, they tried to explain this natural occurrence through
myths. Persephone dies with the coming of the frost, much like the flowers of spring. Dionysus is
ripped to pieces in the winter, just like how grapevines wither and perish. Heroes die, too, and some
more than once. Orpheus visits the underworld to get his beloved Eurydice back, and fails
drastically. Aeneas and the Sibyl descend with a golden bough and talk with his father. Even the
sagacious and silver–tongued Odysseus ventured down there, and saw three very important ghosts.
Furthermore, Odysseus reacted to the ghosts of Anticlea, Elpenor, and Tiresias in the Land of the
Dead in similar yet distinct ways, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
To start with, Odysseus's response to meeting all the ghosts were alike, one example being his
reaction to Anticlea in the Land of the Dead being akin to his reaction to Elpenor, as he was doleful
for both of them. In, "Seeing this ghost I grieved, but held her off, through pang on pang of tears,"
(Homer's The Odyssey, lines 617–618) it is clear Odysseus is inconsolable over his mother's death.
He also is in anguish over Elpenor's demise, as Odysseus and his company did not bury the young
man's corpse, nor had time to properly mourn him. In this, the shrewd King of Ithaca's reaction to
finding Anticlea, his dear mother, and Elpenor, a stripling gone before his time, in the Land of the
Dead are alike. Also, his reaction to Elpenor and Tiresias were akin to each other, this is because he
expected both of them. This is apparent in, "Elpenor, of our company, who lay unburied still on the
wide earth as we had left him," (Homer's The Odyssey, lines 578–580) as Odysseus regrets not
having a proper funeral for him before leaving Aeaea, and clearly
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Death, Be Not Proud, And On The Death Of Richard West
Pop culture icon and music sensation Kanye West once said, "Nothing in life is promised, except
death." Death can be interpreted in many different ways; some people fear death, while others view
death as the pathway to eternal life. Death is a guaranteed and an unavoidable part of life, and it can
have varying impacts on people, whether they are positive or negative. Death is an intriguing topic
often found in poetry. John Donne's "Holy Sonnets: Death, Be Not Proud," William Shakespeare's
"Sonnet 73," and Thomas Gray's "On the Death of Richard West" discuss the topic of death and
impart their own opinions of death. John Donne's metaphysical poem and sonnet, "Holy Sonnets:
Death, Be Not Proud," follows a Petrarchan rhyme scheme as seen in the first eight lines:
a/b/b/a/a/b/b/a. Unlike the quintessential sestet of c/e/f/g/e/f, the sestet of this sonnet has a
c/d/d/c/a/a rhyme scheme. The use of a Petrarchan rhyme scheme is appropriate because the first
twelve lines ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Apostrophe is used from the beginning, as the speaker talks to Death as if he a real human and can
respond back to him, referring to him as "poor Death" (Donne 3). In addition, the speaker
personifies Death by giving him attributes, such as "mighty and dreadful" (2). The speaker uses a
metaphor to compare Death to "rest and sleep" (5), which provide much pleasure–undermining
Death and the fear of it. The speaker contradicts himself in many ways: according to him, Death
thinks he can kill people, but the speaker argues against that saying "nor yet canst thou kill me" (4),
acknowledging his keen sense of mortality. He further contradicts himself by discussing his eternal
life after his "short sleep" (13). Microcosm is used as Death represents the bigger picture of eternity
in heaven, as the speaker says, "One short sleep past, we wake eternally / And death shall be no
more; Death, thou shalt die"
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Nymph Callisto Analysis
This visual description is of the oil painting by Frenchman François Boucher Jupiter in Guise of
Diana and the Nymph Callisto dated 1759 is an oil painting 57.79 × 69.85 cm (22.8 × 27.5 in) on
canvas, which hangs in the Nelson–Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Missouri. The focal point
of this work is the two voluptuous female figures in the center of the bottom half of the canvas. The
women appear to be gentle lovers, gazing each into the others eyes; their expressions are soft and
loving, and their bodies relaxed. Their lightly toned skin colored with a subtle pink flush along with
their curvy bodies make the figures look and feel soft, beckons the viewer to reach out to touch
them. Their sensual appearance enhanced by the pale pink and ivory palette used to render their
forms, so gently blended the change in tone throughout the images no brushstrokes are visible.
Callisto, a beautiful fully nude young blond nymph reclines, across the lap of Jupiter, in the guise of
Diana, her right arm extended lazily across Diana's right forearm, her hand, holding an arrow, gently
touches an angelic putti. Tucked between their bodies is a satiny ivory–white gown, atop a velvety
smoky blue dress and leopard skins. The detail of the pelt is so expertly rendered an observer wants
to stroke it, fine brushwork defines the fur, dark umber spots on golden ground.
Callisto's face gently tilts back over her right shoulder, her long blond, curly tresses pulled back and
flowing down her
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Analysis Of Joachim Patinir 's Triptych, The Penitence Of...
Netherlandish use of triptychs–three distinct art pieces that simultaneously exist as individual
images and as a collective picture–usually were presented as devotional images and altarpieces.
Joachim Patinir's triptych, The Penitence of Saint Jerome (c. 1512–1515, Metropolitan Museum of
Art, NY), employs both the same form of traditional triptychs and the Netherlandish tradition of
extended panoramic landscapes; however, the triptych breaks traditional convention. The three
separate panels share the same landscape which allows the figures to exist in the same pictorial
space. This maintains an unbroken continuation of the landscape, which adds not only to the content
within a single panel, but to the entire narrative of the triptych. Yet, each individual panel is also
worthy of its own analysis and discussion. The left panel depicts the first of three saints, Saint John
the Baptist, in the midst of his signature baptizing of Christ. A river flows from the furthest reaches
of the landscape down to the bottom frame, with Christ standing thigh–deep in the water, a dove
alighting from God perched in the clouds in the top left. Saint John kneels over him on the riverbank
while a group of people huddle in the distance behind the baptism scene. In traditional style, the
triptych simultaneously depicts a central scene as well as past and future narrative events–present
here as Saint John preaching chronologically before the actual baptism of Christ. The central, larger
panel
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The Difference Between Winston And The Society In 1984...
The dedication of Winston's mother and his sister giving up their lives in order to save Winston
shows that the society in 1984 was full of control, if they want people to die, they will die. Although
Winston and his family didn't do anything wrong, there was no way for all of them to be survived.
"He was out in the light and air while they were being sucked down to death, and they were down
there because he was up here" (29). The difference between Winston and his mother and his sister
shows that the Party had the absolute right to control who must live and who must die. This part
shows that Orwell is proving how cold– blooded a society could be. In spite the fact that he was
young and small, he still remembered "...she had sacrificed herself to a conception of loyalty that
was private and unalterable. Such things, he saw, could not happen today" (30). There was no
loyalty could be mentioned in Winston's era, there was only hostility. The Party members had ...
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In Winston's dream, he wandered to "...a summer evening when the slanting rays of the sun gilded
the ground" (30). Mention of Winston's Golden Country reveals his affinity to the nature. He wanted
to touch and feel nature. The difference between Winston's dream and Winston's society reveals
Orwell's opinion on no happiness and pleasure can be found in a society with absolute control. And,
in the sunset, "...the boughs of the elm trees were swaying very faintly in the breeze..." (30). The
contradiction between the breeze in Winston's dream and the vile wind in real life shows the
condition in 1984 is cruel, and cold. The reason he dreamed of sunset was because he missed the old
time, especially the warm environment. Orwell expresses this idea to show a despot has absolute
power will abolish everything that is
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Oedipus Rex Study
Oedipus Rex Study Guide
The Prologos 1. What initial step does Oedipus indicate he has already taken? 2. What is the
significance of Delphi? What is the message from the oracle at Delphi with which Creon returns? 3.
What does Oedipus think about the clue Creon reveals about who murdered King Laios? What
might this perception foreshadow? 4. What does Oedipus promise to do at the end of the Prologos?
5. Of what symbolic significance are the olive boughs, strewn at the alter steps as the Thebans
address Oedipus? Why does Oedipus tell the suppliants to lift up their olive boughs as they depart?
The Parados 1. In strophe 1, what does the chorus ask? 2. In antistrophe 1, to which god and
goddesses does the chorus appeal for ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In light of the caveat in ode 2, what might her statement foreshadow? 4. What attitude toward the
gods does Oedipus exhibit after learning of Polybos' death? Again in light of ode 2, what is
foreshadowed by Oedipus' statement? What effect upon the audience might the similarity of
reactions of Oedipus and Jocasta have? 5. Though Oedipus is comforted that Polybus, his father, has
died of natural causes, what aspect of the oracle still troubles Oedipus? 6. How does the messenger
prove that Oedipus was not the child of Polybus and Merope? 7. Why does Jocasta so insistently
attempt to stop Oedipus' questioning of the messenger? What has Jocasta discovered through the
messenger's story? 8. What incredible coincidences surround the appearance of the messenger from
Corinth and the shepherd? Is such coincidence possible in life? As a modern audience, why might
we believe less in such coincidences than audiences of 5th century, BC? 9. Jocasta's exit line is
significant. The only word she can call Oedipus is "miserable." Why can she not call him husband?
Why can she not call him son?
Ode 3 1. In ode 3, Kith iron is again mentioned. What is Kithairon, and how is it connected to
Oedipus? Refer to scene 3. 2. Who is Pan? Who is Hermes? What is Kyllene? 3. What effect does
juxtaposing the pastoral imagery of ode 3 with scene 3 create? What might this suggest about scene
4?
The Final Clue 1.
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How Does Dido Commit Suicide In The Aeneid
In the Aeneid, Dido decides to commit suicide when she sees the Trojans leaving. This affects
Dido's emotions a lot due to the love of her life. This is what drives her to commit this action. Dido
first considers this act because she feels guilty for breaking her promise to her dead husband. She
promised not to allow herself to love anyone in life again. The second reason for wanting to take her
own life is because she believes she strongly believes she has been led on by Aeneas. In her mind,
Dido believed she was married to Aeneas. As she saw the Trojans set off for good, she makes her
decision that taking her life is the best answer to escape all her emotions.
Aeneas is the main character of the Aeneid. He is the son of Anchises who is a Trojan prince.
Aeneas is a dutiful servant of fate, and for the Gods. He is your ideal leader. Aeneas is a man who
has devoted himself to a mission of being a dedicated man. Every time he encounters a problem, it
is faced without ever losing faith in the will of fate. Throughout ... Show more content on
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Amata tells Turnus that if he dies, she would rather kill herself than to have Aeneas as her son–in–
law. Aeneas says that if Turnus wins, the Trojans will go packing. However, if Aeneas wins, he will
not enslave the Italians, but he will ask the Italians to join him as a new nation under equal citizens.
Turnus is falling in love with Lavinia and is very crazy about her. Turnus needs to win the battle in
order to
not only impress Lavinia, but in order to marry her as well. Turnus has great honor over his life
which keeps his mind determined to battle. He does not care what anybody tells him. Turnus
believes he needs to stick to his plan due to the fact that the Latins are in great danger. He realizes
they are in danger when the Trojan and Etruscan troops are at the gates of his city. He needs to
defeat Aeneas in battle in order to save his city and marry the love of his
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Fate In Virgil's Aeneid
In the Ancient Greek and Roman world fate was known to be an unalterable chain of predetermined
events caused by a supernatural power. Hesiod personifies fate to be three very old women who
spins the threads of people's destiny. Everyone has a fate meaning that even the gods cannot escape
these powerful forces from Atropos (1 of the 3 women) when she cuts the string, ultimately
determining your destiny. Throughout Virgil's Aeneid fate played an immense role from the
beginning of the poem as Aeneas already knew what he was destined for leading him to Italy at the
end. Virgil depicted fate to be an unstoppable power that leads one to their destiny. Regardless of
other irrelevant events ones destiny remains intact but may be prolonged in length. ... Show more
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A prime example would be right after Polydorus's funeral after when they decided to sail southward
to the island of Delos. When they reached the island of Delos Apollo got the chance to speak to
Aeneas instructing him to go to the land of his ancestors. Anchises believing he decoded this
message expresses to Aeneas that he may think Apollo is referring to the Island of Crete. Crete was
the land of one of the great forefathers Teucrians who had ruled a long time ago. Subsequently after
falling asleep the night of the construction in their new city of Crete the gods of Troy appear in
Aeneas's dream. They articulated that his father misinterpreted Apollo and was meant to go to Italy,
which was the original home of Dardanus. If Aeneas was not destined for Italy the gods would not
have came and advised him as he would have started a new life in Crete. Thus proving again that
fate prevails regardless of any hindrances that occur you are always moving forward inching up to
your inescapable fate. Aeneas proves that fate is unchangeable as nothing stopped him from getting
to
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Fate In The Aeneid
Virgil's Aeneid, tells the story of Aeneas, the hero and object of fate who is also well known for
fitting every description of a classic epic hero. He is of noble and supernatural birth, he faces and
successfully overcomes temptations, and he acts as the vessel the gods wish him to be. Although
Aeneas frequently makes his own life decisions, it can still be argued that no single aspect of his life
was untouched by fate, predictions, or prophecy. Fate directs the main course of action as the gods
and goddesses compete with one another in order to see their desired outcome. In the Aeneid, fate is
an all–powerful force. While characters do have the free will to resist their destiny, it is also
common knowledge that what fate decrees ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Virgil most commonly wrote in past tense, but he chose future tense for prophecy and prediction.
