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The Divine Wind Friendship Quotes
In Garry Disher's novel, The Divine Wind, the protagonist, Hartley Penrose, reflects on his life
growing up in Broome during World War Two. In many ways, his 'story' is about the changing
nature of friendships during his teenage years. Friendship plays a significant role in the novel but
does not make up the whole story. Love, war, and betrayal however also plays a substantial role in
Hart approach towards his peers throughout the novel.
Disher's book, 'The Divine Wind', shows friendship in some area in the text. The main friendship in
the text is between Alice and Mitsy. Alice and Mitsy has a close friendship throughout the novel
until Mitsy lost her father from the cyclone and she needed time to be with her mother. While doing
this Alice ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Jealousy throughout the story is shown by Hart towards Jamie over Mitsy."[Hart] envied [Jamie],
[he is] jealous [and has] pit[y on] [him]self." Hart and Jamie's friendship started off well when Hart
approach Jamie to invite him to his birthday party. Hart and Jamie have always been close together
until Jamie started going to the cinema with Alice, Mitsy, and Hart. Hart starts to get jealous of
Jamie being near Mitsy. Hart's jealousy slowly grew and once he starts to follow Jamie to see
whether he is secretly meeting up with Mitsy without Hart knowing. Hart's jealousy reaches a peak
when Jamie is in the water and Hart has to stop and think whether he has to save him from drowning
or letting him die. Hart's keeps this jealousy of Jamie and never gets to reconcile with him because
Jamie died in a plane crash. Therefore jealousy plays a role in the
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Hippocrates: The Four Humors In The External Body
The Classical Age of Greece, not only underwent a remarkable cultural change, but it also marked a
great turning point of clinical medicine, where the perception of the supernatural as a healing power
and medicine was divorced. This is supported by Lambert as he addresses that "The transition from
a priestly to lay a profession of medicine was aided by a group of Greek thinkers and students of
human life and death and the illness of man and the conditions of their occurrence." Amongst those
great thinkers was Hippocrates, one of Greece's most influential scientist and physician.
Hippocrates, born in Cos, was destined to a medical practice path for "he was the son of Herakleides
and belonged to a family of physicians who claimed their ancestry from Asclepius, the god of
medicine." Hippocrates opposed the foundation of medicine of ancient Greece. Hippocrates strongly
believed that there should be a separation between all supernatural force and disease. He dismissed
the religious and magical approach and confided towards a logical interpretation for illness and
disease. He profoundly observed diseases in detail and accordingly focused in diagnosis more rather
than treatment. It was Hippocrates that made the leap ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The four humors in the body, according to Hippocrates consisted of blood, phlegm, yellow bile and
black bile.This theory introduced a new way of approaching disease primarily based on objective
observation of the external body. Hippocrates speculated that in good health, the body was in the
state of equilibrium, in respect to the humors. Each humor was associated to a pair of qualities:
coldness, hotness, dryness and wetness. Blood was linked to the hot and wet elements; phlegm to
cold and wet; yellow bile to hot and dry; and black bile to cold and dry. Altogether, Hippocrates
established a diagnosis system that was followed by many physicians during the time and to this day
a modified version of his diagnosis system is applied to medical
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Analysis of "The Sound of the Sea" by Henry Wadswort...
"The Sound of the Sea" is a sonnet by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, describing the sounds of the
sea and relating it to human inspiration. Through only auditory images of the sea and other powerful
natural forces, Longfellow effectively alludes to the nature of human inspiration. Through detailed
and sensory imagery, Longfellow communicates the subtle details of the human soul and how
inspiration functions.
"The Sound of the Sea" consists of fourteen lines and a particular rhyme scheme (abba abba cde
cde). The first eight lines of the poem consist of one drawn out sentence, which is the description of
the sound of the sea and other natural forces, which then in the final sestet, which also consists of
only one sentence, are used by ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
These two concepts are intrinsically interlinked, and Longfellow uses this poem structure to further
this concept, which is that inspiration comes from within you because God is within you, and he
uses natural imagery to communicate God within nature.
In conclusion, "The Sound of the Sea" effectively creates a parallel between the metaphor of the
sound of the sea with the divine nature of inspiration. Longfellow does so effectively through finely
detailed imagery that gives rather precise insight into the human
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Role Of Gods In The Odyssey
The problematic return of Odysseus' to his homeland was described by The Odyssey. About ten
years have elapsed since the end of the Trojan War, and it is observed that Odysseus who is seen to
be the most cursed of all the present living things has been missing and many individuals supposed
that he was dead. In the narrative, it can be seen that gods play a crucial role in the destiny of
Odysseus as well as many other characters. Contrary to the suggestion by Telemachus that, "Zeus is
who gives what he wants to every man on earth" (1.368–369); the extent of the role of gods is not
unqualified. Even though Zeus is observed to possess' power, his explanation of how individuals
meet their fate is correctly depicted in the narrative. Zeus appropriately pointed out that, "Mortals!
They are always blaming the gods for their troubles when their own witlessness causes them more
than they were destined for!" (1.37–39). In this case, many of the said mortals aggravate the ill fate
by ignoring the warnings of gods and making rash decisions. The gods often aid humans in need and
are also not always disrupting mortal lives. More often than not, mortals who benefit greatly are
those who effectively court the favor of the gods. No one god's power is insurmountable while the
god's strengths are not questionable. The wrath of the gods can be escaped as they can be
outsmarted. In correspondence with the statement by Zeus, the Odyssey eventually portrayed human
freedom as limited though
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Ralph Presents The Success Of The Christian On The Campaign
Ralph presents the success of the Christian on the campaign resulting from Gods intervention on
their behalf. The role played by god as the driving force in the crusade. With the progression of
Gesta Tancredi, God is credited as giving the upper edge to the followers of Christ over the enemies
who and the followers of Mohamet. Ralph credits God with giving courage and wisdom to the
Crusaders. When the odds were against the Christians he showed them the way to victory or
salvation. Ralph presents the primary motive for the Crusade as a service on behalf the Lord. It is
this reason why he credits God when the Christian armies are victorious and to why they kept
pushing even when facing defeat.
Ralph presents that the purpose of the Crusade was a service to God . He states that military life
conflicted with Christian principles on murder. Pope Urban granted remission of all sins for
Christians who participated in the campaign to reclaim the holy land in the name of Lord. Tancred, a
Norman leader participated in the first crusade benefited from this proclamation . Ralph describes
Tancred with having a great battle spirit matched with his devotion for Christ. For the crusade
Tancred took up his sword in the service of Christ. At the begging of the campaign during the
crossing from Italy on the way to Byzantium, the safe passage of Tancred and Bohemond was
possible with gifts and prayers to God . When the king of Alexios of Constantinople heard that
Bohemond was approaching his
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The Divine Wind Analysis
The novel The Divine Wind (1998) by Garry Disher and the 2003 film, Japanese Story, directed by
Sue Brooks both explore the theme of 'love' through the use of novel and film techniques. Through
the studying of the context and textual form of both of these texts, a greater understanding of the
important ideas is achieved. This includes exploring the context, the characters and the key theme of
love. The Divine Wind's story is set in the backdrop of World War II, where Australia's relationship
with Japan is at its weakest. The use of time–shifts and the overall cyclic nature allows the audience
to garner a greater knowledge of the context. It is set in the 1930's and 40's in the city of Broome,
Western Australia. " We lived at he southern end ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In the early stages of the film, Sandy is portrayed as being distanced from life. This is something
that her friends picks up upon when her friend states that, "Even when your here, your not here."
Through her budding relationship with Hiromitsu, Sandy evolves from her fractured sense of self to
embracing life and what it offers. However originally, this connection starts poorly. Sandy sees him
as, "Some Japanese prick" while he believes she is a gruff 'hostess.' This relationship is expanded
further later in when they get bogged in the desert overnight. This scene serves as the catalyst for the
beginning of their intimate relationship and the transformation of Hiromitsu. Over the space of 24
hours he is dubbed, 'Hiro the Hero.' Following this scene the previous awkwardness and barriers in
their relationship are dismissed for a more free–flowing and comfortable experience. The cultural
and personality barriers are broken down and this allows for greater honesty between the two.
Through the of his suit, the camera and the formality of the trip, we explore Hiromitsu's adaption to
the 'Australian way of
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Role Of Gods In The Odyssey
The Odyssey details Odysseus' arduous return to his homeland. Ten years have passed since the end
of the Trojan war and Odysseus, the "most cursed man alive", has been missing and presumed dead
by many. (10.79). Throughout the novel, gods play a significant role in the fate of Odysseus and
other characters. The extent of the gods' role though is not unqualified, contrary to Telemachus'
suggestion that, "Zeus is to blame./He deals to each and every/ laborer on this earth whatever doom
he pleases" (1.401–403). While Zeus does have this power, his description of how humans meet
their fate is more accurately depicted throughout the novel. As he aptly points out, "from us alone,
the say, come all their miseries, yes,/ but they themselves, with their own reckless ways,/ compound
their pain beyond their proper share" (1.38–52). While the gods do doom certain mortals, many of
these mortals exacerbate their ill fate by making rash decisions and ignoring the gods' warnings. The
gods are also not always disrupting mortals lives; they often aid mortals in need. In fact, mortals
who effectively court the favor of the gods often benefit greatly. While the gods' powers are
unquestionable, no one god's power is insurmountable. Gods can be outsmarted and their wrath
escaped. The Odyssey, in congruence with Zeus' statement, ultimately, portrays human freedom as
existent, but limited.
While mortals do not unjustly complain about their fates, they fail to acknowledge that they are also
responsible for their ill fate, as mortals themselves, possess a sizable degree of control. There is little
doubt that Odysseus and his crew are unlucky, but had it not been for their brash decisions they
would have reached Ithaca much sooner. After Odysseus cunningly escapes the Cyclops,
Polyphemos, his pride gets the best of him, as taunts the Polyphemos proclaiming, "if any man on
the face of the earth should ask you/ who blinded you, shamed you so–say Odysseus/ raider of
cities, he gouged out your eye" (9.559–561). Odysseus' arrogance furthers his misfortune, since
Polyphemos is Poseidon's son. Polyphemos proceeds to ask his father to never allow Odysseus to
return and if Odysseus returns home that it be well over due and without his crew;
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Chinese Medicine Vs Greek Medicine Essay
Similarities and Differences between Greek and Chinese Medicine When one compares Greek
medical philosophy to Chinese medical philosophy there will be distinct similarities and differences
that stand out. These similarities and differences become apparent when comparing natural and
supernatural beliefs, as well as when researching the functions and physiology of the body itself.
Another fascinating point, both Greek and Chinese medical philosophy believed in magic and used
it when practicing medicine. Both philosophies believed in the idea of dramatic wind change in
regards to sickness. There is also a cautious balance both perceived by Greek and Chinese medical
philosophy between the body and the seasons, and five natural phenomena. Most Greek
practitioners believed in supernatural divine visitations relating ... Show more content on
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These humors, or bodily fluids, each consist of a season, element, and temperaments. For example,
phlegm is a yellowish liquid when someone has a cold. Phlegm usually occurs during colder
weather, with a water–like substance, traveling from the brain to the nostrils. The temperament of
phlegm is phlegmatic, which has characteristics of a peaceful and calm attitude. Greek medical
philosophy believed the body and the seasons balanced each other through the humoral process.
Tsou Yen was a Chinese medical philosopher who developed the five tangible natural phenomena.
These phenomena arose from the relationships of metal, wood, fire, water, and soil. Thusly, water
puts out fire, fire dissolves metal, metal cuts through wood, wood conquers the soil, and soil takes in
the water. This connection between elements is a process of destruction and regeneration that is
perceived to be mutual. Both Greek and Chinese philosophy believed these two concepts of health
and disease, balanced each other through body and seasons, and five elements of a natural
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analysis of "The Sound of the Sea" by Henry Wadswort...
"The Sound of the Sea" is a sonnet by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, describing the sounds of the
sea and relating it to human inspiration. Through only auditory images of the sea and other powerful
natural forces, Longfellow effectively alludes to the nature of human inspiration. Through detailed
and sensory imagery, Longfellow communicates the subtle details of the human soul and how
inspiration functions.
"The Sound of the Sea" consists of fourteen lines and a particular rhyme scheme (abba abba cde
cde). The first eight lines of the poem consist of one drawn out sentence, which is the description of
the sound of the sea and other natural forces, which then in the final sestet, which also consists of
only one sentence, are used by ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Furthermore the labial sounds of the letters "p" and "b" in "pebbly beaches" give an uneven
pronunciation to the words, which are contrasted with the smooth drawn out "ar", "ide" sounds in
the words far, wide and tide.
This contrast serves to communicate the scattered nature of our consciousness with the unity,
elegance and fluidity of our subconscious. Furthermore, these drawn out sounds serve to also further
the imagery of the tide's "uninterrupted sweep" which is particularly effective in conveying the
image of the wave rushing to envelope the shore, the word "uninterrupted" conveying this sense that
the wave of inspiration is all smooth and relentless. This imagery is furthered by the 3 line–long
segment, uninterrupted by punctuation. Yet, the central point made in these four lines is when the
speaker states that "(he) heard" the waves. The description of the sea gives you a mental image, but
Longfellow stresses upon the fact that the speaker only hears the tide, as this can be seen reflected in
the title of the poem "The Sound of the Sea". Hearing is an auditory action that allows one to be
aware of the presence of the object through the sound, but not visually or physically grasp it. This
suggests that inspiration is similar, in the sense that one can be aware of it but cannot consciously
grasp, control or dominate it.
In the fourth line, Longfellow states that it's "A voice" from the "silence of the deep". Here, the
reader once
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Racism in Divine Wind by Gary Disher Essay
Today I want to address the issues of the novel Divine Wind authored by Gary Disher.
Throughout the novel many problems occur. Some of the main problems are racial and equality
issues. Events in this book show how prejudice and intolerance can ruin numerous friendships and
change lives.
When WWII was declared in Broome, Western Australia 1939 to 1945 Japan became Australia's
enemy, Asia is approximately 3,862 miles away from the coast of Broome, due to this, people from
Asia that country looking for an escape would easily get on a boat an sail to the tip, Broome then
suddenly exposed to more people who are different from the norm.
Concerns about the Japanese–Australians as well as Aboriginals had an impact on Australians as
they ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Australia in this time was quite defensive about whom they trusted. Even Japanese–Australians,
they had an issue towards them simply because the higher authorities thought they would turn on
them.
Disher tries to imply his view that loyalty within the authorities was at high demand and this
portrays the distrust they held against anyone who questioned them. The judgment against the
aboriginal and Japanese people increased during the war period. An example for this would be the
name calling by the locals at the Penrose family even though they stayed loyal towards each other
and their friends.
