Examine the settings which the writers have chosen for their stories in The Red Room, The Man with the Twisted Lip and The Signalman. Consider the effects that each writer has created and how they contribute to

Examine the settings which the writers have chosen for their stories in 'The Red Room', 'The Man with the Twisted Lip' and 'The Signalman'. Consider the effects that each writer has created and how they contribute to the atmosphere. Settings play an important role in a story because it suggests to the reader about what might be in the story. For my essay I will be exploring three stories, each from the gothic genre. Gothic genre is a story with horror and romance events. In the stories the writers are trying to create a dark and gloomy atmosphere. I will be looking at 'The Red Room' by H.G Wells, 'The Man with the Twisted Lip' by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and 'The Signalman' by Charles Dickens. 'The Signalman' is about a man who watches a train accident happen and is powerless to do anything. 'The Red Room' is about an experience in a castle. 'The Man with the Twisted Lip' is about a man that goes missing in the truth to what happens. In all three stories the setting links to the atmosphere. 'The Signalman' was written by Charles Dickens in 1865. The railways were a recent invention at that time so to base a story around them was a very original idea to build up suspense. The suspense is built up in this story as the signalman is shocked that the narrator is talking to him because, he thinks it's a ghost as the narrator says the same thing before an accident happens,

  • Word count: 2459
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Hindu and Islamic weddings

Title Page Pg 1 Hindu Marriages Pg 2-5 Islamic Marriages Pg 6-9 My Vows Pg 10 Biboliography Pg 11 Hindu marriages are very traditional. Before the ceremony, the priest blesses the bride's bangles and it is considered unlucky if she removes them before forty days after the wedding. The groom arrives with his family at his wedding party and is welcomed by the girl's family. Some brides greet the groom by putting a flower garland around his neck after the girl's mother has already done so. The groom may also choose to do the same. When the bride and groom go inside the temple, the priest calls for Ganesha's blessing for success; followed by the Navgraha prayer (asking the blessing of all of the planets for peace and wealth). Then the maternal uncle and the sisters walk the couple to the mendap (wedding tent) where the girl's father performs kanya danam (handing over ceremony to the priest). By spreading turmeric on her hands, she recognizes her change in status from a single woman, a daughter to a wife. The father then places his daughter's dyed hand on the groom's hand and he holds it as a symbol of everlasting love. By pouring out some of the sacred water, the father 'washes his hands' and gives his daughter away to the groom. At this point the groom recites Vedic hymns to

  • Word count: 1455
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: Religious Studies (Philosophy & Ethics)
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Romeo and Juliet coursework

Romeo and Juliet coursework Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet were based on Arthur Brooke's Romeous and Juliet published in 1592. Arthur Brooke took his work from an Italian Marto Bandella's Romeo and guilletta published in 1554. Romeo and Juliet had been written earlier than 1594 and staged later that year. The play was performed at the curtain in London for the first time. The lord chamberlains men (Shakespeare's acting company) became a stable group by 1595 and were writing plays to attract audience. Shakespeare turned thirty and was writing his best plays. The play was immediately popular and was printed and sold in 1597. Francis Meres a theatre critic wrote Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet among the English and said Shakespeare is the most excellent...for tragedy. William Shakespeare makes act 1 scene 5 dramatic by: the beginning of act 1 scene 5 stands in direct contrast with the end of act 1 scene 4. We find Romeo in a depressed mood and fears that something will happen on the night and may bring out his death. "I fear too early, for my mind misgives Some consequence yet hanging in the stars Shall bitterly begin his fearful date With the nights reveals, and expire Of a despised life closed in my breast By some vile forfeight of untimely death. The soliloquy allows Shakespeare to share Romeo's thoughts with the audience and gives them the play will

  • Word count: 1381
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Why did the 'constitutional, gradualist route' of Gladstone's Liberal ministries fail to achieve his objective of a 'pacified' Ireland? Queen Victoria described him as a "half mad firebrand" whilst to large

