After reading Flora & Ulysses By Kate Dicamillo, I think Ulysses Made the wrong decision to start flying in The Giant Do-Nut. I do not agree with his choice in chapter 32 of flying because that choice led to him having a concussion and I think that his superpowers should have been kept secret.
In Chapter 32 Ulysses got a concussion.Ulysses got a concussion because he started to fly and hit a door very hard.Ulysses never flew before and when he did in the Giant Do-Nut shop he failed and flew into a door.I do not think he should have flew because he was doing it in public and has never done it before.
In the book Flora mentions Incandesto such as on page 5,who is a superhero with the secret identity of a janitor.I think Ulysses should have
Followed his tracks and keep his superpowers secret because a lot of people freaked when there was a flying squirrel. Instead of flying in a donut shop with lots of people watching Ulysses should have kept his powers secret. Ulysses should not of flown in chapter 32 because he got a concussion and people freaked when there was a flying squirrel.Which is why after reading Flora & Ulysses I disagree with Ulysses choice of flying.
Ulysses Mcgill has to deal with many different and serious conflicts, both internally and externally.First, Ulysses must decide if he should pull over the car to hear the Sirens, even though he is already on the run and the police must be close. Second, Ulysses’ conflict with society is that, as a married husband on the run from the law, women, no matter how beautiful their voices may be, should not be on his mind. Lastly, Ulysses loses his compadre, Pete, has disappeared without a trace, leaving only a toad and his clothes in his wake. His conflicts within himself are not only affecting him within his own mind, but his behavior toward others are changed as well.
BANG! THUD! FLOP! The usually sound of an athlete when they hit the ground after they received and unexpected injury during the middle of a big game. While reading The Glass Castle, Jeannette Walls went through adversity in her life so too must athletes who get injured in sports. It happens in sports everywhere: professional, college, high school, middle school, and even in younger age groups. Injuries aren’t fun, but that’s just how the dice roll. Those who don’t go through injuries are blessed with knowing that they don’t have to go through the hardships; however, they are also cursed because they don’t know the feeling of breaking your ankles in a soccer game, receiving a concussion during a football game, or even breaking your arm during
In The Odyssey, Odysseus is subject to the treachery of his shipmates significantly at two times: when he told them to keep Aeolus’s wind bag and they disobeyed, and when they slayed Helios’s cows. The latter was the more traumatizing event for Odysseus because it ended in the death of the rest of his surviving crew. After learning of their treason at Helios’s island, he calls out to Zeus, stating, “I am ruined; now my men, awaiting me, contrived this horrid plan” (Mandelbaum 249). The faithlessness of his crew was one of Odysseus’s more testing trials, as it resulted in him losing his men and ship and then being stranded on Ogygia for years. Similarly, Ralph endured bitter betrayal as well. Throughout Lord of the Flies, the other children begin to lose faith in having a civilized life. Thus, they abandon Ralph and join Jack for savagery. This disloyal actl leads to Ralph eventually breaking down in front of Piggy,
The character cannot stand it anymore. He leaves his son to rule the land and goes out to sea. He tries to convince his sailors as well. Ulysses tells his faithful mariners “[o]ld age hath year his honor and his toil….’Tis no too late to seek a newer world….To
Throughout modern history the ancient Greeks and their stories have influenced our culture and way of life. Many of the ancient Greek myths are those of caution that teach us moral lessons. For example, the myth of Odysseus and the sirens, told by Homer in The Odyssey, teaches us to resist the urge to indulge in temptations. Odysseus and his crew are travelling near the island of the sirens when Odysseus plugs the ears of his crewmates with beeswax and has them tie him to the mast so that he can listen to the sirens’ song and not crash their ship onto the rocks as they pass the island. Odysseus and his crew safely pass the island of the sirens without any casualties and continue on their journey home. Author Margaret Atwood and artist John William Waterhouse both display their brilliant ideas about the myth of Odysseus and the sirens using poetry and painting. Both Ulysses and the Sirens by John William Waterhouse and “Siren Song” by Margaret Atwood use the myth of the sirens to show that during their lives, people often encounter bad temptations that can lead to their demise and should pay no attention to such temptations.
Children are to be impressionable and easily persuaded. As a father Ulysses want to share a special bond with his daughter as she mirrors his believes through her everyday life and thinking. As someone who is indifferent to his teachings and ideology he feels that he has failed as a father. Even if Una had disagreed with his teachings, it would be preferable to enticing no emotion.
...ly has wasted his years in pursuit of a goal that is unattainable and wants to remind us that we should not set our goal too high. Otherwise, we will waste our life and have nothing in the end. People usually enjoy the happiness during their chasing of dream. However, Willy can’t find the happiness in the progress of chasing his dream. He should have realized that he was chasing a wrong dream and had other dreams instead. Though I agree that Willy deserves his tragedy, meanwhile, I pity Willy’s tragedy. Willy has no parents to learn from so he learns the things all by himself and nobody teaches him what to do. It is not his fault for having a wrong dream. At least, I think that he is better than people who have no dream. He did strive for his dream and tried to make it comes true. However, he was too stubborn to accept others’ opinions and this leads to his tragedy.
Ulysses grew up loving horses. He loved riding, and taking care of them. His father
Ulysses, in The Odyssey, is the hero who has been trying to get home to his love, Penelope, and also his beloved country. He has found himself at war with many different gods and people, including Neptune, who is not yet ...
There are many theories regarding the mechanism of concussion but the precise mechanism is still not clear-cut. It is known that concussion is a clinical syndrome of neurological impairment that results from traumatic biomechanical forces transmitted to the brain that can occur either directly to the brain or indirectly to the brain. (5) To further explain the term concussion, it is important to know that it is a change in brain function following a force to the head, which may be accompanied by temporary loss of consciousness but is identified in conscious individuals with measures of neurologic and cognitive dysfunction. (6)
Stanford, W. B. The Ulysses Theme: A Study in the Adaptability of a Traditional Hero. Dallas, TX: Spring Publications, 1992.
Michael Fier was playing a late night football game in 2009 at the humongous Sam Barlow High School. He was a tall and skinny wide receiver on the left side, he was open. The ball was passed and then the ball was caught! Michael Fier was at the 20 yard line, 15, 10, BOOM!(Concussion Legacy Foundation)
Homer's Odyssey depicts the life of a middle-aged, while Tennyson's "Ulysses" describes Ulysses as an old man. The character's role in his son's life shifts. With maturity, Telemachus does not require as much guidance from his father. However, time does not alter the caring fellowship the man has with his crew, nor the willpower that he possesses in achieving his goals.
'Ulysses' is both a lament and an inspiring poem. Even modern readers who are not so familiar with the classics, can visualize the heroic legend of Ulysses, and so is not prepared for what he finds in the poem— not Ulysses the hero but Ulysses the man.
The great hero Odysseus has captivated readers throughout the ages. It is no surprise that the Victorian poet Tennyson not only read the Odyssey but wrote poetry about Odysseus as well. In the poems 'The Lotos Eaters' and 'Ulysses,' Tennyson remains true to the legends, but he infuses the characters with the ethos of his own day and his own experiences.