When we find Virgil in control of the narration, the point of view not only includes man's story, but
the actions of the gods as well. Aeneas, in his own storytelling, does not have the access to the gods'
perspedtive and therefore must relate events only from his own perspective. The suffering of
wanderers seems to be a recurring theme in The Aeneid as does the primacy of fate. The first half of
the poem tells of the Trojans' wanderings as they journey from their city of Troyo to Italy. The
culture highly valued geographic location and familial loyalty, and firmly believed that a homeland
is one's source of identity. As homelessness was thought to imply instability pertaining to both a
man's situation and identity, it was a great form of suffering in and of itself. Next we see that the
destination and direction of Aeneas' course are preordained, and his glories in battle and at sea along
with his many sufferings over the course of the epic merely serve to postpone his destiny. The power
of fate stands far above the power of the gods. The will of Jupiter, most powerful of the Olympians,
is what this is often associated with. The disturbances in Aeneas's life by the gods of lesser power,
do not significantly affect the overall outcome of events because the
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Archetypes In Literature
All stories and mythologies regardless of culture and historical period have become a part of human
mind which contain a collective unconscious of all human species. This collective unconscious
shared by all human beings is called as 'Universal Memory 'or 'Primal Memory'. Collective
unconscious is a kind of universal psyche which is vested in dreams and myths and draws the
themes and images from various sources. Recognising this collective unconscious to the conscious
level is the prima–facie of an archetypal writer. These unconscious and recognizable elements of
archetype occur across all literature and life. Literature is based on recurring images, characters,
narrative designs and themes. Archetypal criticism identifies and determines the form and function
of archetypes in literary works. DEFENITION Archetypal literary criticism interprets a text by
focusing on recurring myths and archetypes in the narrative, symbols, images and character types in
literary work. The word archetype first entered into English usage in the 1540's and derives from the
Latin noun archetypum, latinisation of the Greek term archetypos which means first–moulded. So
archetype can be understood as an original model or type after which other similar things are
patterned; a prototype. The Encyclopaedia Britannica defines an archetype as "a primordial image,
character or ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
His first essay of The Anatomy of Criticism contains his Theory of Modes which articulates various
levels of realism in literature. His second essay deals with the Theory of Symbols recognizing five
phases in symbols such as Literal and Descriptive phases which make up symbol as Motif and as
Sign, Formal phase which makes the symbol as Image, Mythical phase which serves symbol as
Archetype and Anagogic phase which means symbol as
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Katherine Mansfield 's The Garden Party
Foster begins this chapter with Katherine Mansfield's The Garden Party. It is about a girl, Laura,
setting up a garden party. Her mother, Mrs. Sheridan let her prepare the garden party for the first
time, so she wants to make it the best. While doing the preparations for the party, Laura hears about
the recent death of a man in the little cottages down the hill. Because of this, she tries to convince
her sister and mother to cancel the party. How could they celebrate when a neighbor just passed
away? However, the both of them tell Laura that it is not their problem that someone had died and
that it is not worth it to put away all the preparations done for the party. From this, the reader can
see that Jose, the sister and Mrs. Sheridan do not really care about the people who are not as
fortunate as them. Mrs. Sheridan distracts Laura from the topic by giving her a hat. The garden party
starts and is very successful. After it ends, Mr. Sheridan brings up the story about the man that had
just died and Mrs. Sheridan decides that they should give the family their leftover food. Laura walks
down to the cottages with a big basket of food. She wants to cover herself because she is dressed
extravagantly while the other neighbors down the hill are not. Laura goes into the widow's house
and meets the man's sister in law, Em. She takes her to see the deceased man and Laura cries. After
this, Laura leaves and meets her brother, Laurie at the corner of the road. She
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Summary Of A Hero's Journey Across The Sargasso Sea
She tried to put the picture together in her mind. The sky; a cold monotony of blue broken only by
the black speck of a raven or a crow. Castles; immense with latticed windows. Air; free from cicadas
which hummed sullenly in the Jamaican nights when she couldn't sleep. Snowy winter's, with parks
covered in thick blankets of white and golden lamp posts standing to attention against the papery
background. She had read all she could; impulsively feathered her fingers across the rosy – pink
shape on her father's wall map.
She knew that he was arriving today. She knew as soon as she saw the maid's preparing the finest
guest room and the groundsmen slaughtering the largest pig. She knew when ornate candles were
brought out and cleaned, filling the air with tiny motes of dust. Her father's command replayed in
her mind, "Bertha, be calm. Mr Rochester's journey across the Sargasso Sea will be long and
tiresome and you will not disturb him on his first night."
"Father," she bit back, "I am to be married to him."
His reply was forceful. "And you will be presented to him, when the time is right and you are
splendidly dressed." He thought ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
She found herself, her eyes steady to the horizon, her face aglow, bright, with the last amber rays of
sun before dusk beckoned the stars. A reddish beam streaked though the boughs of the great Cotton
tree in both brilliant and shadowy beams. Fern trees hung before her like giant emerald curtains and
from them drops of water dangled like diamonds on a necklace. The branches of the Guaguos
danced, falling upon each other in a virescent mosaic and above the birds warbled. She walked
amongst the dripping oranges, and golden pineapples; the pomegranates which hung like broken
shards of sunrise from sprawling branches. The wind roared through the leaves, and coiled around
her feet. Looking up she saw a flock of Red–billed tropicbirds floating upon grey clouds blowing
over from
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The Aeneid-the Role of Fate
Fate is the essential idea of The Aeneid, but more importantly, the underlying force throughout the
text. Fate cannot be changed; it is the set of events with the inevitable result. Virgil uses the idea of
fate to narrate and advance through his epic poem, but perhaps also to illustrate that the gods had
originally intended for Rome to become a great and powerful empire. The king of gods, Jupiter, has
chosen Aeneas and his preordained path to destiny, by leading the Trojans and creating the
foundations for the Roman Empire. However, a variety of gods interfere with Aeneas's direction of
fate in order to satisfy their own desires, only to discover that Aeneas's fate can be manipulated, but
never overturned.
Aeneas is born from the gods ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Perhaps the most significant example of the importance of fate in The Aeneid happens in Book VI;
the golden branch. Aeneas and his fleet arrive on the coast on Cumae in search of the Sibyl at the
Temple of Apollo. Following his father's instructions, Aeneas asks the Sibyl to gain him entrance to
Dis so he may visit his father's spirit. However, in order to enter Dis with any possibility of
returning, Aeneas must first locate a sign to gain him access across the Acheron River. The Sibyl
then explains to Aeneas that the sign is a golden branch in a nearby forest, if the branch breaks off
the tree easily then fate awards Aeneas a pass into the underworld. If the branch does not break off
then Aeneas is not destined to go.
A bough is hidden in a shady tree; its leaves and pliant stem are golden, set aside as sacred to
Proserpina. The grove serves as its screen, and shades enclose the bough in darkened valleys. Only
he may pass beneath earth's secret space who first plucks the golden–leaved fruit of that tree. Lovely
Proserpina ordained that this be offered her as gift. And when the first bough is torn off, a second
grows again – with leaves of gold, again of that same metal. So let your eyes search overhead; and
when the bough is found, then pluck it down by hand as due: for if the Fates have summoned you,
the bough will break off freely, easily; but otherwise, no power can overcome it, hard iron cannot
help
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Stereotypes In The Aeneid
Virgil potrays his characters, both male and female, in a way that threatens the standard cultural
norms of Rome at this time. While they do possess certain Roman characteristics, Penthesilia, an
Amazon warrior queen, Dido, queen of Carthage, and Camilla, a female warrior, are all well–known
representations of women destined to face their doom in a world that is completely dominated by
males. These examples serve to reinforce the importance of gender roles and also to serve as
warning signs for when limits are surpassed. The Aeneid serves not only to establish a Roman
identity that acknow3ledges that women are indeed a necessary component to the continued
existence, but also what happens when their role extends too far. Virgil portrays ... Show more
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He is described by Virgil in Book I as "father Aeneas" and "fond father, as always thoughtful of his
son." Aeneas is deeply respectful of his father and is highly devoted to his son. During the fall of
Troy, Aeneas carries his father on his back and holds his young son'[s hand as they make their way
out of danger and to safety. In Book III, Aeneas's paternal responsibilities have been expanded to
include his son, the Trojans placed in his care, and the entire future of the Roman race. Aeneas
celebrates the anniversary of his father's death by sacrificing to the gods and participating in the
tradition of the athletic games. He maintains a very deep respect for Anchises, his father, even after
his death. When Aeneas visits the underworld, the pietas he has for Anchises is evidebnt. Later, the
notion of pietas is made visible in Aeneas's son who takes on the great responsibility of gathering
and leading the warriors. He respects Aeneas's role as a leader and makes every attempt possible to
follow through with Aeneas's duties. The love that exists between fathers and sons, the ideal of
pietas, is one of the most emotional bonds portrayed in the
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Use Of Literary Devices In A White Heron
In A White Heron Sarah Orne Jewett really dramatizes Sylvia, the main character through using
several different literary elements. He uses such things as diction, metaphors, imagery, narrative
pace and point of view throughout the story which help the reader stay interested. Jewett's diction
was very out of the ordinary. He used words and sayings that really caught your attention and
mostly things you have not heard before. Jewett describes Sylvia as she is about to mount the great–
pine tree. He says she began "with tingling, eager blood coursing the channels of her whole frame,
with her bare feet and fingers, that pinched and held like a bird's claws to the monstrous ladder
reaching up, up, almost to the sky itself. Jewett's description here can ... Show more content on
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For example, Jewett was saying how the tree seems to be getting longer and longer as Sylvia is
going up and he stated that "it was like a great main–mast to the voyaging earth. Later, he also states
that once Sylvia passed the last thorny bough and stood high in the tree top that Sylvia's face was
like a pale star. He later said that the hawks "grey feathers were as soft as moths." This analogy
could really make us, as readers, understand how soft they looked because almost everyone knows
that if you touch a moth it turns into a dusty substance because of how soft they are. All of these
word choices, metaphors and adjectives Jewett uses makes outstanding imagery for the reader. From
the first line to the last you could picture just about everything, not only picture but feel as if you
were there or in the situation. Jewett almost put an adjective in front of every noun he used, which
made it stand out more. The best imagery Jewett used is when Sylvia reached the top of that tree and
he said what she saw. Jewett stated that "there was a sea with the dawning sun making a golden
dazzle over it, and toward the east flew two
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Dido's 'Aeneas': Summary
Summary: Dido finally admits that she has fallen for Aeneas to her sister, Anna, who is fine with her
feelings and reminds Dido that they need a strong military. Juno gets upset with the lack of progress
in the city and talks to Venus before agreeing that Dido and Aeneas need to marry and have go
hunting and forced into a cave alone together to let everything fall into place itself. The goddess
Rumor finds out about what happened in the cave and eventually has the story lead to a king, whom
Dido refused, known as Iarbas, a son of Jupiter, who is very displeased and complains to his father.
Jupiter then sends Mercury to hurry Aeneas along on his journey to found Rome and has Aeneas
readying his fleet to leave in secret. When Dido confronts him, ... Show more content on
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It's no secret, especially to a high school teacher, that many forms of "love" are very temporary yet
still can cause large amounts of problems because of the "he said, she said" situation. Because Dido
was rushed into loving this strange man who she knew, relatively, very little about, but it wasn't her
fault. Without the gods' agendas, Dido and Aeneas could've fallen in love naturally and together
formed a city that could very well surpass the once great city of Troy, but alas, the gods played with
them like pawns in their game of chess which allowed for the events which would forever change
the course of history. To add to the troubles on top of that, Dido's jealous former suitor finds out that
the woman he likes is being courted, again very easy for a high school teacher to picture that
happening, and decides to do something about it, and by do something about it, I mean cry to his
daddy which I'm also sure a high school teacher wouldn't be unfamiliar with. Because of these
semi–artificial feelings, coupled with external pressure, it's no wonder why their relationship ended
with one of them
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Virgil vs. Homer in Underworld
How does Virgil deviate from Homer in the underworld, and why?
When comparing "The Aeneid" to "The Odyssey", it is impossible not to notice the similarity
between Homer and Virgil 's poems. Both heroes leave Troy, granted one barely escapes and the
other leaves victoriously, and both in one sense or the other are trying to reach their home, whether
it is the old or future home. The adventures of the two heroes are incredibly similar on a number of
accounts with the trip to the underworld being most intriguing. First of all it is important to
understand that Homer and Virgil wrote their poems for different reasons; Homer 's "The Odyssey"
was written for entertainment purposes, while Virgil 's "The Aeneid" was written in order to ... Show
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Aeneas on the other hand is much more focused on the future; he is also trying to get home, but that
home does not exist yet, besides that, while seeing his old friends he also finds out about the future
of his generations and yet even more about the city he is on his way to establish. This could bring us
to the point of Homer 's vs. Virgil 's reasons for writing their poems; as mentioned earlier, Homer
wrote his poem for entertainment purposes. This explains why the majority of book eleven is made
up of Odysseus meeting his old friends and great warriors of the war; through telling their stories,
Homer entertained the readers and the audience by letting them imagine how the heroes act after
their death (what still matters to them, which quarrels have not been forgotten etc.). Virgil on the
other hand skips most of the greetings of Aeneas with old friends and focuses instead on the meeting
with his father. There, while including sentimentality, the main point of the meeting is for Aeneas
and the readers to find out about where the rulers of Rome came from. Aeneas in the underworld
gets to see, although not speak to, his future son, the future Caesars and learns all about the glory of
the future empire. Even the description of the underworld itself may fall
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The Influence of Mythology on Literature and Society Essay
The Influence of Mythology on Literature and Society
Edith Hamilton is the author of the book Mythology. This book is about the Mythology of the
Romans and Greeks through her eyes and the way she interprets it. In the beginning of the book
Hamilton writes an introduction to Classical Mythology and how, and why it came about. She starts
off by writing that Greek and Roman Mythology is meant to show us how people felt about the
human race and about where they came from many years ago. She points out that Mythology
describes the Earth when it was young and people cared for the Earth more than today. This is true,
because in today?s world not many people are caring about the Earth and its going by us fast.
She also points out that ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
An example would be how the Egyptian god?s have different body parts with other bodies and the
Greek gods are humans. Hamilton states that the Egyptians made gods they thought up and made
them in a way that no one has seen before. The Greeks therefore made their gods in there own
image. That made it easier for them to understand them and know how they act. The major point
Hamilton is showing in this introduction is that Mythology is a new to look at life and to understand
it under a different light. Another point she states is that Greek Mythology it?s self, is so unique that
it showed extreme beauty yet fear at that same time. The gods were not to be completely feared, but
respected to the point where you didn?t anger them. Greek Mythology is also unique, because it
doesn?t have many of the things that are in most religion or folklore. Hamilton states that Greek
Mythology didn?t contain Magic or Witches, and in reality didn?t fear the dead, they actually pitied
the dead. Hamilton?s main point in this whole introduction is that Mythology itself is completely
and totally different from any other religion or folklore ever. Mythology was written in such a
beautiful way that upon reading it, it seems real and it begins to take shape. She is also saying that
Greek Mythology was in a way different than normal Mythology and therefore changed the face of
Mythology forever.
PART TWO:
Aside from mortals and immortals in
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Tone And Mood In 'Sailing To Byzantium'
Tone and Mood in "Sailing to Byzantium"
Images How do the images listed on the left influence the tone or mood of this poem? Consider the
author's attitude towards the physical body, aging, and nature as opposed to his position on intellect,
art, immortalization, and artificiality.
