Webb Essays

  • Our Town - An Essay On Theme Of The Play

    519 Words  | 2 Pages

    always have. The birds are always chirping. And there is always somebody that has life a little bit worse than your own. In act one when the stage manager pulls Mr. Webb out of the play to talk with him on page 528, the lady in the box asks "Oh Mr. Webb? Mr. Webb is there any culture or love of beauty in Grover's Corners?". Mr. Webb her, there isn't much culture the way she might think, but "... we've got a lot of pleasures of a kind here: We like the sun comin' up over the mountain in the morning

  • Pathos, logos and Ethos in Aristotle´s Rhetorical Triangle

    1640 Words  | 4 Pages

    with specific kinds of groups. Several writers tend to use the diverse appeals in a variety of ways. Two examples that rely on logos and pathos are, “One Picture is Worth a Thousand Diets,” by W. Charisse Goodman, and “The Good Death,” by .Marilyn Webb The three diverse appeals are used in many different works of literature. Many writers use the appeal logos to explain an idea or for an effective argument. Logos is made up of facts and supporting details to back up the author’s claim. For instance

  • morris - the red house

    829 Words  | 2 Pages

    25-years-old as a home for himself and his young bride, Jane Burden, the Pre-Raphaelite uber-muse who appears in dozens of dreamy Victorian paintings. While architect Philip Webb designed the lay-out, Morris gave his artistic friends free-reign on the interiors. Experimenting with a romantic ideal of medievalism, Morris, Webb, Rossetti and Edward Burne-Jones conceived a radically new country house that was both cosy and highly decorative. Creating zigzag patterned doors, curlicue stained-glass windows

  • Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman and Thornton Wilder's Our Town

    1736 Words  | 4 Pages

    past, one of lies and hopelessness. Upon coming about his past, he finally and fatally, discovers himself at the end of his life. Mr. Webb from Our Town plays the figure of an editor of Grover’s Corner Sentinel and loving father of Emily. Early in the play, he displays knowledge over his own self-discovery, which he hopes to tell others. The self-discovered Mr. Webb raised Emily coherently as a woman who in the end recognized the value of life. Married to George Gibbs, her life was very much comparable

  • Significance of Repetition in Our Town

    787 Words  | 2 Pages

    talk, and people who used to be athletic are finding that they cannot do what they used to do.  He goes on by saying that most young people found that they were ready to get married, and start their families.  So was true with George Gibbs and Emily Webb.  They moved on from being children and were now learning how to be adults.  In Act III, which is placed nine years afte... ... middle of paper ... ...ral sing the song to show the gap between the dead and the living.  “Blessed Be the Tie that

  • Last Of The Mohicans

    1780 Words  | 4 Pages

    The book begins in the middle of the French and Indian War in upper New York State near the Hudson River and Lake Chaplain. General Webb has just gotten word from an Indian that Moncalm and the French are going to attack Fort William Henry and that Colonel Munro will not be ale to keep the fort because he only has one thousand men and that he (Webb) needs to send reinforcements immediately. Upon hearing this, he ordered fifteen hundred men to be ready to march at dawn and has Cora and Alice Munro

  • The Lack of Women's Sports Coverage

    1840 Words  | 4 Pages

    Can women's sports establish itself as a topic of on-going media and journalism curiosity?  Currently TV stations do minimal coverage of women's sports, while newspapers and magazines do just a little bit better.  In a recent interview with Gary Webb, a sports writer for The Spectrum, he says that "the people have demonstrated that there is an audience that loves hearing about women athletes.  After all, they are somebody's kids, sisters, and moms".  I learned that these sports writers love to

  • Methodist Church

    1027 Words  | 3 Pages

    began as a lay movement. Among its earliest leaders were Robert Strawbridge, an immigrant farmer who organized work about 1760 in Maryland and Virginia, Philip Embury and his cousin, Barbara Heck, who began work in New York in 1766, and Captain Thomas Webb, whose labors were instrumental in Methodist beginnings in Philadelphia in 1767. The American Revolution had a profound impact on Methodism. John Wesley’s Toryism and his writings against the revolutionary cause did not enhance the image of Methodism

  • Our Town Critique

    592 Words  | 2 Pages

    every scene explaining what is going on in the story. I thought Mr. Wilder did a good job in having a Stage Manager do this. The Stage Manager tells and shows us a story a young girl growing up and facing death, even after death. He show us how Emily Webb (Julie Dumbler) first gets to know her future husband George Gibbs (Eric Cole).

  • A Promise Is A Promise

    2479 Words  | 5 Pages

    A Promise Is A Promise The room was ridiculously cold and my skin was damp against the sheets. No matter how extreme the temperature, I am addicted to the calming lull of the air conditioner as I sleep. It’s what they call my “white noise.” The afternoon sun was playing peek-a-boo with the clouds as its rays snuck in through the blinds. The muscles in my neck and shoulders were throbbing. I was still trying to get used to my awkward dorm room bed. A muffled voice traveled through the paper-thin

  • William Faulkner's Use of Shakespeare

    5391 Words  | 11 Pages

    Falstaff, Prince Hal, Lady Macbeth, Bottom, Ophelia, and Mercutio. In 1947 he told an Ole Miss English class that Shakespeare’s work provides “a casebook on mankind,” adding, “if a man has a great deal of talent he can use Shakespeare as a yardstick” (Webb and Green 134). In one of his last interviews shortly before his death in 1962, Faulkner said of all writers, “We yearn to be as good as Shakespeare” (LIG 276). The parallels in the lives and careers of the two writers are remarkably striking.

