...father died when she was 3. A bad plague breaks out in Pennsylvania killing many leaving few to survive and live. The food supplies are fading,there is no safe place. Mattie turns to other places to live,but there are limited places that will let them in. Her mother gets the plague and tells Mattie and her grandfather to leave to the Ludington's farm. But before they get there Mattie's grandfather suddenly comes down with the fever. They later are at Bush Hill,where Mattie gets over the fever and her grandfather turns out not to have the plague. After they recovered,they returned to the coffeehouse and see that it has been robbed. One night,Mattie gets too hot and opens a window,but in the middle of the night robbers come in and try to rob the place. After Mattie chases them,away she comes back and see's her grandfather died. She moves in with Eliza and her family,where she helps out with cooking and cleaning. Eliza's brother's kids get the fever and they take them to the coffeehouse and Eliza says that once the first frost comes the plague will be gone. When the first frost finally comes they take the kids outside to heal and within a few hours they are cured. Everybody comes back into town....
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...various diseases among humankind have led to many philosophical, ideological, and theological perspectives and arguments on its causes. Notably, the Black Death in the West prompted an assortment of theories of and approaches to deadly diseases in response. The responses to the Black Death consisted of both positive and negative (but mostly negative) reactions to individuals afflicted with the plague. Furthermore, mass hysteria, religious persecution, superstitious practices, and pseudoscientific treatments were common happenings throughout the duration of the bubonic plague outbreak. A careful examination of the Black Death and its impact on social relations and religious principles will reveal a stark contrast between Biblical standards and the responses to and handling of the bubonic plague during its outbreak. The bubonic plague pandemic in the fourteenth century was a frantically contagious bacterial disease that transferred from infected fleas and rodents to humans through bites. Additionally, the Black Death had originated in Central Asia, more...
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...Rosies” to many people became interpreted as a rhyme about the deadly disease that arrived in Europe in the 15th century. People interpreted the line ‘Ashes, Ashes we all fall down.” meaning that millions of people were dying during that time. The famous plague is know as the Bubonic Plague (The Black Death). Nobody in those days knew much about the plague, but they definitely encountered it. The fatal Bubonic Plague caused by a bacteria known as Yersinia, resulted in devastation, deaths throughout Europe and in some cases loss of faith. The Plague first began in small animals like rodents, and mice. According to (Seekers, DNEWS) “The bubonic plague first emerged in China more than 2,600 years ago.”...
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...manifestation of the plague in Europe historically known as "Black Death", “ fever " or "Bubonic plague" among other epithets, is a particular example of why a pest or plague can be developed and how can it be controlled. In this specific case, the plague is used to expand from the general conditions of a concrete reality, and disappears spontaneously when these conditions vary, these circumstances promoted behavioral changes to encourage changes in behavior and domestic actions of man, which in turn caused such a change of environment that disfavored the transcendence of the plague, which has its ultimate manifestation in the Old Continent nearly four hundred years after his arrival in Europe. Some people consider this event as the worst of the epidemics that affected man in its history. Although historically it has been established that the disease was bubonic plague acting with pneumonic and septicemic variants, some researchers attribute the high mortality registered to more than one disease, they base their statements and even in our times, by studying bones from graves that in which tradition is known to have been buried victims of the plague , in some cases there was no evidence of bubonic plague and its variants in one hand and in the other hand traces of other diseases such as Anthrax were found. What is certain and beyond doubt is that this epidemic ends with the third part of the population then, between 20 and 25 million people. Bubonic plague or Black Death...
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...We have all had a dream where we wake up and are confused because we thought our dream actually happened but in reality it did not. Our brain makes us think this because of how real it felt and how much we want to believe that it really happened. Some of us even have dreams that we will make us ponder for hours. We are caught wondering and trying to remember if it actually did happen. In The Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K. Le Guin we begin reading a story about a man named George who mixes up his versions of reality through dreaming. Whenever George enters into deep sleep he begins to dream effective dreams which begin to change the real world. Whenever he has an effective dream he is the only one to remember. George begins going to a man named...