The young
In one another's arms, birds in the trees
–Those dying generations–at their song, This section of the poem is one that gives a very sad and
depressing tone. The section states that death is inevitable and everyone will face it. The tone sets a
mood that is thoughtful. It really makes the reader step back and reflect on life. This can be shown
by the author's rather sadden view on aging.
An aged man is but a paltry thing,
A tattered coat upon a stick.
This part sets an intense and harsh tone in a way. The harsh tone incorporated into this section gives
the reader a sense of disappointment and sadness. This statement is meant to be a very stern one so
readers can realize that aging isn't a great thing, or at least the author thinks so. I think the author is
reflecting on himself aging and is afraid that he is becoming one step closer to dying and maybe
even being forgotten.
Consume my heart away; sick with desire
And fastened to a dying animal ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The poem is again talking about mortality and aging. Just as the part above, you can tell that the
author doesn't want to age. To the author, aging is a horrible thing and he fears it, which makes the
reader feel sad and remorseful towards the author. I think this part of the poem really shines on the
idea that once you get older people start thinking about you less and less. People always pay most
attention to the youngest ones in a family. For example: things such as a newborn baby, a kid's first
day of school, high school graduation, prom, and even marriage seem to be more important than an
aging
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George Orwell Use Of Conformity In 1984
A rebel is a person who rises in opposition against an established government; a person who refuses
allegiance to and resists a ruling party. Every society's set of rules and regulations evokes the inner
insurgent of a minority; George Orwell's dystopia demonstrates the execution of pursuing ones
rebellious tendencies and the unconscious destruction that follows. In George Orwell's 1984, Orwell
juxtaposes rebellion and conformity by using various techniques. The portrayal of London, the Prole
District and the Golden Country, the contrast between the Parson's family unit and Winston's
relationship with Julia along with the depiction of mind versus body are all ways in which Orwell
chooses to analogize rebellion and conformity.
Within Orwell's dystopia, London, the Golden Country and the Prole District play large roles in the
way Winston and Julia not only act, but also speak of themselves and the Inner Party. London is a
concrete jungle where, "...there seemed to be no colour in anything except the posters that were
plastered everywhere." (Orwell 2). London is a setting of pure conformity; within London, Winston
and Julia are confined to the strict policies bestowed upon them by the inner party. Winston is in a
constant state of distress of being caught by the thought police and Julia is constantly ... Show more
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In contrast to London, in the Golden Country, "the slanting rays of the sun glided the ground... the
boughs of the elm trees were swaying very faintly in the breeze." (Orwell 30). In the Golden
Country, Winston and Julia are free to say and act however they may please without worry of being
seized by the thought police. Orwell utilizes the Golden Country as an opportunity for Winston and
Julia to effortlessly practice their unorthodox behavior as political statements against the inner party
and Big
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The Odyssey And Aeneid Vs. Today
Essay 1: Hell in The Odyssey/Aeneid vs. Today As humans, we are always imagining what our lives
will be like when we die. While the depictions of what hell or heaven may be from the ancient times
and now, what has stayed consist is the idea of an afterlife altogether. In The Aeneid, Aeneas has his
own version of what the underworld is. Hell is depicted in Book VI of The Aeneid where the
Trojans sail back to Sicily where the death of Anchises is marked. Aeneas enters the underworld
after meeting with Sibyl, who is a priestess at the Temple of Apollo and asks to enter so that he can
visit his father. In order to enter and return from Hell, he has to find a golden branch and if it breaks
off the tree with ease, then that will be his sign that he can enter. "So lift your eyes and search, and
once you find it pull away the bough. It will come willingly, easily, if you are called by fate. If not,
with all your strength you cannot conquer it, cannot lop it off with a sword's edge. (6.213–217)". A
pair of doves direct him to the tree that he needs to chose the branch from and alas, he has entered
into the underworld. When entering, Aeneas sees that there is a river called Acheron where the
ferryman Charon transports spirits across the river, but not all souls can cross the river. Sibyl tells
him that this is because those souls did not have a proper funeral and were not appreciated the way
they were supposed to be. The souls that do pass have to line up in front of Minos to get
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Figurative Language In Sailing The Byzantium
Literature is always personal, always one man's vision of the world, one man's experience" (W.B.
Yeats n.d.). Such perspicacity is evident in the works of William Butler Yeats, whose poetry reflects
his fascination with mysticism and the days of yore. The poem "Sailing the Byzantium" illustrates
how William Butler Yeats use of artistic diction and symbolism reveals the parallels between ancient
civilization and the cycle of life and communicates the dual themes of obsolescence and perpetuity.
Yeats' elegy, details a metaphoric spiritual journey of renewal to "the holy city" seeking intellectual
refuge within an "artifice of eternity" (Yeats, Lines 16,24). His use of figurative language elicits
both the somber and nostalgic tones evident throughout the poem. ... Show more content on
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At the beginning of the second stanza, Yeats use of the metonymic phrase: "Aged man...A tattered
coat upon a stick" poignantly conveys the not only narrator's image of his own aging mortal form
but the insignificance of his existence among his youthful countrymen (Lines 9,10). Most notably,
the use of dramatic metaphors in Line 11 and 12, "Soul clap its hands and sing...but studying
Monuments of its own magnificence", personifies the soul as a song. In addition, it articulates the
idea that one's soul achieves perpetuity, not through "sensual" song, but through the erudition of
ancient civilization (Yeats, Lines 7, 11,14). Yeats' use of apostrophe and simile in Lines 17–22: "O
sages ...As in gold mosaic ...Come from the holy fire, perne in gyre...Consume my heart away; sick
with desire And fastened to a dying animal", illuminates the narrator's yearning to relinquish earthly
chains. Furthermore, his use of assonance in Line 19, by which he accentuates the long 'i' sound of
the words "fire"
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1984 Rhetorical Analysis
In the novel 1984 written by George Orwell, the author uses contradiction as a rhetorical strategy to
develop his critique of a totalitarian regime by slowly changing the thoughts of people to only
correspond with the thoughts of the inner party and Big Brother himself. Throughout the novel,
many things seem to be the complete opposite of what their names actually mean. Perhaps the first
mention of this is in the beginning of the book where Winston is describing his flat. With a name
such as "Victory Mansions," you'd think the building is nice and of high quality however this is truly
not the case. The elevator hardly ever works, defeating the entire purpose, and... "The hallway
[smells] of boiled cabbage and old rag mats," (Orwell 1). Plastered all over the building and streets
of London are colorful signs meant to enlighten your heart toward Big Brother. ... Show more
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To love Big Brother is to love having your freedom completely and utterly denounced. Now, these
simple uses of contradiction can be taken in context, not everyone's opinion is the same on what
they believe to be nice and who they want to believe in. However, to downright change the meaning
of a word to it's exact opposite needs no opinion. With party slogans such as "war is peace, freedom
is slavery and ignorance is strength," (Orwell 4), it is difficult to understand what the intentions of
these slogans are. With further comprehension and deeper knowledge on using contradiction as a
rhetorical strategy, it is known that their intentions are to trick people into believing an inaccurate
statement. One key element that has been acknowledged is that these uses of contradiction are not
used when describing the Golden Country. Orwell does this to show the difference between the
typical totalitarian atmosphere in Winston's flat compared to the blissful Golden
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Role Of Fate In The Aeneid
Mackenzie Kinsella
Humanities 300
Pinkerton
18 February 2016
Selection from Virgil's The Aeneid In book VI of the Aeneid, Aeneas goes on a journey to see his
father in the underworld. He faces many obstacles on his journey. Aeneas must travel through a
large forest to find a golden branch that will grant him access to the underworld. The branch will
only tear off the tree if it is in Aeneas' fate to travel to the underworld. With some help, Aeneas finds
the tree and the branch comes off of the tree with ease, signifying that Aeneas is destined to go to
the underworld. A prevalent theme throughout the entirety of the Aeneid is fate. Fate is something
that gives the characters a sense of direction and an explanation for why certain things
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Totemism And Religion
Totemism is an aspect of religious belief in which centered towards the important of sacred objects
called a "spirit–being" or "totem", where the totems tend to be based on relatively insignificant
animals and plants.
In Dhurkheim's conclusion " Since neither man nor nature have of themselves a sacred character,
they must get it from another source. Aside from human individual and the physical world, ther
should be some other reality, in relation to which this variety of delirium which all religion is in a
sense, has a significance and an objective value. In other words, beyond those which we have called
animistic and naturistic, there should be another sort of cult, more fundamental and more primitive,
of which the first are only derived ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
J. F. McLennan was the first to try to connect totemism with general human history.On McLennan's
articles "The Worship of Animals and Plants" (1870–71), he showed that totemism was not only a
religion, but multiplicity of beliefs and practices, one from which considerably more advances
religions had derived. L.H. Morgan's Ancient Society (1877) revealed that this religion was closely
connected to the specific form of social organization that Dhurkheim had discussed in The Division
of Labor – the devision of the social group into clans. In James Frazer's Totemism (1887), the
documents accumulated that the same religion and social organization were increasingly observed
and reported among the Australian aborigines. But his study was purely descriptive, making no
effort to understand or explain totemism or the fundamental aspects of totemism. In Robertson
Smith's Religion of the Semites (1889), he made the idea of totemism as the origin of sacrifice
system and in the The Golden Bough (1890) Frazer draws upon the same ideas to the gods of
classical antiquity and the folklore of European peasants. All these works, were constructed with
little observations, for a true totemic religion had not yet been seen in its complete state. This gap
has been filled only in recent years at Baldwin Spencer and F.J Gillen's Native Tribes of Central
Australia (1899) and The Northern Tribes of Central Australia (1899), showing a
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Examples Of Mythology In Women In Love
Chapter no 2: Mythology in Women in Love by D. H Lawrence: D. H Lawrence and Women in
Love: D.H Lawrence was an English writer, playwright, novelist, poet and critic. His works
represent a comprehensive reflection upon the dehumanizing impacts of modernity and
industrialization. Due to his opinions and rebels nature he faced severe criticism and he suffered
official persecution, censorship and misrepresentation of his innovative work during his life. At the
time of his death, his open notoriety was that of the pornographer who had squandered his
significant abilities. E.M Forster wrote in the letter to the Nation and Atheneum (29 march 1930);
"The greatest imaginative novelist of our generation." The influential Cambridge critic F. R. Leavis
supported both his artistic veracity and his moral seriousness. Lawrence`s best known novels are
Sons and Lovers, The Rainbow, Women in Love and Lady Chatterley`s Lover. In these novels he
explores the potential outcomes for life inside of a modern setting. Lawrence ... Show more content
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M. Daleski trends on mythological ground only to negate the contention that Eliseo Vivas advances
in D. H Lawrence regarding Birkin effort to stone the moon in the chapter "Moony". Vivas resists
that Birkin expletives the Syria Dea on the grounds that he fear the Vulva dentata and wishes to
convert like the sodomitic eunch pastors of Cybele, an act which recommends to Gerlad in "
Gladiatorial" the following chapter. Admitting Lawrence`s perusing of The Golden Bough, Daleski
blames Vivas for over reading and rationally illustrate that "the castration rites [as cited by Frazer
associated with the goddess make her an appropriate symbol of all that Birkin fears is destructive to
the male."(P 170) While it is factual that study of the mythic allusions can prompt to over reading,
one wishes that Daleski had sought after his conversation further, for Lawrence implies not only to
Cybelle but also to her cousious Artemis, Aphrodite and
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Similarities and Differences in the Aeneid and the Odyssey.
Both the Odyssey and the Aeneid describe the journeys of the two Greek heroes –Odysseus and
Aeneas, as they struggle towards their goal through the crises and deadly situations caused by the
wrath of the gods upon them. In the Odyssey, we see that Poseidon (god of the sea/earth shaker) has
a grudge against Odysseus while Athena, god of wisdom, aids him throughout his journey. Similarly
in the Aeneid, we see that goddess Juno dislikes Aeneas as he is destined to destroy the city of
Carthage loved by Juno during his mission to find a new land– Rome, whereas Aeneas' mother
Venus aids him.
In these epics, many points of similarity and differences arise such as the characters of the heroes,
how their journeys are delayed by women obsessed with ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
In some serious and important situations, Odysseus is more cunning and intellect than Aeneas.
Something common in the two epics about their journey is that both Odysseus and Aeneas are
distracted from what they are destined for; by the lust and arousal of women obsessed by love. In
the Odyssey, Odysseus is first encountered by Circe's love and then by the over obsession of
Calypso. Circe is an immortal goddess and enchantress who is extremely beautiful and sexy. In the
Aeneid, Aeneas after reaching Carthage meets Dido who is a mortal woman and queen of Carthage.
She is foreign, exotic, mysterious, sexually and politically potent. Talking about Odysseus, we see
that Odysseus is approached by Hermes who warns him against Circe. She offers Odysseus to have
sex with her and it happens. Odysseus now distracted, lives with her on her island for a year until
his comrades remind him of Ithaca. The longest delay in Odysseus' journey is at the island of
Calypso. Calypso lives alone on an exotic and beautiful island. After Odysseus crash lands here, he
is rescued by her and held captive for seven years. Calypso loves Odysseus unconditionally and
offers him immortality. Calypso could never impress Odysseus like Circe did. But in the Aeneid, we
see that Aeneas loses sight of his mission of founding Rome in Italy. Dido makes Aeneas forget
about what he is destined for as they fall in love. Both Dido and Circe keep men away from their
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Every Trip Is A Quest Chapter 1 Analysis
Introduction: How'd He Do That? How do memory, symbol, and pattern affect the reading of
literature? How does the recognition of patterns make it easier to read complicated literature?
