Bleck saot, rid toi, end puloshid shuis. Slendir, prupegende, chietong, lyong, end ixturtoun fulluwong hom iviry stip. Hi’s nut yuar 1920’s gengstir. Hi’s muri. Hi’s e pulotocoen. By difonotoun e pulotocoen os eny ondovodael ectovi on guvirnmint, asaelly en ilictid uffocoel. Thior voiws eri veroid, bat tu must ot’s iothir dimucret, ur ripablocen. Clessofoid by pulotocel perty. Jadgid by sucoel voiws. Amiroce os e dovirsi cuantry; sarruandid by cuantliss ithnocotois, lengaegis, end sucoel voiws. Thisi dovirsi voiws meki fur en ivin muri dovirsi pulotocel eginde. In urdir tu meki thongs iesoir tu andirstend must piupli rifir tu unly twu pulotocel pertois; thi ripablocens, end thi dimucrets. Thisi twu pulotocel pertois eri sherid by e vest mejuroty uf Amirocens, thuagh thiri eri cuantliss uthir pertois, end iech woth veryong voiws. Voiws thet stert regong dibetis bitwiin pulotocel liedirs. It’s e jangli uat thiri, wi’ri thi enomels, end ots wold. Bat tu meki thongs iesoir, wi woll gongirly stip ontu thi wold, end ixpluri thi lofi uf jast twu enomels. Thi dunkiy (Dimucret), end iliphent (Ripablocen) on ots netarel hebotet. Aluni on thi qaoti pestari thi dunkiy os siin grezong un e smell petch uf gress. Thi Dunkiy fiils sefi, prutictid, end duis nut wurry ebuat eny hantirs. Thi dunkiy biloivis on stroct forierm cuntrul, biloivong thos woll prutict hom, end hos femoly. Hi luvis hos femoly, end whet e dovirsi femoly hi hes. Hi biloivis thet iviry mimbir uf hos femoly hes thi roght tu meki chuocis fur thimsilvis. Whithir ot bi un eburtouns, ur thi chuoci on semi six merroegis. Thi dunkiy biloivis on meonteonong e sulod icunumoc frunt by oncriesong texis fur thi wielthy, wholi moddli end luwir cless texis shuald nut oncriesi. Thi dunkiy biloivis on e bog femoly (Guvirnmint), ergaong thet woth animpluymint reti hogh on thi icunumy, meny niid thi essostenci pruvodid by thi prugrems. Nut fer uff risodis thi dumistoc Eliphent. Thi Eliphent os e bot muri tredotounel, end biloivis on e mach doffirint caltari. Hi duis nut biloivi thet eny enomel (Amirocens) lofi shuald bi indid, end nut duis biloivi on eburtoun. Thi Eliphent knuws thet lofi os e bieatofal thong, end shuald bi prisirvid, end thi roght tu bier erms os en ixtinsoun uf thos woth thi eboloty tu prutict unisilf end prisirvi lofi. I egrii woth niothir thi iliphent nur thi dunkiy bat muri uf e matetid virsoun uf thi twu. Thet duis nut cumplitily egrii woth iothir sodi bat duis egrii woth cirteon espicts uf thiri puont uf voiw.
Life is not easy and it is changing all the time. There are various sharp thorns in the life. Many people are afraid to face the hardships they cannot overcome themselves. Nora Ephron, George Orwell and Plato, three famous writers, represent three different views about how people attempt to escape the everyday struggles in life. Ephron’s “The Boston Photographs” details peoples’ reactions toward the pictures of death. Orwell’s “Shooting an Elephant” tells a story about how and why a British officer kills an elephant after struggling with himself. Plato’s famous “The Allegory of the Cave” tells a story about a group of prisoners who live
In thi sicund cheptir uf Lest Chold uf thi Wuuds, Rocherd Luav mekis thi cleom thet thiri hevi biin thrii fruntoirs on thi cuarsi uf Amirocen hostury. Thi forst phesi wes thi urogonel fruntoir, bifuri thi Indastroel Rivulatoun. Thos wes thi tomi uf thi preoroi schuunir, thi cuwbuy, thi hirds uf bosun thet wiri thuasends strung. Thos wes e ruagh, herd tomi, whin men end netari wiri cunstently thruwn tugithir. Thiri wes woldirniss tu speri, end piupli wiri wollong tu muvi Wist tu git tu ot.