Christina Monksfield 034497340 History Level III HST 263 Ireland: the Politics of Home Rule to 1923 Tutor Barbara Nield Why did the 'constitutional, gradualist route' of Gladstone's Liberal ministries fail to achieve his objective of a 'pacified' Ireland? Queen Victoria described him as a "half mad firebrand" whilst to large part of the British working classes he was the "Grand Old Man". Four times Prime Minister, Gladstone provoked strong reaction. Today it is impossible to ignore his achievements as a Liberal father figure and a passionate campaigner for reform, Irish Home Rule and ethical foreign policy. His policies were intended to improve individual liberty while loosening political and economic restraints. When Gladstone first came to power, in 1868, he placed Ireland at the forefront of his priorities. He said, "Ireland is at your doors. Providence placed her there".1 Gladstone's motives for putting Ireland on the political agenda, and when he did, remain controversial. Towards the end of his life, Gladstone was to identify 1868 as one of the golden moments of his career, when he had sensed that public opinion was ripe to be shaped and channelled to put right the long-standing injustice that Ireland had suffered.2 Not all historians have been convinced by Gladstone's analysis of the situation, or of his own motives. Gladstone's adoption of interest in

  • Word count: 3674
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Historical and Philosophical studies
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How does Arthur Miller create tension in "A View from the Bridge"?

How does Arthur Miller create tension in "A View from the Bridge"? A play is specifically written to be performed to a live audience and is made of a script and stage directions. A play is different from a book because a play is written to be acted out whereas a book is written to be read off the page. As a play is written to be performed it needs to keep a live audience thoroughly gripped. If a playwright has been successful with their play it will show through the audience. At times the audience should be on the edge of their seats, at times laughing and sometimes close to tears. In Arthur Miller's "A View from the Bridge" there are different levels of tension that are caused by the main themes running through the play. The play is set in Red Hook, New York, at an age where there were many gangs that fought each other. Most of the play is set in the apartment belonging to Eddie, Catherine and Beatrice. They are joined by Marco and Rodolfo who are Beatrice's cousins. They immigrated to New York from Italy in search of the 'American Dream'. This was the dream of success, fame and wealth through thrift and hard work. The living conditions in the apartment are close and claustrophobic so privacy is scarce. It's a dark and dingy setting with no natural light and the walls are thin so nothing said goes unheard. When Marco and Rodolfo arrived in the apartment extra care had

  • Word count: 2452
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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OF Mice and Men - Revision notes.

GCSE English Literature REVISION TOPIC OF Mice and Men Context John Steinbeck was born in California in 1902, near to Solidad. Although his family was wealthy, he was interested in the lives of the farm labourers and spent time working with them. He used his experiences as material for his writing. He wrote a number of novels about poor people who worked on the land and dreamed of a better life, including The Grapes of Wrath, which is the heart-rending story of a family's struggle to escape the dust bowl of the West to reach California. Steinbeck was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1962, six years before his death in 1968. The Depression. On October 4 1929, millions of dollars were wiped out in an event that became known as the Wall Street Crash. It led to the Depression in America which crippled the country from 1930 - 1936. People lost their life savings when firms and banks went bust, and 12 - 15 million men and women - one third of America's population - were unemployed. Ranch hands. Against this background, ranch hands like George and Lennie were lucky to have work. Ranch hands were grateful for at least a bunk-house to live in and to have food provided, even though the pay was low. Think about how the men agree to hush-up the fight between Curley and Lennie and claim that Curley got his hand caught in a machine: they know that Lennie and George would be

  • Word count: 2779
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Rome and Juliet - Act 3 Scene 5

Romeo and Juliet - Act 3 Scene 5 In this piece of coursework I am going to write about Act 3 Scene 5 in the story, Rome and Juliet. In this scene, love and relationships change completely and it is quite dramatic. The main parts of this scene are that Romeo and Juliet are together for the last time and Juliet has an argument with her father. Romeo and Juliet's love in this scene begins to come out more than it did. They have only known each other for a few days and are already married to each other. Romeo spends his final night with Juliet, although he has been banished from his home town for killing Tybalt. Romeo and Juliet would do anything for each other as they both believe they are truly in love; they would both die for each other because they are so much in love. Lady Capulet comes up to Juliet's room to tell her she is to marry Paris. Romeo, at this point had just left through Juliet's window after being warned by Juliet's nurse that Juliet's mother was on her way up to her room. Lady Capulet thought it was best for Juliet to marry Paris as Lady Capulet cares about Juliet. She thinks she knows what's best for Juliet all the time. Juliet was already married to Romeo and was in love with him but her mother doesn't know this and insisted that she is to marry Paris. Lord Capulet, Juliet's father came into her room just after Juliet refused to marry Paris. Lord Capulet

