Halsted Street Essays

  • Mallam Sile Character Analysis

    826 Words  | 4 Pages

    In the short story Mallam Sile, the protagonist with the same name owns a tea shop on Zongo Street where many young children steal and harass him. He’s a pushover, not known to be the most physically appealing character. Because of this trait, people in the village exhibit a sharp disliking towards him. Eventually, he leaves his shop to visit his hometown. On his journey, he met his new wife Abeeba. Mallam Sile and Abeeba return to the shop, however, Abeeba is displeased. The young children of the

  • Art Of Respect

    799 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Art of Respect You are walking down the street on a warm, sunny day. You pass a homeless man wearing all of his belongings. He is holding up a sign that reads “Anything helps.” You are about to pass him without making eye contact. “Good day!” He says. You turn your head and see him smiling. You stumble back. “Umm.. Good day?” You reply. He asks how you are and sets his cardboard sign down. “I.. I am good, you?” “Good! It sure is a beautiful day out isn’t it?” He replies. You nod and smile

  • Fairytales In Oscar Wilde's The Picture Of Dorian Gray

    763 Words  | 4 Pages

    Although The Picture of Dorian Gray is considered to be a short novel , it contains some commonly found elements in a fairy tale. In the following essay I am going to present the similitudes that Wilde’s novel shares with fairy tales and give my opinion on whether the novel can be considered a prolonged fairy tale or not. One thing that needs to be taken into consideration is the fact that in this novel not all the elaments of a fairy tale are present. For example , in Oscar Wilde’s novel the time

  • The Late Decalogue Analysis

    701 Words  | 3 Pages

    Inverted values for Victorian society in the Clough’s Latest Decalogue “The Latest Decalogue” (1862) by Arthur John Clough is an indirect criticism of the Victorian society, a satire, in which the values promoted are inverted, in order to emphasize the religious and social unrest. The context is also relevant in understanding the poem; this means that the Victorian Age was influenced by the revolutions, which came up with new ideas, new values such as freedom, social mobility, industrial and social

  • Disaster In Amanda Ripley's The Unthinkable

    1007 Words  | 5 Pages

    Disaster strikes when we least expect it and when we’re the least prepared. Life or death situations that leave us wondering “why?”. My own brush with death still puzzles me to this day; why was everything so slow? The car ride was slick in the dead of winter. The winding road looked wet from the previous rain storm, but instead was covered with a thin layer of black ice. The old ford lurched off the road and climbed a hill adjacent to the road, only to roll back down and land roof first into the

  • Whose Favorite Cartoon: The Mouse Queen

    808 Words  | 4 Pages

    1. Whose favorite cartoon is The Mouse Queen? ANSWER: Deja 2. What did the girl who just moved next to Nikki’s house do that lead Deja to decide they won’t invite her to their club? ANSWER: She rolled her eyes at them. 3. What are Nikki and Deja going to be when they’ll grow up? ANSWER: Deja is going to be a decorator and Nikki is going to be a newspaper reporter

  • Personal Narrative: My First Day Of Middle School

    888 Words  | 4 Pages

    First Day of Middle School I was trudging to school on a crisp summer day. I had lazily wriggled myself out of bed about a half an hour ago. It was my first day of school at Sartell Middle School and I was shaking in my shoes I was so nervous. I was a 7th grader and had just switched schools to Sartell. My previous school was much smaller than Sartell was. I had no idea what to expect, all I knew was that I better not forget my locker combination and had better remember where my Student Advisory

  • The Benefits Of Volunteering

    1035 Words  | 5 Pages

    Those who volunteer will more than likely do so to give back to their community and the citizens in a positive manner, or they want to be able to help those who are less fortunate. Volunteering provides many benefits to the people who are served; however, many do not realize that volunteering can also provide benefits to the volunteers themselves. The actions of volunteering benefit the mental health, physical health, and social interactions of the volunteers. Although most people volunteer to give

  • Ray Bradbury The Pedestrian Analysis

    770 Words  | 4 Pages

    amusing. Mr.Mead talks about how the streets are so quiet he says, The street was silent and long and empty, with only his shadow moving like the shadow of a hawk in midcountry. If he closed his eyes and stood very still, frozen, he could imagine himself upon the center of a plain, a wintry, windless Arizona desert with no house in a thousand miles, and only dry river beds, the streets, for company. Mr. Mead is proving that technology has taking over and how h the streets are an example of the

  • Lighting Techniques In The Film 'The Purge: Anarchy'

    1479 Words  | 6 Pages

    The savagery human beings fall into when there are no rules is shown in the movie, ‘The Purge: Anarchy”, through the use of lighting, color palette, and sound. About thirty minutes into the movie Eva and Cali’s luck runs out when a group of men dressed in all black and heavily armed enter their home. Both women are taken from the sanctuary of their apartment and dragged to a white semi-truck waiting outside. At the same time, the sergeant is outside in his car watching the whole ordeal take place

