My project is a book that contains all of Morris's aphorisms that I could find in the book Tuesdays with Morrie. I tried to relate my own life to the aphorisms that I found. I tried to find pictures that relate to the book and the aphorisms. Then I put the pictures with the aphorisms and decorated it with other things i used as decorations. This whole project helped me understand the book better.
Overall I would want to pick colors and lights that would make a more depressing
Also having first impressions about people are common, but as they become closer friends, they think differently about each other. Personally, the lesson about how our impressions of someone can definitely be different once we really know them is a warning that maybe our best friends could be people we never thought would be. In the Bible in Proverbs 18:24 it states, “A man of many companions may come to ruin, but there is a friend who sticks closer than a brother.” There is also another verse in Proverbs that explains, “A friend Loves at all times, and a brother is born for adversity.” Proverbs 17:17 Just like Kit loved at all times and didn’t count Hannah out before she got to know her, Jesus Loves us at all times and we should love others at all
An English writer Gilbert K. Chesterton once said, "The way to love anything is to realize that it may be lost." In the year 1692, the Puritans of Salem they understand the meaning of Mr. Chestrton's words. To prevent everything can change or lose. In Arthur Miller's play, The Crucible, he shows how love can give one courage and strength. Elizabeth is a great moral wife.
Love is a complicated thing. A wise man once said, ”There is great pain in love, for we all have our flaws, but it’s all worth it in the end; it’s worth the sacrifice.” We all have our little imperfections, and we have all suffered because of them, but at one point in your life, someone will see those flaws and find them beautiful. That’s what love is. This theme can be seen in the play Cyrano de Bergerac by Edmond Rostand and in the poem, O’ If I were loved as I desire to be by Alfred lord Tennyson.
It is quiet understanding, mutual confidence, sharing and forgiving. It is loyalty through good and bad times. It settles for less than perfection and makes allowances for human weaknesses.” This quotation means that friendship is can be good, and bad. Understanding one another through good, and bad, but allowing the other to get hurt causes greater problems.
“My only love sprung from my only hate! Too early, seen unknown, and known too late!” (1.5.
A good quote that shows how black can be used to show deep emotions is, "Somehow, between the sadness and loss, Max Vandenburg, who was now a teenager with hard hands, blackened eyes, and a sore tooth, was also a little disappointed. ”(Zusak 188) The use of black in this quote shows how Max’s eyes were deep and filled with sadness. Using the color really helps the reader visualize how max was feeling. In the book, Death who is the narrator denies he wears a black robe.
Loving someone or being loved doesn't always bring happiness. One quote that proves that it doesn't always bring you happiness is “ I love you now-- isn't that enough? I can't help what’s past.”(132) This quote proves that loving someone doesn't always bring you happiness. Daisy isn't happy that she has to choose either tom or gatsby because she loved both of them. Loving someone can be difficult.
In Act III, scene i of The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark by William Shakespeare, readers will come upon Ophelia’s soliloquy. After Rosencrantz and Guildenstern have failed to find a reason as to why Hamlet is acting in a peculiar and mad way, Claudius is persuaded by Polonius that the reason for Hamlet’s madness is the broken romance between Hamlet and Ophelia. To prove this, Claudius and Polonius plan to spy on Ophelia’s meeting with Hamlet. During their conversation, Hamlet denies ever having loved her and curses her. Ophelia is left fretting over his sanity.
In the picture that I have chosen the color grey represents the sadness of this topic because seeing this image makes me wonder how can things be better for this teenager and what can be different for them in their life? The focal point, background, movement, etc. sets the tone and mood for this picture because when people see images like this, many things may come across their minds like unanswered questions or
Sydney Stone Mrs. Paul English 10A 16 October 2017 Rhetorical Analysis Essay William Shakespeare, a very famous writer, tells the story of Julius Caesar. In his play, Marc Antony delivers a powerful speech that uses many different rhetorical devices, appeals, and different styles of writing. Some of these include repetition, rhetorical questions, pathos, logos, ethos, and diction. These help enhance Marc Antony’s speech by persuading the audience towards considering that Caesar was a good man.
Ursula Le Guin defines Omelas as a utopia where the citizens’ lives are never wretched. Le Guin captures her readers’ attention by describing the city’s beauty with the colorful scenery, events featuring games and horse riding, and the everlasting happiness. She does a great job of leading her readers into thinking this could be the perfect society, but leaves us with the question of satisfaction. According to Le Guin, “happiness is based on a just discrimination of what is necessary, what is neither necessary nor destructive, and what is destructive” (p. 2). This quote means that there must be a balance for the society to succeed.
Margaret Wolfe Hungerford once said, “Beauty lies in the eyes of the beholder”. The meaning of this quote is that beauty exists only in the mind of the person that contemplates it. This correlates with the beginning of the love shared by the main characters in Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare. Born from opposing families, Romeo and Juliet fall in love, but cannot be together because of their family feud. Their love begins from the moment they meet, and just upon looking at each other, they instantly fall in love.
“Surely, of all creatures that have life and will, we women/ Are the most wretched” (Euripides 229-230). This first quote is spoken by Medea after she escapes her maudlin feelings and assesses her feelings on her situation with her husband. Before now, she showed no sign of overcoming her agonized spirit. She lay in her bed sobbing, and only spoke to declare her wish for immediate death. When she decides to make a statement, she addresses all women of Corinth.