Original Writing Poetry Heartache My life was happy with no pain at all,Not having any worries of the darkness that crawlsBeneath my shadow and dark secrets to come

Heartache My life was happy with no pain at all, Not having any worries of the darkness that crawls Beneath my shadow and dark secrets to come Is the cause of my feelings becoming so numb Then something had to destroy my happiness Now feeling so empty and eternally stressed Like being suffocated by my own mistakes And having to feel them is more than can take With each day ending in a hurtful flow Not knowing how long I have left to go Wondering when all this stress will decrease So I can once again live my life at ease Bur right now my emotions are swollen As though as each part of my heart has been stolen Thrown away to the gates of hell Where feelings of betrayal live and dwell Ill never forget the feelings of this pain Feelings as though as I have nothing to gain But in reality I'm afraid to let go Not wanting to live in bitterness and sorrow But life goes on and so will u Having no need for me to cry Ill get on with my life and not be stuck in the past Because life is short and I want to make It last.

  • Word count: 206
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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As the number zero was the start of mathematics and the vacuum the foundation of physics.

A deafening silence Comic relief in stills in Faulknerian tragedy Term paper by R.Borst For Conrad & Faulkner by G.Moore st semester UVA 2003 Ronald Borst Jan v. Duivenvoordestr.183 067 MT Amsterdam Studentnr. 9187944 Introduction As the number zero was the start of mathematics and the vacuum the foundation of physics, so silence became the standard measure of civilization. Yet, all three of these 'scientific' standards spring from human imagination and are only applicable by general agreement, but remain in principle fictional. Few compositions have caused such a division of opinion as John Cage's '4.33' from 1952, one of his own favourites. A well-dressed pianist entered the stage, sat down behind the grand piano, opened it, turned a page of the score in front of him every now and then and after about four and a half minutes he got up, made a bow and left the stage. Cage got the idea for this composition after a visit to a soundproof room and only wanted to show there is no such thing as absolute silence. This manifests itself on a recording of the piece that still exists. In it, a world of small tiny sounds opens up. Chairs squeak, uncomfortable coughing, the humming of the air-conditioning, some far-away sounds of traffic, the rustling of the pages of a program. Above all one can hear, just like the original audience back in 1952, the rushing of one's own

  • Word count: 4538
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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Religion and Belief: Festivals project- Write about each of the festivals mentioned, explaining in detail the reasons for the festivals.

Religion and Belief Festivals project- Write about each of the festivals mentioned, explaining in detail the reasons for the festivals. The Athenians of the 5th century bc regularly took part in religious festivals. They had these for a number of reasons * To honour the gods * To relax * To feast * To enjoy themselves * To experience a sense of community * To enjoy drama and athletics * To give all classes the chance to participate * To recognise various stages in life and to show other states their wealth and power. The Skira This festival was held to honour Demeter at the threshing time and was restricted to women. Women threw into holes in the ground various offerings, especially piglets, which were symbols and sacred to Demeter. They also threw in snakes and male genital organs made from dough. (This had no correlation with the actual ploughing of the peasants. The Thesmorphia This was also exclusively for women at the sowing time; usually 3 months after the Skira. This time the women "Bakers" retrieved the decayed remains of the Skira and placed them on altars. In order that the women remained pure for 3 days before the festival, they ate garlic to discourage their husbands' advances. The "remains" were supposed to promote fertility in the fields as well as the women. Only rich men might be involved as they had to pay for the festival.(They basically had

  • Word count: 806
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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The Cycle of the 'Fuck It' Attitude: Both Constructive and Destructive.

