A few miles from Boston, in Massachusetts, there is a deep inlet winding several miles into the interior of the country from Charles Bay, and terminating in a thickly wooded swamp, or morass. On one side of this inlet is a beautiful dark grove; on the opposite side the land rises abruptly from the water's edge, into a high ridge on which grow a few scattered oaks of great age and immense size. Under one of these gigantic trees, according to old stories, there was a great amount of treasure buried by Kidd the pirate. The inlet allowed a facility to bring the money in a boat secretly and at night to the very foot of the hill. The elevation of the place permitted a good look out to be kept that no one was at hand, while the remarkable trees formed good landmarks by which the place might easily be found again.…
The texts Monster written and performed by 4 members of the DC slam team, Dance with the Devil composed by Immortal Technique, Blindside directed by John Lee Hancock, and Divergent directed by Neil Burger, studied the connecting idea of influences across life in varying ways. An important lesson that was found was that our cultural capital can influence our choices and the way we see and value things in life. Secondly, it is our choice on whether we let our past and cultural capital be the barrier that stops us from seeing things from a new and broader perspective.…
Man. The killer angel. [1] Since the dawn of civilization humanity has fought to protect what they hold dear. Whether that be freedom, religion or land, the body politic has been at war, even within their own borders. Civil War is defined as a war between regions of the same country.[2] Throughout the course of the four and a half year Civil War, many battles were fought, but none quite as pivotal as the Battle of Gettysburg. Had Lee obliged Longstreet in his persistence of a defensive strategy, the Confederate Army very well could have won the war. Instead, the Union succeeded in holding their ground atop a hillside and thus defeating the Confederate Army and ultimately winning the war. One contemplates the motivations of both the Confederates and the Union soldiers in the United States Civil War. Was it money? Power? Dominance? Michael Shaara, author of The Killer Angels suggests alternative motives. In his novel about the pivotal battle, he suggests that even though it was commonly perceived that soldiers were fighting solely…
As a child we paint the world in colors and rainbow though the reality varies quiet afar from that. In our youth we know of only basic traits of happy and sad, then we grow and experience the world and evolve to have greed, maliciousness, and jealousy, that is what this world makes us. And no matter how hard we try to conceal the unlikable, a peek of it will always show it self through your personality.As someone who keep his evil covered till death there is a clear case made by saying that Carlos Ventresca from the book Angels & Demons embodies the most diabolical villain because he is remorseless towards his own father and has a love for violence.…
One story from a survivor, a first grade teacher Kaitlin Roig-DeBellis states “I did what anyone would have done," she says. "That was my responsibility. I'm their teacher. That's my job."(Sandy Hook School Massacre “i will not let that day define me”). That day she saved all 15 of her first graders in a tiny bathroom stall where barely anyone could breathe. Nearly three years after that day, Kaitlin Roig-DeBellis, has written Choosing Hope to help others…
Hope is the only thing stronger than fear. A little hope is effective. A lot of hope can be dangerous. In “Unbroken,” a novel by Laura Hillenbrand, hope is the only thing that doesn’t leave this novel for the main character, Louie Zamperini. Every ounce of human strength is tested and the audience sees what makes a human unbreakable.…
Through challenging their fears, personal or community morale benefits from their perceived success. In such a way, the hero’s success manipulates the situation as the feared become afraid.…
Hope is bared through out the novel “Little Bee”. Little Bee suffered from the most perplexing experiences that a refugee has to face, due to society, and misfortunate circumstances that she is fleeing from in her Homeland Nigeria. Hope is the core survival tool for Little Bee and other characters in this novel. Hope is the only thing some of these characters have, and without hope death seems like the only other option.…
This idea is demonstrated when hope is never defeated because of support from people with close bonds physically and mentally. In addition, hope can never be defeated since it’s source is from the identity of the person. Last but not least, hope is the last resort that any human can look towards that will also be presented for humanity. Consequently, even if our life appears abject we should live on with a sliver of…
The theme of hope is present in a plethora of American literature. Hope can be both a positive and negative quality. Hope is threaded into the following three pieces of literature: I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, and Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller. In the preceding literature hope plays a strong role in improving characters’ lives. Hope helps some people and is useless to others.…
Hopes can change a person’s ability to make choice. Society determines the role that every individual must adapt to according to age, gender, race and so on. In Sherman Alexie’s article, Superman and Me, he expressed his unsatisfied to discrimination of the society by showing his passion of obtaining knowledge from books.…
In both "Hope is the thing with feathers", by Emily Dickinson, and Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck, hope is portrayed as keeping up one's spirit, and welcome when times are grueling, and sounding promising but not always making sense. Curley's wife dreams of being a movie star, and this keeps her married, if unhappily, to Curley, but her dream is actually a delusion, and while promising much, never actually delivers. George and Lennie are sustained throughout their troubles by their dream of a farm and escape from the migrant worker's life, and while it could have happened, Lennie kills Curley's wife, thus making their dream impossible. The poem describes hope as a tangible thing that is constant in the soul, and attracts people to it, but isn't rational.…
The Heart of Darkness The search for truth and knowledge consumes us all at some point in our lives, but we don't always find what we are looking for in Truth. We wish it to be definitive, but more than that, we search for it with the strong belief that we will find it and be pleased, pleasantly enlightened, and will live better lives for it. In Heart of Darkness, it is shown that this is seldom true. Kurtz was destroyed by the truth he discovered about himself and the world he lived in. He had known and believed a "white" truth about the world he knew. His white truth was one of civilized, genteel ideas and actions. Living amongst the privileged few, the artists, musicians, orators, and other cultured people, he knew nothing of the dark depths of the human heart. When confronted with those horrible realities, he was forced to learn the "black" truth about life and people. His mind couldn't comprehend the truths he had to accept; it was totally contradicting to what he knew, and so he crumbled, selling his soul to sit among demons and devils. He was hollow inside, had no sense of moral or social responsibility, and the black truth he discovered ate away and destroyed him. He regressed to savage behaviors he had previously repressed and let the darkness fill the cold void within him. Because he knew so much blackness, he was unable to live in society again. He crossed over and relinquished all ties to the civilized world, for he had lived the white truths to an extreme, so did he live the black truths. Kurtz showed what happens when the white truths and lies of society are taken away. Kurtz lived and found sustenance in that reality, when it vanished and was replaced by another, darker world, he folded. In our society, we live by restraint. For Kurtz in Africa, all the restraints were removed and he was allowed to have as much candy as he wished, even before dinner. This proved to be too much for him, he went to an extreme and was destroyed by…
Langdon is at first confused and panicked when Solomon’s kidnapper phones him, but then begins to understand the clues the kidnapper left because of his extensive historical and symbolic knowledge. His American Dream is imperative to achieve, because he needs to save Solomon’s life. When the CIA becomes involved, Langdon uses his knowledge to help them as well, explaining one of the first clues left by the kidnapper, a severed hand. “The image of a human hand, marked in this way on the fingertips, is a very old icon. It’s known as ‘The Hand of Mysteries’…the Hand of Mysteries served as a mystical summons. It’s an invitation to receive secret knowledge” (Brown, 69).…
I’ve read some of Dan Brown’s books and I must say that I do enjoy his stories and the awesome idea that there could be some huge conspiracy out there that only a few people know about. Dan Brown’s writing could use a bit of revising and he’s not crafting a great literature here but the content of his stories usually makes up for that specifically The Lost Symbol makes no exception. This is the third book to follow the adventures of Robert Langdon, a Harvard Symbologist who previously showed up in Angels and Demons.…