Discuss a time when your appreciation of a literary work was enhanced by understanding symbol or
pattern. Response: When you're reading, it is incredible to have a decent memory. In the event that
you recollect something you read the previous summer and after use that knowledge to compose an
essay, you're style will improve. Symbol influences the way you read in light of the fact that when
you perceive something typical like a man, place, or thing and contrast that with something more
unpredictable like thought, feeling, or circumstance, it makes an entire new ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
Contrast how it could be viewed by a reader from the twenty–first century with how it might be
viewed by a contemporary reader. Focus on specific assumptions that the author makes,
assumptions that would not make it in this century. Shakespeare's, The Taming of A Shrew, displays
many ideas that would be considered sexist by anyone reading it today. The whole idea of the story
is a young man trying to 'tame' his young wife into doing everything that he wants her to. He
expects her to meet all of his needed desires and agree with anything that he says or does. During
Shakespeare's time this was very common for women to be treated more like a servant rather than
an actual wife or daughter. Today, of course, people (especially women) would not comply with the
idea of men being the boss of everything and woman dutifully following their
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Wharton's Allusions In 'The Age Of Innocence'
2012530058
Zhou, Xuanchen
American Lit
Ms. Davis
27th Dec, 2015
Diana with Preserving Fluid in Veins and Savage Bride in an Opera Box:
Wharton's Allusions in "The Age of Innocence" to Primitive and Pagan Myths and Beliefs When
reading the comment of Archer made on Mrs. Welland's simulation of reluctance at the time she
hears about the engagement of her daughter and Archer, comparing her action to the "Primitive"
culture in which "savage bride is dragged with shrieks from her parents' tent (Wharton, 22).", most
of the students of American Lit must be reminded of the allusion to the anthropology works as The
Golden Bough made by Wharton's contemporary authors such as T.S.Eliot, who happened to have
tortured us in a previous week. After going ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Her connection with wild nature (both the real, uncultivated nature and the "man's sphere" in society
without protection), which is a major and substantial characteristic of Diana that shows her mystical
power, is shown in the story by the impressions she left on Archer. He thought that at a "unpruned
garden, the tumbledown house, and the oak–grove under which the dusk was gathering" seems to be
" so exactly the place in which he ought to have found Madame Olenska (103)." When he founds
her alone in the publicity, he asked her "But what on earth are you doing in this wilderness (105)?"
Archer's mentioning of the oak–grove is another specific clue that leads to the identity of Diana, as
she is actually "queen of the woods in general" and also "goddess of the oaks in particular (Frazer,
II, 380)." Ellen's first name as the shortened version of "Helen" might also be an allusion to Diana,
who is also known as "Helen of the Tree (Frazer, V, 292)." Besides, working in concert with May's
marriage with Archer around Easter, the mutual confession of Countess Olenska and Archer takes
place in middle of August, when Diana's own day is celebrated (Frazer, I, 12–14) (Scheick, 3).
Moreover, the term "flower of life" with a little bit of ambiguity and inexplicability kind of
resembles the term "heart of life" she used in her previous work, which refers to Diana– and thus
readers could suggest that the
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Sylvia Plath Allusions
Written task 2 Sylvia Plath is not your average poet. Plath is a poet from the Confessional era who
also suffered from depression. She uses a lot of similes, metaphors, and allusions in her poems,
mainly Greek mythology. She uses mythological allusions including stories like Midas' Touch and
Narcissus as well as historical allusions using Jews and concentration camps to add more depth and
meaning. Plath refers to the story Midas' Touch in her poem In Midas' Country. Midas turns
everything he touches into gold and she compares August to Midas saying it turns things gold. Plath
states," August gives over its Midas touch, wind bares a flintier landscape". She is saying as August
is ending, the gold is leaving nature and everything is getting darker. Plath is giving a more
illustrative example of just how golden and bright everything was in August. August is known to be
one of the hottest months with everything being sun kissed. She says," Apples gold on the bough,
goldfinch, goldfish, golden tiger cat stock...". She claims everything is much more brighter and
golden in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The poem Daddy, referencing the camps and Nazis, is supposed to be a negative sounding poem.
"...an engine chuffing me off like a Jew. A Jew to Dachau, Auschwitz, Belsen," explains how Plath
was feeling. The places listed are concentration camps where the Jews went, with her having felt
like a Jew herself.Plath comparing herself to a Jew explains how distant she felt from her
father.Obviously Jews and Nazis did not have a close relationship, so her calling her father a Nazi
explains her feelings. "... with your Luftwaffe, your gobbledygoo. And your neat mustache and your
Aryan eye,bright blue", is the description she gives her father. Neat mustache and bright blue eyes
were traits of Nazis and her father had all of those and Luftwaffe was the German military. By
comparing her father to a Nazi, it shows what kind of man he was to
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Depictions of the Afterlife
The afterlife as a residence for souls after death has long been a topic of discussion and debate. This
idea intrigues many. As Christians we believe that heaven is a place where believers go where life
there will be a continuation of their present life, while hell is a place of judgment and punishment
where many experience severe treatment. Direct experience is the only way individuals can
experience these concepts, but once we obtain the experience it cannot be shared. This ultimately
makes us want to know more leading many to visualize the afterlife. Starting with the earliest Greek
Epics, such as The Iliad, society has imagined an Underworld, a place beneath the Earth where souls
go once the body dies. Our thoughts and expectations about such an idea have changed over time;
the idea of the Underworld continues in many Greek and Latin poems and it still used today
(Spiegel). The best descriptions of the afterlife are found in Dante's Divine Comedy. In his first
book, The Inferno, Dante explores Hell, a place in which sinners dwell after they die. His account is
mainly taken from Book VI of Virgil's The Aeneid, which describes Aeneas's journey into the
Underworld to visit his father. These two works, written many years apart share similar ideas about
life after death and it makes us consider the changes in society's thoughts over these times. There are
obvious differences found between these two stories and they correlate with the different beliefs
society has about the
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Motifs And Symbols In The Aeneid
There are many openions on "The Aeneid" but mine is of a good light. "The Aeneid" was a
wonderful book with many themes motifs and symbols. The auther of "the Aeneid" was Publius
Vergilius Maro also known as Virgil. Virgil is traditionally ranked as one of Rome's best poets.His
Aeneid is thought of as the national epic of ancient Rome from the time of its making to present day.
Virgil was bornin of Andes, near Mantua in Cisalpine Gaul. Scholars think Etruscan, Umbrian or
Celtic descent by looking at the linguistic and ethnic markers of the region. it is also said that
classmates considered Virgil to be extremely shy and reserved, and he was given the nickname
"Parthenias" or "maiden" because of his social aloofness. Virgil seems to have ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
of course most of it is fictional yet it showes what life was like for thoes outside the group of the
hero. There were also life leasons to learn in the book and maybe more then what i found if you take
what was said in a diffrent meaning.they traveld Carthage. Impressed by Aeneas's acomplishments
and sympathetic to his suffering, Dido falls head over heals with Aeneas. They live with echother as
lovers for a while, until the gods remind Aeneas of his duty to creat a new city. He decides to go out
once again once again. . As the Trojans made for Italy, winds blew them to Sicily, where they have
games for Anchises who died . The women tired from the trip begin set fire to the ships, but rainfall
puts the fires out. Aeneas goes into the underworld, guided by the Sibyl of Cumae. He is shown a
pageant of the future history. King Latinus, the Italian ruler, extends his hospitality to Aeneas.
Amata and Turnus cultivate enmity toward the newly arrived Trojans. While the Trojan leader is
away, Turnus attacks. Aeneas returns to see his people embroiled in battle. Pallas, the child of
Aeneas's new ally Evander, is killed by Turnus. They decide to spare any further carnage by a hand–
to–hand duel between Aeneas and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
I Wandered Lonely As A Cloud, By William Wordsworth
I can recall that day when I stumbled across William's beatific poem. The sky was painted with the
richest and brightest of colors behind boughs of trees and lifeless houses. The air felt cordial,
yearning for your embrace. After I read the poem I could feel myself unraveling. I consider myself
as a great lover of nature and being out in the wilderness has gave me a new moral dimension in
life. I am my best version out in nature therefore I have grew very fond of this poem. 'I wandered
lonely as a cloud is one of the most loved and influential poems of William Wordsworth. It had been
Inspired by Dorothoy's(his sister) diary extract which chronicles their peaceful promenading along a
river near Grasmere, where they encountered a colony of radiant daffodils. The sight was so
glorious which later on inspirited William to compile his recollection of one of his most precious
memories. The poem immediately establishes of a dream–like state which is apparent by the use of
the similie 'I wandered lonely as a cloud'. The noun 'cloud' is a airy and free–flowing notion that has
connotations of seclusion that gives an impression to the readers that he is currently detached from
the real world; unconcerned with its troubles. In addition, by the use of the personal pronoun 'I'
gives greater emotion and depth to his language but simultaneously highlighting the inherent unity
between men and nature (that was a prominent theme in William's poems). However, in contrary the
pronoun 'I'
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Witch Hunt Research Paper
Topic 1: The Witch Hunts
Witch Hunts during the post middle ages were a tragic event that led to many people to be falsely
accused for the act of witchcraft and devil worship. During the 15th to the 18th centuries Europe
experienced a dramatic changed in socitity as it faced the Renascence, the Protestant Reformation,
and the culmination of diverse societies, this would lead to the Church and many other Europeans
weary of the supernatural to find and purge anyone who would be in league with the Satanic Cult.
Since those who were accused of portraying to be a servant of the Devil, would be put on trial for
their crime and would be subject to many forms of punishing trials that led to over 40,000 people
were put to death. Since the belief of magic was popular during those times, the higher social class
would be involved in developing the idea of Devil ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The lower levels of society would originally be the ones who suspected witchcraft that would only
be exploited by the social elite, such as the church and rich aristocrats. The Catholic Church, while
strong in many regions, was a dwindling force in many other parts of Europe because of the
Protestant Reformation so in order to bring back authority of the church; it would be a good time to
take advantage of the common people's fear of the Devil and eternal damnation this would bring
many back into the fold and actually have people work for the church, using Bakhtin's idea of the
carnivalesque on how the pardoned behavior that took place at that time, involving the use of torture
to gain a confession was all for the glory of God in stopping the works of the Devil, even in small
villages, neighbors turn against neighbors on the presumption of witchcraft, and back then it was a
close–knit community that relied on each
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Aeneas Book 6
Book 6 starts out with the Trojan fleet arriving on the shore of Italy. When Aeneas arrives on land he
creates the temple of Apollo, and a preistess named Sibyl meets him. Aeneas then prays to Apollo to
let him and his crew settle in Italy. Sibyl warns Aeneas that more trials still await in Italy. Aeneas
then wonderes if Sibyl can gain him entrance to The Underworld, so that he can visit his father's
spirit. Aeneas must have a sign from the gods, first. He is told to go into the forest and find a golden
bough. If the bough breaks off easy, then it is fate. If the bough does not come off easily, then it is
not fate, and he should not travel to The Underworld. The gods lead Aeneas to a desired tree. This
tree does have a golden branch,
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Eight Theories Of Religion
Although broad in nature, religion is complex and mysterious, yet pure. Simply put, religion
represents supernatural beliefs, where traditions and ideologies vary greatly. However, religion is
greater than that of a belief, but rather a way of life. According to Mary Fisher, author of Living
Religions, religion is something of a sacred reality, serving as a significance and lifestyle for
millions of people around the world (2). Nonetheless, figures such as E.B. Taylor, J.G. Frazer,
Sigmund Freud, Émilie Durkheim, and Karl Marx have analyzed the mystery of faith, bringing new
meaning and definition to the subject.
E.B. Taylor was awed by the many cultures of the world. According to Daniel Pals, author of Eight
Theories of Religions, E.B. Taylor described religion as a "belief in spiritual beings" (26). In order
to encompass the vast differences among religions, such as monotheism and polytheism, E.B. Taylor
examined primitive people, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Frazer, contrary to E.B. Taylor, examined the principles of magic behind religion. According to
Daniel Pals, J.G. Frazer composed the Golden Bough, analyzing the connections of magical and
spiritual topics in order to theorize the concept of religion (36). J.G. Frazer also believed that
science failed to truly explain the subject of supernatural beliefs and beings (45).
Sigmund Freud initially regarded religion as somewhat of an illusion. In Eight Theories of Religion,
Daniel Pals outlines Sigmund Freud's views on religion as human dreams (56). However, Sigmund
Freud recognized the concept of promise in religion, serving as a hopeful desire for many (73).
Émilie Durkheim viewed religion as a unified, sacred concept. Focusing on the fundamentals of
religion in the text The Elementary Forms, Émilie Durkheim veered from the supernatural beliefs of
Taylor, Frazer, and Sigmund, according to Daniel Pals (95). Rather, Émilie Durkheim described
religion as a "sacred thing," where practices unite into a moral community, or a church
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Aha Moment: A Micro Theme On An Aesthetic Experience
After a long day of self–contemplation and a sleepless night of retrospection, it is now 3 AM
Wednesday morning and before me awaits a blank white sheet of paper, intimidating me, taunting
me as if saying, "go ahead write this micro theme on an aesthetic experience". How do I choose that
"aha moment" from a life well lived? In my sixty–two years of life I have had many aesthetic
experiences each adding a single facet to the human being that I am in this movement. I breathe in
deep, I will myself to relax and to write about the beauty in a single deep breath. Wait, that is a too
broad and too deep of a topic for this micro theme so I will narrow it down to a breath that I
remember clearly.
My border collie Janta and I, took a trip to explore the central and northern coastal areas of
California. We left our home in Santa Barbara, California three or four days before with one ...
Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The sunlight tinting the clouds with pink and golden hues reminding me of a Maxwell Parish
painting I had once owned. There was a heavy fog and mist coming in off the Pacific Ocean into the
San Francisco Bay I noticed that the fog clung to the bottom of the Golden Gate Bridge. Sounds of
gulls screeching and fog horns moaning, issuing warning of possible danger are coming in off the
bay overwhelmed my senses. I did not take the time to breath in this wondrous moment as I should
have. It is only now though this reflection that I appreciate the beauty. I had a goal, a destination. I
was a force of nature not to be deterred. So onward north I traveled passing monumental sites with a
lackadaisical attitude. Not understanding that I needed to breath in, slowdown and enjoy the singular
experience of the once in lifetime moments that were flying past me as I raced down the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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Descriptive Essay About Hiking

  • 1. Descriptive Essay About Hiking Trails of exhaust were propelled out of every single car in the bumper to bumper traffic, making the recirculation button a necessity. The dull roar of hundreds of people walking, talking, shouting, and blaring their car horns gradually blended into one unpleasant, continuous track that I was forced to listen to. Litter and cigarette butts pooled around gutters and lined the curbs, so I redirected my gaze upwards at the towering skyscrapers. I liked the view, so long as I kept my eyes above street level, and I supposed I liked the city, so long as I did not breathe in too deeply. I tried to appreciate nicer aspects of the busy city, but where I really wanted to be, was hiking somewhere in the mountains. Although it may seem illogical, my love for hiking started before I could even walk. When I was still quite young, I remember being put into a child carrier on my dad's back, my head bobbing in rhythm to his steps. I am told that sitting in that backpack is the quietest I had ever been, as I was enraptured by the passing trees give way to the sunny slopes of the alpine. Upon learning how to walk, I began to pester my parents to free me from the prison that was the child carrier, and ever since then, hiking has become one of my favorite hobbies. Hiking gives me a sense of accomplishment and provides me with a place that I can find peace from the literal and metaphorical noise in my life. My parents have fostered my love for hiking and nature, by bringing me on vacation every year to hike for at least two weeks. In the Austrian Alps, tall and jagged cliffs rise out of the ground, towering over bustling towns lying on the valley floor. In Iceland, the rhyolite mountains are colored shades of red, golden yellow, and pink, and nestled between the mountains are large, sweeping, raven–black lava fields. The impressive mountains in Utah are accompanied by a lush canopy of greenery that slowly peters out as the mountains grow in height. In the spring and summer, the greenery is widespread and the skies are blue. Come fall, the mountains seem to be lit up with the magical colors of burnt sienna, fiery orange, crimson red, and bright yellow. In the winter, the skies are stormy grey, the mountains covered in a thick ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. The Beauty of Nature Essay examples The Beauty of Nature The sunset was not spectacular that day. The vivid ruby and tangerine streaks that so often caressed the blue brow of the sky were sleeping, hidden behind the heavy mists. There are some days when the sunlight seems to dance, to weave and frolic with tongues of fire between the blades of grass. Not on that day. That evening, the yellow light was sickly. It diffused softly through the gray curtains with a shrouded light that just failed to illuminate. High up in the treetops, the leaves swayed, but on the ground, the grass was silent, limp and unmoving. The sun set and the earth waited. On the edge of a small wood, an ancient tree sat hunched over, the gnarled, old king of a once vast domain that had long ago ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The bees still buzzed and hummed among the flowers; the deer still grazed softly among the undulating waves of grass, yet in that moment, their movement seemed arrested, held in check by the waning sun. And the winds came. The wild west wind came down through the fields, rousing the deer from their reverie, and swaying the bee–studded flowers. From its highest bough to the loose sand on its mighty roots, the ancient tree quivered lightly, yet was untroubled by the breeze. Many a storm had passed over the tree, yet no rain had managed to drown those fathomless roots, no hail had managed to bite the iron bark. As the stars hang, unchanging in the nighttime sky, and as the sun moves in ceaseless circles around the earth, so the tree had endured. And even as the wind rustled in its outermost boughs, the tree looked out to the sun, as if for reassurance about its own unchanging eternity. On the horizon, no yellow eye looked back. The sun was gone. In a tumult of wind and rain, a hail of twigs and leaves thundered through the trees and tore the arching grasses out by the roots. The deer bolted and hid, quivering, in the darkest thickets. The sky boiled, and the younger saplings were bent almost to the ground. Even as the shadows bounded up the stalks and blades of weeping grass, and the soft plink of falling rain quickened to a constant hiss and sputter, the sun found its equal. A thousand stars came down to earth and unleashed their pent– up fury on that wood. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 3. Anticlea In The Odyssey Death frequents classical literature. The ancients did not like to sugarcoat things; they knew death was a part of life and accepted that fact. Often, they tried to explain this natural occurrence through myths. Persephone dies with the coming of the frost, much like the flowers of spring. Dionysus is ripped to pieces in the winter, just like how grapevines wither and perish. Heroes die, too, and some more than once. Orpheus visits the underworld to get his beloved Eurydice back, and fails drastically. Aeneas and the Sibyl descend with a golden bough and talk with his father. Even the sagacious and silver–tongued Odysseus ventured down there, and saw three very important ghosts. Furthermore, Odysseus reacted to the ghosts of Anticlea, Elpenor, and Tiresias in the Land of the Dead in similar yet distinct ways, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... To start with, Odysseus's response to meeting all the ghosts were alike, one example being his reaction to Anticlea in the Land of the Dead being akin to his reaction to Elpenor, as he was doleful for both of them. In, "Seeing this ghost I grieved, but held her off, through pang on pang of tears," (Homer's The Odyssey, lines 617–618) it is clear Odysseus is inconsolable over his mother's death. He also is in anguish over Elpenor's demise, as Odysseus and his company did not bury the young man's corpse, nor had time to properly mourn him. In this, the shrewd King of Ithaca's reaction to finding Anticlea, his dear mother, and Elpenor, a stripling gone before his time, in the Land of the Dead are alike. Also, his reaction to Elpenor and Tiresias were akin to each other, this is because he expected both of them. This is apparent in, "Elpenor, of our company, who lay unburied still on the wide earth as we had left him," (Homer's The Odyssey, lines 578–580) as Odysseus regrets not having a proper funeral for him before leaving Aeaea, and clearly ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4. Death, Be Not Proud, And On The Death Of Richard West Pop culture icon and music sensation Kanye West once said, "Nothing in life is promised, except death." Death can be interpreted in many different ways; some people fear death, while others view death as the pathway to eternal life. Death is a guaranteed and an unavoidable part of life, and it can have varying impacts on people, whether they are positive or negative. Death is an intriguing topic often found in poetry. John Donne's "Holy Sonnets: Death, Be Not Proud," William Shakespeare's "Sonnet 73," and Thomas Gray's "On the Death of Richard West" discuss the topic of death and impart their own opinions of death. John Donne's metaphysical poem and sonnet, "Holy Sonnets: Death, Be Not Proud," follows a Petrarchan rhyme scheme as seen in the first eight lines: a/b/b/a/a/b/b/a. Unlike the quintessential sestet of c/e/f/g/e/f, the sestet of this sonnet has a c/d/d/c/a/a rhyme scheme. The use of a Petrarchan rhyme scheme is appropriate because the first twelve lines ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Apostrophe is used from the beginning, as the speaker talks to Death as if he a real human and can respond back to him, referring to him as "poor Death" (Donne 3). In addition, the speaker personifies Death by giving him attributes, such as "mighty and dreadful" (2). The speaker uses a metaphor to compare Death to "rest and sleep" (5), which provide much pleasure–undermining Death and the fear of it. The speaker contradicts himself in many ways: according to him, Death thinks he can kill people, but the speaker argues against that saying "nor yet canst thou kill me" (4), acknowledging his keen sense of mortality. He further contradicts himself by discussing his eternal life after his "short sleep" (13). Microcosm is used as Death represents the bigger picture of eternity in heaven, as the speaker says, "One short sleep past, we wake eternally / And death shall be no more; Death, thou shalt die" ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. Nymph Callisto Analysis This visual description is of the oil painting by Frenchman François Boucher Jupiter in Guise of Diana and the Nymph Callisto dated 1759 is an oil painting 57.79 × 69.85 cm (22.8 × 27.5 in) on canvas, which hangs in the Nelson–Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Missouri. The focal point of this work is the two voluptuous female figures in the center of the bottom half of the canvas. The women appear to be gentle lovers, gazing each into the others eyes; their expressions are soft and loving, and their bodies relaxed. Their lightly toned skin colored with a subtle pink flush along with their curvy bodies make the figures look and feel soft, beckons the viewer to reach out to touch them. Their sensual appearance enhanced by the pale pink and ivory palette used to render their forms, so gently blended the change in tone throughout the images no brushstrokes are visible. Callisto, a beautiful fully nude young blond nymph reclines, across the lap of Jupiter, in the guise of Diana, her right arm extended lazily across Diana's right forearm, her hand, holding an arrow, gently touches an angelic putti. Tucked between their bodies is a satiny ivory–white gown, atop a velvety smoky blue dress and leopard skins. The detail of the pelt is so expertly rendered an observer wants to stroke it, fine brushwork defines the fur, dark umber spots on golden ground. Callisto's face gently tilts back over her right shoulder, her long blond, curly tresses pulled back and flowing down her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. Analysis Of Joachim Patinir 's Triptych, The Penitence Of... Netherlandish use of triptychs–three distinct art pieces that simultaneously exist as individual images and as a collective picture–usually were presented as devotional images and altarpieces. Joachim Patinir's triptych, The Penitence of Saint Jerome (c. 1512–1515, Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY), employs both the same form of traditional triptychs and the Netherlandish tradition of extended panoramic landscapes; however, the triptych breaks traditional convention. The three separate panels share the same landscape which allows the figures to exist in the same pictorial space. This maintains an unbroken continuation of the landscape, which adds not only to the content within a single panel, but to the entire narrative of the triptych. Yet, each individual panel is also worthy of its own analysis and discussion. The left panel depicts the first of three saints, Saint John the Baptist, in the midst of his signature baptizing of Christ. A river flows from the furthest reaches of the landscape down to the bottom frame, with Christ standing thigh–deep in the water, a dove alighting from God perched in the clouds in the top left. Saint John kneels over him on the riverbank while a group of people huddle in the distance behind the baptism scene. In traditional style, the triptych simultaneously depicts a central scene as well as past and future narrative events–present here as Saint John preaching chronologically before the actual baptism of Christ. The central, larger panel ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. The Difference Between Winston And The Society In 1984... The dedication of Winston's mother and his sister giving up their lives in order to save Winston shows that the society in 1984 was full of control, if they want people to die, they will die. Although Winston and his family didn't do anything wrong, there was no way for all of them to be survived. "He was out in the light and air while they were being sucked down to death, and they were down there because he was up here" (29). The difference between Winston and his mother and his sister shows that the Party had the absolute right to control who must live and who must die. This part shows that Orwell is proving how cold– blooded a society could be. In spite the fact that he was young and small, he still remembered "...she had sacrificed herself to a conception of loyalty that was private and unalterable. Such things, he saw, could not happen today" (30). There was no loyalty could be mentioned in Winston's era, there was only hostility. The Party members had ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In Winston's dream, he wandered to "...a summer evening when the slanting rays of the sun gilded the ground" (30). Mention of Winston's Golden Country reveals his affinity to the nature. He wanted to touch and feel nature. The difference between Winston's dream and Winston's society reveals Orwell's opinion on no happiness and pleasure can be found in a society with absolute control. And, in the sunset, "...the boughs of the elm trees were swaying very faintly in the breeze..." (30). The contradiction between the breeze in Winston's dream and the vile wind in real life shows the condition in 1984 is cruel, and cold. The reason he dreamed of sunset was because he missed the old time, especially the warm environment. Orwell expresses this idea to show a despot has absolute power will abolish everything that is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. Oedipus Rex Study Oedipus Rex Study Guide The Prologos 1. What initial step does Oedipus indicate he has already taken? 2. What is the significance of Delphi? What is the message from the oracle at Delphi with which Creon returns? 3. What does Oedipus think about the clue Creon reveals about who murdered King Laios? What might this perception foreshadow? 4. What does Oedipus promise to do at the end of the Prologos? 5. Of what symbolic significance are the olive boughs, strewn at the alter steps as the Thebans address Oedipus? Why does Oedipus tell the suppliants to lift up their olive boughs as they depart? The Parados 1. In strophe 1, what does the chorus ask? 2. In antistrophe 1, to which god and goddesses does the chorus appeal for ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In light of the caveat in ode 2, what might her statement foreshadow? 4. What attitude toward the gods does Oedipus exhibit after learning of Polybos' death? Again in light of ode 2, what is foreshadowed by Oedipus' statement? What effect upon the audience might the similarity of reactions of Oedipus and Jocasta have? 5. Though Oedipus is comforted that Polybus, his father, has died of natural causes, what aspect of the oracle still troubles Oedipus? 6. How does the messenger prove that Oedipus was not the child of Polybus and Merope? 7. Why does Jocasta so insistently attempt to stop Oedipus' questioning of the messenger? What has Jocasta discovered through the messenger's story? 8. What incredible coincidences surround the appearance of the messenger from Corinth and the shepherd? Is such coincidence possible in life? As a modern audience, why might we believe less in such coincidences than audiences of 5th century, BC? 9. Jocasta's exit line is significant. The only word she can call Oedipus is "miserable." Why can she not call him husband? Why can she not call him son? Ode 3 1. In ode 3, Kith iron is again mentioned. What is Kithairon, and how is it connected to Oedipus? Refer to scene 3. 2. Who is Pan? Who is Hermes? What is Kyllene? 3. What effect does juxtaposing the pastoral imagery of ode 3 with scene 3 create? What might this suggest about scene 4? The Final Clue 1. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. How Does Dido Commit Suicide In The Aeneid In the Aeneid, Dido decides to commit suicide when she sees the Trojans leaving. This affects Dido's emotions a lot due to the love of her life. This is what drives her to commit this action. Dido first considers this act because she feels guilty for breaking her promise to her dead husband. She promised not to allow herself to love anyone in life again. The second reason for wanting to take her own life is because she believes she strongly believes she has been led on by Aeneas. In her mind, Dido believed she was married to Aeneas. As she saw the Trojans set off for good, she makes her decision that taking her life is the best answer to escape all her emotions. Aeneas is the main character of the Aeneid. He is the son of Anchises who is a Trojan prince. Aeneas is a dutiful servant of fate, and for the Gods. He is your ideal leader. Aeneas is a man who has devoted himself to a mission of being a dedicated man. Every time he encounters a problem, it is faced without ever losing faith in the will of fate. Throughout ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Amata tells Turnus that if he dies, she would rather kill herself than to have Aeneas as her son–in– law. Aeneas says that if Turnus wins, the Trojans will go packing. However, if Aeneas wins, he will not enslave the Italians, but he will ask the Italians to join him as a new nation under equal citizens. Turnus is falling in love with Lavinia and is very crazy about her. Turnus needs to win the battle in order to not only impress Lavinia, but in order to marry her as well. Turnus has great honor over his life which keeps his mind determined to battle. He does not care what anybody tells him. Turnus believes he needs to stick to his plan due to the fact that the Latins are in great danger. He realizes they are in danger when the Trojan and Etruscan troops are at the gates of his city. He needs to defeat Aeneas in battle in order to save his city and marry the love of his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10. Fate In Virgil's Aeneid In the Ancient Greek and Roman world fate was known to be an unalterable chain of predetermined events caused by a supernatural power. Hesiod personifies fate to be three very old women who spins the threads of people's destiny. Everyone has a fate meaning that even the gods cannot escape these powerful forces from Atropos (1 of the 3 women) when she cuts the string, ultimately determining your destiny. Throughout Virgil's Aeneid fate played an immense role from the beginning of the poem as Aeneas already knew what he was destined for leading him to Italy at the end. Virgil depicted fate to be an unstoppable power that leads one to their destiny. Regardless of other irrelevant events ones destiny remains intact but may be prolonged in length. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... A prime example would be right after Polydorus's funeral after when they decided to sail southward to the island of Delos. When they reached the island of Delos Apollo got the chance to speak to Aeneas instructing him to go to the land of his ancestors. Anchises believing he decoded this message expresses to Aeneas that he may think Apollo is referring to the Island of Crete. Crete was the land of one of the great forefathers Teucrians who had ruled a long time ago. Subsequently after falling asleep the night of the construction in their new city of Crete the gods of Troy appear in Aeneas's dream. They articulated that his father misinterpreted Apollo and was meant to go to Italy, which was the original home of Dardanus. If Aeneas was not destined for Italy the gods would not have came and advised him as he would have started a new life in Crete. Thus proving again that fate prevails regardless of any hindrances that occur you are always moving forward inching up to your inescapable fate. Aeneas proves that fate is unchangeable as nothing stopped him from getting to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. Fate In The Aeneid Virgil's Aeneid, tells the story of Aeneas, the hero and object of fate who is also well known for fitting every description of a classic epic hero. He is of noble and supernatural birth, he faces and successfully overcomes temptations, and he acts as the vessel the gods wish him to be. Although Aeneas frequently makes his own life decisions, it can still be argued that no single aspect of his life was untouched by fate, predictions, or prophecy. Fate directs the main course of action as the gods and goddesses compete with one another in order to see their desired outcome. In the Aeneid, fate is an all–powerful force. While characters do have the free will to resist their destiny, it is also common knowledge that what fate decrees ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Virgil most commonly wrote in past tense, but he chose future tense for prophecy and prediction. When we find Virgil in control of the narration, the point of view not only includes man's story, but the actions of the gods as well. Aeneas, in his own storytelling, does not have the access to the gods' perspedtive and therefore must relate events only from his own perspective. The suffering of wanderers seems to be a recurring theme in The Aeneid as does the primacy of fate. The first half of the poem tells of the Trojans' wanderings as they journey from their city of Troyo to Italy. The culture highly valued geographic location and familial loyalty, and firmly believed that a homeland is one's source of identity. As homelessness was thought to imply instability pertaining to both a man's situation and identity, it was a great form of suffering in and of itself. Next we see that the destination and direction of Aeneas' course are preordained, and his glories in battle and at sea along with his many sufferings over the course of the epic merely serve to postpone his destiny. The power of fate stands far above the power of the gods. The will of Jupiter, most powerful of the Olympians, is what this is often associated with. The disturbances in Aeneas's life by the gods of lesser power, do not significantly affect the overall outcome of events because the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. Archetypes In Literature All stories and mythologies regardless of culture and historical period have become a part of human mind which contain a collective unconscious of all human species. This collective unconscious shared by all human beings is called as 'Universal Memory 'or 'Primal Memory'. Collective unconscious is a kind of universal psyche which is vested in dreams and myths and draws the themes and images from various sources. Recognising this collective unconscious to the conscious level is the prima–facie of an archetypal writer. These unconscious and recognizable elements of archetype occur across all literature and life. Literature is based on recurring images, characters, narrative designs and themes. Archetypal criticism identifies and determines the form and function of archetypes in literary works. DEFENITION Archetypal literary criticism interprets a text by focusing on recurring myths and archetypes in the narrative, symbols, images and character types in literary work. The word archetype first entered into English usage in the 1540's and derives from the Latin noun archetypum, latinisation of the Greek term archetypos which means first–moulded. So archetype can be understood as an original model or type after which other similar things are patterned; a prototype. The Encyclopaedia Britannica defines an archetype as "a primordial image, character or ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... His first essay of The Anatomy of Criticism contains his Theory of Modes which articulates various levels of realism in literature. His second essay deals with the Theory of Symbols recognizing five phases in symbols such as Literal and Descriptive phases which make up symbol as Motif and as Sign, Formal phase which makes the symbol as Image, Mythical phase which serves symbol as Archetype and Anagogic phase which means symbol as ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. Katherine Mansfield 's The Garden Party Foster begins this chapter with Katherine Mansfield's The Garden Party. It is about a girl, Laura, setting up a garden party. Her mother, Mrs. Sheridan let her prepare the garden party for the first time, so she wants to make it the best. While doing the preparations for the party, Laura hears about the recent death of a man in the little cottages down the hill. Because of this, she tries to convince her sister and mother to cancel the party. How could they celebrate when a neighbor just passed away? However, the both of them tell Laura that it is not their problem that someone had died and that it is not worth it to put away all the preparations done for the party. From this, the reader can see that Jose, the sister and Mrs. Sheridan do not really care about the people who are not as fortunate as them. Mrs. Sheridan distracts Laura from the topic by giving her a hat. The garden party starts and is very successful. After it ends, Mr. Sheridan brings up the story about the man that had just died and Mrs. Sheridan decides that they should give the family their leftover food. Laura walks down to the cottages with a big basket of food. She wants to cover herself because she is dressed extravagantly while the other neighbors down the hill are not. Laura goes into the widow's house and meets the man's sister in law, Em. She takes her to see the deceased man and Laura cries. After this, Laura leaves and meets her brother, Laurie at the corner of the road. She ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. Summary Of A Hero's Journey Across The Sargasso Sea She tried to put the picture together in her mind. The sky; a cold monotony of blue broken only by the black speck of a raven or a crow. Castles; immense with latticed windows. Air; free from cicadas which hummed sullenly in the Jamaican nights when she couldn't sleep. Snowy winter's, with parks covered in thick blankets of white and golden lamp posts standing to attention against the papery background. She had read all she could; impulsively feathered her fingers across the rosy – pink shape on her father's wall map. She knew that he was arriving today. She knew as soon as she saw the maid's preparing the finest guest room and the groundsmen slaughtering the largest pig. She knew when ornate candles were brought out and cleaned, filling the air with tiny motes of dust. Her father's command replayed in her mind, "Bertha, be calm. Mr Rochester's journey across the Sargasso Sea will be long and tiresome and you will not disturb him on his first night." "Father," she bit back, "I am to be married to him." His reply was forceful. "And you will be presented to him, when the time is right and you are splendidly dressed." He thought ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... She found herself, her eyes steady to the horizon, her face aglow, bright, with the last amber rays of sun before dusk beckoned the stars. A reddish beam streaked though the boughs of the great Cotton tree in both brilliant and shadowy beams. Fern trees hung before her like giant emerald curtains and from them drops of water dangled like diamonds on a necklace. The branches of the Guaguos danced, falling upon each other in a virescent mosaic and above the birds warbled. She walked amongst the dripping oranges, and golden pineapples; the pomegranates which hung like broken shards of sunrise from sprawling branches. The wind roared through the leaves, and coiled around her feet. Looking up she saw a flock of Red–billed tropicbirds floating upon grey clouds blowing over from ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. The Aeneid-the Role of Fate Fate is the essential idea of The Aeneid, but more importantly, the underlying force throughout the text. Fate cannot be changed; it is the set of events with the inevitable result. Virgil uses the idea of fate to narrate and advance through his epic poem, but perhaps also to illustrate that the gods had originally intended for Rome to become a great and powerful empire. The king of gods, Jupiter, has chosen Aeneas and his preordained path to destiny, by leading the Trojans and creating the foundations for the Roman Empire. However, a variety of gods interfere with Aeneas's direction of fate in order to satisfy their own desires, only to discover that Aeneas's fate can be manipulated, but never overturned. Aeneas is born from the gods ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Perhaps the most significant example of the importance of fate in The Aeneid happens in Book VI; the golden branch. Aeneas and his fleet arrive on the coast on Cumae in search of the Sibyl at the Temple of Apollo. Following his father's instructions, Aeneas asks the Sibyl to gain him entrance to Dis so he may visit his father's spirit. However, in order to enter Dis with any possibility of returning, Aeneas must first locate a sign to gain him access across the Acheron River. The Sibyl then explains to Aeneas that the sign is a golden branch in a nearby forest, if the branch breaks off the tree easily then fate awards Aeneas a pass into the underworld. If the branch does not break off then Aeneas is not destined to go. A bough is hidden in a shady tree; its leaves and pliant stem are golden, set aside as sacred to Proserpina. The grove serves as its screen, and shades enclose the bough in darkened valleys. Only he may pass beneath earth's secret space who first plucks the golden–leaved fruit of that tree. Lovely Proserpina ordained that this be offered her as gift. And when the first bough is torn off, a second grows again – with leaves of gold, again of that same metal. So let your eyes search overhead; and when the bough is found, then pluck it down by hand as due: for if the Fates have summoned you, the bough will break off freely, easily; but otherwise, no power can overcome it, hard iron cannot help ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. Stereotypes In The Aeneid Virgil potrays his characters, both male and female, in a way that threatens the standard cultural norms of Rome at this time. While they do possess certain Roman characteristics, Penthesilia, an Amazon warrior queen, Dido, queen of Carthage, and Camilla, a female warrior, are all well–known representations of women destined to face their doom in a world that is completely dominated by males. These examples serve to reinforce the importance of gender roles and also to serve as warning signs for when limits are surpassed. The Aeneid serves not only to establish a Roman identity that acknow3ledges that women are indeed a necessary component to the continued existence, but also what happens when their role extends too far. Virgil portrays ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He is described by Virgil in Book I as "father Aeneas" and "fond father, as always thoughtful of his son." Aeneas is deeply respectful of his father and is highly devoted to his son. During the fall of Troy, Aeneas carries his father on his back and holds his young son'[s hand as they make their way out of danger and to safety. In Book III, Aeneas's paternal responsibilities have been expanded to include his son, the Trojans placed in his care, and the entire future of the Roman race. Aeneas celebrates the anniversary of his father's death by sacrificing to the gods and participating in the tradition of the athletic games. He maintains a very deep respect for Anchises, his father, even after his death. When Aeneas visits the underworld, the pietas he has for Anchises is evidebnt. Later, the notion of pietas is made visible in Aeneas's son who takes on the great responsibility of gathering and leading the warriors. He respects Aeneas's role as a leader and makes every attempt possible to follow through with Aeneas's duties. The love that exists between fathers and sons, the ideal of pietas, is one of the most emotional bonds portrayed in the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. Use Of Literary Devices In A White Heron In A White Heron Sarah Orne Jewett really dramatizes Sylvia, the main character through using several different literary elements. He uses such things as diction, metaphors, imagery, narrative pace and point of view throughout the story which help the reader stay interested. Jewett's diction was very out of the ordinary. He used words and sayings that really caught your attention and mostly things you have not heard before. Jewett describes Sylvia as she is about to mount the great– pine tree. He says she began "with tingling, eager blood coursing the channels of her whole frame, with her bare feet and fingers, that pinched and held like a bird's claws to the monstrous ladder reaching up, up, almost to the sky itself. Jewett's description here can ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... For example, Jewett was saying how the tree seems to be getting longer and longer as Sylvia is going up and he stated that "it was like a great main–mast to the voyaging earth. Later, he also states that once Sylvia passed the last thorny bough and stood high in the tree top that Sylvia's face was like a pale star. He later said that the hawks "grey feathers were as soft as moths." This analogy could really make us, as readers, understand how soft they looked because almost everyone knows that if you touch a moth it turns into a dusty substance because of how soft they are. All of these word choices, metaphors and adjectives Jewett uses makes outstanding imagery for the reader. From the first line to the last you could picture just about everything, not only picture but feel as if you were there or in the situation. Jewett almost put an adjective in front of every noun he used, which made it stand out more. The best imagery Jewett used is when Sylvia reached the top of that tree and he said what she saw. Jewett stated that "there was a sea with the dawning sun making a golden dazzle over it, and toward the east flew two ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. Dido's 'Aeneas': Summary Summary: Dido finally admits that she has fallen for Aeneas to her sister, Anna, who is fine with her feelings and reminds Dido that they need a strong military. Juno gets upset with the lack of progress in the city and talks to Venus before agreeing that Dido and Aeneas need to marry and have go hunting and forced into a cave alone together to let everything fall into place itself. The goddess Rumor finds out about what happened in the cave and eventually has the story lead to a king, whom Dido refused, known as Iarbas, a son of Jupiter, who is very displeased and complains to his father. Jupiter then sends Mercury to hurry Aeneas along on his journey to found Rome and has Aeneas readying his fleet to leave in secret. When Dido confronts him, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It's no secret, especially to a high school teacher, that many forms of "love" are very temporary yet still can cause large amounts of problems because of the "he said, she said" situation. Because Dido was rushed into loving this strange man who she knew, relatively, very little about, but it wasn't her fault. Without the gods' agendas, Dido and Aeneas could've fallen in love naturally and together formed a city that could very well surpass the once great city of Troy, but alas, the gods played with them like pawns in their game of chess which allowed for the events which would forever change the course of history. To add to the troubles on top of that, Dido's jealous former suitor finds out that the woman he likes is being courted, again very easy for a high school teacher to picture that happening, and decides to do something about it, and by do something about it, I mean cry to his daddy which I'm also sure a high school teacher wouldn't be unfamiliar with. Because of these semi–artificial feelings, coupled with external pressure, it's no wonder why their relationship ended with one of them ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. Virgil vs. Homer in Underworld How does Virgil deviate from Homer in the underworld, and why? When comparing "The Aeneid" to "The Odyssey", it is impossible not to notice the similarity between Homer and Virgil 's poems. Both heroes leave Troy, granted one barely escapes and the other leaves victoriously, and both in one sense or the other are trying to reach their home, whether it is the old or future home. The adventures of the two heroes are incredibly similar on a number of accounts with the trip to the underworld being most intriguing. First of all it is important to understand that Homer and Virgil wrote their poems for different reasons; Homer 's "The Odyssey" was written for entertainment purposes, while Virgil 's "The Aeneid" was written in order to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Aeneas on the other hand is much more focused on the future; he is also trying to get home, but that home does not exist yet, besides that, while seeing his old friends he also finds out about the future of his generations and yet even more about the city he is on his way to establish. This could bring us