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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Lucy went missing on Wednesday

Lucy had gone missing on Wednesday. It was now Friday. When she failed to return home from school, her father, a policeman named John, called all of her friends and neighbours, asking in a panic if they'd seen her. They hadn't. She was only 8, she'd never been separated from her mother and father for more than a few days, but even then they had kept in contact somehow, whether by phone or by post. They were very worried about her. John and Mary, his wife, had been constantly phoning everyone they knew, checking and double-checking if anyone had seen their daughter or if they had any news about her. As it was, they didn't have to wait very long for news and it came in the form of a note left tucked under their doormat. If you wish to see your daughter again, a price of £1,000,000 must be delivered to us in £50 notes. You will be contacted within one week with further instructions. The note was scruffily formed out of single letters cut out from magazines and newspapers, glued onto a sheet of thick paper. Mary was the one to find it; she noticed it when she was throwing out a bag of cut grass and garden debris. She grasped it clumsily in her thick gloves and read it. She wept. John, with an assistant, had tested the note for fingerprints himself, for that was one of his fields as a policeman. The only one he and his colleague could find was a fingerprint of John's. It

  • Word count: 1767
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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The Cost of Stability in Brave New World - Freedom.

The Cost of Stability in Brave New World - Freedom David Grayson once said that "Commandment Number One of any truly civilized society is this: Let people be different". Difference, or individuality, however, may not be possible under a dictatorial government. Aldous Huxley's satirical novel Brave New World shows that a government-controlled society often places restraints upon its citizens, which results in a loss of social and mental freedom. These methods of limiting human behaviour are carried out by the conditioning of the citizens, the categorical division of society, and the censorship of art and religion. Conditioning the citizens to like what they have and reject what they do not have is an authoritative government's ideal way of maximizing efficiency. The citizens will consume what they are told to, there will be no brawls or disagreements and the state will retain high profits from the earnings. People can be conditioned chemically and physically prior to birth and psychologically afterwards. The novel, Brave New World, takes place in the future, 632 A. F. (After Ford), where biological engineering reaches new heights. Babies are no longer born viviparously, they are now decanted in bottles passed through a 2136 metre assembly line. Pre-natal conditioning of embryos is an effective way of limiting human behaviour. Chemical additives can be used to control the

  • Word count: 2049
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Stories: Healing and Sharing

Stories: Healing and Sharing The story can act to heal those have been injured by personal violence or social injustice. Often traumatic acts are "unspeakable" because those acts are so terrible that it clamps the tongue and subsequently the victim suffers a pain so great that the inexpressibility, the inadequacy of representation, grows and locks the sufferer inside of their suffering. By having their stories told, victims begin to feel empowered again because events where they were once powerless are being re-created. Although events cannot be erased, the act of recollecting and of telling both aid people to process and move beyond pain. Zora Neal Hurston's Mules and Men (year) and Anzaldúa's Borderlands (year) are creative and potent cross-cultural examples of such medicinal storytelling, serving to redefine and yet preserve the people they re-represent. Trinh Min-ha's Native Woman Other (year) speaks of the marginalized, woman storyteller, recognizing the power of stories as integral to healing. The complex process of healing differs for everybody, but storytelling holds prescriptive elements that promote people to move beyond their wounds. According to Trinh Minh-ha, "the principle of healing rests on reconciliation, hence the necessity for the family and/or community to participate... witness the recovery" (140). Within narrative, I have identified three functions

  • Word count: 3160
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Arthur Miller's play "The Crucible", discussing the two women, Abigail Williams and Elizabeth Proctor, and how they are absolute opposites.

Miller attempts to create an outright contrast between the two protagonists - Abigail Williams and Elizabeth Proctor. Examine how he has established this dichotomy character, and what does it add to the dramatic quality and audiences involvement in the play. In this essay I will be writing about Arthur Miller's play "The Crucible", particularly about the two women, Abigail Williams and Elizabeth Proctor, and how they are absolute opposites. I would like to discuss how this affects the play and how this allows a more modern audience to follow and relate to this play. These days, most people, do not actually believe in witches and witchcraft which can make it hard for a modern audience, like me, to follow and understand some of the actions and reactions of certain people in the play. That is why Miller has added this affair between Abigail and John so modern audiences can understand different aspects of the play. To make this play even more dramatic, Miller makes Abigail and Elizabeth completely different physically, mentally and in their beliefs about religion and life. Elizabeth in the play stands as this mother, homemaker figure whereas Abigail stands for youth, heat, passion, emotional and mischievous. Abigail is this young girl or child, "(gently pressing her from him, with great sympathy but firmly): Child -", who lives on emotions, who is independent, but still willing

  • Word count: 3191
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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The waters

The waters One tragic day a doomed young couple went down to a lake on a date. It was a day like no other. The clouds and sun merged and became a swirling blue and purple mixture of strange unknown gases, some considered it beautiful: others? Deadly. Betty Mills of Virginia Way drew her fuchsia coloured curtains and placed herself condemningly in front of her mirror. "My bum looks big and my hips are too wide!" She thought, pinching her rolls of fat. She grimaced, sprayed herself with her favourite perfume, "Baby doll" and closed her bedroom door. "Good luck" she murmured as she walked down the stairs. Little did she know that no few words could save her now. John Ford from Sutton Courtney cranked up the volume on his heavy-beating gramophone and put on his shades. "I am so cool" he thought to himself, I'm the top dog" he boogied as he stepped to view himself in his mirror, "Daddy cool, I rock!" He said and wandered across to his window where all the local girls tried to catch a glimpse of the school hunk. Winking at them he quickly shut his curtains, turned off the music and walked slowly to his drawer. Removing his shades he pulled the handle and peered inside. From a birds eye view you would think there were only aftershaves in there but he slid his hand to the back and withdrew a small box. Lifting the lid he picked out a glistening ring, inside he smiled

  • Word count: 1114
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Financial advice to a business customer on a new range of products.