Kimberly Morgan May 5, 2004 WMST 300 Professor Fuchs The Cycle of the 'Fuck It' Attitude: Both Constructive and Destructive In the world today, children are born in many different situations. Everyday a child is born in poverty and surrounded by depression. These children usually do not have the same opportunities as children born in more positive situations. So these children have to find a way to motivate themselves to change their position in society. This motivation usually comes with determination, fight, and heart. They need to have determination and drive to change their way of life, and the fight and heart to keep trying when others try to hold them back. For most young adults today, that determination, fight, and heart comes in the form of a 'fuck it' attitude. They feel that it is they against the world, and that they cannot trust anyone. So they have to look out for themselves and do what benefits them regardless of how it affects others. These young adults use this 'fuck it' attitude as motivation to prove to the world that they can make it (out of the ghetto) without help from anyone. And for that reason alone, no one can judge them for what they say or do. But this 'fuck it' attitude is usually a dangerous cycle. It causes actions that seem productive at first but eventually prove to be disastrous. The life of Tupac, the character Bishop in the movie

  • Word count: 2222
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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Narayan: The Man-Eater of Malgudi

Narayan: The Man-Eater of Malgudi As a starting point, refer to the section of chapter 5 involving Nataraj's consultation with the adjournment lawyer (pgs 60-64). Explore how Narayan "invests his story with all his warm, wicked and delightful sense of comedy." You should use to other sequences from the novel in your response. Narayan's humour in "The Man-Eater of Malgudi" relies on a lot of ironical situations as well as the interaction of several of his major and minor characters in unexpected ways, creating a distinct range of reactions which lead to comic and humorous situations. Apart from Nataraj's consultation with the adjournment lawyer in chapter 5, the opening of chapter 4 - when Vasu takes the liberty of taking Nataraj, without warning, on an excursion into Mempi Village - and a section of chapter 6 - when the septuagenarian visits Nataraj and learns that Vasu has shot his grandchild's dog - are also varied examples of how Narayan creates humour in different forms. The humour created on the trip to Mempi Village relies heavily on the unexpected and Nataraj's own internal thoughts while the episode concerning the murdered dog involves an array of characters, and Narayan uses dialogue as his main technique in creating a dark humour here. Nataraj's consultation with the adjournment lawyer is a small example of how Narayan creates a humorous situation out of typical

  • Word count: 2512
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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Travel Writing Australia

Travel Writing Coursework Down Under It's the driest, hottest, most infertile and climately aggressive of all the inhabited continents, home to the most dangerous animals on the planet. Australia is a country tanned red by the scorching sun that beams down endlessly throughout the year like the sea lapping gently against the shoreline. With a population of only a third of England, shared between six cities, to Australians anything vaguely rural is the bush. At some undetermined point this becomes the outback, push for a further 2,000 miles and eventually you come to the bush again, then a city, then the sea. That's Australia. Sydney is situated in the foothills of the Blue Mountains whose rocky outcrops provide a dramatic backdrop to the city. It is a warm and friendly city where the people are cheerful, extrovert and quick-witted, apart from a tendency among men of a certain age to wear knee-high socks with shorts. After the bustle of cosmopolitan Sydney, I headed for the Blue Mountains, so named for the blue tinged haze shimmering in the valleys as the sun reflects off oil droplets from the eucalyptus trees. This was a relatively short bus journey of 90 minutes. Approaching the mountains I wasn't quite sure what to expect from a cluster of rock formations lined with a few trees. However once I arrived at the spectacular mountains, I was taken back by the beautiful

  • Word count: 815
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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Courtesy and respect essay.

Courtesy and respect essay I define respect as showing care and politeness to everyone and everything, including living and non-living things. Your elders are the people that deserve your respect the most out of everyone and everything. It is very rude to disrespect someone, especially a teacher. When a teacher is in front of the class you should have your mouth closed and your eyes on her, giving her your full attention. It is very rude to run your mouth or do something disrespectful while she is trying to teach or explain To have courtesy and to show respect is to be polite with good manners, considerate of others and to have good opinions of others. When you ask others to or for things you need to include the words 'may I', 'please' and 'thank you.' In formal places and assemblies lots of respect is needed to be shown at all times especially when there are very important people giving speeches and awards. All your attention should be directed at them as it can be very disturbing and nervous when presenting in front of a lot of people. Showing your courtesy or even eye contact gives them every bit of confidence as they are aware u seem interested in what the speaker has to say. Entering and leaving the formal functions at various times can be very rude and annoying there fore you should be seated at all times during the functions unless your required to perform and