ABORIGINAL RACISM
In the chapter 'Desired earth' there was a discussion between Morrissey who is a military
commander, Lester Webb, Carl and Alice who takes care of derby whom is aboriginal.
"The abos are going to be a liability if the japs land" Morrissey to Carl
And "if the abos cause trouble we can shoot them, no questions asked" Lester to Alice
They all had a discussion about the 'foreign' people and how they would turn against Australian
people, all three men made harsh statements while Alice stood up for what she believed. They as in
aboriginal and Japanese people are not bad.
JAPANESE INTERNMENT (concentration camps for Japanese people)
During WWII and around that time period things got pretty heated towards different races, Chinese
taxi drivers were bashed and when they would be selling their goods at markets to get money to
even survive they would
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Racial Racism In Gary Disher's The Divine Wind
Gary Disher's socially provocative Australian historical drama novel The Divine Wind (1998) set in
the Australian pearling town of Broome, provides a thought–provoking and contemporary outlook
on racial prejudice, isolation and the loss of rights to adulthood during the onset of World War11.
Disher establishes this through a range of characters of differing ages and cultural backgrounds,
evoking a war–devastated Australia and its effects on young adults forced to leave their childhood
behind. Written as a series of melancholic recollections, the seemingly simple novel conveys the
messages of a violent history, as it explores the complexity of the relationships between racially
diverse characters during the onset of WW11. The novel follows a young and ambitious Hartley
Penrose who faces challenges with discovering his maturity/identity, serving as a transition from his
past to his future. The Divine Wind utilizes the characters' ideas, experiences, beliefs, and values to
explore the central themes, the racial prejudice between the white race and other ethnicities, the
regional and urban divide and the growing up and loss of rights to adulthood. The Divine Wind
utilizes conventions and ideas from the drama genre to communicate these central themes which are
still prevalent in today's modern society.
The racist attitudes of the time are personified by the subordinate characters in the book.
Racisms plays a key role in Disher's novel The Divine Wind and it still plays a
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Divine Wind Analysis
The Divine Wind, written by Garry Disher, is a novel in which not only shows and describes the
struggle of characters during World War II in Broome, Australia, but also the many aspects of
prejudice which affect namingly Ida Penrose, Mitsy Sennosuke, and Magistrate Killian. Ida Penrose,
mother of the narrator, hartley, is arguable one of the most prejudiced characters throughout The
Divine Wind. Ida has an anglocentric background which has shaped her prejudiced perspectives.
She has a negative, biased view of all those who are not caucasian, or those who do not share the
same anglocentric lifestyle as her. Early in the novel, Hartley has strong feelings about his mother,
Ida, stating that It's even possible that she continued to love my ... Show more content on
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However, Magistrate Killian had suspicions that the Sennosukes were aiding the Japanese during
WWII and warranted a search , in which Mitsy reacted with That's Right, I've got a bomb hidden
under me and a radio in my undies. Mitsy was subject to much racial prejudice at this point, and
even though she when the Japanese bomb had hit Broome, she had the urge to get down to the
harbour. To aid the people in the water, (the)people dying, and to help those who were injured, even
those who had prejudiced views against her. Mitsy suffers from a large amount of racial abuse, most
especially after the bombing of Broome. Her and her mother were sent to an internment camp even
though Mitsy was born in Australia. Yet she shows no unjust behaviour or hatred towards others,
just frustration for them looking down on (Mitsy), just because (she's) Japanese. Magistrate Kilian.
Another white Australian with Ango–centric views. He is self righteous because of his title.
However, Mr Kilian treats and abuses others that are racially different, such as when to discussing a
tropical Australian paradise during a dinner party with the Penroses. The question came from Jamie,
who does all the work while we sit outside in the sun, dad? In which Magistrate Kilian rebuked
with, we may need some black workers. As Mr
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Differences Between The Renaissance And Romantic Period...
British literature is constantly evolving. This became overwhelmingly apparent in the survey of
literature from the varying literary periods analyzed in English III. The reason for such is the ever–
changing nation in which the authors lived. The stark differences in life during the Renaissance and
Romantic Era resulted in authors' writing with the intention to convey different themes. Specifically,
one key theme of the Renaissance was the role of God in people's lives, which manifests itself in
John Donne's sermon "Meditation 17" was well as John Milton's poem "When I Consider How My
Light Is Spent." In the Romantic Era, one theme around which writers tended to focus was the
beauty and power of nature. This theme is overwhelmingly clear in William Wordsworth's poem
"The World Is Too Much with Us" and Percy Shelley's poem "Ode to the West Wind." A theme
nearly omnipresent in the Renaissance was the role of God in people's lives. One major work it
appears in is John Milton's "When I Consider How My Light Is Spent." In this sonnet, Milton
reflects on his blindness and its impact to his standing as a Christian. This is evident when he
"fondly" asks, "Doth God exact day–labor, light denied?" In other words, he is asking God whether
he still demands good works that may not be possible to to his disability. The answer to such
question is a clear no, as "God doth not need... man's work." Moreover, this "murmur" elaborates its
position, that whoever best accepts life's burdens ("His
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Finding Identity In Peter Christen Asbjornsen's East Of...
Peter Christen Asbjornsen's East of the Sun and West of the Moon is a Norwegian fairy tale that
revolves around the journey of a young woman who is unknowingly married off to a prince trapped
in the form of a polar bear. She is forbidden see him at night and is put through an impossible trial
once she discovers his identity. Likewise, Apuleius' version of Cupid and Psyche tells of Psyche, a
beautiful young woman, who finds herself unknowingly married to Cupid. She too is forbidden from
discovering his identity by night however, her curiosity leads her to uncover the truth and she is put
through various trials in order to win back Cupid. To tell these remarkable tales, Asbjornsen and
Apuleius both implement eerily similar themes to present an ... Show more content on
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In East of the Sun and West of the Moon, the heroine must travel to a land that is simply known as
East of the Sun and West of the Moon to retrieve her husband. However, she has not an inkling of
knowledge of how to get there and decides to enlist the help of the East Wind, but confesses that he
has never blown to the land that she is looking for and thus states that he will take her "to [his]
brother the West Wind, maybe he knows." (Asbjornsen 20). The West Wind then takes her to the
South Wind, who then takes her to the North Wind who is able to finally bring her to the land her
prince has fled to. Impossible tasks are undergone by Psyche as well, which Venus puts forth in her
endeavor to stop Psyche from having her beloved son. In her first trial, Psyche is ordered to sort a
vast heap of mixed grains, but "an ant came to her rescue and summoned his army to isolate each
different grain." (Morford 215) In the second task, "a reed murmured instructions" (215) on how to
accomplish her task and she succeeded. In the third task she was to fill a jar of water from the
stream in the Underworld and "the eagle of Jupiter swooped down and filled the jar for Psyche."
(215). In the final task, Cupid himself helps her by putting sleep back into the box that she was
ordered to bring from the Underworld. An
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The Life Of The Divine Comedy
A piece of literature written to walk people through life, and what is waiting for them after. The
Divine Comedy was written by a man of politics, relating his content to the events of his everyday
life. Moving deeper into the substance of the writing, there are three major sections represented,
Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso. Furthermore, we will take a look at the nine circles of hell
depicted in the Divine Comedy.
Dante Alghieri's life leading up to the writing the Divine Comedy. Dante was known for engaging in
political agenda through his life and his writing. He was so into politics that he ran, and was elected
as one of the six priors of Florence in 1300. The priors were seen as a high group in the public eye
and only solidified his involvement in the government. His reign couldn't last forever though, and he
was exiled by the Black Guelfs upon their return to power. Dante greatly incorporated Florence
politics and society into the Divine Comedy because of his experience and knowledge on the
subjects. Dante is recorded to have traveled city to city in the hopes of finding military assistance in
finding justice for his unjust exile (Kumar . ) Along with that, he wanted to fight to bring the White
Guelfs back in power. Bringing this idea together, Akash Kumar wrote, "settling for a presence in
the court of certain signori (political and military leaders) such as the Malaspina family in
Lunigiana, Cangrande della Scala in Verona, and finally Guido Novello of Ravenna.
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Essay about Mobey Dick
Herman Melville's Moby Dick is a book which can be read as a general metaphor for the battle
between the evil powers of the Devil versus the divine powers of God and Jesus, both try to obtain
the souls of mankind in order to assist in each other's destruction. In this metaphor, the Devil is
shown through the person of Captain Ahab, God becomes nature, Jesus is seen as the White Whale,
and the representation of mankind is the crew. The voyage of the Pequod, therefore, is a
representation of a similar voyage of mankind on earth, until the death of Jesus, during the whole
thing the influences of these three "supernatural forces" are connected. Thus, the basis of this idea is
that ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
"The hand of fate had snatched all their souls, and by the stirring perils of the previous day;
the rack of the past night's suspense; the fixed, unfearing, blind, reckless way in which their wild
craft went plunging towards its flying mark; by all these things, their hearts were bowled along. The
wind that made great bellied sails, and rushed the vessel on by arms invisible as irresistible; this
seemed the symbol of that unseen agency which so enslaved them to the race," (p.606)
Relating to the metaphor, this passage can be viewed as giving the possibility of God as symbolized
through the medium of nature in Moby Dick. The "wind", thought about in this sense, is an
"unseen agency" of the motivation of God, which leads men's souls to the right paths.
However, it is not a representational term found just in Melville's book. This "wind"
appears as an indication of God in the opening lines of the book of Genesis, and can also
represented when God breathes life into man. Another similarity between the Biblical representation
of God and this passage is shown through the thought of arms. Just as God acts in the Bible by
stretching out his right arm and commanding good or
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Divine Wind Analysis
The novel The Divine Wind (1998) by Garry Disher and the 2003 film, Japanese Story, directed by
Sue Brooks both explore the common theme of 'love' through the use of novel and film techniques.
Through the studying of the context and textual form of both of these texts, a greater understanding
of the important ideas is achieved.
The geographical setting in the novel, The Divine Wind, plays a key role in its story. It is set in the
backdrop of World War II, where Australia's relationship with Japan is its weakest. Succession and
mistrust of the Japanese is reflected even in reference to those who were born in Australia. The use
of time–shifts and the overall cyclic nature allows for the audience to garner greater knowledge of
the context. It is set in the 1930's and 40's in the 'frontier town' of Broom, Western Australia. "We
lived at the southern end of Broome, where many of the master pearlers lived." Due to the
geographical isolation, the main characters, Hart and Mitsy, often feel marginalised from society.
This tyranny of distance reflects upon their ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
It too showcases examples of the isolation and the significant role of the landscape, often becoming
a 3rd character. The opening scene, through a range of panoramic shots, introduces as to the
Australian culture. Sue Brook's successfully uses native music, colours such as yellow, white and
red, and high angle shots to explore the isolation and it allows for the audience to be drawn into this
environment. There are comparisons made between the differing density of population between the
two cultures of Australia and Japan. One of the main characters, Hiromitsu, an Japanese business
man, states this, "In Australia you have lots of space, no people. In Japan we have lots of people, no
space." This environment serves a prominent role in the relationship of Hiromitsu and Sandy as
forces of nature bring them
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
What Does The Tyger Mean
An Analysis of William Blake's "The Tyger" William Blake is known for two collections of poems,
those collections are Songs of Innocence (1789) and it was added onto with Songs of Experience
(1794). It is from those collections that he draws out his innermost thoughts on life often looking at
"a being of God" or "the very human existence." In his poem "The Tyger" he used numerous literary
devices that center on divine creation ultimately putting beauty and destruction hand in hand, it does
this through the lens of a Romantic Era poet. To first understand the poem by Blake it must first be
dissected. The first stanza had a set of word choice that gave a question that was expanded upon by
each stanza following the first. This question was: What immortal hand or eye, Could frame thy
fearful symmetry? (lines 3–4). It is from that moment that the poem eludes to a being above through
the use of the word "immortal", and considering the others works done by Blake it can be assured
that this being that is eluded to as a crafter is God. The word choice gave way to another intriguing
piece of evidence for Romanticism and that was the use of the words "fearful" and "symmetry"
together. Symmetry in art forms beauty. It is said that the more ... Show more content on
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This stanza was vaguer than the stanzas previously because it refers to a more broad choice of
words, however two words add substance to the thesis and they are the use of "shoulder" in line 9,
and the use of "dread" in line 12. The shoulder reference refers to the strength and symbol of
strength and muscle needed to build something so beautiful and so deadly. The dread reference
points out the unknown or fear building in what is unknown which points towards the idea that
Blake was putting fear and beauty together as one in this
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Fate Versus the Will of Juno Essays
Virgil is considered the most renowned Latin poet, according to the work "Divine Intervention,
Supremacy of Fate in The Aeneid." He is the writer of the epic poem The Aeneid. Virgil's epic is a
continuation of Homer's The Iliad. The Aeneid is very much like The Iliad. In The Iliad, the men and
gods are a driving power of the Trojan War, as are the men and gods a driving power of Aeneas's
journey in The Aeneid, but there is a stronger power driving Aeneas on his journey. It is the same
power to which the characters of The Iliad are subject, and that is the power of fate. In The Aeneid
the men and gods draw the battle lines. Some want Aeneas to succeed on his journey to Latium.
Others want him to fail. Still other characters are just on the ... Show more content on
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Jupiter says to Venus, "Relieve yourself of fear, my lady of Cythera...the fate of your children stands
unchanged, I swear..." and that "On [the Romans] I set no limits, space or time...I have granted them
power, empire without end" (qtd. in "Divine" 2). So the god of the gods has spoken that fate will
prevail ("Divine"2). Jupiter represents fate and Juno is the antagonist, comments Woodworth (115).
Jupiter's and Fate's will are the same. Continuing throughout the epic poem Jupiter will help to
insure that Aeneas fulfills his destiny (Woodson 115).
According to "Divine Intervention, Supremacy of Fate in The Aeneid", Aeneas's mother Venus loves
her son as much as Juno hates him (2). Venus struggles to keep Juno from harming Aeneas . Venus
worries that the Trojans will not be accepted at the city of Carthage. Before Aeneas arrives at
Carthage, Venus sends the god of love, Cupid, into the city. Cupid is told to use his gifts to make
Dido, Queen of Carthage, fall madly in love with Aeneas. The plan works very well. Juno sees
Dido's love for Aeneas as opportunity to delay his journey to Italy ("Divine" 2). According to Virgil,
one day while Dido and Aeneas are hunting in the forest, Juno summons a storm (101). Dido and
Aeneas take cover in a cave. They both sleep together while in the cave. Dido considers this a
marriage (Virgil 102). Juno now hopes Aeneas will not leave Carthage. By not leaving, Aeneas will
not
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Anne Bradstreet's Puritan Beliefs In The Greatness Of God
Puritans in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries are constantly portrayed as devout believers in
the greatness of God. Puritans had an obvious belief that God acted in their everyday lives, a
concept known as providentialism. When the new religion of Puritanism arose, a majority of these
Puritans believed in values such as the grace of God and His divine mission. The Puritan concept of
God's grace signifies their constant need for God. God was seen as kind, and He helped to cleanse
the Puritans of envy, hatred, lust, or vanity. The Puritans also believed in God's divine mission,
which was a plan for each of the Puritans' life. The Puritans felt that they had to follow His plan;
their lives went on how they did because of God's control. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
This alarming metaphor uses a dark tone and syntax to build up intensity and show God's fearful
side. The choice of the word "drunk" helps to convey this message of God being vicious and harsh.