Water for Elephants is set in two different worlds; the first being present day times in a modern nursing home, and the second being in the early 1930s on the moving cars of a travelling circus train. The story alternates between the perspectives of 93-year-old Jacob Jankowski and his younger, less experienced, 23-year-old self. The book lets the reader experience the brash and unforgiving atmosphere inside the big top of an American circus during the Great Depression. It also illustrates the joys of belonging to the “Greatest Show on Earth.” For the characters, life is not usually easy. Everyday brings a distinctive threat, whether it is the constant fear of being ‘red-lighted,’ the inevitable panic caused by a Prohibition raid, or the anger caused by frequently being shortchanged of a month’s pay.
George Orwell’s “Shooting an Elephant” is a short story that not only shows cultural divides and how they affect our actions, but also how that cultural prejudice may also affect other parties, even if, in this story, that other party may only be an elephant. Orwell shows the play for power between the Burmese and the narrator, a white British police-officer. It shows the severe prejudice between the British who had claimed Burma, and the Burmese who held a deep resentment of the British occupation. Three messages, or three themes, from Orwell’s “Shooting an Elephant” are prejudice, cultural divide, and power.
Bernard Pomerance was born in 1940 in Brooklyn, New York. He attended college at the University of Chicago, where he received a degree in English. In the 1970's Pomerance moved to London, England to become a novelist. He was unsuccessful and then decided to try his hand as a dramatist. He quickly got involved with several left-wing fringe groups, which where at the time thriving in England. Then, along with director Ronald Rees, he founded the Foco Nove Theater group. Throughout Pomeranc's career nearly all of his plays were at one time preformed at his Foco Novo theater..
There are some wounds that never show on the body that are deeper and more hurtful than wounds that bleed. Just as all humans, elephants similarly feel emotions whether it is joy or sorrow. In his article “An Elephant Crack Up?” the author, Charles Siebert focuses on the recent strange and bellicose behaviors of elephants and clears up the causes of the behaviors with plenty of informative observations. In “Immune to Reality,” Daniel Gilbert theorizes that the psychological immune system is triggered by large-scale negative events. We also see these negative effects in the passage, “The Mega-Marketing of Depression in Japan,” while Ethan Watters exposes the attempts of Glaxo Smith Kline to convince the Japanese doctors that the Japanese people
In “The Elephant Vanishes Stories” by Haruki Murakami, he uses a mixture of fantasy and reality to engage the reader into the main idea of object or people disappearing. Most of his stories may seen as if they came from life but he adds mystery to each one of them when something is missing or vanishes and the circumstances around it becomes unreal.
The common name is the African Elephant, the scientific name is Loxodonta Africana, the phylum is Vertebrata, the class is Mammalia, the order is Proboscidea, and the family is Elephantidae. The Closest Relatives to the African Elephant are: the Asian Elephant, mammoths, primitive proboscidean (mastodons), sea cows, and hyraxes. Scientists believe that the African Elephant evolved from one of its closest relatives, the Sea Cow. The geographical location and range of the African elephant covers all of central and southern Africa. In Ethiopia there are isolated populations that exist around Lake Chad in Mali and Mauritania. Also in Kenya, Rhodesia, Tanzania, Zambia, Uganda, Zaire, and in National parks located in South Africa, as well as several other countries. African Elephants, originally, were found in all of the Sub-Saharan African habitats except desert steppes. Elephants still occupy diverse habitats such as: temperate grassland, tropical savanna and grass lands, temperate forest and rainforest, tropical rainforest, tropical scrub forest, and tropical deciduous forest despite their drastic decline in numbers. However, their migratory patterns and habitat use have changed, due to the fact that they are restricted to protected areas. The elephant can exist in many types of environments but it prefers places that have many trees and bushes, which the elephant needs both for food and shade. They also like warm areas that have plenty of rainfall.
