Great essays

“I like nonsense, it wakes up the brain cells. Fantasy is a necessary ingredient in living, it’s a way of looking at life through the wrong end of a telescope. Which is what I do, and that enables you to laugh at life’s realities.” - Dr. Seuss

Breaking from Family Tradition

“Digging,” by Seamus Heaney, is a poem narrated from a writer, whose family’s tradition is to work with the earth in ways that necessitate digging. He is proud of his father and grandfather for their skillfulness in their work. However, he tells us that he wishes instead to be a writer, which will break him away from the family tradition of working with the earth. [...]


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Jonah

December 7th 2008
Topics: Response

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To Die With Honor or Live Without

Hotspur and Falstaff in “Henry IV Part 1” have strikingly opposite personalities. They are two extremes in the play. Their conceptions of honor are very different, and it is surprising how much it affects their behaviors and actions, and how is affects how they stand at the end of the play. Hotspur, although considered a villain in the play by some, represents the honorable, moral and principled individual. Falstaff contrasts this as being lighthearted, lazy, and selfish and without morals. [...]

Jonah

December 7th 2008
Topics: Response

No Comments

Breaking from Family Tradition

“Digging,” by Seamus Heaney, is a poem narrated from a writer, whose family’s tradition is to work with the earth in ways that necessitate digging. He is proud of his father and grandfather for their skillfulness in their work. However, he tells us that he wishes instead to be a writer, which will break him away from the family tradition of working with the earth. [...]

Jonah

October 8th 2008
Topics: Response

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Challenges Clashed

In “Sonny’s Blues,” James Baldwin tells the story of two brothers and their challenges in life. Their challenges deeply intertwine, and yet they are very different. While the narrator’s challenge is to take responsibility for his brother, Sonny, Sonny’s challenge is, however, to be independent from his brother’s responsibility, or anybody else’s. The irony is that these two challenges counter each other. Sonny’s challenge is to become self-sufficient, while the narrator’s challenge is to help him become self-sufficient. It is funny, isn’t it, that to be independent, he must first accept help from another? [...]

Jonah

May 23rd 2008
Topics: Uncategorized

One Comment

Jacques-Louis David: A Man of Pathos

Jacques-Louis David was born in Paris, on August 30, 1754, and died 77 years later in Brussels on December 30, 1825 (Roberts, 3). He was taught by Vein, one of the most known painters of the time (Friedlaender, 12). Many of his painting, including the two I have chosen, represent very emotional events that had happened during and around the time that he lived. David was able to capture these events on canvas and really bring out its pathos and emotion. [...]

Jonah

May 22nd 2008
Topics: Politics, Uncategorized

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The Gun Ban – Will it Work?

One difficulty the world has always been faced with is crime. We have put penalties on crime, such as flogging and beating in the older days, and today we have more civilized methods such as jailing and the death sentence. But we still have crime. It would be ridiculous to think that we will ever fully get rid of crime in this imperfect world. Even so, we are still always striving to come up with new ways to lower the crime rate. One much disputed method to reduce crime is a gun ban – to ban all guns. Banning guns is a very dramatic thing to do and it deserves to be thought out. Something that seems to be neglected by a lot of anti-gun advocates is that criminals will still have the black market as a way to attain their guns even if they are banned, and for this reason I do not think a gun ban would turn out as expected. [...]

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