The word drunk sometimes complies with enjoyment; God's wrath will fully shoot through one's
heart and enjoy it. The bow and arrow helps to create an image of death and God's "evil side."
Edwards also discusses God's providentialism by writing another comparison: "There are the black
clouds of God's wrath now hanging directly over your heads, full of the dreadful storm, and big with
thunder; and were it not for the restraining hand of God it would immediately burst forth upon you"
(24–29). This frightening description of a vicious storm emphasizes how helpless any person is
when compared to God. The daunting tone of this dreadful storm expresses the idea of
providentialism while making any readers or listeners intimidated by God's absolute power. God has
full control of our lives, and He can send us to hell with ease. By putting the fear of God into others'
minds, they are intimidated by His providential supervision and what He can do if one does not
correctly
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How Did The Romantic Influence On The Modern World?
The romantic period in regards to the natural world had many accounts of divinity having an
influence on the modern world. William Blake and his crazy yet visionary religious views implied
the world followed the human form; all of its' mercy, pity and peace being in constant play in
shaping our world. Percy Bysshe Shelley and the view of the world as a shift from spring and
winter, how our world follows the ups and downs as the seasons change, making life and taking it in
balance and glorious harmony. William wordsworth has had the idea that children are the most
divine and loving, for they have not yet been tainted and taught the evils of the world and once they
had as men and women seen and experienced such evils, only nature could show them once again
the love and compassion of the natural world. The romantic writers expressed deep theories and
ideas that followed into other aspects of life, including later writers. William Blake was known to be
crazy and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
As he enjoyed the works of William Wordsworth when he was younger, the more conservative
Wordsworth caused much of Shelley's dissatisfaction, which he eventually showed in a later work.
Shelley showed his interest in the natural world in his, "Ode to the West Wind", which he explained
that the world has its ways and means for advancement and rebirth, "The trumpet of a prophecy! O
wind, If winter comes, can spring be far behind"(Shelley, 64–70). This was the conclusion when he
described how the winds change with the season and what their involvement is with the natural
world. How the winds take down trees and spread seeds in its very own balance of destroyer and
creator. Shelley finishes his ode with the statement quoted to create a comparison of the winds and
its duties to the laws of nature, birth, death, and rebirth of the natural world, for the cycle of winter
and spring tell a larger story of the
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Essay on The Odyssey
The Odyssey details Odysseus' arduous return to his homeland. Ten years have passed since the end
of the Trojan war and Odysseus, the "most cursed man alive", has been missing and presumed dead
by many. (10.79). Throughout the novel, gods play a significant role in the fate of Odysseus and
other characters. The extent of the gods' role though is not unqualified, contrary to Telemachus'
suggestion that, "Zeus is to blame./He deals to each and every/ laborer on this earth whatever doom
he pleases" (1.401–403). While Zeus does have this power, his description of how humans meet
their fate is more accurately depicted throughout the novel. As he aptly points out, "from us alone,
the say, come all their miseries, yes,/ but they themselves, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
Odysseus' arrogance furthers his misfortune, since Polyphemos is Poseidon's son. Polyphemos
proceeds to ask his father to never allow Odysseus to return and if Odysseus returns home that it be
well over due and without his crew; Poseidon obliges. In this instance, Poseidon's wrath against
Odysseus is solely Odysseus fault. Had Odysseus not told the Cyclops his name, he would not have
been deemed the ill fate that he was. With one brash decision, Odysseus cedes control of his fate to
Polyphemos and then Poseidon. Here, Odysseus' stupidity shows that mortals possess a significant
degree of control over their fate. After being released from Circe's island, Odysseus follows her
advice and ventures to the underworld to speak with the lauded prophet Tiresias. While Tiresias is
not a god, he is not a mortal. This, along with his knowledge of Odysseus' desire to return home and
Poseidon's anger towards Odysseus, allows Odysseus to trust him. Upon speaking with Tiresias, he
learns that,
A sweet smooth journey home, renowned Odysseus, that is what you seek, but a god will make it
hard for you–I know– you will never escape the one who shakes the earth, quaking with anger at
you still, still enraged, because you blinded the Cyclops, his dear son.
Even so, you and your crew may still reach home,
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The Divine Wind Analysis
Disher demonstrates isolation of the ethnic groups and the regional and urban divide present in The
Divine Wind through the beliefs, experiences, and values of the Killian family and Hartley Penrose.
Both culturally and geographically isolated from the rest of Australia, the people of Northern and
Central Australia, specifically Broome felt ignored, misunderstood, and misconstrued by the urban
South. This is an ongoing theme in Australia. They resented interference from the federal
government. The North feared invasion from Japanese and argued that Australia would perish if the
North and the Centre were not populated and developed. Racism was intrinsic, with the Aborigines
seen either as treacherous or lazy or as childlike and in need of protection. White Australians were
the minority and their high statuses were a scant consolation when they were vastly outnumbered by
a diverse range of cultures, the Japanese, Malays, and other South East Asians. Although, the
minority, the white residents felt as if they had a power of the other ethnicities. Therefore, opening
segregated cinemas, a Register of Aliens, and a clear but unofficial racial hierarchy. Their
geographical isolation led to specific cultures, views, and beliefs on race. The regional and urban
divide was evident when Jaimie Kilian's wealthy urban family arrived in Broome. Jaimie felt
entitled as his father was the new magistrate in town, he was arrogant and opinionated towards the
regional community. When Hart offered his friendship, Kilian responded by saying "I don't need any
friends. "He walked as if he had owned the town." Jamie enjoyed having an edge over Hart, he felt
entitled as he was an urban elite. "Jamie was competitive. In almost everything you could name,
Jamie was better than me...We were opposites." Hart displayed what many felt about the new family
from the Urban South. "I envied him, I was jealous, I pitied myself."
As an urban elite, Mr. Killian's beliefs and attitudes towards different races was narrow–minded
stereotyping and placing generalisations on the Japanese and Aboriginal community, labelling them
as unintelligent people who "were unable to make any ethical or moral distinctions." Magistrate
Kilian's views can be compared
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John Keats On The Sea
English 1 Athini Majali Group HH 22August 2014 Friday 9:35 Tutor: Ms Ashley Graven A close
reading of John Keat's On the Sea Born in Moorgate, London, 1795, John Keats proved to be a
promising poet during the short course of his life – he is hailed as one of the greatest poets of the
Romantic period, one of his greatest literary works include To Autumn and The eve of St Agnes.
The Romantic Movement was a reaction to the emphasis on society and logic present in the
enlightenment era – the period focused extensively on individuality, human emotion and the
relationship between man and nature (Abram, 283). On the Sea portrays the sea as an embodiment
of nature which provides relief and freedom to man and suggests that humanity refrain from
rejecting nature. This essay aims to illustrate the relationship between nature and man and re– iterate
the mightiness and the spiritual effect of the sea both as a divine and a liberating force for
humankind. On the Sea presents the transcendence of the sea to a ... Show more content on
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In the octave, nature is dark, mighty yet gentle. In the sestet, the imagery has a negative connotation
and the negative connotation is directed towards the intended hearer. The imagery changes from that
of 'eternal whisperings', 'gentle temper' to that of disturbed hearts, "uproar rude" (11) and "cloying
melody" (12). The negative relation to man threads itself throughout the poem. In the first quatrain
the shores are desolate because man has rejected and shifted away from nature. In the sestet – the
same imagery is present. Perhaps he does this to illustrate that mankind holds this negative notion
and perception of the sea, they view the sea as an object that causes "uproar rude" or disturbs hearts
and by disclosing a different view of the sea – one that is spiritual and gentle, the poet hopes that
humanity would attach nature to
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Figurative Language In The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner
Often times, nature is perceived in many different ways. This can be as a result of people having
their own opinions and knowledge. The Romantic era was an intellectual movement that lasted from
about 1800–1850. Romantic poets believed that nature is beautiful and controls fate. The Romantics
often used figurative language to describe and give nature traits. The poems Rime of the Ancient
Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and Ode to the West Wind by Percy Bysshe Shelley are
examples of Romantic poems. In the poems, each author reflected their visions of nature. These
poems reflected their visions of nature as dangerous, powerful, and divine. They reflected their
visions of nature by using symbolism and other forms of figurative language. ... Show more content
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For example, "The death–fires danced at night; the water, like a witch's oils, burnt green, and blue
and white" (128–130 – Coleridge). The quote above personified the death–fires as dancing, and
connected the sea with the color of a witch's oil. Also, this quote describes the sea as color–changing
which may be symbolic of its power. Another example that reflects nature is: "And we did speak
only to break the silence of the sea!" (109–110 – Coleridge). The previous quote reflects their
visions of nature by putting emphasis on the "silence of the sea" which may represent the serenity of
nature. The quote also shows how if we "speak" we would disrupt the balance of nature. Coleridge
also used rhyme scheme to get a point across as can be seen in: "The ice was here, the ice was there,
the ice was all around, It cracked and growled, and roared and howled like noises in a swound!"
(61–62 Coleridge). This quote used the words "roared" and "growled" to describe how the nature of
the ice around them is dangerous and hostile. Coleridge reflected his opinion of nature by using
figurative language to describe how dangerous and divine nature
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Analysis Of The Book ' 12 Of The Iliad '
His True Nature
Following the demise of Troy, the Achaean's mighty fortification is destined to fall not by mere
mortal strength, but rather, the selfish act of divine intervention. In Book 12 of the Iliad, Homer's
narration is centralized around the Greek's mighty fortifications, the fortress that agitates the gods.
The author begins the story by describing Zeus's plans to dismantle the Greek rampart. The author
makes the god's plan manifest when Hector chastises Polydamas for his foresight and proceeds to
carry out his god's will. More specifically the structure of the story proceeds with Asius' and
Sarpedon's attempt at charging the wall and finally Hector's assault, with the intervention of Zeus,
which successfully opens the gates and lead the Trojans inside the wall. Though, prior to Hector's
success, Homer illustrates stalemate–like battle scenes to describe the evenness of the mortal
warriors. More specifically, Homer emphasizes this evenness in strength between both armies and
the overbearing power of Zeus through the usage of his epic similes, most notable in lines 322–337,
where Zeus is depicted by his divine powers as supporting Hector and his Trojans breach the wall.
Ultimately, Homer's simile in lines 322–337 functions as a way to determine the fate of the victor on
the battlefield, the breach of the Greek's fortification, and most importantly to demonstrate how
divine intervention is committed out of selfishness rather than to aid mortal men.
In lines 322–337,
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The divine wind racism
The Divine Wind 'The Divine Wind shows how difficult it is for communities to accept cultural
difference.' Discuss. The community of Broome before the advent of World War II in The Divine
Wind at first appears to be an idyllic town in which Malays, Koepangers, Japanese, Manilamen and
Australians all work in relative harmony in search of the elusive pearl. Hartley Penrose, the central
narrator of the novel, seems to enjoy describing the tropical existence of Broome and its harmony:
"mangoes and barramundi on the table", "the half–dozen languages, the slap of sandals and bare
feet." But for all its seeming harmony, Broome is a town where racial tensions simmer just under the
surface and evolve into a blatant racism with the coming of ... Show more content on
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Major Morrissey demonstrates a view typical of the ignorant racist "if your Jap painted his face with
burnt cork, who would be the wiser?" – and shows a tendency to view people with totally different
cultures as one and the same. Such is his belief in his own superiority and the unsuperiority of others
of different race, that he neglects to realise that Japanese and Aboriginal cultures are two very
independent and separate ways of life. The racially and culturally intolerant behaviour of the
community of Broome shows how troublesome it is to accept cultural difference. Even the two most
unprejudiced and open–minded characters in The Divine Wind demonstrate the devastating effect of
spreading racial intolerance in a small community. Originally, Hart and Michael Penrose are
indignant at the treatment of some of the Aboriginals and Japanese. They alone are able to see the
idiocy of the internment camps: "Alf? Peggy? What harm can they do anyone?" Michael shows his
disapproval in the most sarcastic manner when he comments: "Maybe they think Sadako will send
messages out to sea in her soy sauce bottles. Maybe they think she'll insinuate herself into our lives
and commode our will" But sadly and steadily, Michael's resistance to the racial intolerance
decreases and is washed away with Alice officially reported as missing, he feels that Mitsy and
Sadako, his two friends are now "two lithe killers." After his stroke, Michael spends his days
desperately
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Animistic Beliefs
Under the same regard as Catholics pray not only to the Lord, but to their ancestors, saints, and the
Holy Mother during times of need, and in the same regard that most Christians pray for each other
during hardships, it is acceptable for those who hold animistic beliefs to pray to alternative sources
as well. Prayers, after all, are simply the method of communicating to those beyond the reach of our
normal perceptions. There is a wide divide between communicating and worshipping. One of the
strongest principles of Christianity is the Holy Spirit, the essence of the Lord that fills all things and
inhabits all people, beckoning them to accept the divine and guiding them towards righteousness.
Through a Christianized filter of thought, the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The differences between idolatry and respect are vast, but the line between them can be thin.
Without using a Christianized filter of thought, many practitioners of animistic traditions fall victim
to Pagan actions. It is easy for God's works to be misinterpreted, misused, and mistreated. Unless
one can recognize that the spirits of their belief exist solely because of the Holy Spirit placed within
them by the Lord, they risk performing idolatry and falling into polytheistic worship. However,
when reviewed with a Christianized filter of thought, one may derive different messages through
scripture. In Exodus, the Lord states that "[t]hou shalt have no other gods before me. Thou shalt not
make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in
the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth" (Exo. 20. 4–5). While not necessarily
dictating that the faithful should not believe in other spiritual entities, the Lord merely states that
such entities should not be respected above Him. Faithful should not idolize anything in the skies,
the earth, or the waters, although the skies, earth, and waters themselves may be another story.