to the point of Homer 's vs. Virgil 's reasons for writing their poems; as mentioned earlier, Homer wrote his poem for entertainment purposes. This explains why the majority of book eleven is made up of Odysseus meeting his old friends and great warriors of the war; through telling their stories, Homer entertained the readers and the audience by letting them imagine how the heroes act after their death (what still matters to them, which quarrels have not been forgotten etc.). Virgil on the other hand skips most of the greetings of Aeneas with old friends and focuses instead on the meeting with his father. There, while including sentimentality, the main point of the meeting is for Aeneas and the readers to find out about where the rulers of Rome came from. Aeneas in the underworld gets to see, although not speak to, his future son, the future Caesars and learns all about the glory of the future empire. Even the description of the underworld itself may fall ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. The Influence of Mythology on Literature and Society Essay The Influence of Mythology on Literature and Society Edith Hamilton is the author of the book Mythology. This book is about the Mythology of the Romans and Greeks through her eyes and the way she interprets it. In the beginning of the book Hamilton writes an introduction to Classical Mythology and how, and why it came about. She starts off by writing that Greek and Roman Mythology is meant to show us how people felt about the human race and about where they came from many years ago. She points out that Mythology describes the Earth when it was young and people cared for the Earth more than today. This is true, because in today?s world not many people are caring about the Earth and its going by us fast. She also points out that ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... An example would be how the Egyptian god?s have different body parts with other bodies and the Greek gods are humans. Hamilton states that the Egyptians made gods they thought up and made them in a way that no one has seen before. The Greeks therefore made their gods in there own image. That made it easier for them to understand them and know how they act. The major point Hamilton is showing in this introduction is that Mythology is a new to look at life and to understand it under a different light. Another point she states is that Greek Mythology it?s self, is so unique that it showed extreme beauty yet fear at that same time. The gods were not to be completely feared, but respected to the point where you didn?t anger them. Greek Mythology is also unique, because it doesn?t have many of the things that are in most religion or folklore. Hamilton states that Greek Mythology didn?t contain Magic or Witches, and in reality didn?t fear the dead, they actually pitied the dead. Hamilton?s main point in this whole introduction is that Mythology itself is completely and totally different from any other religion or folklore ever. Mythology was written in such a beautiful way that upon reading it, it seems real and it begins to take shape. She is also saying that Greek Mythology was in a way different than normal Mythology and therefore changed the face of Mythology forever. PART TWO: Aside from mortals and immortals in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. Tone And Mood In 'Sailing To Byzantium' Tone and Mood in "Sailing to Byzantium" Images How do the images listed on the left influence the tone or mood of this poem? Consider the author's attitude towards the physical body, aging, and nature as opposed to his position on intellect, art, immortalization, and artificiality. The young In one another's arms, birds in the trees –Those dying generations–at their song, This section of the poem is one that gives a very sad and depressing tone. The section states that death is inevitable and everyone will face it. The tone sets a mood that is thoughtful. It really makes the reader step back and reflect on life. This can be shown by the author's rather sadden view on aging. An aged man is but a paltry thing, A tattered coat upon a stick. This part sets an intense and harsh tone in a way. The harsh tone incorporated into this section gives the reader a sense of disappointment and sadness. This statement is meant to be a very stern one so readers can realize that aging isn't a great thing, or at least the author thinks so. I think the author is reflecting on himself aging and is afraid that he is becoming one step closer to dying and maybe even being forgotten. Consume my heart away; sick with desire And fastened to a dying animal ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The poem is again talking about mortality and aging. Just as the part above, you can tell that the author doesn't want to age. To the author, aging is a horrible thing and he fears it, which makes the reader feel sad and remorseful towards the author. I think this part of the poem really shines on the idea that once you get older people start thinking about you less and less. People always pay most attention to the youngest ones in a family. For example: things such as a newborn baby, a kid's first day of school, high school graduation, prom, and even marriage seem to be more important than an aging ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. George Orwell Use Of Conformity In 1984 A rebel is a person who rises in opposition against an established government; a person who refuses allegiance to and resists a ruling party. Every society's set of rules and regulations evokes the inner insurgent of a minority; George Orwell's dystopia demonstrates the execution of pursuing ones rebellious tendencies and the unconscious destruction that follows. In George Orwell's 1984, Orwell juxtaposes rebellion and conformity by using various techniques. The portrayal of London, the Prole District and the Golden Country, the contrast between the Parson's family unit and Winston's relationship with Julia along with the depiction of mind versus body are all ways in which Orwell chooses to analogize rebellion and conformity. Within Orwell's dystopia, London, the Golden Country and the Prole District play large roles in the way Winston and Julia not only act, but also speak of themselves and the Inner Party. London is a concrete jungle where, "...there seemed to be no colour in anything except the posters that were plastered everywhere." (Orwell 2). London is a setting of pure conformity; within London, Winston and Julia are confined to the strict policies bestowed upon them by the inner party. Winston is in a constant state of distress of being caught by the thought police and Julia is constantly ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In contrast to London, in the Golden Country, "the slanting rays of the sun glided the ground... the boughs of the elm trees were swaying very faintly in the breeze." (Orwell 30). In the Golden Country, Winston and Julia are free to say and act however they may please without worry of being seized by the thought police. Orwell utilizes the Golden Country as an opportunity for Winston and Julia to effortlessly practice their unorthodox behavior as political statements against the inner party and Big ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23. The Odyssey And Aeneid Vs. Today Essay 1: Hell in The Odyssey/Aeneid vs. Today As humans, we are always imagining what our lives will be like when we die. While the depictions of what hell or heaven may be from the ancient times and now, what has stayed consist is the idea of an afterlife altogether. In The Aeneid, Aeneas has his own version of what the underworld is. Hell is depicted in Book VI of The Aeneid where the Trojans sail back to Sicily where the death of Anchises is marked. Aeneas enters the underworld after meeting with Sibyl, who is a priestess at the Temple of Apollo and asks to enter so that he can visit his father. In order to enter and return from Hell, he has to find a golden branch and if it breaks off the tree with ease, then that will be his sign that he can enter. "So lift your eyes and search, and once you find it pull away the bough. It will come willingly, easily, if you are called by fate. If not, with all your strength you cannot conquer it, cannot lop it off with a sword's edge. (6.213–217)". A pair of doves direct him to the tree that he needs to chose the branch from and alas, he has entered into the underworld. When entering, Aeneas sees that there is a river called Acheron where the ferryman Charon transports spirits across the river, but not all souls can cross the river. Sibyl tells him that this is because those souls did not have a proper funeral and were not appreciated the way they were supposed to be. The souls that do pass have to line up in front of Minos to get ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. Figurative Language In Sailing The Byzantium Literature is always personal, always one man's vision of the world, one man's experience" (W.B. Yeats n.d.). Such perspicacity is evident in the works of William Butler Yeats, whose poetry reflects his fascination with mysticism and the days of yore. The poem "Sailing the Byzantium" illustrates how William Butler Yeats use of artistic diction and symbolism reveals the parallels between ancient civilization and the cycle of life and communicates the dual themes of obsolescence and perpetuity. Yeats' elegy, details a metaphoric spiritual journey of renewal to "the holy city" seeking intellectual refuge within an "artifice of eternity" (Yeats, Lines 16,24). His use of figurative language elicits both the somber and nostalgic tones evident throughout the poem. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... At the beginning of the second stanza, Yeats use of the metonymic phrase: "Aged man...A tattered coat upon a stick" poignantly conveys the not only narrator's image of his own aging mortal form but the insignificance of his existence among his youthful countrymen (Lines 9,10). Most notably, the use of dramatic metaphors in Line 11 and 12, "Soul clap its hands and sing...but studying Monuments of its own magnificence", personifies the soul as a song. In addition, it articulates the idea that one's soul achieves perpetuity, not through "sensual" song, but through the erudition of ancient civilization (Yeats, Lines 7, 11,14). Yeats' use of apostrophe and simile in Lines 17–22: "O sages ...As in gold mosaic ...Come from the holy fire, perne in gyre...Consume my heart away; sick with desire And fastened to a dying animal", illuminates the narrator's yearning to relinquish earthly chains. Furthermore, his use of assonance in Line 19, by which he accentuates the long 'i' sound of the words "fire" ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. 1984 Rhetorical Analysis In the novel 1984 written by George Orwell, the author uses contradiction as a rhetorical strategy to develop his critique of a totalitarian regime by slowly changing the thoughts of people to only correspond with the thoughts of the inner party and Big Brother himself. Throughout the novel, many things seem to be the complete opposite of what their names actually mean. Perhaps the first mention of this is in the beginning of the book where Winston is describing his flat. With a name such as "Victory Mansions," you'd think the building is nice and of high quality however this is truly not the case. The elevator hardly ever works, defeating the entire purpose, and... "The hallway [smells] of boiled cabbage and old rag mats," (Orwell 1). Plastered all over the building and streets of London are colorful signs meant to enlighten your heart toward Big Brother. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... To love Big Brother is to love having your freedom completely and utterly denounced. Now, these simple uses of contradiction can be taken in context, not everyone's opinion is the same on what they believe to be nice and who they want to believe in. However, to downright change the meaning of a word to it's exact opposite needs no opinion. With party slogans such as "war is peace, freedom is slavery and ignorance is strength," (Orwell 4), it is difficult to understand what the intentions of these slogans are. With further comprehension and deeper knowledge on using contradiction as a rhetorical strategy, it is known that their intentions are to trick people into believing an inaccurate statement. One key element that has been acknowledged is that these uses of contradiction are not used when describing the Golden Country. Orwell does this to show the difference between the typical totalitarian atmosphere in Winston's flat compared to the blissful Golden ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26. Role Of Fate In The Aeneid Mackenzie Kinsella Humanities 300 Pinkerton 18 February 2016 Selection from Virgil's The Aeneid In book VI of the Aeneid, Aeneas goes on a journey to see his father in the underworld. He faces many obstacles on his journey. Aeneas must travel through a large forest to find a golden branch that will grant him access to the underworld. The branch will only tear off the tree if it is in Aeneas' fate to travel to the underworld. With some help, Aeneas finds the tree and the branch comes off of the tree with ease, signifying that Aeneas is destined to go to the underworld. A prevalent theme throughout the entirety of the Aeneid is fate. Fate is something that gives the characters a sense of direction and an explanation for why certain things ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. Totemism And Religion Totemism is an aspect of religious belief in which centered towards the important of sacred objects called a "spirit–being" or "totem", where the totems tend to be based on relatively insignificant animals and plants. In Dhurkheim's conclusion " Since neither man nor nature have of themselves a sacred character, they must get it from another source. Aside from human individual and the physical world, ther should be some other reality, in relation to which this variety of delirium which all religion is in a sense, has a significance and an objective value. In other words, beyond those which we have called animistic and naturistic, there should be another sort of cult, more fundamental and more primitive, of which the first are only derived ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... J. F. McLennan was the first to try to connect totemism with general human history.On McLennan's articles "The Worship of Animals and Plants" (1870–71), he showed that totemism was not only a religion, but multiplicity of beliefs and practices, one from which considerably more advances religions had derived. L.H. Morgan's Ancient Society (1877) revealed that this religion was closely connected to the specific form of social organization that Dhurkheim had discussed in The Division of Labor – the devision of the social group into clans. In James Frazer's Totemism (1887), the documents accumulated that the same religion and social organization were increasingly observed and reported among the Australian aborigines. But his study was purely descriptive, making no effort to understand or explain totemism or the fundamental aspects of totemism. In Robertson Smith's Religion of the Semites (1889), he made the idea of totemism as the origin of sacrifice system and in the The Golden Bough (1890) Frazer draws upon the same ideas to the gods of classical antiquity and the folklore of European peasants. All these works, were constructed with little observations, for a true totemic religion had not yet been seen in its complete state. This gap has been filled only in recent years at Baldwin Spencer and F.J Gillen's Native Tribes of Central Australia (1899) and The Northern Tribes of Central Australia (1899), showing a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28. Examples Of Mythology In Women In Love Chapter no 2: Mythology in Women in Love by D. H Lawrence: D. H Lawrence and Women in Love: D.H Lawrence was an English writer, playwright, novelist, poet and critic. His works represent a comprehensive reflection upon the dehumanizing impacts of modernity and industrialization. Due to his opinions and rebels nature he faced severe criticism and he suffered official persecution, censorship and misrepresentation of his innovative work during his life. At the time of his death, his open notoriety was that of the pornographer who had squandered his significant abilities. E.M Forster wrote in the letter to the Nation and Atheneum (29 march 1930); "The greatest imaginative novelist of our generation." The influential Cambridge critic F. R. Leavis supported both his artistic veracity and his moral seriousness. Lawrence`s best known novels are Sons and Lovers, The Rainbow, Women in Love and Lady Chatterley`s Lover. In these novels he explores the potential outcomes for life inside of a modern setting. Lawrence ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... M. Daleski trends on mythological ground only to negate the contention that Eliseo Vivas advances in D. H Lawrence regarding Birkin effort to stone the moon in the chapter "Moony". Vivas resists that Birkin expletives the Syria Dea on the grounds that he fear the Vulva dentata and wishes to convert like the sodomitic eunch pastors of Cybele, an act which recommends to Gerlad in " Gladiatorial" the following chapter. Admitting Lawrence`s perusing of The Golden Bough, Daleski blames Vivas for over reading and rationally illustrate that "the castration rites [as cited by Frazer associated with the goddess make her an appropriate symbol of all that Birkin fears is destructive to the male."