Financial advice to a business customer on a new range of products In this section I have been asked to give financial advice to a business customer on them either expanding or buying a new range of products to ensure good customer services. Mr Smith started his hire car business fifteen years ago and since then he has been making a steady profit. Through these years John has only changed his fleet of 20 cars twice. With him only making a steady profit he thinks he is not making as much due to his run down cars and is now looking to either buy or lease a new fleet of 20 cars. John Smith is 40 years old and is looking to retire in 15 years to do this john has to try and make as much profit as he can so that this will be possible. Smith Cars is a limited company, which is owned by john and his son Peter which means that Smith cars can raise extra capital on the stock market. John leases his cars out at a price of £25 a day and £5 extra for over night. The business is situated in Leeds, which is very good for business due to the lack of car hire firms in Leeds. To find out what Smith cars earns and loses o have done a profit and loss account to see what available funds John has to spend on a new fleet of cars. John pays interest on the leasing of the property where he runs the business. He also pays for car vaulting to ensure customer satisfaction. Profit and Loss

  • Word count: 1320
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Comparisons and Contrasts of 1984 & Brave New World.

Stephen B. Mangan November 14, 2004 Comparisons and Contrasts of 1984 & Brave New World There are two novels that stand out in literature which display a sense of supreme control of society by a government in some future time. George Orwell's `1984', which was first published in 1949, creates a nightmarish vision of what the world may become via a `negative utopia' and Aldous Huxley's `Brave New World', which was published in 1932, depicts a future society where everyone is conditioned to be eternally happy with their station in life and completely devoid of emotion. The two novels have been compared to current events (versus to each other that this paper addresses) exhaustively over the last fifty years although `1984' is being quoted more recently in popular television shows such as `Big Brother' in the United States and `Room 101' in the United Kingdom. `Brave New World' is the story about a future time where society is completely under control of the government. The latest technology is on display where everyone has their own helicopter and can travel from place to place very quickly. Children are not born but `hatched' using embryos from females that are artificially fertilized. They are pre-programmed during the gestation process and after they are born to belong to a specific group of society as well as to accept their predestination in life.

  • Word count: 3791
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Destined To Die

Joshua bools Destined To Die 13th September Buildings collapsed to the ground hysterically, like a baby trying to take his first steps, but slowly stumbling back down. People were crushed devastatingly under buildings; people fled the city like an army of ants marching out. Cars crashed into each other dreadfully, children lost in contact with their beloved parents, nevertheless many people raced towards any open churches, for protection and prayers, but many unfortunately collapsed too. This quake was an uncontrollable disaster. Several minutes later the quake had stopped, leaving thousands homeless, thousands had been injured and yet thousands had died, many were also missing. (The most that were missing were unusually the civilians who were by the quake fault) All local hospitals were packed with a continuous flow of patients, people were screaming, with deep-filled emotions, and their was also moaning, permanently surrounding the atmosphere. Parts of the hospital had been ruined by the quake, so it was a constant rush hour of civilians panicking around the hospital. Fire fighters could not get to some particular places to put out the blazing, horrendous fires. So much looting was rapidly occurring. The mayor Jason Quinn got into contact with John: (head of geologist department- quake specialist) over the CB

  • Word count: 1210
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Aldous Huxley's Brave New World presents a portrait of a society which is apparently a perfect world.

Aldous Huxley's Brave New World presents a portrait of a society which is apparently a perfect world. At first inspection, it seems perfect in many ways: it is care free, problem free and depression free. All aspects of the population are controlled: both as to number, social class, and mental ability. Even history is controlled and re-written to meet the needs of the party. Solidity must be maintained at all costs. In the new world which Huxley creates, if there were even a hint of anger, the wonder drug Soma is prescribed to remedy the problem. A colleague, noticing your depression, would chime in with the chant, "A gram is better then a damn." This slogan was taught to everyone, from the youngest to the oldest. Unhappiness, intellectual curiosity, disagreement, suffering- none of these feelings is allowed in the world which Huxley envisioned. Soma, (the predecessor of the modern day Prozac) would be prescribed immediately. Emotions of all types were strictly controlled. Another of the panaceas of society was that everyone enjoyed his or her work because he or she was "made" or trained for it when they were young. In Brave New World, society was strictly stratified. All births are completely planned and monitored. There were different classes of people with different intelligence and different "career plans." The social order was divided into the most highly educated,

  • Word count: 5520
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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