Regardless, these forces of nature are only divine because the Lord has made them so, and nothing
should be respected above the Lord himself. These forces should not be worshipped. The Lord's
faithful should not bow to them nor serve them. However, just as the faithful are commanded to love
thy neighbor, the faithful that believe that aspects of the natural world embody spiritual entities
should extend this precept to these spirits as well. When they love thy neighbor, they should extend
their love to both the physical persons in their lives as well as to the spiritual persons in their lives,
and should recognize all the while the differences between love
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Prejudice In The Divine Wind By Garry Disher
In his novel, The Divine Wind Garry Disher engages his reader and persuades them to consider the
ideas of friendship, prejudice and love. In the pressure pot of the racially charged Broome, Western
Australia during the testing times of the second world war, Disher encourages his readers to connect
to the characters by using recurring and universal themes. Through the effective use of literary
techniques such as narrative structure, characterisation and setting, the novel encourages and
develops the audience's understanding of the testing, slippery state of friendship, the ever–present
prejudice in this society, and love in its different kinds.
Disher's use of first–person narration and rhetorical question gives an insight into the character's ...
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The prologue builds suspense and foreshadows the love held for Misty by Hart, "unaware that I was
in love with her" but also that this love is not be eventuated. The reader, therefore, is encouraged to
read on, to see not what will happen, but how it will occur The issues of unrequired love explored
later in the novel, as Hart and Misty relationship would not be supported," When I was outside.
Misty retread, became a dream in my head', the reader emphasizing with the reader as the racial
intolerance preventing their love. Hart acts as a reliable narrator, as at the beginning of the novel you
are unsure of him, but as he is able to comment on his weaknesses, "I'm a plain man and I've plain
life, but it doesn't follow that I'm a man of plain feelings, does it? I burn for her," the reader,
therefore, sympathies with him. Through these elements of unique narrative structure and self–
reflexive narration, the author conveys the idea of racial intolerance preventing
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Hippocrates On The Sacred Disease Summary
The passage On the Sacred Disease, is an examination into the alleged 'sacred disease' of epilepsy.
Although many of the anatomic and bodily propositions were incorrect, Hippocrates concepts were
closer to the diagnostics and teachings of today than those of metaphysical reasoning. For these
reasons, On the Sacred Disease provided a structural understanding of diseases in our bodies today.
Hippocrates main concepts are derived from the fact that this disease originates from a natural
cause. He states , "Men regard its nature and cause as divine from ignorance and wonder...this
notion of divinity is kept up by their inability to comprehend it (33–35)." It was this 'sacred disease'
of epilepsy that people used to connect with divine interference. Divine stimulation was never in
form of a sickness or disease. These people were under the idea that sickness was not a sole
presence, but rather an ailment that affects the human body and is sent by divinities. Therefore
people did little to treat the affected, but rather tried to appease the so–called divine powers that sent
the disease. In fact, the epileptic attacks were often referred to different gods depending on the
symptoms such as Poseidon, Ares, Apollo, and Hecate. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He states, "the body is made to feel and undergo changes in the changes of the winds (326–327)," it
was conventional that there were just four elements, earth, air, fire, and water with their related
traits, coldness, dryness, heat, and wetness. If these elements were present in the human body in
balanced amounts, health was maintained, if not health was ravaged by the lack of an equivalence.
This concept was stemmed from an idea that health was maintained by an equal rule of the bodily
elements rather than dominion by a single
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The Divine Wind Quotes
Assessment Type 2 – Text Analysis – Novel: How are the ideas, experiences, values and beliefs of
these characters from the divine wind relevant to you and the others today? In the novel "The Divine
wind", Garry Disher explores the experiences, values, ideas and beliefs expressed by some
Australians, in remote Broome, during the world war two. Narrated by Hartley Penrose, the story
follows the lives of his family and friends, as they deal with the reality of war. Touching on subjects
such as racism and relationship, Disher provides an insight into how dramatically their lives are
affected. The racial discrimination experienced by Zeke is largely due to the involvement of japan in
the Second World War. Zeke is a Japanese immigrant who's taken ... Show more content on
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This is very true. For example, Hart loses Mitsy's friendship when she had mistaken what Hart had
meant when he jerked his head to signal he would catch up to her later. After that, their friendship
ended, until Alice was about to leave, which their friendship then mended. After that they become
lovers, however, again they break off their friendship due to Hart insecurity as 'Mitsy and Sadako
began to look less benign.' This quote shows his perception of them being influenced by the war as
he became suspicious and saw them as Japanese enemies instead of friends. What finally pushed
him over the edge was Alice's official letter, which resulted in him calling Mitsy, A bitch. Then there
is Jamie Kalian whom he becomes friends with, which Jamie accepts because they were both lonely
and Jamie liked being older than Hartley. Jamie is better than Hartley at everything, as well as being
completely opposite but their friendship is just some convenience to them both. However, near the
end, Hartley's jealously got the better of him, almost allowing Jamie to die which then results in the
end of their friendship. The value of friendship is shown between Hartley, Mitsy and Jamie is
evident in today's society. The jealousy felt by Hartley in the novel, provides an understanding of
how envy can become a powerful emotion that can control people to do things that aren't in their
nature or can instead influence them to be more aggressive if it is already in their
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The Divine Comedy In Dante's Inferno
The Divine Comedy acknowledged as Dante's Inferno was written in the 14th century and is an epic
poem with allegorical value. Dante the Pilgrim is 35 years old and he was "midway along the
journey of our life"(TEXTBOOK). Dante the pilgrim is lost in the dark wood, where he meets his
guide named Virgil and he escorts Dante through the nine circles of hell. Virgil symbolizes human
reason and wisdom. In the beginning, Dante was sympathetic for all of the people he saw suffering
in hell, but as time goes by and as Dante gets deeper into hell, he realizes that the suffering people
are getting what they deserve. Dante the Pilgrim grow as a character thought the story The first
circle of hell is Limbo and this is where it is "a place of sorrow without torment" (Dante's Inferno 1).
The virtuous non–Christians and unbaptized infants reside in this circle. These people are not saved,
but they did not sin. They are punished by being forced to live for eternity in an inferior version of
Heaven. They are living in a castle that has seven gates. They represent the seven virtues. Dante sees
many famous people of the past "like Homer, Socrates, Aristotle, Cicero, Hippocrates and Julius
Caesar (9 Circles of Hell). He has the upmost respect for these public figures.
In the second circle of hell is where those who committed lustful acts are punished. They are
penalized by being blown violently back and forth by extremely powerful wind. This wind does not
allow the inhabitants to find
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Supernatural In The Odyssey
The part of the supernatural in "The Iliad" composed by Homer has component's which goes past
authenticity utilizing the intercessions of divine beings. Also, which of the divine beings would it
say it was that set them on to squabble (128)? The part of the extraordinary in the Sakuntala
composed by Kalidasa has otherworldly components in condemnations to flights to the sky. See! in
his vaporous limits he appears to fly, And leaves no follow upon the' flexible turf (378). This
exposition will indicate how the part of the otherworldly can influence human lives through the
force of divine beings. Besides, it will tell how the utilization of heavenly is distinctive in each of
these works. First, let talk about the Iliad. "The Iliad" indicates how for example the war between
Apollos and Achilles who were both gods begun, as well as the part that divine beings took in that
war. Apollo descended from Olympus with his bow to assist. He sat himself down far from the boats
with a face as dim as night, and his silver bow rang passing as he shot his bolt amidst them (128).
All through the story, there were numerous divine beings or ... Show more content on
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The Shakuntala is in light of the condemnation given by the sage on the King Dushyant. The
condemnation happens on the grounds that King Dushyant overlooked Shakuntala. After the part of
the condemnation happens divine intercession becomes possibly the most important factor by
method for flame, water, rain, wind, and the sun. These five strengths of nature at distinctive times
have helped either the ruler, or Shakuntala. In this story, the group of onlookers has the capacity see
the force of the sage by decimating the lives of two individuals in adoration just in light of the fact
that they were overlooked. In this epic, story the five strengths of nature through all the outrage, and
embarrassment that happened has the ability to make the world or decimate
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What Does The Tyger Mean
An Analysis of William Blake's "The Tyger" William Blake is known for two collections of poems,
those collections are Songs of Innocence (1789) and it was added onto with Songs of Experience
(1794). It is from those collections that he draws out his innermost thoughts on life often looking at
"a being of God" or "the very human existence." In his poem "The Tyger" he used numerous literary
devices that center on divine creation ultimately putting beauty and destruction hand in hand, it does
this through the lens of a Romantic Era poet. To first understand the poem by Blake it must first be
dissected. The first stanza had a set of word choice that gave a question that was expanded upon by
each stanza following the first. This question was: What immortal hand or eye, Could frame thy
fearful symmetry? (lines 3–4). It is from that moment that the poem eludes to a being above through
the use of the word "immortal", and considering the others works done by Blake it can be assured
that this being that is eluded to as a crafter is God. The word choice gave way to another intriguing
piece of evidence for Romanticism and that was the use of the words "fearful" and "symmetry"
together. Symmetry in art forms beauty. It is said that the more ... Show more content on
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This stanza was vaguer than the stanzas previously because it refers to a more broad choice of
words, however two words add substance to the thesis and they are the use of "shoulder" in line 9,
and the use of "dread" in line 12. The shoulder reference refers to the strength and symbol of
strength and muscle needed to build something so beautiful and so deadly. The dread reference
points out the unknown or fear building in what is unknown which points towards the idea that
Blake was putting fear and beauty together as one in this
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Odysseus Fate And Free Will In Homer's Odyssey
The conflicting will of the gods in the direction of Odysseus' fate are clear in the opposing actions of
Zeus and his remittance of Hermes to tell Calypso to let Odysseus go. However, just as the positive
effects of this divine intervention are realized and Odysseus is able to build his boat, another god,
Poisedon collects powerful winds which obliterate the boat Odysseus built and send him reeling off
to another distant land where he is, for a time, free from any divine vengeance. Zeus recognizes the
cause for Poisedon's fury with Odysseus and notes that even though he himself wishes to aid
Odysseus, "it's the Earth–Shaker, Poseidon, unappeased, / forever fuming against him [Odysseus]
for the Cyclops / whose giant eye he blinded" (Homer I.81–83).
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Interracial Relationships Exposed In The Divine Wind By...
The novel 'The Divine Wind', written by Australian author Garry Disher, set in Broome during
WWII is about a man named Hart who happens to fall in heart–eyes with a young, beautiful woman
during a time of hardship and war. The book is a straightforward yet deceiving read due to the short
length of the novel. The language used in the novel was very understandable, there were not many
overly complex words used. The plot of the story was in two parts, following two main story lines,
one being the interracial love between Hartley Penrose and Mitsy Sennosuke and the other being the
bombing of Darwin.
The friendships and relationships formed and broken by characters and how they impacted on others
at the time was a big part of the read. More ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The depression caused multiple hardships for them to endure. World War II saw many women join
the workforce due to necessity, taking up jobs that had previously been considered only for men.
Social attitudes towards what women were capable of doing had been changed due to the
experience; this point in time was of high importance. During the time in the text, woman's rights
were very underdeveloped, women were powerless and men were alpha. The female characters were
often portrayed as nothing but housewives that weren't able to express their own opinions without
facing a critical
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Essay about Divine Wind
The Divine Wind describes an Australia that is tarnished by racism, hatred and distrust, and yet the
novel ends on an optimistic note. Do you agree?
The novel is set during a World War. The tension and separation of races during a war seemed
evident in Australia. As a multicultural country including Japanese and Aborigine population,
conflicting attitudes towards these races had to be imminent. I entirely agree with the above
statement due to the unequal treatment of the aborigines, tension between the Japanese population
and characters such as Hart showing lack of trust over his lover Mitsy
With a war against the Japanese was the trigger for racism in Australia. All throughout the novel
elements of separation are presented. The ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Killian is talking about purity at the dinner, he declares that black workers will do all the work while
'we' (whites) sit inside. Aborigines do not even get equal opportunity, an example is when Derby's
interview with the officer is forged and consequently Carl Venning simply lets Derby to fight his
case without any support. Aborigines have been replaced with stereotypes and generalisations from
the Broome community especially all aborigines being alcoholics and inferior. Racism has the
significance in the future of Broome in that it will become extremely hard to reverse.
Hart's lack of trust for characters in the novel such as Mitsy and Jamie are just some signs of Disher
showing an Australia that is tarnished from distrust. Mitsy and Hart are close friends and at one time
lovers. Nevertheless, Hart still has thoughts about Mitsy secretly seeing Jamie. Hart asks Jamie,
"What's going on between you and Mitsy." Some might argue that Hart is only caring about his love
but when Hart secretly follows Mitsy around town the reader recognises Hart's personality of
distrust. Another aspect of distrust is from the white community concerning over aborigines of
Broome "Your Abo is unreliable... He'll collaborate. He'll guide the Japs...." Since
whites know that they are separate and unpleasant to other races, they fear the aborigines will help
the Japanese in their desire to takeover Broome.
Although the novel ends on an optimistic note, the future for Broome doesn't
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Macbeth Witches Control
The Elizabethan chain of being is based on the idea of hierarchy and divine order. A part of this
divine order is the king who is said to be God's representative on earth; they bear the responsibility
of carrying out God's wishes on earth. However, in the case of Macbeth, instead of god, it would be
the witches. The witches are the patriarch to all of the character's in the play and the catalyst to all of
the crimes Macbeth commits. The witches portray this through their supernatural abilities, their
prophecy's control over the world, and their influence over Macbeth.
To start with, the witches use their powers to perform many supernatural tasks. The ability to control
the winds, to change states of matter, and the ability of foresight. Their control of the winds ... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
the prophecy of him becoming king (I.III.50) creates a platform for confusion and doubt which
causes Macbeth to murder Duncan. The prophecy which the witches promised Banquo a lineage of
kings, heavily influences Macbeth into hiring murderer's to kill Banquo and his son Fleance.