  • Word count: 592
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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What Makes Ann A Survivor? - Z for Zachariah By Robert C O'Brian

What Makes Ann A Survivor? By Melissa Bannon "Z For Zachariah" by Robert C. O'Brien, is an exciting and powerful novel. I am going to discuss what makes the main character Ann a survivor by conveying some of her many qualities, which she reveals to us in her diary. She shows practical knowledge, capability and cautious behaviour. Ann Burden is a sixteen-year-old girl who is left to fend for herself after her hometown is destroyed as a result of a nuclear explosion. She has lived alone for a year and her initial reaction to new life, Loomis, arriving in the valley is joy and excitement. But she soon realises what he is really like and her reaction is altered to fear and instinct to survive. In the story, Ann is portrayed as a wise girl. She has a lot of practical knowledge, which in the end, is the key to her survival. Simple things like taking care of the farm when she is left alone and letting Loomis drink only in little amounts when he is sick, "Not any more, it will make you sick again," give me a positive message that she is a very flexible character. I think this is a good thing as, no matter the circumstances, she does what she has to do and gets on with it. Checking the brook for safety using a Geiger counter before drinking: "He asked me, I took it (Geiger counter) across to Burden Creek" and forward thinking, like food and fuel for winter, show she is also

  • Word count: 1617
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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Shukhov's Survival Strategies.

IB English James Heim Essay January, 2004 Shukhov's Survival Strategies Throughout Alexander Solzheitsyn's novel, "One Day In The Life Of Ivan Denisovich", the theme of human survival is constantly present. The way, in which Solzhenitsyn describes the intense, terrible conditions at the prison camp, shows that the individual prisoners needed survival skills, strategies, and qualities, if they wanted a chance to survive. Solzhenitsyn uses the characters in the novel, to show this theme, which is portrayed through their behaviour, reactions, and their own actions. The author also uses the setting to help display and develop the theme in the novel, by giving the impression of eerie, hopeless, and angry feelings in his setting, by using places like the sick room, and the work site. Solzhenitsyn forebodes the fact in his book, that survival strategies separated the individuals in the prison who lived through their prison sentence and the ones that didn't. The novel focuses on one day in the life of the main character, Shukhov, in the prison camp. We learn that he is a survivor, by analysis his day in the camp. We learn that Ivan Denisovich, or Shukhov, as we know him, is a consummate survivor because he has a positive attitude, practical skills, and a strong sense of moral and ethical integrity. Shukhov appears to have both physical and mental

  • Word count: 1464
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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Critical review Fahrenheit 451

Fahrenheit 451 has itself been threatened and censored in various school systems, mostly due to the appearance of words like "hell" and "damn" in the novel, and has now taken its proud place on the list of books which have been censored or banned in America. Main Characters Montag, the protagonist of Fahrenheit 451, starts out as a typical "fireman": he takes a primitive joy in his job -- which is burning books -- and never stops to question why things are the way they are. But after a series of reversals makes him question his assumptions, Montag begins a painful metamorphosis, eventually becoming first becoming a full-fledged rebel against his repressive society. At the beginning of the book, Montag is living what Henry Thoreau might call an "unexamined life": He believes what he's taught, respects his Fire Captain boss, and thinks that he is happy. But, after he meets young Clarisse McClellan, Montag's "happiness" crumbles away, and he finds himself left with a profound void inside. For the first time he lets himself be aware both of the problems of the world and of his own unsatisfied desires for knowledge, philosophy, and intimacy with other people. Finding that everyone else in his consumeristic culture is also skating on the thin ice of denial, Montag seeks friends and mentors in the thinking outcasts of society -- people like Clarisse, Faber, and Granger's

  • Word count: 14980
  • Level: AS and A Level
  • Subject: English
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