Secret passage Essays

  • Comparison Of The Key Passage In Catherine's 'Secret Garden'

    923 Words  | 2 Pages

    Key Passage     “ The body heals with play, the mind heals with laughter, and the spirit heals with joy ” (proverbs). This quote really relates back to the Secret Garden and the key passage i have chosen. The key passage i have chosen is in chapter one and is the last paragraph on page 4 which continues on to page 5. In the book up to this paragraph Burnett explains where this young girl Mary comes from and how beautiful her mother is and how successful her father is but Mary is neither of those

  • Tunnels used in War Zones

    1043 Words  | 3 Pages

    Tunnels The first characteristic of a tunnel complex is normally superb camouflage. Entrances and exits are concealed, bunkers are camouflaged and even inside the tunnel itself, side tunnels are concealed, hidden trapdoors, and dead-ends where used to confuse the attacker. Trapdoors were used extensively, both at entrances and exits and inside the tunnel complex itself. There where several different types of trapdoors, concrete covered by dirt, hard packed dirt reinforced by wire, or a basin type

  • Comparing Symbolical Language in Their Eyes Were Watching God and Great Gatsby

    1464 Words  | 3 Pages

    meanings. Unraveling these symbolic word puzzles may reveal insights into the author's perspective and one's own secrets.  A careful analysis of selected passages of two books: Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God and Francis Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby, will show that symbolical language can reveal even more insight. In this comparison, symbolism in the passages containing variations of the words "blossom" or "blooming" will be examined to reveal human development beyond

  • Compare and Contrast: Passage 1: Description of Tom, Passage 2: Gatsby

    818 Words  | 2 Pages

    Compare and Contrast: Passage 1: Description of Tom, Passage 2: Gatsby seen The first passage is a description of Tom. He is portrayed as strongly built: "It was a body capable of enormous leverage-a cruel body." He also seems to be a brutal an supercilious man. Words as "arrogant", "sturdy", "gruff" and "husky" create a mood around him which is quite unpleasant. This description is very objective and we get a clear picture of what Tom looks like. We are also given a description of Tom's

  • Creative Writing

    2052 Words  | 5 Pages

    It was 9:00 on a dark and dreary night in October when Mindy and Mandy crept slowly up the stairs to check on their little brother Max. Mandy was very upset over the fact of having to check on her little brother when she wanted to sleep. However, Mindy wanted to make sure he was asleep, and she dragged Mandy along for company. “He’s supposed to be asleep! And he should be asleep by now! Why bother?!” Mandy complained as she dragged her black purse up the stairs. Mindy tried to ignore Mandy as she

  • Arvay's Epiphany In Seraph On The Suwanee

    864 Words  | 2 Pages

    journey to the courthouse; the reader, halfway through the journey from the top of the page encounters an interior journey as Arvay travels within herself. This four-line passage serves as a milestone marking the beginning of the narrative, which is a journey across the landscape of the life of Jim and Arvay’s relationship. The passage begins with “The elements opened above Avery and she arose inside of herself”(57). The first clause of this sentence has a poetic eye focusing on an atmosphere, or an

  • The Change of Perspective in the Author of Sky High

    791 Words  | 2 Pages

    adjectives and similes, the feeling of immense excitement is shown clearly to the responder. The mood and tone of the passage changes dramatically as the perspective changes in paragraph 6. The author... ... middle of paper ... ...ity going in the last paragraph. The structure of the passage helps the responder to clearly see the changed perspective of the author. The passage starts with the child’s perspective; the writing has almost a curious and flighty feel to it. This feeling is empathized

  • Close Reading of the Two Holes Passage of Toni Morrison's Sula

    928 Words  | 2 Pages

    A Close Reading of the Two Holes Passage of Sula Toni Morrison’s novel Sula is rich with paradox and contradiction from the name of a community on top of a hill called "Bottom" to a family full of discord named "Peace." There are no clear distinctions in the novel, and this is most apparent in the meaning of the relationship between the two main characters, Sula and Nel. Although they are characterized differently, they also have many similarities. Literary critics have interpreted the girls

  • Pure Conformity: Holding By Lois Lowry

    1015 Words  | 3 Pages

    vs. a nonconformist who does the complete opposite. Willie, the conformist from the short passage Holding written by Lois Lowry, made the decision to continue a lie about his father’s sexuality. Willie’s father, who in this case was the nonconformist, was a homosexual. Willie’s lie was astonishing and all until things began to take a twist and the duration of the lie had to come to an end. In the passage Holding, a young boy named Willie goes to New York to visit his father. Now this is not like

  • Identifying the Main Character in The Use of Force

    510 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Use of Force Since Olson narrates the story, I was tempted to focus on his opinions and motives in accessing and handling the intense situation of diagnosing a sick child. Though tempted to focus on Olson, after meticulous analysis of the passage, I noted Matilda as the character that force is being applied to-clearly a manifestation of the title of this story. All attention and focus is on Matilda employing care to her appearance as well as her fluster. Matilda just would not allow Olson

