The change FADE IN INT. BEDROOM - MIDNIGHT With wet tears rolling down her cheeks, heart racing, struggling to breathe, as the words NANCY who’s 17, reads across her phone screen broke her into a million pieces. She felt as if her life was coming to an end. She deserved a better guy than Jay. NANCY Im worth so much than what I give myself Credit for. I need to be my own person and not Depend my happiness on nobody but me. Pulling her bed covers over her Nancy puts some music she can fall asleep to. NANCY (cont’d) I need some rest. Tomorrow is a new day. FADE OUT FADE IN Her alarm rang and she got up to get ready for school, 15 minutes later her mom walks in to check that she was up. NANCY (v.o) It's crazy how …show more content…
But like she said she's my mother and not my friend. FADE OUT MONTAGE. Nancy gets dropped off for summer school. Nancy meets up with her friend Lexi. Nancy is heading to her class but then a guy catches her attention. Nancy couldn't think about anything that whole afternoon but him. Who was he? FADE IN INT. BEDROOM - EVENING As Nancy was listening to Eli Young band she couldn't stop thinking about him. She found it weird that she never noticed him before because she knew everyone that went to Crimson High. NANCY Why am I now barely noticing him? I don't have time for guys at the moment but there's something about him, I just can't figure out what. Is it cause he's mysterious? Since then Nancy figured out that she likes enigmatic guys because they’re not easy to read and are down to earth. FADE OUT (couple weeks later, Wednesday) FADE IN EXT. OUTSIDE OF NANCY'S HOUSE - AFTERNOON JAY is parked outside of Nancy's house, they agreed that they would talk and try to work things out. INTERCUT BETWEEN JAY AND NANCY Text message: Hey you can come now. - Nancy Text message: Okay i'm going. - Jay NANCY Hey come …show more content…
LILIANNA Just making sure so I can Cover for you when mom Gets back. NANCY Ohh okay yeah i'll let you Know when i'm leaving. Nancy knew it wasn’t right to go behind her parents back to hang out with Jeffrey but she needed to hang out with him. Since that day at the hospital when she told her doctors that she wasn’t depressed anymore, little did they know he was the reason why. NANCY Hey i'm leaving now! LILIANNA Alright, be careful And have fun. EXT.JEFFREY’S CAR - EVENING As Nancy was walking to Jeffreys car she couldn’t help but to think that he was going to graduate in a couple months. It was going to be her first year without seeing him around school, she liked knowing he was at school because she knew that he was safe. But in a couple months that's going to change. JEFFREY (smiling) Heeey NANCY (smiling back) Heeey! So where Are we going? JEFFREY I'm taking you to that farm I told you about with the Baby elephant? NANCY (excitingly) ARE YOU SERIOUS?! As Nancy responded to Jeffrey her eyes gleamed with joy, Jeffrey knew that she loved taking pictures of nature and she was filled with happiness on how he's showing interest in what she loves
Night Waitress by Lynda Hull is a poem that describes the feelings of a waitress that works the night shift of a diner Reflection of “Night Waitress” “Night Waitress” by Lynda Hull is a poem that describes the feelings of a waitress that works the night shift of a diner. The speaker obviously belongs to a lower social class, in the way of income and her occupation. Much like the character in this poem, the speaker in “The Chimney Sweeper” by William Blake works long, hard hours as a chimneysweeper. These two characters are both related in their ways of life and their classes in our society.
Poverty is often taxing to one’s life in multiple ways, some of which include mind taxation, stress taxation, emotional taxation and of course money taxation. Mother Theresa once said “Loneliness and the feeling of being unwanted is the most terrible poverty”. How would you find time to look for the one that would make you feel special and wanted, while having to live in situation which doesn’t forgive free time? “Night Waitress” by Linda Hull is poem that looks at daily life of a waitress who struggles to answer just that question.
The Holocaust is known to be one the World's greatest catastrophes. Many people know about it, but very few know how life was like in the concentration camps. In the memoir, Night, Elie Wiesel utilizes figurative language like metaphors, irony, foreshadowing, and unique sentence structures, to convey and compare how life during the Holocaust was ghastly, full of lies and regret, and how it was like "one long night, seven times cursed"(25).
On an ordinary day, Leslie opens the main door of her house, when she walked inside she saw her mom and sister Islla sitting on the coach. Islla was crying, and Leslie ask her “What happened?’ Why you crying?’”. Islla told her that she is pregnant and that she wants to keep the baby even if her boyfriend will be against the baby, but she will need to drop out from her University. In a few minutes of thinking, Leslie decided and told her sister “You don’t need to drop out I will help you to babysit with my nephew.”
Book Review of Night and Dawn "Never shall I forget that night, the first night in the camp, which has turned my life into one long night, seven times cursed and seven times sealed. Never shall I forget that smoke. Never shall I forget the little wreaths of smoke beneath a silent blue sky. Never shall I forget those flames which consumed my faith forever. Never shall I forget that nocturnal silence which deprived me, for all eternity, of the desire to live.
