Dispicable thats all you can decribe it. You look around and its like the population of man has been wiped out.

Dispicable thats all you can decribe it. You look around and its like the population of man has been wiped out. News papers blowing in the wind glass bottles struned about, needles and everything you can thing of just left on the floor. Not a persons footstep can be hurd. Not a childs lafter. Slience thats all, complete silence, And the reason for the deadly silence is that its 6.30. No one dare go out or make a sound after this time. Six months ago the place would have been buzzin with life on a warm day like this but now that cannot be. To explain why we would have to go back about a year to 2020, when things were just starting to look bright. Carla applyed a last coat of mascara and looked in the mirro t check her jeans were fiting right, her top wasnt creased and that she was looking fine. It was a tippical friday night and she was goin out with her friends, the wind was blowing and it was drisseling out side but that didnt bother her. She shouted "goodbye" to her mum as she shut the door and headed down the road to the park were they all met. There was about 20 of them that met up every friday, She waled down the bumpy path to the darkened park were there was alredy about 10 people laffing and gigleing. "hey, anyone got anything yet?" shouted carla. "Not yet, we are goin for sum now" someone out of the group. The group set off down to the offlicence and hung about

  • Word count: 1263
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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Svidrigailov and Raskolnikov: Men of Differences and Similarities.

Svidrigailov and Raskolnikov: Men of Differences and Similarities Svidrigailov and Raskolnikov are they really that different from each other? In the novel Crime and Punishment, by Fyodor Dostoyevsky these two men live lives that seem to parallel. Raskolnikov used to be an impoverished law student who wrote a thesis on the role of "the extraordinary man," which he believed to be above the law since they have a greater calling that would benefit society. He attempts to prove his theory by murdering two women, but instead he ends up disproving his theory since he fails to commit the perfect crime. He is not an extraordinary man because he cannot mentally handle what he has done. Svidrigailov is the former employer of Raskolnikov's sister, Dunia. He killed his wife and went out to seek Dunia, the woman he truly seems to love and tried to seduce. Both Svidrigailov and Raskolnikov committed murders; as a result they were faced with a long, mentally agonizing journey in order to seek redemption. Svidrigailov and Raskolnikov both had to deal with being murders and seeking redemption, they however ended up drastically differently because they had completely different perspectives on life. Raskolnikov was besotted with his "extraordinary man theory". Raskolnikov was constantly trying to prove to him and to the world that he was part of those few extraordinary people in the world.

  • Word count: 990
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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Consider the way the characters of The Bottle imp and the Rocking-horse Winner end up. Do they get what they deserve?

Consider the way the characters of The Bottle imp and the Rocking-horse Winner end up. Do they get what they deserve? Both The Bottle Imp and The Rocking horse are fables; a fable is a myth or a story which normally has a moral to be learnt they are often described as a legend, fables such as Aesop's animal are best known. Fables frequently unite everyday settings with a fantastical element, and are usually written in a distinctive style using colloquial lexis there are the traditional form of writing a story but modern writers have used them to get a particular point across. The reasons for writing a fable can be to get a particular moral point of view across or for a lesson to be learnt. Both these stories can be considered to be fables because they both show characters that gain money and advantages from a fantastical source but also show the characters suffer for these reasons due to this a lesson can be learnt that clearly money isn't everything, it doesn't necessarily bring happiness. The Bottle Imp is written by D.H. Lawrence and the themes which run trough the story are sacrifices, love, poverty, evil and fortune. The writer uses these themes to express his own ethics and principles on the matter. The story symbolises these themes and contain a number of lessons to be learnt. The morals which the writer wants the audience to pick up on are linked to all the themes

  • Word count: 2694
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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Compare and contrast the ways in which the Häftlinge in Primo Levi's 'If This is a Man' and zeks in Alexander Solzhenitsyn's 'One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich' overcome the dehumanisation they experience through the formation of friendships.