Macbeth becomes fearful and insecure about his fate, causing him to become reckless and inhumane
at the end, due to the fear of losing his throne. The prophecy in which it mentions (Thou shalt get
kings, though thou be none" (I.III.67). The thought of Banquo's lineage being of kingship caused
Macbeth to act in an inhumane manner in the fear that this may one day be true. In summary,
Macbeth's downfall can be directly traced back to the witches as their apparition and prophecies
caused Macbeth to become overconfident and develop a sense of greed. In act 5 scene 8, Macbeth
acknowledges the influence the witches had on him through their half–truths. This proves the
witches to being the catalyst to Macbeth's crimes because of their influence over
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Gods In Hesiod's Odyssey
The Gods were toppled by a race of more youthful divine beings, the Olympians, in a ten–year war
called the Last GODS ("War of the Titans") – a progression of fights which were battled in Thessaly
between the two camps of gods well before the presence of humankind. This battle of Gods is
otherwise called the Skirmish of the Gods, Clash of Divine beings, or simply The God War. It spoke
to a fanciful change in perspective that the Greeks may have acquired from the Antiquated Close
East. The 12 Gods divine beings, otherwise called the senior divine beings. Their ruler was Cronus
who was ousted by his child Zeus. A large portion of the god battled with Cronus against Zeus and
were rebuffed by being exiled to Tartarus. The predominant one, and the special case that has
survived, was in the Theogony credited to Hesiod. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Ouranos considers Cronus monstrous, thus detains him in the entrails of the Earth. Cronus, helped
by the Hundred–handers and Cyclopes, at that point sets upon his dad, maims him, and sets himself
up as lord of the divine beings, with Rhea as his significant other and ruler. Rhea bears another era
of divine beings to Cronus, yet in expect that they will oust him, he swallows them each of the one
by one. Just Zeus is spared: Rhea gives Cronus a stone in swaddling garments in his place, and
places him in Crete to be monitored by the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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The Divine Wind Friendship Quotes

  • 1. The Divine Wind Friendship Quotes In Garry Disher's novel, The Divine Wind, the protagonist, Hartley Penrose, reflects on his life growing up in Broome during World War Two. In many ways, his 'story' is about the changing nature of friendships during his teenage years. Friendship plays a significant role in the novel but does not make up the whole story. Love, war, and betrayal however also plays a substantial role in Hart approach towards his peers throughout the novel. Disher's book, 'The Divine Wind', shows friendship in some area in the text. The main friendship in the text is between Alice and Mitsy. Alice and Mitsy has a close friendship throughout the novel until Mitsy lost her father from the cyclone and she needed time to be with her mother. While doing this Alice ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Jealousy throughout the story is shown by Hart towards Jamie over Mitsy."[Hart] envied [Jamie], [he is] jealous [and has] pit[y on] [him]self." Hart and Jamie's friendship started off well when Hart approach Jamie to invite him to his birthday party. Hart and Jamie have always been close together until Jamie started going to the cinema with Alice, Mitsy, and Hart. Hart starts to get jealous of Jamie being near Mitsy. Hart's jealousy slowly grew and once he starts to follow Jamie to see whether he is secretly meeting up with Mitsy without Hart knowing. Hart's jealousy reaches a peak when Jamie is in the water and Hart has to stop and think whether he has to save him from drowning or letting him die. Hart's keeps this jealousy of Jamie and never gets to reconcile with him because Jamie died in a plane crash. Therefore jealousy plays a role in the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2.
  • 3. Hippocrates: The Four Humors In The External Body The Classical Age of Greece, not only underwent a remarkable cultural change, but it also marked a great turning point of clinical medicine, where the perception of the supernatural as a healing power and medicine was divorced. This is supported by Lambert as he addresses that "The transition from a priestly to lay a profession of medicine was aided by a group of Greek thinkers and students of human life and death and the illness of man and the conditions of their occurrence." Amongst those great thinkers was Hippocrates, one of Greece's most influential scientist and physician. Hippocrates, born in Cos, was destined to a medical practice path for "he was the son of Herakleides and belonged to a family of physicians who claimed their ancestry from Asclepius, the god of medicine." Hippocrates opposed the foundation of medicine of ancient Greece. Hippocrates strongly believed that there should be a separation between all supernatural force and disease. He dismissed the religious and magical approach and confided towards a logical interpretation for illness and disease. He profoundly observed diseases in detail and accordingly focused in diagnosis more rather than treatment. It was Hippocrates that made the leap ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The four humors in the body, according to Hippocrates consisted of blood, phlegm, yellow bile and black bile.This theory introduced a new way of approaching disease primarily based on objective observation of the external body. Hippocrates speculated that in good health, the body was in the state of equilibrium, in respect to the humors. Each humor was associated to a pair of qualities: coldness, hotness, dryness and wetness. Blood was linked to the hot and wet elements; phlegm to cold and wet; yellow bile to hot and dry; and black bile to cold and dry. Altogether, Hippocrates established a diagnosis system that was followed by many physicians during the time and to this day a modified version of his diagnosis system is applied to medical ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4.
  • 5. Analysis of "The Sound of the Sea" by Henry Wadswort... "The Sound of the Sea" is a sonnet by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, describing the sounds of the sea and relating it to human inspiration. Through only auditory images of the sea and other powerful natural forces, Longfellow effectively alludes to the nature of human inspiration. Through detailed and sensory imagery, Longfellow communicates the subtle details of the human soul and how inspiration functions. "The Sound of the Sea" consists of fourteen lines and a particular rhyme scheme (abba abba cde cde). The first eight lines of the poem consist of one drawn out sentence, which is the description of the sound of the sea and other natural forces, which then in the final sestet, which also consists of only one sentence, are used by ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... These two concepts are intrinsically interlinked, and Longfellow uses this poem structure to further this concept, which is that inspiration comes from within you because God is within you, and he uses natural imagery to communicate God within nature. In conclusion, "The Sound of the Sea" effectively creates a parallel between the metaphor of the sound of the sea with the divine nature of inspiration. Longfellow does so effectively through finely detailed imagery that gives rather precise insight into the human ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6.
  • 7. Role Of Gods In The Odyssey The problematic return of Odysseus' to his homeland was described by The Odyssey. About ten years have elapsed since the end of the Trojan War, and it is observed that Odysseus who is seen to be the most cursed of all the present living things has been missing and many individuals supposed that he was dead. In the narrative, it can be seen that gods play a crucial role in the destiny of Odysseus as well as many other characters. Contrary to the suggestion by Telemachus that, "Zeus is who gives what he wants to every man on earth" (1.368–369); the extent of the role of gods is not unqualified. Even though Zeus is observed to possess' power, his explanation of how individuals meet their fate is correctly depicted in the narrative. Zeus appropriately pointed out that, "Mortals! They are always blaming the gods for their troubles when their own witlessness causes them more than they were destined for!" (1.37–39). In this case, many of the said mortals aggravate the ill fate by ignoring the warnings of gods and making rash decisions. The gods often aid humans in need and are also not always disrupting mortal lives. More often than not, mortals who benefit greatly are those who effectively court the favor of the gods. No one god's power is insurmountable while the god's strengths are not questionable. The wrath of the gods can be escaped as they can be outsmarted. In correspondence with the statement by Zeus, the Odyssey eventually portrayed human freedom as limited though ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8.
  • 9. Ralph Presents The Success Of The Christian On The Campaign Ralph presents the success of the Christian on the campaign resulting from Gods intervention on their behalf. The role played by god as the driving force in the crusade. With the progression of Gesta Tancredi, God is credited as giving the upper edge to the followers of Christ over the enemies who and the followers of Mohamet. Ralph credits God with giving courage and wisdom to the Crusaders. When the odds were against the Christians he showed them the way to victory or salvation. Ralph presents the primary motive for the Crusade as a service on behalf the Lord. It is this reason why he credits God when the Christian armies are victorious and to why they kept pushing even when facing defeat. Ralph presents that the purpose of the Crusade was a service to God . He states that military life conflicted with Christian principles on murder. Pope Urban granted remission of all sins for Christians who participated in the campaign to reclaim the holy land in the name of Lord. Tancred, a Norman leader participated in the first crusade benefited from this proclamation . Ralph describes Tancred with having a great battle spirit matched with his devotion for Christ. For the crusade Tancred took up his sword in the service of Christ. At the begging of the campaign during the crossing from Italy on the way to Byzantium, the safe passage of Tancred and Bohemond was possible with gifts and prayers to God . When the king of Alexios of Constantinople heard that Bohemond was approaching his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10.
  • 11. The Divine Wind Analysis The novel The Divine Wind (1998) by Garry Disher and the 2003 film, Japanese Story, directed by Sue Brooks both explore the theme of 'love' through the use of novel and film techniques. Through the studying of the context and textual form of both of these texts, a greater understanding of the important ideas is achieved. This includes exploring the context, the characters and the key theme of love. The Divine Wind's story is set in the backdrop of World War II, where Australia's relationship with Japan is at its weakest. The use of time–shifts and the overall cyclic nature allows the audience to garner a greater knowledge of the context. It is set in the 1930's and 40's in the city of Broome, Western Australia. " We lived at he southern end ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the early stages of the film, Sandy is portrayed as being distanced from life. This is something that her friends picks up upon when her friend states that, "Even when your here, your not here." Through her budding relationship with Hiromitsu, Sandy evolves from her fractured sense of self to embracing life and what it offers. However originally, this connection starts poorly. Sandy sees him as, "Some Japanese prick" while he believes she is a gruff 'hostess.' This relationship is expanded further later in when they get bogged in the desert overnight. This scene serves as the catalyst for the beginning of their intimate relationship and the transformation of Hiromitsu. Over the space of 24 hours he is dubbed, 'Hiro the Hero.' Following this scene the previous awkwardness and barriers in their relationship are dismissed for a more free–flowing and comfortable experience. The cultural and personality barriers are broken down and this allows for greater honesty between the two. Through the of his suit, the camera and the formality of the trip, we explore Hiromitsu's adaption to the 'Australian way of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12.
  • 13. Role Of Gods In The Odyssey The Odyssey details Odysseus' arduous return to his homeland. Ten years have passed since the end of the Trojan war and Odysseus, the "most cursed man alive", has been missing and presumed dead by many. (10.79). Throughout the novel, gods play a significant role in the fate of Odysseus and other characters. The extent of the gods' role though is not unqualified, contrary to Telemachus' suggestion that, "Zeus is to blame./He deals to each and every/ laborer on this earth whatever doom he pleases" (1.401–403). While Zeus does have this power, his description of how humans meet their fate is more accurately depicted throughout the novel. As he aptly points out, "from us alone, the say, come all their miseries, yes,/ but they themselves, with their own reckless ways,/ compound their pain beyond their proper share" (1.38–52). While the gods do doom certain mortals, many of these mortals exacerbate their ill fate by making rash decisions and ignoring the gods' warnings. The gods are also not always disrupting mortals lives; they often aid mortals in need. In fact, mortals who effectively court the favor of the gods often benefit greatly. While the gods' powers are unquestionable, no one god's power is insurmountable. Gods can be outsmarted and their wrath escaped. The Odyssey, in congruence with Zeus' statement, ultimately, portrays human freedom as existent, but limited. While mortals do not unjustly complain about their fates, they fail to acknowledge that they are also responsible for their ill fate, as mortals themselves, possess a sizable degree of control. There is little doubt that Odysseus and his crew are unlucky, but had it not been for their brash decisions they would have reached Ithaca much sooner. After Odysseus cunningly escapes the Cyclops, Polyphemos, his pride gets the best of him, as taunts the Polyphemos proclaiming, "if any man on the face of the earth should ask you/ who blinded you, shamed you so–say Odysseus/ raider of cities, he gouged out your eye" (9.559–561). Odysseus' arrogance furthers his misfortune, since Polyphemos is Poseidon's son. Polyphemos proceeds to ask his father to never allow Odysseus to return and if Odysseus returns home that it be well over due and without his crew; ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14.
  • 15. Chinese Medicine Vs Greek Medicine Essay Similarities and Differences between Greek and Chinese Medicine When one compares Greek medical philosophy to Chinese medical philosophy there will be distinct similarities and differences that stand out. These similarities and differences become apparent when comparing natural and supernatural beliefs, as well as when researching the functions and physiology of the body itself. Another fascinating point, both Greek and Chinese medical philosophy believed in magic and used it when practicing medicine. Both philosophies believed in the idea of dramatic wind change in regards to sickness. There is also a cautious balance both perceived by Greek and Chinese medical philosophy between the body and the seasons, and five natural phenomena. Most Greek practitioners believed in supernatural divine visitations relating ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... These humors, or bodily fluids, each consist of a season, element, and temperaments. For example, phlegm is a yellowish liquid when someone has a cold. Phlegm usually occurs during colder weather, with a water–like substance, traveling from the brain to the nostrils. The temperament of phlegm is phlegmatic, which has characteristics of a peaceful and calm attitude. Greek medical philosophy believed the body and the seasons balanced each other through the humoral process. Tsou Yen was a Chinese medical philosopher who developed the five tangible natural phenomena. These phenomena arose from the relationships of metal, wood, fire, water, and soil. Thusly, water puts out fire, fire dissolves metal, metal cuts through wood, wood conquers the soil, and soil takes in the water. This connection between elements is a process of destruction and regeneration that is perceived to be mutual. Both Greek and Chinese philosophy believed these two concepts of health and disease, balanced each other through body and seasons, and five elements of a natural ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16.
  • 17. Analysis of "The Sound of the Sea" by Henry Wadswort... "The Sound of the Sea" is a sonnet by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, describing the sounds of the sea and relating it to human inspiration. Through only auditory images of the sea and other powerful natural forces, Longfellow effectively alludes to the nature of human inspiration. Through detailed and sensory imagery, Longfellow communicates the subtle details of the human soul and how inspiration functions. "The Sound of the Sea" consists of fourteen lines and a particular rhyme scheme (abba abba cde cde). The first eight lines of the poem consist of one drawn out sentence, which is the description of the sound of the sea and other natural forces, which then in the final sestet, which also consists of only one sentence, are used by ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Furthermore the labial sounds of the letters "p" and "b" in "pebbly beaches" give an uneven pronunciation to the words, which are contrasted with the smooth drawn out "ar", "ide" sounds in the words far, wide and tide. This contrast serves to communicate the scattered nature of our consciousness with the unity, elegance and fluidity of our subconscious. Furthermore, these drawn out sounds serve to also further the imagery of the tide's "uninterrupted sweep" which is particularly effective in conveying the image of the wave rushing to envelope the shore, the word "uninterrupted" conveying this sense that the wave of inspiration is all smooth and relentless. This imagery is furthered by the 3 line–long segment, uninterrupted by punctuation. Yet, the central point made in these four lines is when the speaker states that "(he) heard" the waves. The description of the sea gives you a mental image, but Longfellow stresses upon the fact that the speaker only hears the tide, as this can be seen reflected in the title of the poem "The Sound of the Sea". Hearing is an auditory action that allows one to be aware of the presence of the object through the sound, but not visually or physically grasp it. This suggests that inspiration is similar, in the sense that one can be aware of it but cannot consciously grasp, control or dominate it. In the fourth line, Longfellow states that it's "A voice" from the "silence of the deep". Here, the reader once ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18.