  • Avalon: Isle of Mystery

    1048 Words  | 3 Pages

    famous as the Celtic paradise "The Happy Island of the Blest" (Webb 11). In the earliest religion it was believed that the souls of the dead were borne westward to "…an Island in the Western Sea, to the abode of Glast and Avallac….Thus in later times was Arthur to be borne to the 'Island Valley of Avillion' " (Webb 11). The island supposedly held a mystic cauldron of Regeneration into which dead are dipped to spring out into a new life (Webb 12). In the Life of Gildas written by Caradoc of Llancarvan

  • Appolo 11

    1922 Words  | 4 Pages

    of putting an American on the moon. It was on May 25, 1961 when Kennedy finally made public his commitment "to land an American safely on the moon by the end of the decade," (Shepard 28). The pressure was on the NASA, but all eyes were on James E. Webb, NASA Administrator, who was not even certain the U.S. could beat the Soviets to the moon. Chief Scientist Hugh Dryden calculated cost to the Federal budget to put a man on the moon would be a staggering $40 billion (the entire federal budget then

  • Black Humanity in Huckleberry Finn

    2397 Words  | 5 Pages

    international level, it is “a fixture among the classics of world literature” (Kaplan 352).  It “is a staple from junior high . . . to graduate school” and “is second only to Shakespeare in the frequency with which it appears in the classroom . . . ” (Carey-Webb 22).   During the push for school desegregation in the 1950s, however, many parents raised serious objections to the teaching of this text.  These objections centered around Twain's negative characterization of Jim and his extensive use of the term

  • Chocky - Tv Vs The Book

    764 Words  | 2 Pages

    Polly, and taught Matthew to do the binary code in both texts. However in the Film Chocky also gave Matthew super strength to play cricket, develop fast reflexes to play computer games and do the rubix cubes at amazing speeds. The Film Editor, Oscar Webb left out some scenes and added some different ones. One of these new scenes included the visit to the planetarium. Later we saw Chocky entering Matthew’s body during a Maths class, along with other scenes in the class rooms, such as biology, not previously

  • Youth Behaviors and The Jazz Age

    1038 Words  | 3 Pages

    Armstrong was more than just a trumpet player; he was the father of scat singing which is using syllables instead of words. "Louis Armstrong." This is what Ella Fitzgerald exceled in is the one that really helped her in her career working with Chick Webb? (Gaff) Louis Armstrong was always an entertainer; He claimed he use to dance on the streets of New Orleans for pennies that he hid in his mouth. That story was how he got the name Satchmo which is short for satchel mouth. Armstrong was a man who

  • Rutherford B. Hayes

    606 Words  | 2 Pages

    Rutherford B. Hayes (19th president) Rutherford Bichard Hayes was not a well know president. He was not president that had the opportunity to lead us through a war. He was not a president that would draw much attention to the public eye. He was however one of the presidents that had a great triumph over a major U.S. problem, economics and civil rights following a war. The United States was just coming out of the Civil War and was in need of a new president. They were in need of one that could lead

  • William Webb Ellis: The Legend Of Rugby

    896 Words  | 2 Pages

    rugby's beginning. In 1823, during a game of soccer at Rugby School in England, 16 year old William Webb Ellis, in fine disregard for the rules, picked up the ball and ran with it. After William's display it was so obvious to his classmates the genius of that move that soon the whole school adopted the new rules and word quickly spread. And so the game of rugby was born. Unfortunately the legend of William Webb Ellis is most likely just that- a legend. Most scholars agree that this story is probably too

  • How And Why Rugby has Developed from a Traditional form to its Modern day Equivalent

    1206 Words  | 3 Pages

    was distinctly different to its modern form History Whether in legend or in fact, rugby is said to have originated in 1823 at the Rugby School in England. To this day, a stone marker at the gates of the school commemorates the event when "William Webb Ellis ... with fine disregard for the rules of football as played in his time, first took the ball in his arms and ran with it." Ellis and the rest of the world never looked back. The new sport grew in private schools and universities throughout

  • James Van Der Ze Essay

    1347 Words  | 3 Pages

    What an incredible night we had last night. November 21, 1934 seemed like it would be just an ordinary Wednesday night, a little over a week before Thanksgiving, as we trudged off to a rent party at 143rd and Lenox. I met my friend, James Van Der Zee, at his glorious studio on 135th Street as the sun set and he finished up his work day. His studio, in which he has worked for nearly 20 years, is like a fantasy land. The chronicler of our people has spent nearly the last two decades capturing