World Literature Assignment I, English A1 HL Compare and contrast the ways in which the Häftlinge in Primo Levi's 'If This is a Man' and zeks in Alexander Solzhenitsyn's 'One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich' overcome the dehumanisation they experience through the formation of friendships Both 'One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich' by Alexander Solzhenitsyn and 'If This is a Man' by Primo Levi are books written about one of the most horrific features of the twentieth century - forced labour camps. Although the authors describe different types of camps with different regimes, their stories are very similar in one aspect. Both of them write about the degradation of the human soul as a result of the harsh conditions in the camp. However, despite cold, hunger, humiliating treatment, and omnipresent fear of death, some prisoners in both narratives, in particular the heroes of each, managed to maintain their humanity, largely through the formation of either genuine friendships or pragmatic alliances. Still, Häftlinge in the Nazi concentration camp are more devastated by the system than zeks in the Gulag camp, because, although all had to endure forced labour in both camps, the Gulag was established with the purpose of obtaining a free labour force, while the German concentration camps were death camps, from which there was meant to be no escape or return. Knowledge of this

  • Word count: 1585
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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How far and in what ways do you consider that Malan presents the black person viewpoint in My Traitor's Heart.

How far and in what ways do you consider that Malan presents the black person viewpoint in My Traitor's Heart. Malan wrote a different book to the one he set out to write but this finished autobiographical memoir was written because he was "searching for a way to live in this strange country-for an alternative, if one existed, to the law of Dawid Malan". To live in this world he needs understand the world and in this quest he needs to understand the problems that his country must endure. The tale of the Hammermans murders is told by Malan but it is not told in his typical criminal journalist way it is told almost as if it were a story. Introducing the characters, telling the reader of their lives "Dave and Jay used to smoke zol and jol, but they've outgrown all that. They're both turning thirty, both newly 'turned onto free enterprise'. Then once the reader has identified with them he (Malan) tells of their killings " Jay is slumped against the wall, dead with a dozen hammer holes in his skull. His half naked wife is lying on the floor. She'd spent hours spinning around in a pool of her own blood, trying in vain to get up." In the section on the court case there are a few interjections, from Simon Mpungose but the main story is told through Rian Malan. Malan tells us of how eloquently Simon tells his story but much of this we cannot experience because we are not told this

  • Word count: 516
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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Analyse how Paddy´s relationship with his brother Sinbad develops in relation to the many outside influences and occurences which surround their lives.

Paddy Clarke In this essay I shall analyse how Paddy´s relationship with his brother Sinbad develops in relation to the many outside influences and occurences which surround their lives. In particular Paddy´s relationship with his friends and his parents relationships with each other. To begin with Paddy sees his brother more as a tool to impress his friends with and seemingly has no proper relationship with him at all. The way in which he impresses his friends is by various intriguing cruel experiments and methods of torture. I think that also, this is subconciously a way of giving himself a feeling of superiority. Although it is not over his friends he feels that if he is superior to his brother then at least he has some sort of status within the group. The most interesting and possible most cruel method of inflicting pain on his unfortunate brother is when he pours lighter fluid into Sinbad´s mouth and sets it ablaze, this is not just an example of random opportunist violence, but one of pre-meditated hatred towards his brother. Also when Paddy says 'I gave him a dead leg´ the impression is given again that it is not opportunistic but that Paddy has purposfully gone out of his in order to bring harm to Sinbad because of something Sinbad had done earlier. Paddy also trys to hurt Sinbad emotionally by getting him into trouble with his parents; 'I loved getting him into

  • Word count: 979
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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Holiday of a Lifetime

Holiday of a Lifetime Two years previous I had been on a holiday of a lifetime, a holiday (in my opinion) to the greatest city in the world, Orlando, Florida. Now I would be in that fantastic city again and I would go on more fast rides because I was older and more adventurous. We had chosen to take the plane from Manchester to Florida via New York. On the plane journey from Manchester to New York all I could think about was my last trip to America. I tried to remember how hot it had been, the adrenalin filled rides which I thought could only have got better since the last time I went. I thought about how refreshing it was to jump in a pool in the middle of the afternoon, when the humidity and the sun were at their most intense. I remembered how I went down a two hundred-foot vertical drop in a water park, how I had nearly fainted due to thirst, and I remembered the luxurious villa and apartment we stayed in. In about twenty-four hours that life would all be mine again, for three weeks. I had to make the most of it. Finally we arrived at our destination; J.F.K airport and I took one glance at the place and thinking to myself "Wow!" This airport was by far the largest airport I had ever been in. We checked in and everything was perfect. We went round to all the duty-free shops because we had time to kill for our flight to Orlando was not scheduled for another hour. About