(P 170) While it is factual that study of the mythic allusions can prompt to over reading, one wishes that Daleski had sought after his conversation further, for Lawrence implies not only to Cybelle but also to her cousious Artemis, Aphrodite and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29. Similarities and Differences in the Aeneid and the Odyssey. Both the Odyssey and the Aeneid describe the journeys of the two Greek heroes –Odysseus and Aeneas, as they struggle towards their goal through the crises and deadly situations caused by the wrath of the gods upon them. In the Odyssey, we see that Poseidon (god of the sea/earth shaker) has a grudge against Odysseus while Athena, god of wisdom, aids him throughout his journey. Similarly in the Aeneid, we see that goddess Juno dislikes Aeneas as he is destined to destroy the city of Carthage loved by Juno during his mission to find a new land– Rome, whereas Aeneas' mother Venus aids him. In these epics, many points of similarity and differences arise such as the characters of the heroes, how their journeys are delayed by women obsessed with ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In some serious and important situations, Odysseus is more cunning and intellect than Aeneas. Something common in the two epics about their journey is that both Odysseus and Aeneas are distracted from what they are destined for; by the lust and arousal of women obsessed by love. In the Odyssey, Odysseus is first encountered by Circe's love and then by the over obsession of Calypso. Circe is an immortal goddess and enchantress who is extremely beautiful and sexy. In the Aeneid, Aeneas after reaching Carthage meets Dido who is a mortal woman and queen of Carthage. She is foreign, exotic, mysterious, sexually and politically potent. Talking about Odysseus, we see that Odysseus is approached by Hermes who warns him against Circe. She offers Odysseus to have sex with her and it happens. Odysseus now distracted, lives with her on her island for a year until his comrades remind him of Ithaca. The longest delay in Odysseus' journey is at the island of Calypso. Calypso lives alone on an exotic and beautiful island. After Odysseus crash lands here, he is rescued by her and held captive for seven years. Calypso loves Odysseus unconditionally and offers him immortality. Calypso could never impress Odysseus like Circe did. But in the Aeneid, we see that Aeneas loses sight of his mission of founding Rome in Italy. Dido makes Aeneas forget about what he is destined for as they fall in love. Both Dido and Circe keep men away from their ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30. Every Trip Is A Quest Chapter 1 Analysis Introduction: How'd He Do That? How do memory, symbol, and pattern affect the reading of literature? How does the recognition of patterns make it easier to read complicated literature? Discuss a time when your appreciation of a literary work was enhanced by understanding symbol or pattern. Response: When you're reading, it is incredible to have a decent memory. In the event that you recollect something you read the previous summer and after use that knowledge to compose an essay, you're style will improve. Symbol influences the way you read in light of the fact that when you perceive something typical like a man, place, or thing and contrast that with something more unpredictable like thought, feeling, or circumstance, it makes an entire new ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Contrast how it could be viewed by a reader from the twenty–first century with how it might be viewed by a contemporary reader. Focus on specific assumptions that the author makes, assumptions that would not make it in this century. Shakespeare's, The Taming of A Shrew, displays many ideas that would be considered sexist by anyone reading it today. The whole idea of the story is a young man trying to 'tame' his young wife into doing everything that he wants her to. He expects her to meet all of his needed desires and agree with anything that he says or does. During Shakespeare's time this was very common for women to be treated more like a servant rather than an actual wife or daughter. Today, of course, people (especially women) would not comply with the idea of men being the boss of everything and woman dutifully following their ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31. Wharton's Allusions In 'The Age Of Innocence' 2012530058 Zhou, Xuanchen American Lit Ms. Davis 27th Dec, 2015 Diana with Preserving Fluid in Veins and Savage Bride in an Opera Box: Wharton's Allusions in "The Age of Innocence" to Primitive and Pagan Myths and Beliefs When reading the comment of Archer made on Mrs. Welland's simulation of reluctance at the time she hears about the engagement of her daughter and Archer, comparing her action to the "Primitive" culture in which "savage bride is dragged with shrieks from her parents' tent (Wharton, 22).", most of the students of American Lit must be reminded of the allusion to the anthropology works as The Golden Bough made by Wharton's contemporary authors such as T.S.Eliot, who happened to have tortured us in a previous week. After going ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Her connection with wild nature (both the real, uncultivated nature and the "man's sphere" in society without protection), which is a major and substantial characteristic of Diana that shows her mystical power, is shown in the story by the impressions she left on Archer. He thought that at a "unpruned garden, the tumbledown house, and the oak–grove under which the dusk was gathering" seems to be " so exactly the place in which he ought to have found Madame Olenska (103)." When he founds her alone in the publicity, he asked her "But what on earth are you doing in this wilderness (105)?" Archer's mentioning of the oak–grove is another specific clue that leads to the identity of Diana, as she is actually "queen of the woods in general" and also "goddess of the oaks in particular (Frazer, II, 380)." Ellen's first name as the shortened version of "Helen" might also be an allusion to Diana, who is also known as "Helen of the Tree (Frazer, V, 292)." Besides, working in concert with May's marriage with Archer around Easter, the mutual confession of Countess Olenska and Archer takes place in middle of August, when Diana's own day is celebrated (Frazer, I, 12–14) (Scheick, 3). Moreover, the term "flower of life" with a little bit of ambiguity and inexplicability kind of resembles the term "heart of life" she used in her previous work, which refers to Diana– and thus readers could suggest that the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32. Sylvia Plath Allusions Written task 2 Sylvia Plath is not your average poet. Plath is a poet from the Confessional era who also suffered from depression. She uses a lot of similes, metaphors, and allusions in her poems, mainly Greek mythology. She uses mythological allusions including stories like Midas' Touch and Narcissus as well as historical allusions using Jews and concentration camps to add more depth and meaning. Plath refers to the story Midas' Touch in her poem In Midas' Country. Midas turns everything he touches into gold and she compares August to Midas saying it turns things gold. Plath states," August gives over its Midas touch, wind bares a flintier landscape". She is saying as August is ending, the gold is leaving nature and everything is getting darker. Plath is giving a more illustrative example of just how golden and bright everything was in August. August is known to be one of the hottest months with everything being sun kissed. She says," Apples gold on the bough, goldfinch, goldfish, golden tiger cat stock...". She claims everything is much more brighter and golden in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The poem Daddy, referencing the camps and Nazis, is supposed to be a negative sounding poem. "...an engine chuffing me off like a Jew. A Jew to Dachau, Auschwitz, Belsen," explains how Plath was feeling. The places listed are concentration camps where the Jews went, with her having felt like a Jew herself.Plath comparing herself to a Jew explains how distant she felt from her father.Obviously Jews and Nazis did not have a close relationship, so her calling her father a Nazi explains her feelings. "... with your Luftwaffe, your gobbledygoo. And your neat mustache and your Aryan eye,bright blue", is the description she gives her father. Neat mustache and bright blue eyes were traits of Nazis and her father had all of those and Luftwaffe was the German military. By comparing her father to a Nazi, it shows what kind of man he was to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33. Depictions of the Afterlife The afterlife as a residence for souls after death has long been a topic of discussion and debate. This idea intrigues many. As Christians we believe that heaven is a place where believers go where life there will be a continuation of their present life, while hell is a place of judgment and punishment where many experience severe treatment. Direct experience is the only way individuals can experience these concepts, but once we obtain the experience it cannot be shared. This ultimately makes us want to know more leading many to visualize the afterlife. Starting with the earliest Greek Epics, such as The Iliad, society has imagined an Underworld, a place beneath the Earth where souls go once the body dies. Our thoughts and expectations about such an idea have changed over time; the idea of the Underworld continues in many Greek and Latin poems and it still used today (Spiegel). The best descriptions of the afterlife are found in Dante's Divine Comedy. In his first book, The Inferno, Dante explores Hell, a place in which sinners dwell after they die. His account is mainly taken from Book VI of Virgil's The Aeneid, which describes Aeneas's journey into the Underworld to visit his father. These two works, written many years apart share similar ideas about life after death and it makes us consider the changes in society's thoughts over these times. There are obvious differences found between these two stories and they correlate with the different beliefs society has about the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34. Motifs And Symbols In The Aeneid There are many openions on "The Aeneid" but mine is of a good light. "The Aeneid" was a wonderful book with many themes motifs and symbols. The auther of "the Aeneid" was Publius Vergilius Maro also known as Virgil. Virgil is traditionally ranked as one of Rome's best poets.His Aeneid is thought of as the national epic of ancient Rome from the time of its making to present day. Virgil was bornin of Andes, near Mantua in Cisalpine Gaul. Scholars think Etruscan, Umbrian or Celtic descent by looking at the linguistic and ethnic markers of the region. it is also said that classmates considered Virgil to be extremely shy and reserved, and he was given the nickname "Parthenias" or "maiden" because of his social aloofness. Virgil seems to have ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... of course most of it is fictional yet it showes what life was like for thoes outside the group of the hero. There were also life leasons to learn in the book and maybe more then what i found if you take what was said in a diffrent meaning.they traveld Carthage. Impressed by Aeneas's acomplishments and sympathetic to his suffering, Dido falls head over heals with Aeneas. They live with echother as lovers for a while, until the gods remind Aeneas of his duty to creat a new city. He decides to go out once again once again. . As the Trojans made for Italy, winds blew them to Sicily, where they have games for Anchises who died . The women tired from the trip begin set fire to the ships, but rainfall puts the fires out. Aeneas goes into the underworld, guided by the Sibyl of Cumae. He is shown a pageant of the future history. King Latinus, the Italian ruler, extends his hospitality to Aeneas. Amata and Turnus cultivate enmity toward the newly arrived Trojans. While the Trojan leader is away, Turnus attacks. Aeneas returns to see his people embroiled in battle. Pallas, the child of Aeneas's new ally Evander, is killed by Turnus. They decide to spare any further carnage by a hand– to–hand duel between Aeneas and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 35. I Wandered Lonely As A Cloud, By William Wordsworth I can recall that day when I stumbled across William's beatific poem. The sky was painted with the richest and brightest of colors behind boughs of trees and lifeless houses. The air felt cordial, yearning for your embrace. After I read the poem I could feel myself unraveling. I consider myself as a great lover of nature and being out in the wilderness has gave me a new moral dimension in life. I am my best version out in nature therefore I have grew very fond of this poem. 'I wandered lonely as a cloud is one of the most loved and influential poems of William Wordsworth. It had been Inspired by Dorothoy's(his sister) diary extract which chronicles their peaceful promenading along a river near Grasmere, where they encountered a colony of radiant daffodils. The sight was so glorious which later on inspirited William to compile his recollection of one of his most precious memories. The poem immediately establishes of a dream–like state which is apparent by the use of the similie 'I wandered lonely as a cloud'. The noun 'cloud' is a airy and free–flowing notion that has connotations of seclusion that gives an impression to the readers that he is currently detached from the real world; unconcerned with its troubles. In addition, by the use of the personal pronoun 'I' gives greater emotion and depth to his language but simultaneously highlighting the inherent unity between men and nature (that was a prominent theme in William's poems). However, in contrary the pronoun 'I' ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36. Witch Hunt Research Paper Topic 1: The Witch Hunts Witch Hunts during the post middle ages were a tragic event that led to many people to be falsely accused for the act of witchcraft and devil worship. During the 15th to the 18th centuries Europe experienced a dramatic changed in socitity as it faced the Renascence, the Protestant Reformation, and the culmination of diverse societies, this would lead to the Church and many other Europeans weary of the supernatural to find and purge anyone who would be in league with the Satanic Cult. Since those who were accused of portraying to be a servant of the Devil, would be put on trial for their crime and would be subject to many forms of punishing trials that led to over 40,000 people were put to death. Since the belief of magic was popular during those times, the higher social class would be involved in developing the idea of Devil ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The lower levels of society would originally be the ones who suspected witchcraft that would only be exploited by the social elite, such as the church and rich aristocrats. The Catholic Church, while strong in many regions, was a dwindling force in many other parts of Europe because of the Protestant Reformation so in order to bring back authority of the church; it would be a good time to take advantage of the common people's fear of the Devil and eternal damnation this would bring many back into the fold and actually have people work for the church, using Bakhtin's idea of the carnivalesque on how the pardoned behavior that took place at that time, involving the use of torture to gain a confession was all for the glory of God in stopping the works of the Devil, even in small villages, neighbors turn against neighbors on the presumption of witchcraft, and back then it was a close–knit community that relied on each ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 37. Aeneas Book 6 Book 6 starts out with the Trojan fleet arriving on the shore of Italy. When Aeneas arrives on land he creates the temple of Apollo, and a preistess named Sibyl meets him. Aeneas then prays to Apollo to let him and his crew settle in Italy. Sibyl warns Aeneas that more trials still await in Italy. Aeneas then wonderes if Sibyl can gain him entrance to The Underworld, so that he can visit his father's spirit. Aeneas must have a sign from the gods, first. He is told to go into the forest and find a golden bough. If the bough breaks off easy, then it is fate. If the bough does not come off easily, then it is not fate, and he should not travel to The Underworld. The gods lead Aeneas to a desired tree. This tree does have a golden branch, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38. Eight Theories Of Religion Although broad in nature, religion is complex and mysterious, yet pure. Simply put, religion represents supernatural beliefs, where traditions and ideologies vary greatly. However, religion is greater than that of a belief, but rather a way of life. According to Mary Fisher, author of Living Religions, religion is something of a sacred reality, serving as a significance and lifestyle for millions of people around the world (2). Nonetheless, figures such as E.B. Taylor, J.G. Frazer, Sigmund Freud, Émilie Durkheim, and Karl Marx have analyzed the mystery of faith, bringing new meaning and definition to the subject. E.B. Taylor was awed by the many cultures of the world. According to Daniel Pals, author of Eight Theories of Religions, E.B. Taylor described religion as a "belief in spiritual beings" (26). In order to encompass the vast differences among religions, such as monotheism and polytheism, E.B. Taylor examined primitive people, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Frazer, contrary to E.B. Taylor, examined the principles of magic behind religion. According to Daniel Pals, J.G. Frazer composed the Golden Bough, analyzing the connections of magical and spiritual topics in order to theorize the concept of religion (36). J.G. Frazer also believed that science failed to truly explain the subject of supernatural beliefs and beings (45). Sigmund Freud initially regarded religion as somewhat of an illusion. In Eight Theories of Religion, Daniel Pals outlines Sigmund Freud's views on religion as human dreams (56). However, Sigmund Freud recognized the concept of promise in religion, serving as a hopeful desire for many (73). Émilie Durkheim viewed religion as a unified, sacred concept. Focusing on the fundamentals of religion in the text The Elementary Forms, Émilie Durkheim veered from the supernatural beliefs of Taylor, Frazer, and Sigmund, according to Daniel Pals (95). Rather, Émilie Durkheim described religion as a "sacred thing," where practices unite into a moral community, or a church ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 39. Aha Moment: A Micro Theme On An Aesthetic Experience After a long day of self–contemplation and a sleepless night of retrospection, it is now 3 AM Wednesday morning and before me awaits a blank white sheet of paper, intimidating me, taunting me as if saying, "go ahead write this micro theme on an aesthetic experience". How do I choose that "aha moment" from a life well lived? In my sixty–two years of life I have had many aesthetic experiences each adding a single facet to the human being that I am in this movement. I breathe in deep, I will myself to relax and to write about the beauty in a single deep breath. Wait, that is a too broad and too deep of a topic for this micro theme so I will narrow it down to a breath that I remember clearly. My border collie Janta and I, took a trip to explore the central and northern coastal areas of California. We left our home in Santa Barbara, California three or four days before with one ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The sunlight tinting the clouds with pink and golden hues reminding me of a Maxwell Parish painting I had once owned. There was a heavy fog and mist coming in off the Pacific Ocean into the San Francisco Bay I noticed that the fog clung to the bottom of the Golden Gate Bridge. Sounds of gulls screeching and fog horns moaning, issuing warning of possible danger are coming in off the bay overwhelmed my senses. I did not take the time to breath in this wondrous moment as I should have. It is only now though this reflection that I appreciate the beauty. I had a goal, a destination. I was a force of nature not to be deterred. So onward north I traveled passing monumental sites with a lackadaisical attitude. Not understanding that I needed to breath in, slowdown and enjoy the singular experience of the once in lifetime moments that were flying past me as I raced down the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...