  • Word count: 836
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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In the Ruin, the focus is on either the decay or the splendour rather than on the contrast between them(TM) (Renoir) Do you agree with this analysis of the poem? In your answer you should compare The Ruin

In the Ruin, 'the focus is on either the decay or the splendour rather than on the contrast between them' (Renoir) Do you agree with this analysis of the poem? In your answer you should compare The Ruin to at least One other Old English Text. In comparison to The Wanderer and The Seafarer, I believe that Renoir's observation is fitting in that, firstly, the process of thought between what the speaker in The Ruin observes as the decay of a city and what he recalls as its past glory does not seem to, structurally, represent a developing or progressive thought process. Thus, I believe that the poem does not provide a structural template in which the poet can contrast the decay of the ruin and its splendour. Although we do have a structural conjunction in the form of 'oþþæt' between the descriptions of decay and the descriptions of splendour from line 21- 28, the transition between the descriptions is arbitrary. In The Wanderer and arguably in The Seafarer we can observe that an emotional or at least meditative response is evoked after the speaker reflects on the decay of cities or the transience of earthly life in general. But in The Ruin, the speaker 'draws no explicit moral from his description' (Mitchell and Robinson, 2007.265). However, I cannot agree that the descriptions of decay and splendour do not sometimes affectively work together. Renoir has described the poem

  • Word count: 2268
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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Law Woolf Report Access to Justice

The Woolf Report - Access to Justice Lord Woolf didn't like the way the law system operated, he wanted to make it quicker and simpler, and he also thought that the law system wasn't running efficiently and it was too complicated. His report - Access to Justice - is famous for the ways in made huge improvements to the way the court system opporated. Here are some of the changes that have made the way the courts operate in a more positive way: (1) greater judicial management of the process including, notably, tighter and properly enforced timetables and a greater control on discovery and the use of expert evidence (both of which have an escalating effect on costs); (2) The allocation of different types of cases, normally determinable according to the amounts at stake in the disputes, to different sets of management rules; (3) The encouragement of early settlements and resort to ADR procedures; (4) A greater transparency of legal costs. He thought that if it was possible all small disputes should be solved outside the court room, possibly using mediator to help the parties arguments get less messy, and fairer. This would also save money as a lawyer is not needed, and a mediator only charges on average £2,000. One of the main changes that Lord Woolf made was the introduction of fast track and multi track cases. By sorting the cases into two categories he was able to split

  • Word count: 638
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Law
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Examine the settings which the writers have chosen for their stories in the Signalman and The Man with the Twisted Lip. Consider the effects that each writer has created and how they contribute to the atmosphere.

Examine the settings which the writers have chosen for their stories in the Signalman and The Man with the Twisted Lip. Consider the effects that each writer has created and how they contribute to the atmosphere. Both The Signalman by Charles Dickens and The Man with the Twisted Lip by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle use setting to create a menacing atmosphere. They were also both written during Queen Victoria's reign: The Signalman in 1866, and The Man with the Twisted Lip in 1891. The Signalman was written five years after the Clayton tunnel crash and a year after Dickens was involved in the Staplehurst rail crash which killed ten people and injured forty-nine. Central to the Signalman are two rail accidents, preceded by the appearance of a spectre, and these are both believed to have been used as material for the story. It is, perhaps, saying that railways, a product of the Industrial Revolution and rationality, are not immune to unknown and irrational forces. The Industrial Revolution changed the world: the Victorian era saw the rise of machine powered labour needing fewer people to do work, and mass movement of people from the country to cities. The Man with the Twisted Lip is one of Doyle's famous Sherlock Holmes stories. Sherlock Holmes is an amateur detective who always manages to solve his cases, unlike the police of the time who were unable to catch the infamous Jack the

  • Word count: 2405
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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