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.../And hither shall he come, and he and /I Will watch thy waking,” (IV.i.108-115). However Friar did not send this in the best way. Friar Lawrence gave the letter to Friar John to give to Romeo, but when John went to get help from another Friar, the people there suspected Friar John’s house has been hit with the plague. Friar John now was not allowed to leave his house or get a messenger because the plague could spread. Romeo was informed of different news before Friar Lawrence’s letter had arrived, so at the fault of Friar Lawrence not having a better delivery method Romeo thought Juliet was dead for real. When Romeo arrives to see Juliet, he is devastated, shouting things like, “Thou detestable maw, thou womb of death,Gorged with the dearest morsel of the earth,Thus I enforce thy rotten jaws to open,And in despite I’ll cram thee with more food!” (V.iii.51-54). Romeo is angrily opening up the tomb of which Juliet lays, he could not believe his love was dead. Romeo could not bear it, so he went to the apothecary to get a potion that would kill him because he could not be without Juliet. As Romeo says his last words, he drinks the potion, and almost immediately dies. Juliet wakes up to find Romeo now dead. After this, a frantic Juliet drinks that same potion. This whole time Friar Lawrence could have put an end to it. However he let it happen. This is another reason why Friar Lawrence is at fault for the two deaths. Juliet came to Friar for advice on how she should handle what happened...
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...Friar Laurence is to Blame Throughout the story, Friar Laurence plays a dominate role in the eventual death of Romeo and Juliet. Even though Romeo and Juliet’s families are at war.There are three major parts to the tragedy: the marriage ,the plan, and the deaths which Friar Laurence plays a vital role in. Friar Laurence is to blame because he is the one who is married Romeo and Juliet. Also he is to blame because his plan didn’t go as planned. Romeo and Juliet fall in love as soon as they meet. They decide to marry and keep it a secret from their families. There were only two people that would help and know of their marriage. They were the Nurse and Friar Laurence. Friar Laurence agrees to marry Romeo and juliet even though he he thinks...
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...Fear of an Apocalypse Shalene Walsh Professor Sanpierto ENG 151-07 04/27/2015 Table of Contents Abstract Page 3 Annotated Bibliography Page 4 Introduction Page 6 Fear of an Apocalypse Page 7 Conclusion Page 13 Abstract People have many fears in the world whether it be heights, bugs, death, etc. I fear an apocalypse, just knowing that one day all we have come to love and enjoy can be gone in an instant. I fear that happening and the many different things that can cause the end of the world. Some people fear the end of the world and others don’t really care about it. I know for me if there were zombies coming after me or any other scenario I wouldn’t know what to do. I have wrote about each individual scenario that could cause the end of the world. I talked about how each one affects us. Some people fear an apocalypse so much they have either killed themselves over it or even dwell on it so much their life becomes surrounded by it. I wouldn’t say my life is surrounded by it, but just knowing something, anything, could happen is scary. I feel all the different...
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...Confederate Flag Controversy On July 9, 2015 a bill was presented to the House of Representatives asking that the use of the confederate battle flag be discontinued due to the fact that it represents only pain, torture, humiliation, and racial oppression (Congressional Bills and Votes 2013). This bill was presented in the wake of the Emmanuel 9 shooting in Charleston, South Carolina. Our elected officials, along with some American citizens are calling for knee-jerk legislation instead of taking time to get to the root of the real issue at hand. This type of legislation will only cause more tension and divide amongst the American people, when we need to start coming together as a nation. Seeking to destroy our history by removing it from...
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...The Five Pillars of Islam consist of ways to be selfless. Document four, shows the five pillars of Islam and what they are. One who would follow it must be generous. For example, Pillar three is Zakat. Zakat is an almsgiving where Muslims give 2.5% of their money to the poor. Someone who was not selfless would keep the money for themselves, and spend it. Another example of this is pillar four Siloam. For this, a Muslim must not eat or drink from Sunrise to sunset. This is a difficult Task, because you must wake up before the sun, and go to bed after the sun does. Only people that do not think about themselves can accomplish something like that. That is another reason why The religion is so important to...
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...Athens have dedicated their power and resources to the learning of knowledge of the surrounding world while all the Spartans have dedicated their resources into is war. This presents problems such as the Spartans being uneducated with the ailments of sickness, structurally sound architecture, and whether the political system can stand the tests of time. The one thing that creates a society that is strong is its ability to adapt and change. The spartans will not adapt as they will only take action if it is for the best of the war effort. They do not take into account the possibility of famine or plague wiping out the populous until too late. The Athens on the other hand work together with other city states to learn and progress technology not only for themselves but for the good of all...
