YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Stephen Cranes The Monster and Nathaniel Hawthornes Young Goodman Brown
Essays 181 - 210
an awareness of who she is and wants to be. The unfortunate thing about this discovery is that society and her husband stand as ma...
blood that is shed on the battlefield. The novel opens when the rumor runs through a Union camp that the army is finally going to ...
the tiny little life boat. At one point they believe they see land in the distance, and then they realize it is land. However the ...
its mothers shame has come from the hand of God," and, in so doing, works upon the heart of her mother, both giving her joy and pr...
notes the following: "He wondered why he did not feel some keen agony of fear cutting his sense like a knife. He wondered at this,...
In seven pages the indifference represented by this famous short story by Stephen Crane is critiqued. Four sources are cited in t...
A five page essay that compares and contrasts the works by Stephen Crane and William Dean Howells. The antiwar stances of these a...
with the famous line: "None of them knew the color of the sky" (PG). The introduction is chilling. Why would no one know the color...
In 5 pages this paper discusses how the fear of the protagonist is employed to motivate his reactions in an analysis of this novel...
In five pages the images of time and place are explored in 'The White Heron' by Sarah Orne Jewett, 'My Antonia' by Willa Cather, '...
In five pages this paper discusses how nature adaptability influences a character's salvation in 'An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridg...
In ten pages this paper presents a comparative analysis of individualism perceptions as reflected in these works by Stephen Crane ...
In six pages this paper discusses how fear is naturalistically presented by Stephen Crane in this famous antiwar novel The Red Bad...
In eight pages this paper discusses how nature and naturalism is depicted through powerful imagery in this famous short story by S...
four men. As Crane describes the four men, he continues to emphasize the perilous quality of their situation. Only six inches of ...
a nation of disillusionment, and we often find some sort of sympathetic resonance in tales of the dark and unholy. And the first p...
In seven pages these works by Stephen Crane and Homer are examined within the context of the tragic hero and his combat motives. ...
was irreparable. In I, Tituba, the Black Witch of Salem, the protagonist is the misunderstood Tituba, a real-life woman who had b...
powerful setting. In the title itself we imagine hills and we envision hills that look like white elephants. This could clearly...
to enlist in the Union army. He leaves his mother and the farm behind, which have always offered him a sheltered existence. We see...
. . . Dont go a-thinkin you can lick the hull rebel army at the start, because yeh cant" (Crane 5). In his innocence, however, he ...
men see as hostility is in fact only the normal progression of the natural world. At first, they assume that that it is some consc...
ordinary and therefore the townspeople find it frightening. They have tried on several occasions to discover why the minister wear...
in the goodness of man and the mans natural state is in nature and is burdened by civilization (Campbell). The doctrine of sensibi...
of the Puritan ideal that humans born into the world had a tendency to sin and he went on further to theorize that the human subco...
his studies had no definite object, either of public advantage or personal ambition; a gentleman, high bred and fastidiously delic...
the remainder of her days with the red letter A embroidered upon her chest as a lasting reminder of her sin. Because Puritan wome...
parents who were drunks and irresponsible, their children have grown up to live lives that are fraught with insecurities, hardship...
truly fulfilled, and in fact he likens this fulfillment to a nearly spiritual ideal. On the other hand, there was...
punishes her by labeling her with the letter "A" and through social ostracism. Thoreaus argument with the state in "Civil Disobe...