John Proctor and Abigail Williams both show an amazing amount of bravery, valiant, and boldness. John

Moses Preciado 10-1-05 Per.1 THE CRUCIBLE Brave is defined as: Possessing or displaying courage; valiant. Being brave is not necessarily always good and can lead to a disastrous outcome. In the play The Crucible, written by Arthur Miller, the protagonist and antagonist both display a great deal of courage. John Proctor is brave in the sense that he is willing to make a confession and risk his life to save his wife's life, and Abigail Williams is brave in the sense that she is bold enough to falsely condemn a large amount of people of witchery knowing that they will all be hung. John Proctor is a wealthy farmer who's wife is accused of bewitching young girls and practicing witchcraft. Throughout the play John proves that he is a brave man. As soon as his wife is accused, John quickly goes to the court proceedings to denounce the trial and to reveal that the girls that accuse his wife are just pretending. Also that the only reason his wife was accused is because Abigail Williams, the leader of the accusers, had had an extra marital affair with John, and John said," She thinks to dance with me on my wife's grave!" (p.106). By saying this he admits to committing lechery, which is punished by death. This is just one of the times when John is courageous and puts his life before his wife's. Soon after John is arrested for condemning the court, and for saying "I say-I say - God

  • Word count: 782
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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An Armadillo that Created the Perfect Father

An Armadillo that Created the Perfect Father Dan Needham is a very important character for the development of John Irving's novel especially for one of the book's theme. Tabitha John's mother met Dan for the first time in the good old Boston and Maine (Irving 40). Harriet Wheelwright, Tabitha's mother informs the reader about the origin of the Needham family referring to it as a traditional name that could be traced back to the Massachusetts Bay Colony (Irving 43). Dan Needham studied in Harvard and he worked as a drama teacher and a theater director in the Gravesend Academy (Irving 43). From the first time Tabitha's family especially John heard about the existence of Dan he knew he was special. John refers to him in this way because he had seen many of his mothers "dates" before, but he had never seen her mother referring to somebody so openly, telling them she liked him and that she wanted the family to meet him (Irving 45). Physically Dan Needham was also different from the rest of Tabitha's "dates" who were good looking, Dan was tall and gawky, his hair was curly and colored, and he had a sizable bottom and wore eye glasses that didn't fit his face. His cloth didn't fit either, the jacket was to tight and the sleeves very short, his trousers were big and baggy and his hips were prominent and "womanly"(Irving 46). Even tough Dan was a little clumsy; he was very courteous

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Why does John reject the 'civilization' represented in "Brave New World" and how does Huxley make this apparent in his writing?

Why does John reject the 'civilization' represented in "Brave New World" and how does Huxley make this apparent in his writing? John comes from an Indian reservation in New Mexico, and goes to the Brave New world with Bernard Marx who was about to be sent away from there because he was different. Bernard and Lenina brought John because they knew that John was the son of the Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning with Linda. This would humiliate the Directory because having viviparous babies in the Brave New World was seen as disgusting, and no one would ever imagine that the director could have had one himself. John was not accepted in the savage reservation because his mother slept with many men, this was seen as an absurd, but in the Brave New World it was not, "Every one belongs to everyone else"; having sex with many different people was a moral duty. John was fascinated by the prospect of going to the Brave New World because his mother told him that in the Brave New World people never had problems, because even if they had they would take a drug called Soma, which would make them "take a holiday from reality" and forget all about them. He was also told about how people travelled by helicopter and he thought that they could really fly. He learned how to read and right superficially, how everything is clean and that no one marries, that there are no nasty smells, that

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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1 years later, the aftermath of 'the shooting', based on a true story.