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... Romeo went to the Capulets party. At the party he fell in love with a Capulet that was Romeo’s fault because he should have fallen in love with a Montague. When Romeo and Tybalt fight Romeo killed him out of anger because Tybalt killed Mercutio, he fought because they were saying Romeo couldn’t fight. “A plague O’ both your house” (3.1.87). After Tybalt was killed instead of banishing Romeo from Verona, he should be found in the city and he will be killed. Well, one idea to consider is that if Romeo had not killed Tybalt he...
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...much: Destroy all creatures for thy sport or gust, Yet cry, if man's unhappy, God's unjust; If man alone engross not Heav'n's high care, Alone made perfect here, immortal there: Snatch from his hand the balance and the rod, Rejudge his justice, be the God of God. In pride, in reas'ning pride, our error lies; All quit their sphere, and rush into the skies. Pride still is aiming at the blest abodes, Men would be angels, angels would be gods. Aspiring to be gods, if angels fell, Aspiring to be angels, men rebel: And who but wishes to invert the laws Of order, sins against th' Eternal Cause. V. Ask for what end the heav'nly bodies shine, Earth for whose use? Pride answers, " 'Tis for mine: For me kind Nature wakes her genial pow'r, Suckles each herb, and spreads out ev'ry flow'r; Annual for me, the grape, the rose renew, The juice nectareous, and the balmy dew; For me, the mine a thousand treasures brings; For me, health gushes from a thousand springs; Seas roll to waft me, suns to light me rise; My foot-stool earth, my canopy the skies." But errs not Nature from this gracious end, From burning suns when livid deaths descend, When earthquakes swallow, or when tempests sweep Towns to one grave, whole nations to the deep? "No, ('tis replied) the first Almighty Cause Acts not by partial, but by gen'ral laws; Th' exceptions few; some change since all began: And what created perfect?"Why then man? If the great end be human...
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...Fruitvale station review I went to see Fruitvale Station a few months ago. It's based on the true story of Oscar Grant, who was dragged off a BART train in Oakland in the early hours of New Year's Day, 2009, and shot and killed by a BART police officer for essentially no worse a crime than being young, and male and black. Seen in the wake of the Trayvon Martin shooting and the Zimmerman trial, it's a powerful movie that sheds much light on the plight of young black men in a society that regards them with suspicion, fear, and loathing, and hog-tied by laws and law enforcement practices that single them out for special, and especially harsh, treatment. The movie follows Oscar for the length of the day that precedes his death, including flashbacks to the kind of prison experience that is almost routine too many of our young black men. We see him doing what he can to learn to control the anger and resentment that threaten to poison his relationship with his girlfriend and their little daughter; to correct the missteps of the past, to find a viable path for himself to employment and a decent living, and to change his life for the better. He meets with seemingly insurmountable roadblocks and frustration at every turn. By the end of the day he's ready to do whatever he can to find an outlet for his natural energy, and head off in search of some simple fun. Aside from some terrific acting and some scenes that grab the attention for their gritty realism, the movie has the poetic feel...
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...In Aesop’s fable, “The Wolf and the Lamb,” the moral of the story asks the reader to examine the desire for an object—and how we justify our behavior if we cannot obtain that object. This moral is graphically presented through the repeated use of key words to describe the fox’s repeated failure to get what he wants. The fox’s first attempt is foiled as he “just missed” the grapes (35). He attempts “again and again”, running and jumping repeatedly, but has “no greater success” (35). He then becomes disgusted and walks away. These successive descriptions of his failure build to his disdainful comment that the grapes are probably sour (35). The repeated demonstration of fox’s failures and his self-rationalization of why is he walking away—not that he has failed but because he has decided that the grapes are sour and he does not want them anyway—cleverly portrays the moral of the fable: if you can’t get it, blame something else, not yourself. It therefore asks the readers to Aesop’s Fables 3 of 93 The Wolf and the Lamb Once upon a time a Wolf was lapping at a spring on a hillside, when, looking up, what should he see but a Lamb just beginning to drink a little lower down. ‘There’s my supper,’ thought he, ‘if only I can find some excuse to seize it.’ Then he called out to the Lamb, ‘How dare you muddle the water from which I am drinking?’ ‘Nay, master, nay,’ said Lambikin; ‘if the water be muddy up there, I cannot be the cause of it, for it runs down from you to me.’ ‘Well...
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