  • Word count: 1339
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested. -Francis Bacon

Ashik Kabir Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested. -Francis Bacon The first novel that I finished reading was Jurassic Park, by Michael Chriton. That was the first book that captivated my imagination and brought me into the world of reading. I noticed that the book was far better than the movie. My imagination could take me any where and my mind painted extraordinary pictures of hundreds of beautiful dinosaurs walking along side fully developed characters with whom I could relate to. I felt their fear, joy, and even sadness. All I can say is that I was addicted, and I kept on reading. Since than, I have read hundreds of books. I treat the books I read with a lot of caution. Like everyone else, I feel that my time is very precious. If I invest my time into reading, than the reading must yield some sort of profit. As Samuel Patterson once put it, "Books, like friends, should be few and well chosen." My best friends are friends from whom I might be able to gain some wisdom. The literature I choose to read must contain some wisdom that I can gain. The first book I read where I felt that I had truly gained some wisdom was, Plato's Republic. I spent months reading the book. I slowly digest every single word that Socrates had spoken. Even though the book was nearly 3,000 years old, every single idea was totally

  • Word count: 723
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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The Other Side of the Mountain - A 'get away' can be appreciated from The Bean Trees by Barbara Kingsolver in which the main character experiences a change, a change in her way of thinking.

The Other Side of the Mountain A 'get away' can be appreciated from The Bean Trees by Barbara Kingsolver in which the main character experiences a change, a change in her way of thinking. The passage serves to present a theme about the upcoming events in the book. It does so by describing the changes that the author lives through, her reactions to it, and even unexpected surprises encountered during her 'rebirth' stage that gives the reader hints or clues leading to the upcoming. The reader is able to apperceive the protagonist's mind because of the author's simple fashion of writing, and its relatively easy comprehensibility. At the beginning, she adopts a new name as she adopts a new perspective on the world, broadening out from her rural Kentucky background to a larger view of life. She realizes a name's importance by reflecting that we receive it, and we do not choose it (line 6-7), but admits she had influence in choosing her new name. Her anxiety to get a new name, therefore adopt a change (the motif in this passage), displays itself in line 5: "I didn't have anything special, but just wanted a change." This gives the reader a question in mind: Why the urge to forget the past? The answer can not be responded with this passage, but instead, the excerpt leaves it to the imagination. In addition, the cars driving and gas stations contribute to the meaning of an upcoming

  • Word count: 1016
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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Is 'Honesty the best policy' is a debatable question which some people might agree with and others may disagree with. There is no right or wrong answer to this question it all depends on your opinion.

Is Honesty the best policy? Is 'Honesty the best policy' is a debatable question which some people might agree with and others may disagree with. There is no right or wrong answer to this question it all depends on your opinion. People who believe in this statement will believe it is always be good to be honest. This is because if you are always honest you will never have a guilty conscience about things. For example if someone asks you if there new jumper is nice and it's obviously not you would tell them the truth although this could some times lead to upset. This would be absolute morality because you told them what you believe with out lying to make them feel better. Is this a good thing though? A Christian would tend always to be an absolute moralist because of the Ten Commandments, which tell you the right things to do. 'Thou shall not steal' is to do with honesty and a true Christian would not break these rules so they would be absolute moralists. When someone is not honest about something like stealing there is a good chance they will be found out and if they are and they still don't tell the truth then they will make everything very complicated. They will also have to remember everything they said and it will make things very hard for themselves. People who believe that this statement is not true will believe that being honest is not always the best option. For

  • Word count: 697
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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