  • 19. Racism in Divine Wind by Gary Disher Essay Today I want to address the issues of the novel Divine Wind authored by Gary Disher. Throughout the novel many problems occur. Some of the main problems are racial and equality issues. Events in this book show how prejudice and intolerance can ruin numerous friendships and change lives. When WWII was declared in Broome, Western Australia 1939 to 1945 Japan became Australia's enemy, Asia is approximately 3,862 miles away from the coast of Broome, due to this, people from Asia that country looking for an escape would easily get on a boat an sail to the tip, Broome then suddenly exposed to more people who are different from the norm. Concerns about the Japanese–Australians as well as Aboriginals had an impact on Australians as they ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Australia in this time was quite defensive about whom they trusted. Even Japanese–Australians, they had an issue towards them simply because the higher authorities thought they would turn on them. Disher tries to imply his view that loyalty within the authorities was at high demand and this portrays the distrust they held against anyone who questioned them. The judgment against the aboriginal and Japanese people increased during the war period. An example for this would be the name calling by the locals at the Penrose family even though they stayed loyal towards each other and their friends. ABORIGINAL RACISM In the chapter 'Desired earth' there was a discussion between Morrissey who is a military commander, Lester Webb, Carl and Alice who takes care of derby whom is aboriginal. "The abos are going to be a liability if the japs land" Morrissey to Carl And "if the abos cause trouble we can shoot them, no questions asked" Lester to Alice They all had a discussion about the 'foreign' people and how they would turn against Australian people, all three men made harsh statements while Alice stood up for what she believed. They as in aboriginal and Japanese people are not bad. JAPANESE INTERNMENT (concentration camps for Japanese people) During WWII and around that time period things got pretty heated towards different races, Chinese taxi drivers were bashed and when they would be selling their goods at markets to get money to even survive they would ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20.
  • 21. Racial Racism In Gary Disher's The Divine Wind Gary Disher's socially provocative Australian historical drama novel The Divine Wind (1998) set in the Australian pearling town of Broome, provides a thought–provoking and contemporary outlook on racial prejudice, isolation and the loss of rights to adulthood during the onset of World War11. Disher establishes this through a range of characters of differing ages and cultural backgrounds, evoking a war–devastated Australia and its effects on young adults forced to leave their childhood behind. Written as a series of melancholic recollections, the seemingly simple novel conveys the messages of a violent history, as it explores the complexity of the relationships between racially diverse characters during the onset of WW11. The novel follows a young and ambitious Hartley Penrose who faces challenges with discovering his maturity/identity, serving as a transition from his past to his future. The Divine Wind utilizes the characters' ideas, experiences, beliefs, and values to explore the central themes, the racial prejudice between the white race and other ethnicities, the regional and urban divide and the growing up and loss of rights to adulthood. The Divine Wind utilizes conventions and ideas from the drama genre to communicate these central themes which are still prevalent in today's modern society. The racist attitudes of the time are personified by the subordinate characters in the book. Racisms plays a key role in Disher's novel The Divine Wind and it still plays a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22.
  • 23. The Divine Wind Analysis The Divine Wind, written by Garry Disher, is a novel in which not only shows and describes the struggle of characters during World War II in Broome, Australia, but also the many aspects of prejudice which affect namingly Ida Penrose, Mitsy Sennosuke, and Magistrate Killian. Ida Penrose, mother of the narrator, hartley, is arguable one of the most prejudiced characters throughout The Divine Wind. Ida has an anglocentric background which has shaped her prejudiced perspectives. She has a negative, biased view of all those who are not caucasian, or those who do not share the same anglocentric lifestyle as her. Early in the novel, Hartley has strong feelings about his mother, Ida, stating that It's even possible that she continued to love my ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... However, Magistrate Killian had suspicions that the Sennosukes were aiding the Japanese during WWII and warranted a search , in which Mitsy reacted with That's Right, I've got a bomb hidden under me and a radio in my undies. Mitsy was subject to much racial prejudice at this point, and even though she when the Japanese bomb had hit Broome, she had the urge to get down to the harbour. To aid the people in the water, (the)people dying, and to help those who were injured, even those who had prejudiced views against her. Mitsy suffers from a large amount of racial abuse, most especially after the bombing of Broome. Her and her mother were sent to an internment camp even though Mitsy was born in Australia. Yet she shows no unjust behaviour or hatred towards others, just frustration for them looking down on (Mitsy), just because (she's) Japanese. Magistrate Kilian. Another white Australian with Ango–centric views. He is self righteous because of his title. However, Mr Kilian treats and abuses others that are racially different, such as when to discussing a tropical Australian paradise during a dinner party with the Penroses. The question came from Jamie, who does all the work while we sit outside in the sun, dad? In which Magistrate Kilian rebuked with, we may need some black workers. As Mr ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24.
  • 25. Differences Between The Renaissance And Romantic Period... British literature is constantly evolving. This became overwhelmingly apparent in the survey of literature from the varying literary periods analyzed in English III. The reason for such is the ever– changing nation in which the authors lived. The stark differences in life during the Renaissance and Romantic Era resulted in authors' writing with the intention to convey different themes. Specifically, one key theme of the Renaissance was the role of God in people's lives, which manifests itself in John Donne's sermon "Meditation 17" was well as John Milton's poem "When I Consider How My Light Is Spent." In the Romantic Era, one theme around which writers tended to focus was the beauty and power of nature. This theme is overwhelmingly clear in William Wordsworth's poem "The World Is Too Much with Us" and Percy Shelley's poem "Ode to the West Wind." A theme nearly omnipresent in the Renaissance was the role of God in people's lives. One major work it appears in is John Milton's "When I Consider How My Light Is Spent." In this sonnet, Milton reflects on his blindness and its impact to his standing as a Christian. This is evident when he "fondly" asks, "Doth God exact day–labor, light denied?" In other words, he is asking God whether he still demands good works that may not be possible to to his disability. The answer to such question is a clear no, as "God doth not need... man's work." Moreover, this "murmur" elaborates its position, that whoever best accepts life's burdens ("His ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26.
  • 27. Finding Identity In Peter Christen Asbjornsen's East Of... Peter Christen Asbjornsen's East of the Sun and West of the Moon is a Norwegian fairy tale that revolves around the journey of a young woman who is unknowingly married off to a prince trapped in the form of a polar bear. She is forbidden see him at night and is put through an impossible trial once she discovers his identity. Likewise, Apuleius' version of Cupid and Psyche tells of Psyche, a beautiful young woman, who finds herself unknowingly married to Cupid. She too is forbidden from discovering his identity by night however, her curiosity leads her to uncover the truth and she is put through various trials in order to win back Cupid. To tell these remarkable tales, Asbjornsen and Apuleius both implement eerily similar themes to present an ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In East of the Sun and West of the Moon, the heroine must travel to a land that is simply known as East of the Sun and West of the Moon to retrieve her husband. However, she has not an inkling of knowledge of how to get there and decides to enlist the help of the East Wind, but confesses that he has never blown to the land that she is looking for and thus states that he will take her "to [his] brother the West Wind, maybe he knows." (Asbjornsen 20). The West Wind then takes her to the South Wind, who then takes her to the North Wind who is able to finally bring her to the land her prince has fled to. Impossible tasks are undergone by Psyche as well, which Venus puts forth in her endeavor to stop Psyche from having her beloved son. In her first trial, Psyche is ordered to sort a vast heap of mixed grains, but "an ant came to her rescue and summoned his army to isolate each different grain." (Morford 215) In the second task, "a reed murmured instructions" (215) on how to accomplish her task and she succeeded. In the third task she was to fill a jar of water from the stream in the Underworld and "the eagle of Jupiter swooped down and filled the jar for Psyche." (215). In the final task, Cupid himself helps her by putting sleep back into the box that she was ordered to bring from the Underworld. An ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28.
  • 29. The Life Of The Divine Comedy A piece of literature written to walk people through life, and what is waiting for them after. The Divine Comedy was written by a man of politics, relating his content to the events of his everyday life. Moving deeper into the substance of the writing, there are three major sections represented, Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso. Furthermore, we will take a look at the nine circles of hell depicted in the Divine Comedy. Dante Alghieri's life leading up to the writing the Divine Comedy. Dante was known for engaging in political agenda through his life and his writing. He was so into politics that he ran, and was elected as one of the six priors of Florence in 1300. The priors were seen as a high group in the public eye and only solidified his involvement in the government. His reign couldn't last forever though, and he was exiled by the Black Guelfs upon their return to power. Dante greatly incorporated Florence politics and society into the Divine Comedy because of his experience and knowledge on the subjects. Dante is recorded to have traveled city to city in the hopes of finding military assistance in finding justice for his unjust exile (Kumar . ) Along with that, he wanted to fight to bring the White Guelfs back in power. Bringing this idea together, Akash Kumar wrote, "settling for a presence in the court of certain signori (political and military leaders) such as the Malaspina family in Lunigiana, Cangrande della Scala in Verona, and finally Guido Novello of Ravenna. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30.
  • 31. Essay about Mobey Dick Herman Melville's Moby Dick is a book which can be read as a general metaphor for the battle between the evil powers of the Devil versus the divine powers of God and Jesus, both try to obtain the souls of mankind in order to assist in each other's destruction. In this metaphor, the Devil is shown through the person of Captain Ahab, God becomes nature, Jesus is seen as the White Whale, and the representation of mankind is the crew. The voyage of the Pequod, therefore, is a representation of a similar voyage of mankind on earth, until the death of Jesus, during the whole thing the influences of these three "supernatural forces" are connected. Thus, the basis of this idea is that ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "The hand of fate had snatched all their souls, and by the stirring perils of the previous day; the rack of the past night's suspense; the fixed, unfearing, blind, reckless way in which their wild craft went plunging towards its flying mark; by all these things, their hearts were bowled along. The wind that made great bellied sails, and rushed the vessel on by arms invisible as irresistible; this seemed the symbol of that unseen agency which so enslaved them to the race," (p.606) Relating to the metaphor, this passage can be viewed as giving the possibility of God as symbolized through the medium of nature in Moby Dick. The "wind", thought about in this sense, is an "unseen agency" of the motivation of God, which leads men's souls to the right paths. However, it is not a representational term found just in Melville's book. This "wind" appears as an indication of God in the opening lines of the book of Genesis, and can also represented when God breathes life into man. Another similarity between the Biblical representation of God and this passage is shown through the thought of arms. Just as God acts in the Bible by stretching out his right arm and commanding good or ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32.
  • 33. The Divine Wind Analysis The novel The Divine Wind (1998) by Garry Disher and the 2003 film, Japanese Story, directed by Sue Brooks both explore the common theme of 'love' through the use of novel and film techniques. Through the studying of the context and textual form of both of these texts, a greater understanding of the important ideas is achieved. The geographical setting in the novel, The Divine Wind, plays a key role in its story. It is set in the backdrop of World War II, where Australia's relationship with Japan is its weakest. Succession and mistrust of the Japanese is reflected even in reference to those who were born in Australia. The use of time–shifts and the overall cyclic nature allows for the audience to garner greater knowledge of the context. It is set in the 1930's and 40's in the 'frontier town' of Broom, Western Australia. "We lived at the southern end of Broome, where many of the master pearlers lived." Due to the geographical isolation, the main characters, Hart and Mitsy, often feel marginalised from society. This tyranny of distance reflects upon their ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It too showcases examples of the isolation and the significant role of the landscape, often becoming a 3rd character. The opening scene, through a range of panoramic shots, introduces as to the Australian culture. Sue Brook's successfully uses native music, colours such as yellow, white and red, and high angle shots to explore the isolation and it allows for the audience to be drawn into this environment. There are comparisons made between the differing density of population between the two cultures of Australia and Japan. One of the main characters, Hiromitsu, an Japanese business man, states this, "In Australia you have lots of space, no people. In Japan we have lots of people, no space." This environment serves a prominent role in the relationship of Hiromitsu and Sandy as forces of nature bring them ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34.
  • 35. What Does The Tyger Mean An Analysis of William Blake's "The Tyger" William Blake is known for two collections of poems, those collections are Songs of Innocence (1789) and it was added onto with Songs of Experience (1794). It is from those collections that he draws out his innermost thoughts on life often looking at "a being of God" or "the very human existence." In his poem "The Tyger" he used numerous literary devices that center on divine creation ultimately putting beauty and destruction hand in hand, it does this through the lens of a Romantic Era poet. To first understand the poem by Blake it must first be dissected. The first stanza had a set of word choice that gave a question that was expanded upon by each stanza following the first. This question was: What immortal hand or eye, Could frame thy fearful symmetry? (lines 3–4). It is from that moment that the poem eludes to a being above through the use of the word "immortal", and considering the others works done by Blake it can be assured that this being that is eluded to as a crafter is God. The word choice gave way to another intriguing piece of evidence for Romanticism and that was the use of the words "fearful" and "symmetry" together. Symmetry in art forms beauty. It is said that the more ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This stanza was vaguer than the stanzas previously because it refers to a more broad choice of words, however two words add substance to the thesis and they are the use of "shoulder" in line 9, and the use of "dread" in line 12. The shoulder reference refers to the strength and symbol of strength and muscle needed to build something so beautiful and so deadly. The dread reference points out the unknown or fear building in what is unknown which points towards the idea that Blake was putting fear and beauty together as one in this ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36.
  • 37. Fate Versus the Will of Juno Essays Virgil is considered the most renowned Latin poet, according to the work "Divine Intervention, Supremacy of Fate in The Aeneid." He is the writer of the epic poem The Aeneid. Virgil's epic is a continuation of Homer's The Iliad. The Aeneid is very much like The Iliad. In The Iliad, the men and gods are a driving power of the Trojan War, as are the men and gods a driving power of Aeneas's journey in The Aeneid, but there is a stronger power driving Aeneas on his journey. It is the same power to which the characters of The Iliad are subject, and that is the power of fate. In The Aeneid the men and gods draw the battle lines. Some want Aeneas to succeed on his journey to Latium. Others want him to fail. Still other characters are just on the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Jupiter says to Venus, "Relieve yourself of fear, my lady of Cythera...the fate of your children stands unchanged, I swear..." and that "On [the Romans] I set no limits, space or time...I have granted them power, empire without end" (qtd. in "Divine" 2). So the god of the gods has spoken that fate will prevail ("Divine"2). Jupiter represents fate and Juno is the antagonist, comments Woodworth (115). Jupiter's and Fate's will are the same. Continuing throughout the epic poem Jupiter will help to insure that Aeneas fulfills his destiny (Woodson 115). According to "Divine Intervention, Supremacy of Fate in The Aeneid", Aeneas's mother Venus loves her son as much as Juno hates him (2). Venus struggles to keep Juno from harming Aeneas . Venus worries that the Trojans will not be accepted at the city of Carthage. Before Aeneas arrives at Carthage, Venus sends the god of love, Cupid, into the city. Cupid is told to use his gifts to make Dido, Queen of Carthage, fall madly in love with Aeneas. The plan works very well. Juno sees Dido's love for Aeneas as opportunity to delay his journey to Italy ("Divine" 2). According to Virgil, one day while Dido and Aeneas are hunting in the forest, Juno summons a storm (101). Dido and Aeneas take cover in a cave. They both sleep together while in the cave. Dido considers this a marriage (Virgil 102). Juno now hopes Aeneas will not leave Carthage. By not leaving, Aeneas will not ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38.