1/2 years later, the aftermath of 'the shooting', based on a true story It started off as a normal school day; I arrived late to school, at 8:50 am, and was shouted at by Mrs Robinson. The date was 23rd June 2000. I was in Year 8 at the time. I went to the first 2 lessons as usual, and then it was break. I went into the form room to find virtually the whole class gathered around John Smith, a fellow pupil in my form. He had a very sophisticated looking BB gun in his hand. It fired little round, coloured pellets. He was showing off this gun to everyone, firing pellets at distant objects or out of the window. The gun was a pistol, non-automatic. It was amazingly powerful though; it could easily break glass at close range, and smash windows. This gun was a Desert Eagle. The bullets it fired went so fast, that you only saw them once they'd hit something. He had also brought another BB gun, except this one was a semi-automatic M16 sub-machine gun. It could unload a whole magazine of these little round, coloured pellets in a matter of seconds. Another boy, Herbert Jenkins, picked up this gun, and without any caution, shouted at me across the form room, "You'd better run Abhishek," He smiled menacingly, pointing this M16 gun at me. I tried to dodge the continuous reign of pellets, as he unloaded the whole magazine of 36 pellets at me. I got caught and tried to protect myself

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Life inside

LIFE INSIDE It all happened along time ago in Mississippi when there was a robbery in the local bank and two of the cashiers were shot dead. The robber/killer had a mask on but the witness knew that he was black because he wasn't wearing any gloves. When he left the bank he jumped into a white car just like my one but no one got his registration number. Since it was a long time ago there was a lot of racists in the town were I was living and nearly all my life I had to stick with the abuse that they threw at me. A few days later the police came knocking at my door and arrested me. I ended up in court in front of an all white jury and a white judge. I knew I had no chance even though I was innocent. With no evidence except for a witness saying that the robber was black I was sent down for life not just for the robbery but for the killing of the two cashiers as well. My first sight of the prison was when the jail bus pulled up outside with the convicts and I inside. I stepped out of the bus and seen a big scary place with fences and barbed wire all around. I was wearing my jail clothes that you see in movies with my number 1657 printed on it. The minute I stepped inside I knew it wasn't going to be very pleasant. The guard to see if I was trying to sneak anything in checked me. I was guided to my room. I looked in and thought how much I was going to miss the

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Look closely at the meeting between John and Elizabeth Procter in prison In what ways does it show their relationship to have changed from earlier in the play?

Look closely at the meeting between John and Elizabeth Procter in prison In what ways does it show their relationship to have changed from earlier in the play? How does Millar make this episode both moving and tragic? In the Salem witch trials, in 1692, 119 people were accused of doing witchcraft. Similarly Arthur Millar was questioned by McCarthy in un-American Activities and was asked to betray his friends, he decided to write a play because he thought the events were similar. He wrote about the Salem trials to shed light on modern day. Millar chose the Salem trials because the McCarthyism was very much doing the same, accept more recent. Millar focuses his play on two people, John and Elizabeth Procter. At the beginning of the play they are distant and un-romantic. However towards the end of the play they become deeply in love and they realise how much they love each other this is because they go to jail and John feels guilty that his wife has been imprisoned when he had committed adultery. John Procter tries to be nice to Elizabeth as he feels guilty for betraying her ands committing adultery with Abigail '(with a grin) I mean to please you Elizabeth' he is trying to make up for his sins. '(it is hard to say): I know it John' this tells us that she still has doubts as to whether she fully forgives him for what he has done, however she doesn't want to cause an

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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How does Athol Fugard present personal and political conflict in the opening scene of the Island?

How does Athol Fugard present personal and political conflict in the opening scene of the Island? Athol fugard presents the opening scene in a number of ways. The play is all about contrasts in personal and political conflict. The Island was written by Fugard to show the situation between whites and blacks in South Africa. When the play was first preformed it was more like a political play, but audiences see it as based more on the human spirit. After the apartheid had finished the play was more about how people overcame pressure and stress. The play was written around the 1970's when there was Apartheid in South Africa. This meant that the white people were in control of the black people. The black people were treated as slaves and were said to be like animals, if the black people were to disobey the rules then one of the punishments was to be thrown into prison, which was where this play was set. These plays were against the law, because they were a form of rebellion, so if the actors and audience were caught they would be severely punished. The setting and staging are presented in different ways to show the isolation and confinement in the cell. Fugard does this by the centre of the stage being raised to represent a cell on Robben Island. In the cell everything is neat and tidy, blankets are all folded and this is because mess would take up more room. The black prisoners

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Investigating John Calvin, the founder of the Calvinist faith.