The section in the novel night that painted a dark and angry picture of human nature is when the Jews were fleeing Buna and hundreds of them were packed in a roofless cattle car. The Jews were only provided with a blanket that soon became soaked by the snowfall. They spent days in the bitter cold temperatures and all they ate was snow. For these reasons, many suffered and died. When they stopped in German towns, the people stared at that cattle cars filled with soulless bodies. “They would stop and look at [the Jews] without surprise.” It was a regular occasion for the German people to see suffering Jews and not feel pity. The dark and angry picture of human nature was when a German worker “took a piece of bread out of his bag and threw it
In the memoir, Night, author Elie Wiesel portrays the dehumanization of individuals and its lasting result in a loss of faith in God. Throughout the Holocaust, Jews were doggedly treated with disrespect and inhumanity. As more cruelty was bestowed upon them, the lower their flame of hope and faith became as they began turning on each other and focused on self preservation over family and friends. The flame within them never completely died, but rather stayed kindling throughout the journey until finally it stood flickering and idle at the eventual halt of this seemingly never-ending nightmare. Elie depicts the perpetuation of violence that crops up with the Jews by teaching of the loss in belief of a higher power from devout to doubt they endure.
“There is no longer any reason to live; any reason to fight” (Wiesel 99). In the book “Night”, worte by Elie Wiesel, it depicts the many struggles of the prisoners of the Holocaust. Elie writes about his own experiences and his own struggles. Elie’s life changed and was influenced by what happened during the Holocaust. His life changed by his faith cheapening, having only his father, and the things he had seen.
“Wherever men and women are persecuted because of their race, religion, or political views, that place must - at that moment - become the center of the universe” a quote by Elie Wiesel. Read and receive knowledge in the book “Night” by Elie Wiesel about how the main character Elie survived and experienced the crucial torture the holocaust had put them through. While reading the book you will learn how Elie went through his very own journey through the holocaust as a survivor and how he witnessed the nightmare himself. In the novel “Night” by Elie Wiesel, the main character Elie, was effected by the events in the book including emotional changes, loss of attachment to faith, and how he lost himself while in the concentration camps.
The death camp was a terrible place where people where killed. Hitler is who created the death camp for Jews. The death camp was used for extermination on Jews. This occurred on 1939 – 1945. The death camps were in the country of Europe. Hitler did all this because he didn’t like Jews and the religions. The book Night is a autobiography written by Elie Wiesel. The poem called First they came for the communist written by Martin Neimoller is a autobiography.
I have made a mistake. And this mistake took away thirty years of my life away from you. I won’t be able to pack your lunch on your first day of school, and I won’t be able to see you walk across the podium to receive your diploma. Because of my mistake, your life will be more difficult, and I only hope to make it up with this story. You may hate me or miss me, but no matter what you are feeling, I hope that you will have this story to accompany and guide you when I am gone.
The book Night, by Elie Wiesel, is a very short, personal book, about Elie’s experience of living through the holocaust and Auschwitz. To write this book, it didn’t require any research, Elie didn’t make any assumptions; he just told things as they were, from his personal experiences. Elie could have written more in this book, but then it would most likely be too much to handle, this book is already upsetting to read as it is. While reading this book, there is moments where you need to stop and set the book down for a moment, it is a lot to take in.
According to Rudolf Reder, one of only two Jews to survive the camp at Belzec, Poland, he describes the circumstance during his time at the prison camp, “The brute Schmidt was our guard; he beat and kicked us if he thought we were not working fast enough. He ordered his victim to lie down and gave them 25 lashes with a whip, ordering them to count out loud. If the victim made a mistake, he was given 50 lashes….Thirty or 40 of us were shot every day….” This quotation shows the SS guards treat the Jews inhumanly. As these Jews acclimate to the situation, their primitive survival instincts become stronger over time. They put their lives as their first priority and will do anything to survive. However, in the memoir Night by Elie Wiesel, Eliezer Shlomo the protagonist adversely demonstrates more commitment to family than to himself in the concentration camps. Before World War II, Adolf Hitler and his Nazi Party gain popularity by promising to make Germany a rich and powerful nation again after their defeat in World War I. The Nazis publicly blame the Jews for Germany’s loss of World War I and the Great Depression, resulting in promoting the anti-Semitism. Although he admits to the power of the instinct for self-preservation, because of his commitment to his father throughout the prison camp experience, and because of his reactions to others sons who do abandon or turn on their fathers, Wiesel apparently favors commitment to family over commitment to self-preservation. Eliezer never attempts to show commitment to family until the deportation to Birkenau.
Connie’s social life was very active, because of this she knew a lot of people and a lot of people knew her as well. One night when she goes to a restaurant with her girlfriends, she sees a guy in a convertible jalopy painted gold. The guy stares at her, making her feel uncomfortable. After that, he says to her “Gonna get you, baby”
Robert Browning's poem "Meeting at Night" is essentially a narrative of a man who is journeying to meet his lover. The man recounts his journey as he undertakes it, mentioning or observing different portions of the trip, each in turn. One by one, he briefly describes his surroundings as he passes by them, merely noting them as if they bear only fleeting significance to him. However, although his descriptions are unpretentious and abruptly forgotten as he continues onward toward his goal, each line of the poem contains striking imagery. In fact, it should be noted that this poem consists entirely of imagery. Every line depicts a scene of the landscape that Browning's narrator encounters; that is, at least, until he finally reaches his destination, when his focus is diverted to his lover. Throughout the entire poem he offers no personal insight or reflection on his situation, and he instead is content to merely report his perceptions and observations as they come and go. Although each of these little vignettes is of seemingly small consequence in itself, these individual images are each portrayed with remarkable style and feeling, and Browning skillfully strings these images together to elicit specific feelings and reactions from his readers. His masterful application of imagery, mood, and dynamic movement serve to shape the poem's emotion in such a way that the reader can tap into a plentiful well of information pertaining to the state of the speaker and his emotions -- information that initially goes unnoticed from a strictly literal observation.