  • 39. Anne Bradstreet's Puritan Beliefs In The Greatness Of God Puritans in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries are constantly portrayed as devout believers in the greatness of God. Puritans had an obvious belief that God acted in their everyday lives, a concept known as providentialism. When the new religion of Puritanism arose, a majority of these Puritans believed in values such as the grace of God and His divine mission. The Puritan concept of God's grace signifies their constant need for God. God was seen as kind, and He helped to cleanse the Puritans of envy, hatred, lust, or vanity. The Puritans also believed in God's divine mission, which was a plan for each of the Puritans' life. The Puritans felt that they had to follow His plan; their lives went on how they did because of God's control. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This alarming metaphor uses a dark tone and syntax to build up intensity and show God's fearful side. The choice of the word "drunk" helps to convey this message of God being vicious and harsh. The word drunk sometimes complies with enjoyment; God's wrath will fully shoot through one's heart and enjoy it. The bow and arrow helps to create an image of death and God's "evil side." Edwards also discusses God's providentialism by writing another comparison: "There are the black clouds of God's wrath now hanging directly over your heads, full of the dreadful storm, and big with thunder; and were it not for the restraining hand of God it would immediately burst forth upon you" (24–29). This frightening description of a vicious storm emphasizes how helpless any person is when compared to God. The daunting tone of this dreadful storm expresses the idea of providentialism while making any readers or listeners intimidated by God's absolute power. God has full control of our lives, and He can send us to hell with ease. By putting the fear of God into others' minds, they are intimidated by His providential supervision and what He can do if one does not correctly ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40.
  • 41. How Did The Romantic Influence On The Modern World? The romantic period in regards to the natural world had many accounts of divinity having an influence on the modern world. William Blake and his crazy yet visionary religious views implied the world followed the human form; all of its' mercy, pity and peace being in constant play in shaping our world. Percy Bysshe Shelley and the view of the world as a shift from spring and winter, how our world follows the ups and downs as the seasons change, making life and taking it in balance and glorious harmony. William wordsworth has had the idea that children are the most divine and loving, for they have not yet been tainted and taught the evils of the world and once they had as men and women seen and experienced such evils, only nature could show them once again the love and compassion of the natural world. The romantic writers expressed deep theories and ideas that followed into other aspects of life, including later writers. William Blake was known to be crazy and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... As he enjoyed the works of William Wordsworth when he was younger, the more conservative Wordsworth caused much of Shelley's dissatisfaction, which he eventually showed in a later work. Shelley showed his interest in the natural world in his, "Ode to the West Wind", which he explained that the world has its ways and means for advancement and rebirth, "The trumpet of a prophecy! O wind, If winter comes, can spring be far behind"(Shelley, 64–70). This was the conclusion when he described how the winds change with the season and what their involvement is with the natural world. How the winds take down trees and spread seeds in its very own balance of destroyer and creator. Shelley finishes his ode with the statement quoted to create a comparison of the winds and its duties to the laws of nature, birth, death, and rebirth of the natural world, for the cycle of winter and spring tell a larger story of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 42.
  • 43. Essay on The Odyssey The Odyssey details Odysseus' arduous return to his homeland. Ten years have passed since the end of the Trojan war and Odysseus, the "most cursed man alive", has been missing and presumed dead by many. (10.79). Throughout the novel, gods play a significant role in the fate of Odysseus and other characters. The extent of the gods' role though is not unqualified, contrary to Telemachus' suggestion that, "Zeus is to blame./He deals to each and every/ laborer on this earth whatever doom he pleases" (1.401–403). While Zeus does have this power, his description of how humans meet their fate is more accurately depicted throughout the novel. As he aptly points out, "from us alone, the say, come all their miseries, yes,/ but they themselves, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Odysseus' arrogance furthers his misfortune, since Polyphemos is Poseidon's son. Polyphemos proceeds to ask his father to never allow Odysseus to return and if Odysseus returns home that it be well over due and without his crew; Poseidon obliges. In this instance, Poseidon's wrath against Odysseus is solely Odysseus fault. Had Odysseus not told the Cyclops his name, he would not have been deemed the ill fate that he was. With one brash decision, Odysseus cedes control of his fate to Polyphemos and then Poseidon. Here, Odysseus' stupidity shows that mortals possess a significant degree of control over their fate. After being released from Circe's island, Odysseus follows her advice and ventures to the underworld to speak with the lauded prophet Tiresias. While Tiresias is not a god, he is not a mortal. This, along with his knowledge of Odysseus' desire to return home and Poseidon's anger towards Odysseus, allows Odysseus to trust him. Upon speaking with Tiresias, he learns that, A sweet smooth journey home, renowned Odysseus, that is what you seek, but a god will make it hard for you–I know– you will never escape the one who shakes the earth, quaking with anger at you still, still enraged, because you blinded the Cyclops, his dear son. Even so, you and your crew may still reach home, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 44.
  • 45. The Divine Wind Analysis Disher demonstrates isolation of the ethnic groups and the regional and urban divide present in The Divine Wind through the beliefs, experiences, and values of the Killian family and Hartley Penrose. Both culturally and geographically isolated from the rest of Australia, the people of Northern and Central Australia, specifically Broome felt ignored, misunderstood, and misconstrued by the urban South. This is an ongoing theme in Australia. They resented interference from the federal government. The North feared invasion from Japanese and argued that Australia would perish if the North and the Centre were not populated and developed. Racism was intrinsic, with the Aborigines seen either as treacherous or lazy or as childlike and in need of protection. White Australians were the minority and their high statuses were a scant consolation when they were vastly outnumbered by a diverse range of cultures, the Japanese, Malays, and other South East Asians. Although, the minority, the white residents felt as if they had a power of the other ethnicities. Therefore, opening segregated cinemas, a Register of Aliens, and a clear but unofficial racial hierarchy. Their geographical isolation led to specific cultures, views, and beliefs on race. The regional and urban divide was evident when Jaimie Kilian's wealthy urban family arrived in Broome. Jaimie felt entitled as his father was the new magistrate in town, he was arrogant and opinionated towards the regional community. When Hart offered his friendship, Kilian responded by saying "I don't need any friends. "He walked as if he had owned the town." Jamie enjoyed having an edge over Hart, he felt entitled as he was an urban elite. "Jamie was competitive. In almost everything you could name, Jamie was better than me...We were opposites." Hart displayed what many felt about the new family from the Urban South. "I envied him, I was jealous, I pitied myself." As an urban elite, Mr. Killian's beliefs and attitudes towards different races was narrow–minded stereotyping and placing generalisations on the Japanese and Aboriginal community, labelling them as unintelligent people who "were unable to make any ethical or moral distinctions." Magistrate Kilian's views can be compared ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 46.
  • 47. John Keats On The Sea English 1 Athini Majali Group HH 22August 2014 Friday 9:35 Tutor: Ms Ashley Graven A close reading of John Keat's On the Sea Born in Moorgate, London, 1795, John Keats proved to be a promising poet during the short course of his life – he is hailed as one of the greatest poets of the Romantic period, one of his greatest literary works include To Autumn and The eve of St Agnes. The Romantic Movement was a reaction to the emphasis on society and logic present in the enlightenment era – the period focused extensively on individuality, human emotion and the relationship between man and nature (Abram, 283). On the Sea portrays the sea as an embodiment of nature which provides relief and freedom to man and suggests that humanity refrain from rejecting nature. This essay aims to illustrate the relationship between nature and man and re– iterate the mightiness and the spiritual effect of the sea both as a divine and a liberating force for humankind. On the Sea presents the transcendence of the sea to a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the octave, nature is dark, mighty yet gentle. In the sestet, the imagery has a negative connotation and the negative connotation is directed towards the intended hearer. The imagery changes from that of 'eternal whisperings', 'gentle temper' to that of disturbed hearts, "uproar rude" (11) and "cloying melody" (12). The negative relation to man threads itself throughout the poem. In the first quatrain the shores are desolate because man has rejected and shifted away from nature. In the sestet – the same imagery is present. Perhaps he does this to illustrate that mankind holds this negative notion and perception of the sea, they view the sea as an object that causes "uproar rude" or disturbs hearts and by disclosing a different view of the sea – one that is spiritual and gentle, the poet hopes that humanity would attach nature to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 48.
  • 49. Figurative Language In The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner Often times, nature is perceived in many different ways. This can be as a result of people having their own opinions and knowledge. The Romantic era was an intellectual movement that lasted from about 1800–1850. Romantic poets believed that nature is beautiful and controls fate. The Romantics often used figurative language to describe and give nature traits. The poems Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and Ode to the West Wind by Percy Bysshe Shelley are examples of Romantic poems. In the poems, each author reflected their visions of nature. These poems reflected their visions of nature as dangerous, powerful, and divine. They reflected their visions of nature by using symbolism and other forms of figurative language. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... For example, "The death–fires danced at night; the water, like a witch's oils, burnt green, and blue and white" (128–130 – Coleridge). The quote above personified the death–fires as dancing, and connected the sea with the color of a witch's oil. Also, this quote describes the sea as color–changing which may be symbolic of its power. Another example that reflects nature is: "And we did speak only to break the silence of the sea!" (109–110 – Coleridge). The previous quote reflects their visions of nature by putting emphasis on the "silence of the sea" which may represent the serenity of nature. The quote also shows how if we "speak" we would disrupt the balance of nature. Coleridge also used rhyme scheme to get a point across as can be seen in: "The ice was here, the ice was there, the ice was all around, It cracked and growled, and roared and howled like noises in a swound!" (61–62 Coleridge). This quote used the words "roared" and "growled" to describe how the nature of the ice around them is dangerous and hostile. Coleridge reflected his opinion of nature by using figurative language to describe how dangerous and divine nature ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 50.
  • 51. Analysis Of The Book ' 12 Of The Iliad ' His True Nature Following the demise of Troy, the Achaean's mighty fortification is destined to fall not by mere mortal strength, but rather, the selfish act of divine intervention. In Book 12 of the Iliad, Homer's narration is centralized around the Greek's mighty fortifications, the fortress that agitates the gods. The author begins the story by describing Zeus's plans to dismantle the Greek rampart. The author makes the god's plan manifest when Hector chastises Polydamas for his foresight and proceeds to carry out his god's will. More specifically the structure of the story proceeds with Asius' and Sarpedon's attempt at charging the wall and finally Hector's assault, with the intervention of Zeus, which successfully opens the gates and lead the Trojans inside the wall. Though, prior to Hector's success, Homer illustrates stalemate–like battle scenes to describe the evenness of the mortal warriors. More specifically, Homer emphasizes this evenness in strength between both armies and the overbearing power of Zeus through the usage of his epic similes, most notable in lines 322–337, where Zeus is depicted by his divine powers as supporting Hector and his Trojans breach the wall. Ultimately, Homer's simile in lines 322–337 functions as a way to determine the fate of the victor on the battlefield, the breach of the Greek's fortification, and most importantly to demonstrate how divine intervention is committed out of selfishness rather than to aid mortal men. In lines 322–337, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 52.
  • 53. The divine wind racism The Divine Wind 'The Divine Wind shows how difficult it is for communities to accept cultural difference.' Discuss. The community of Broome before the advent of World War II in The Divine Wind at first appears to be an idyllic town in which Malays, Koepangers, Japanese, Manilamen and Australians all work in relative harmony in search of the elusive pearl. Hartley Penrose, the central narrator of the novel, seems to enjoy describing the tropical existence of Broome and its harmony: "mangoes and barramundi on the table", "the half–dozen languages, the slap of sandals and bare feet." But for all its seeming harmony, Broome is a town where racial tensions simmer just under the surface and evolve into a blatant racism with the coming of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Major Morrissey demonstrates a view typical of the ignorant racist "if your Jap painted his face with burnt cork, who would be the wiser?" – and shows a tendency to view people with totally different cultures as one and the same. Such is his belief in his own superiority and the unsuperiority of others of different race, that he neglects to realise that Japanese and Aboriginal cultures are two very independent and separate ways of life. The racially and culturally intolerant behaviour of the community of Broome shows how troublesome it is to accept cultural difference. Even the two most unprejudiced and open–minded characters in The Divine Wind demonstrate the devastating effect of spreading racial intolerance in a small community. Originally, Hart and Michael Penrose are indignant at the treatment of some of the Aboriginals and Japanese. They alone are able to see the idiocy of the internment camps: "Alf? Peggy? What harm can they do anyone?" Michael shows his disapproval in the most sarcastic manner when he comments: "Maybe they think Sadako will send messages out to sea in her soy sauce bottles. Maybe they think she'll insinuate herself into our lives and commode our will" But sadly and steadily, Michael's resistance to the racial intolerance decreases and is washed away with Alice officially reported as missing, he feels that Mitsy and Sadako, his two friends are now "two lithe killers." After his stroke, Michael spends his days desperately ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 54.
  • 55. Animistic Beliefs Under the same regard as Catholics pray not only to the Lord, but to their ancestors, saints, and the Holy Mother during times of need, and in the same regard that most Christians pray for each other during hardships, it is acceptable for those who hold animistic beliefs to pray to alternative sources as well. Prayers, after all, are simply the method of communicating to those beyond the reach of our normal perceptions. There is a wide divide between communicating and worshipping. One of the strongest principles of Christianity is the Holy Spirit, the essence of the Lord that fills all things and inhabits all people, beckoning them to accept the divine and guiding them towards righteousness. Through a Christianized filter of thought, the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The differences between idolatry and respect are vast, but the line between them can be thin. Without using a Christianized filter of thought, many practitioners of animistic traditions fall victim to Pagan actions. It is easy for God's works to be misinterpreted, misused, and mistreated. Unless one can recognize that the spirits of their belief exist solely because of the Holy Spirit placed within them by the Lord, they risk performing idolatry and falling into polytheistic worship. However, when reviewed with a Christianized filter of thought, one may derive different messages through scripture. In Exodus, the Lord states that "[t]hou shalt have no other gods before me. Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth" (Exo. 20. 4–5). While not necessarily dictating that the faithful should not believe in other spiritual entities, the Lord merely states that such entities should not be respected above Him. Faithful should not idolize anything in the skies, the earth, or the waters, although the skies, earth, and waters themselves may be another story. Regardless, these forces of nature are only divine because the Lord has made them so, and nothing should be respected above the Lord himself. These forces should not be worshipped. The Lord's faithful should not bow to them nor serve them. However, just as the faithful are commanded to love thy neighbor, the faithful that believe that aspects of the natural world embody spiritual entities should extend this precept to these spirits as well. When they love thy neighbor, they should extend their love to both the physical persons in their lives as well as to the spiritual persons in their lives, and should recognize all the while the differences between love ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 56.