  • Lewis And Clark Swot Analysis

    1909 Words  | 8 Pages

    Strengths The north end of the Lewis and Clark neighborhood has multitude strengths which it can promote. These include affordable housing, proximity to schools, street design and proximity to parks. All of these elements are attractive to residents, especially those trying to find a safe place to start their American Dream. The most positive is the accessibly of affordable housing in the area. The properties in the area include low income rental complexes, fourplexes, manufactured homes, condos

  • How Does The Socs Affect The Greasers

    1140 Words  | 5 Pages

    walking down the street. Sometimes the Socs put them through unfathomable agony, like

  • Ap English Poetry Comparison Essay

    1125 Words  | 5 Pages

    William Blake’s “London” and Wilfred Owen’s “Dulce et Decorum Est” appear to have little in common. Although at first they may seem different, they have many hidden similarities. Blake and Owen both uniquely deliver the message being told in their pieces to the readers. Ultimately, both deliver their message by allowing one to expect the unexpected, appeal to their senses, and the way the poet wants one to feel while reading. Owen and Blake hope to deliver their message presented in the poem by

  • Pedro Lopez Research Paper

    1034 Words  | 5 Pages

    having sexual intercourse with his younger sister. Lopes then ran away from this and went to Bogota. He became homeless along with many other young children, they were known as the “ gaminies”. He joined a gang and smoked cocaine. Somebody in the street offered Lopez a bed to stay in instead of sleeping on the floor but instead of accepting it, he took this stranger to a abandoned building and sexually abused him. While being a 10 year old homeless child , an older American couple found him on

  • Diction And Symbolism In Dudley Randall's Ballad Of Birmingham

    932 Words  | 4 Pages

    speakers, the mother and young daughter, take turns in a dialogue that begins in the first stanza with the daughter asking her mother to go downtown: Mother dear, may I go downtown Instead of out to play, And March the streets of Birmingham In a Freedom March today? (Randall 1-4) As the daughter asks her mother if she can go downtown, “Mother dear, may I go downtown,” her diction is that of a young and innocent girl who loves and respects her mother. The word “dear” reveals the admiration and

  • Character Analysis: The End Of Sir Finkal Toes

    387 Words  | 2 Pages

    The End of Sir Finkal Toes It was June 11th 3101 and Tim was getting chased by Sir Finkal Toes it was not really a chase because they were a bit chunky. They were running through the streets of LA It was a extremely slow chase. 10 hours earlier Tim arrived to his new school Mc Valley High. Tim walks into the school to find his arch enemy Sir Finkal Toes. Tim was a weird fellow, he had an ugly alien face. He also believed that he was a gangsta to prove to people that he was a gangsta he would

  • Thank You M Am Langston Hughes Analysis

    648 Words  | 3 Pages

    Hughes did, and it was the best mistake of his life. Roger lived his life a lonely one, with no one at home to help him, for example, pay for shoes so Roger had to resort to different means of getting the things he wanted. Roger was patrolling the streets when he saw a lady he had never met before and attempted at stealing her purse. She wasn’t going to let that happen so she caught him and took him back to her house. She fed him, cleaned him up, and gave him money to pay for the shoes, and left him

  • Willy And The Gang Alternate Ending

    578 Words  | 3 Pages

    But Wille blocked it and ran as fast as he could. But never noticed that the gang was only a yard away. he ran back home but when he opened the door to his raggity and rusty home they allready caught up, the gang knew where he lived and now Willy knew the real dangers as to why peole say to never run home when getting chased by anybody! Willy ran inside shut the door and locked it even though it wasnt very sturdy. jimmy and his gang were gone but not for long. He ran to the bedroom that

  • 9/11 Short Stories

    1375 Words  | 6 Pages

    of her hand catches sweat off her hairline. Eighteen year old Crystal’s apartment complex must be the next alley. Damnit, she thinks, Did they see me come in here, are they still following? Light on her feet, she stalks over to the main street where she entered second ago. Her thunder-cloud-blue eyes peer around the corner of the alley. She spots a man, familiar, he has been- no is following her. Quickly she slams her back

  • Social Interaction In The Film 'Koe No Katachi'

    1021 Words  | 5 Pages

    Koe no Katachi (A Silent Voice) is about Ishida, who bullied Shouko for being deaf in elementary school to the point she had to transfer away. Despite the entire class taking part in being mean to Shouko, they instantly blame only Ishida, and alienate him just as he did to Shouko. Now in high school, Ishida has developed anxiety and depression, but runs into Shouko at a sign language class. What does he want out of talking to Shouko again? Will anyone forgive him? Will he be able to make amends?