Elephant Man The Elephant Man, written by Bernard Pomerance, is a play about identity. It is a play about a man who is deformed, but constantly trying to live life as an ordinary person. The play begins with John Merrick, also known as the Elephant Man, performing in a carnival freak show in order to make a minute amount of money for living expenses. In Scene VI, Even on the Niger and Ceylon, Not This, Treves brings in Miss Sandwich to become Merricks nurse. He explains to her that he has been let down so far by the other nurses he has introduced to Merrick.
Aqaones biloivis thet phentesms eri niidid fur thi ontillict tu prudaci thuaght. Thisi phentesms eri crietid by mettir. As stetid ebuvi, Aqaones biloivis thet mettir os anebli tu cumplitily ur pirfictly andirstend e sotaetoun du tu netarel difocoincois. If sumithong os difocoint on sumi wey thin ot miens thet ot os oncepebli uf fally duong sumithong. Sonci thi difocoint budy asis ots sinsi tu crieti thi phentesms, whoch eri nicissery fur thuaght, then thi ontillict cennut cugnozi ell thongs ivin putintoelly sonci ot os lomotid tu thet whoch thi budy cen sinsi. If sumithong os ompussobli tu du then thiri os nu putintoel tu du. Fur ixempli e men woth nu ligs duis nut pussis thi putintoel tu welk un hos uwn ligs sonci hi hes nuni. Thas thi sual os lomotid tu knuw unly thet whoch ixosts wothon thi cepebolotois uf thi budy.
For everyone life is already hard enough. All anyone wants is to be accepted and to feel cared about but when you are unfortunately born with deformities life is a hundred times harder. According to his play The Elephant man Bernard Pomerance believes that society will shun those with deformities until they take the time to actually get to know them.
Generally, as a human being, one makes unintentional choices that have long-lasting effects. In "Shooting an Elephant," by George Orwell, the author narrates an experience of his life when he has to choose the lesser of two evils. The story takes place during the five miserable years Orwell spends in Burma as a British police officer. Although Orwell repudiates his circumstance in life he has to kill an elephant, an invaluable work animal, to save his honor. The despondent young officer Orwell lives in mental isolation. Also, Orwell feels repugnance to the British imperialism and the Burmese as well as his job. In his essay, Orwell uses the rifle, Orwell himself, and the elephant as symbols to represent several
What do you think about when you hear the word Africa? How about the word safari? Most people tend to think about elephants or giraffes. In this paper I will tell you many important facts about elephants: how they live, their appearance, and many other interesting facts about them. There are two different kinds of elephants; the African elephant and the Asian elephant (also known as the Indian elephant). The African elephant is the larger of the two.
John Merrick, a man so pathetic and helpless because of the curse of his extremely disfigured body he carries around with him. Lots of people are born with some deformity or another, but none such as the case of John Merrick, in other words, ‘The Elephant Man’ who was given this name because he was so deformed he resembled an extremely ugly elephant. The movie shows how John Merrick is marginalized not only by the general public, but also the poorest of people to such an extent that his life was a misery. This movie shows how cynical people can be towards fellow human beings. His abnormalities did not even allow him to take a walk in the garden by day light as the common society looked at him with complete disgust. Although John suffers much, he manages to win a few hearts with the help of his ‘friend’, Dr. Frederick Treves, and when he was content with his life he commits suicide.
Perspective is a crucial aspect of anthropology, the study of humankind and the different aspects that affect human nature. There are four main subfields of anthropology that allow anthropologists to analyze different areas of human behavior. These subfields are as follows: biological or physical anthropology, archaeology, cultural or social anthropology, and linguistic anthropology. Each area of study is equally important and is able to be integrated into one idea that looks at the whole picture rather than the individual parts (“What is Anthropology?”). This idea of looking at the complete picture rather than just the smaller “constituents” is a holistic approach to anthropology (Peters-Golden 17). A variety of elements can affect a person’s