  • 57. Prejudice In The Divine Wind By Garry Disher In his novel, The Divine Wind Garry Disher engages his reader and persuades them to consider the ideas of friendship, prejudice and love. In the pressure pot of the racially charged Broome, Western Australia during the testing times of the second world war, Disher encourages his readers to connect to the characters by using recurring and universal themes. Through the effective use of literary techniques such as narrative structure, characterisation and setting, the novel encourages and develops the audience's understanding of the testing, slippery state of friendship, the ever–present prejudice in this society, and love in its different kinds. Disher's use of first–person narration and rhetorical question gives an insight into the character's ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The prologue builds suspense and foreshadows the love held for Misty by Hart, "unaware that I was in love with her" but also that this love is not be eventuated. The reader, therefore, is encouraged to read on, to see not what will happen, but how it will occur The issues of unrequired love explored later in the novel, as Hart and Misty relationship would not be supported," When I was outside. Misty retread, became a dream in my head', the reader emphasizing with the reader as the racial intolerance preventing their love. Hart acts as a reliable narrator, as at the beginning of the novel you are unsure of him, but as he is able to comment on his weaknesses, "I'm a plain man and I've plain life, but it doesn't follow that I'm a man of plain feelings, does it? I burn for her," the reader, therefore, sympathies with him. Through these elements of unique narrative structure and self– reflexive narration, the author conveys the idea of racial intolerance preventing ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 58.
  • 59. Hippocrates On The Sacred Disease Summary The passage On the Sacred Disease, is an examination into the alleged 'sacred disease' of epilepsy. Although many of the anatomic and bodily propositions were incorrect, Hippocrates concepts were closer to the diagnostics and teachings of today than those of metaphysical reasoning. For these reasons, On the Sacred Disease provided a structural understanding of diseases in our bodies today. Hippocrates main concepts are derived from the fact that this disease originates from a natural cause. He states , "Men regard its nature and cause as divine from ignorance and wonder...this notion of divinity is kept up by their inability to comprehend it (33–35)." It was this 'sacred disease' of epilepsy that people used to connect with divine interference. Divine stimulation was never in form of a sickness or disease. These people were under the idea that sickness was not a sole presence, but rather an ailment that affects the human body and is sent by divinities. Therefore people did little to treat the affected, but rather tried to appease the so–called divine powers that sent the disease. In fact, the epileptic attacks were often referred to different gods depending on the symptoms such as Poseidon, Ares, Apollo, and Hecate. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He states, "the body is made to feel and undergo changes in the changes of the winds (326–327)," it was conventional that there were just four elements, earth, air, fire, and water with their related traits, coldness, dryness, heat, and wetness. If these elements were present in the human body in balanced amounts, health was maintained, if not health was ravaged by the lack of an equivalence. This concept was stemmed from an idea that health was maintained by an equal rule of the bodily elements rather than dominion by a single ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 60.
  • 61. The Divine Wind Quotes Assessment Type 2 – Text Analysis – Novel: How are the ideas, experiences, values and beliefs of these characters from the divine wind relevant to you and the others today? In the novel "The Divine wind", Garry Disher explores the experiences, values, ideas and beliefs expressed by some Australians, in remote Broome, during the world war two. Narrated by Hartley Penrose, the story follows the lives of his family and friends, as they deal with the reality of war. Touching on subjects such as racism and relationship, Disher provides an insight into how dramatically their lives are affected. The racial discrimination experienced by Zeke is largely due to the involvement of japan in the Second World War. Zeke is a Japanese immigrant who's taken ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This is very true. For example, Hart loses Mitsy's friendship when she had mistaken what Hart had meant when he jerked his head to signal he would catch up to her later. After that, their friendship ended, until Alice was about to leave, which their friendship then mended. After that they become lovers, however, again they break off their friendship due to Hart insecurity as 'Mitsy and Sadako began to look less benign.' This quote shows his perception of them being influenced by the war as he became suspicious and saw them as Japanese enemies instead of friends. What finally pushed him over the edge was Alice's official letter, which resulted in him calling Mitsy, A bitch. Then there is Jamie Kalian whom he becomes friends with, which Jamie accepts because they were both lonely and Jamie liked being older than Hartley. Jamie is better than Hartley at everything, as well as being completely opposite but their friendship is just some convenience to them both. However, near the end, Hartley's jealously got the better of him, almost allowing Jamie to die which then results in the end of their friendship. The value of friendship is shown between Hartley, Mitsy and Jamie is evident in today's society. The jealousy felt by Hartley in the novel, provides an understanding of how envy can become a powerful emotion that can control people to do things that aren't in their nature or can instead influence them to be more aggressive if it is already in their ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 62.
  • 63. The Divine Comedy In Dante's Inferno The Divine Comedy acknowledged as Dante's Inferno was written in the 14th century and is an epic poem with allegorical value. Dante the Pilgrim is 35 years old and he was "midway along the journey of our life"(TEXTBOOK). Dante the pilgrim is lost in the dark wood, where he meets his guide named Virgil and he escorts Dante through the nine circles of hell. Virgil symbolizes human reason and wisdom. In the beginning, Dante was sympathetic for all of the people he saw suffering in hell, but as time goes by and as Dante gets deeper into hell, he realizes that the suffering people are getting what they deserve. Dante the Pilgrim grow as a character thought the story The first circle of hell is Limbo and this is where it is "a place of sorrow without torment" (Dante's Inferno 1). The virtuous non–Christians and unbaptized infants reside in this circle. These people are not saved, but they did not sin. They are punished by being forced to live for eternity in an inferior version of Heaven. They are living in a castle that has seven gates. They represent the seven virtues. Dante sees many famous people of the past "like Homer, Socrates, Aristotle, Cicero, Hippocrates and Julius Caesar (9 Circles of Hell). He has the upmost respect for these public figures. In the second circle of hell is where those who committed lustful acts are punished. They are penalized by being blown violently back and forth by extremely powerful wind. This wind does not allow the inhabitants to find ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 64.
  • 65. Supernatural In The Odyssey The part of the supernatural in "The Iliad" composed by Homer has component's which goes past authenticity utilizing the intercessions of divine beings. Also, which of the divine beings would it say it was that set them on to squabble (128)? The part of the extraordinary in the Sakuntala composed by Kalidasa has otherworldly components in condemnations to flights to the sky. See! in his vaporous limits he appears to fly, And leaves no follow upon the' flexible turf (378). This exposition will indicate how the part of the otherworldly can influence human lives through the force of divine beings. Besides, it will tell how the utilization of heavenly is distinctive in each of these works. First, let talk about the Iliad. "The Iliad" indicates how for example the war between Apollos and Achilles who were both gods begun, as well as the part that divine beings took in that war. Apollo descended from Olympus with his bow to assist. He sat himself down far from the boats with a face as dim as night, and his silver bow rang passing as he shot his bolt amidst them (128). All through the story, there were numerous divine beings or ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The Shakuntala is in light of the condemnation given by the sage on the King Dushyant. The condemnation happens on the grounds that King Dushyant overlooked Shakuntala. After the part of the condemnation happens divine intercession becomes possibly the most important factor by method for flame, water, rain, wind, and the sun. These five strengths of nature at distinctive times have helped either the ruler, or Shakuntala. In this story, the group of onlookers has the capacity see the force of the sage by decimating the lives of two individuals in adoration just in light of the fact that they were overlooked. In this epic, story the five strengths of nature through all the outrage, and embarrassment that happened has the ability to make the world or decimate ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 66.
  • 67. What Does The Tyger Mean An Analysis of William Blake's "The Tyger" William Blake is known for two collections of poems, those collections are Songs of Innocence (1789) and it was added onto with Songs of Experience (1794). It is from those collections that he draws out his innermost thoughts on life often looking at "a being of God" or "the very human existence." In his poem "The Tyger" he used numerous literary devices that center on divine creation ultimately putting beauty and destruction hand in hand, it does this through the lens of a Romantic Era poet. To first understand the poem by Blake it must first be dissected. The first stanza had a set of word choice that gave a question that was expanded upon by each stanza following the first. This question was: What immortal hand or eye, Could frame thy fearful symmetry? (lines 3–4). It is from that moment that the poem eludes to a being above through the use of the word "immortal", and considering the others works done by Blake it can be assured that this being that is eluded to as a crafter is God. The word choice gave way to another intriguing piece of evidence for Romanticism and that was the use of the words "fearful" and "symmetry" together. Symmetry in art forms beauty. It is said that the more ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This stanza was vaguer than the stanzas previously because it refers to a more broad choice of words, however two words add substance to the thesis and they are the use of "shoulder" in line 9, and the use of "dread" in line 12. The shoulder reference refers to the strength and symbol of strength and muscle needed to build something so beautiful and so deadly. The dread reference points out the unknown or fear building in what is unknown which points towards the idea that Blake was putting fear and beauty together as one in this ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 68.
  • 69. Odysseus Fate And Free Will In Homer's Odyssey The conflicting will of the gods in the direction of Odysseus' fate are clear in the opposing actions of Zeus and his remittance of Hermes to tell Calypso to let Odysseus go. However, just as the positive effects of this divine intervention are realized and Odysseus is able to build his boat, another god, Poisedon collects powerful winds which obliterate the boat Odysseus built and send him reeling off to another distant land where he is, for a time, free from any divine vengeance. Zeus recognizes the cause for Poisedon's fury with Odysseus and notes that even though he himself wishes to aid Odysseus, "it's the Earth–Shaker, Poseidon, unappeased, / forever fuming against him [Odysseus] for the Cyclops / whose giant eye he blinded" (Homer I.81–83). ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 70.
  • 71. Interracial Relationships Exposed In The Divine Wind By... The novel 'The Divine Wind', written by Australian author Garry Disher, set in Broome during WWII is about a man named Hart who happens to fall in heart–eyes with a young, beautiful woman during a time of hardship and war. The book is a straightforward yet deceiving read due to the short length of the novel. The language used in the novel was very understandable, there were not many overly complex words used. The plot of the story was in two parts, following two main story lines, one being the interracial love between Hartley Penrose and Mitsy Sennosuke and the other being the bombing of Darwin. The friendships and relationships formed and broken by characters and how they impacted on others at the time was a big part of the read. More ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The depression caused multiple hardships for them to endure. World War II saw many women join the workforce due to necessity, taking up jobs that had previously been considered only for men. Social attitudes towards what women were capable of doing had been changed due to the experience; this point in time was of high importance. During the time in the text, woman's rights were very underdeveloped, women were powerless and men were alpha. The female characters were often portrayed as nothing but housewives that weren't able to express their own opinions without facing a critical ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 72.
  • 73. Essay about Divine Wind The Divine Wind describes an Australia that is tarnished by racism, hatred and distrust, and yet the novel ends on an optimistic note. Do you agree? The novel is set during a World War. The tension and separation of races during a war seemed evident in Australia. As a multicultural country including Japanese and Aborigine population, conflicting attitudes towards these races had to be imminent. I entirely agree with the above statement due to the unequal treatment of the aborigines, tension between the Japanese population and characters such as Hart showing lack of trust over his lover Mitsy With a war against the Japanese was the trigger for racism in Australia. All throughout the novel elements of separation are presented. The ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Killian is talking about purity at the dinner, he declares that black workers will do all the work while 'we' (whites) sit inside. Aborigines do not even get equal opportunity, an example is when Derby's interview with the officer is forged and consequently Carl Venning simply lets Derby to fight his case without any support. Aborigines have been replaced with stereotypes and generalisations from the Broome community especially all aborigines being alcoholics and inferior. Racism has the significance in the future of Broome in that it will become extremely hard to reverse. Hart's lack of trust for characters in the novel such as Mitsy and Jamie are just some signs of Disher showing an Australia that is tarnished from distrust. Mitsy and Hart are close friends and at one time lovers. Nevertheless, Hart still has thoughts about Mitsy secretly seeing Jamie. Hart asks Jamie, "What's going on between you and Mitsy." Some might argue that Hart is only caring about his love but when Hart secretly follows Mitsy around town the reader recognises Hart's personality of distrust. Another aspect of distrust is from the white community concerning over aborigines of Broome "Your Abo is unreliable... He'll collaborate. He'll guide the Japs...." Since whites know that they are separate and unpleasant to other races, they fear the aborigines will help the Japanese in their desire to takeover Broome. Although the novel ends on an optimistic note, the future for Broome doesn't ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 74.
  • 75. Macbeth Witches Control The Elizabethan chain of being is based on the idea of hierarchy and divine order. A part of this divine order is the king who is said to be God's representative on earth; they bear the responsibility of carrying out God's wishes on earth. However, in the case of Macbeth, instead of god, it would be the witches. The witches are the patriarch to all of the character's in the play and the catalyst to all of the crimes Macbeth commits. The witches portray this through their supernatural abilities, their prophecy's control over the world, and their influence over Macbeth. To start with, the witches use their powers to perform many supernatural tasks. The ability to control the winds, to change states of matter, and the ability of foresight. Their control of the winds ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... the prophecy of him becoming king (I.III.50) creates a platform for confusion and doubt which causes Macbeth to murder Duncan. The prophecy which the witches promised Banquo a lineage of kings, heavily influences Macbeth into hiring murderer's to kill Banquo and his son Fleance. Macbeth becomes fearful and insecure about his fate, causing him to become reckless and inhumane at the end, due to the fear of losing his throne. The prophecy in which it mentions (Thou shalt get kings, though thou be none" (I.III.67). The thought of Banquo's lineage being of kingship caused Macbeth to act in an inhumane manner in the fear that this may one day be true. In summary, Macbeth's downfall can be directly traced back to the witches as their apparition and prophecies caused Macbeth to become overconfident and develop a sense of greed. In act 5 scene 8, Macbeth acknowledges the influence the witches had on him through their half–truths. This proves the witches to being the catalyst to Macbeth's crimes because of their influence over ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 76.
  • 77. The Gods In Hesiod's Odyssey The Gods were toppled by a race of more youthful divine beings, the Olympians, in a ten–year war called the Last GODS ("War of the Titans") – a progression of fights which were battled in Thessaly between the two camps of gods well before the presence of humankind. This battle of Gods is otherwise called the Skirmish of the Gods, Clash of Divine beings, or simply The God War. It spoke to a fanciful change in perspective that the Greeks may have acquired from the Antiquated Close East. The 12 Gods divine beings, otherwise called the senior divine beings. Their ruler was Cronus who was ousted by his child Zeus. A large portion of the god battled with Cronus against Zeus and were rebuffed by being exiled to Tartarus. The predominant one, and the special case that has survived, was in the Theogony credited to Hesiod. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Ouranos considers Cronus monstrous, thus detains him in the entrails of the Earth. Cronus, helped by the Hundred–handers and Cyclopes, at that point sets upon his dad, maims him, and sets himself up as lord of the divine beings, with Rhea as his significant other and ruler. Rhea bears another era of divine beings to Cronus, yet in expect that they will oust him, he swallows them each of the one by one. Just Zeus is spared: Rhea gives Cronus a stone in swaddling garments in his place, and places him in Crete to be monitored by the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...