  • Mysticism in A Passage to India

    3924 Words  | 8 Pages

    Mysticism in Forester's A Passage to India The figure of Mrs. Moore, and the problem of what happened to her in the extraordinary Marabar Caves, has fascinated critics for decades. The question has absorbed attention to a degree that does not correspond to the secondary role that Mrs. Moore plays in the plot of A Passage to India. On the surface, she is a supporting character, yet many of the unresolved issues of the novel seem to be concentrated in her experience. Mrs. Moore arrives in India

  • Comparing Relationships in E. M. Forster’s A Passage to India and Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthou

    2775 Words  | 6 Pages

    Comparing Relationships in E. M. Forster’s A Passage to India and Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse E. M. Forster’s A Passage to India and Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse are concerned with the lack of intimacy in relationships. Forster’s novel is set in English-run India, the difference between race and culture being the center of disharmony. Woolf’s novel is set in a family’s summer house, the difference between genders being the center of disharmony. Despite this difference of scale,

  • Secret Survivors Analysis

    840 Words  | 2 Pages

    Secret Survivors by Sue Blume is a paper uncovering the incest and it’s aftereffects in women. Throughout this paper, Blume makes some points that are very hypocritical and bias. She is a private therapist, social worker, and diplomat in social work, but she has never been a victim, and her opinions make for a worse argument. Example in Argument format: It happened to Elizabeth Barret Browning and to Bessie Smith, to name only a couple notables It happened to a president’s son, and to Lana Turner’s

  • Ceremony

    1101 Words  | 3 Pages

    They will fear the people They kill what they fear" (Silko 136). 	Leslie Marmon Silko uses these three short passages taken from an ancient Indian story included in the novel Ceremony to express and convey the idea that the white man’s fear was the primary factor contributing to their negative actions toward the Indian people. The ancient Indian story that the passages are pulled from also explains how Indian witchery led to the invention of the white people and all the evil inside of them

  • Faustus' Study and Opening Speech

    3582 Words  | 8 Pages

    not want merely to protect men’s bodies through medicine, nor does he want to protect their property through law. He wants higher things, and so he proceeds on to religion. There, he quotes selectively from the New Testament, picking out only those passages that make Christianity appear in a negative light. He reads that “[t]he reward of sin is death,” and that “[i]f we say we that we have no sin, / We deceive ourselves, and there is no truth in us” (1.40–43). The second of these lines comes from the

  • Ghost In Da Hood Analysis

    885 Words  | 2 Pages

    says, “Not to worry that people around here are shy.” Felicia then tells them that she has to go and both of them said, “Bye Felicia.” By next week when O’Shea was in the basement in doing some laundry, he stumbled upon a secret door behind the gas tank. When he went inside the secret room it felt cold and ominous, as if someone was watching from behind. As O’Shea was going in deeper he noticed something at the end, there was a red figure. When O’Shea was coming closer to the figure he wanted

  • rasputin

    2068 Words  | 5 Pages

    unnatural death that has boggled the minds of many learned scholars. The early life of any child can be and is most of the time the most influential time of a child's life. The life of the parent's is, in that way, important to many. Someone can find passages into the life of the mysterious child. The parents of Grigorii Rasputin are of no exception. They have been apart of their children's lives. The mother of three, Anne Egorovna, took on the task of keeping together the home. The local custom was for

  • Mirrors Don’t Lie in Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.'s The Lie

    1026 Words  | 3 Pages

    Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.'s The Lie - Mirrors Don’t Lie In The Lie by Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., Eli Remenzel is a thirteen-year-old boy on his way to The Whitehill Preparatory School with his parents.  Little do they know that Eli is keeping a big secret from them: he didn’t get accepted to the school.  As the story unfolds Eli finally cracks under the pressure of the lie as the headmaster informs his parents that he wasn’t accepted at Whitehill.  What happens next is a disaster.  As I was reading the story

  • Character Analysis Of Arnold Friend

    969 Words  | 2 Pages

    teenage girl that he has never met before. He is very persistent with getting Connie to run away from her awful teenage life at home with him. Arnold’s appearance adds even more mystery to who he actually is. Arnold has a roughed up look to him, a secret code painted on his car that can be interpreted as a Bible verse, and he can not stand steady on his feet, because of all of these attributes Arnold appears that he is possibly Satan. Arnold seems like the typical teenage cool guy with his roughed

  • Black Thunder

    1305 Words  | 3 Pages

    Frenchmen whose discourses are often laced with phrases of equality and liberty. These Frenchmen are referred to as Jacobins by the whites. Moreover, Gabriel and others are regularly listening to a freed slave, Mingo's reading of the Bible; they find passages about the Children of Israel's deliverance from Egypt and David's slaying of Goliath interesting. The slaves consider themselves another Children of Israel in another time. With a natural yearning to be free, and the enlightenment to reinforce