John Calvin John Calvin was the founder of the Calvinist faith, the Presbyterian denomination of Christianity today. Calvin was born and died in 1564. John Calvin was one of the chief leaders of the Protestant Reformation. From his early life and start in Protestantism, to his life in Geneva, and the Proclamation of his faith, Calvin was an incredible individual. Calvin was born in Noyon, France, near Compiegne. His father was a lawyer for the Roman Catholic Church. Young Calvin was educated in Paris, Orleans and Bourges. Calvin planned to be a lawyer as his father was, but it is likely that he never inwardly committed himself to that career. With his father died in May of 1931, Calvin was free to make his choice. He completed his doctorate in law but then came to study Greek and Latin and the University of Paris. Calvin's life then took a new direction that he refers to as a "sudden conversion". He writes about his experience in the introduction to his Commentary on the Psalms written in 1557: "Since I was more stubbornly addicted to the superstitions of the Papacy than to be easily drawn out of so deep a mire, God subdued my heart-too stubborn for my age-to docility by a sudden conversion." Therefore, by 1533 Calvin had declared himself a Protestant. In 1534 Calvin moved to Basel, Switzerland where there, two years later in 1536, he published his first

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Descriptive writing.

Reece Darwin10PK English, Descriptive writing Twenty inches of neck attached to a freakishly large body, the likes of which are not usually seen outside the covers of Neanderthal-Weekly, with tree trunk legs and splaying arms carrying invisible buckets filled to the brim with water walked into the dark pulsating night club. With a permanent frown on his armour plated forehead he paid for his entry slamming the money down sending shock waves through the counter. He thudded towards the bar making the floor vibrate with every step he took, barging every one to one side that stood between him and the bar making a path through the sea of people. He was a walking truck who in his spare time liked to play professional Rugby and eat babies. Instinct told me that he would be fighting by the end of the night. I asked a few questions to my fellow colleagues and friends about who this gigantic fighting machine was, in return I got answers like "don't do it Reg", "he's a legend on the pitch and in the ring", "he's the man that can't be knocked out!" This just made me want him even more. He stood at the bar like he had paid rent. He had a few of his mates around him that were also massive and equally ugly but he made them look like skinny little excuses for men. There wasn't another group of lads in a five-mile radius through fear of this absurdly sized man and his ape like behaviour.

  • Word count: 725
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Dear Diary, Today John and me had a quarrel because he went to Salem without letting me know.

Dear Diary, Today John and me had a quarrel because he went to Salem without letting me know. I still have suspicion that the affair between him and Abigail has not ended just yet. My suspicion has come about due to him spending some time in Salem today and not telling me that he had even gone. When John came back I had his tea on the table as usual and he sat down without saying a word. This was when I first got suspicious. It was the way he didn't acknowledge that I had spent a lot of time on the day's tea. I only got a bit of thanks after I had told him that I had caught the rabbit and had too skin it and then cook it myself. I mentioned that he had gone to Salem, he exploded into a frenzy of that all he had wished was for us to be happy and to forget about Abigail. Dear Diary, Mary Warren revealed to John and I today that fourteen people had been arrested. She knew this because she has been appointed an official of the court. This means that she has to go into Salem everyday until the town is clean of this witchcraft nonsense. Again today I have been advising john to take his evidence to the court about Abigail telling him that the dancing in the woods and nought to do with witchcraft. John was appalled when Mary Warren told him that she shall be gone for some weeks and he cannot stop her. Hen I told John to take his evidence to the court of Salem he said but what

  • Word count: 721
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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