Lands' End Essays

  • Passion for Learning Case Analysis

    931 Words  | 2 Pages

    Passion for Learning Case Analysis Background: Andrew Popell, founder and president of Passion for Learning, started a direct mail order catalogue company in 1994 that exclusively sold educational toys targeted at elementary-school children between the ages of 6 to 12. After sending out the company's first catalogue and receiving a disappointing .77% response rate, as well as discovering that specialty chains that focused on educational toys (such as Learningsmith, Zany Brainy, and Noodle Kidoodle)

  • Hamlet, Act 1 Scene 1

    1048 Words  | 3 Pages

    something. Another factor that reveals a mood of wariness and caution is how the night is dark, the air is chilling, and the characters speak of "the bitter cold," (p. 9, ln.8). This evokes a mood of foreboding and mystery. At one point, Fransisco ends his watch thankfully because, "he is sick at heart," (p.9, Ln. 10). Shortly after the atmosphere is created, the reader is introduced to the idea of a ghost, which sets a mood of dread and eerieness. The men speak of the ghost with great fear, and

  • Oedipus the King

    971 Words  | 2 Pages

    Oedipus Rex Broken Down Oedipus Rex is a classic tragedy that shows how King Oedipus does some detestable things that led to his misfortune and eventually end his reign as the “King of Thebes.” I will be breaking down the Plot, Structure and Setting of this play, and then go more in depth into the theme. The Plot in Oedipus Rex had a set pattern. The play opens with a Prologue, which is in the form of a dialogue. In the Prologue, the protagonist lays down the statement for the rest of the play to

  • The Character of Helena in All's Well that Ends Well

    1441 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Character of Helena in All's Well that Ends Well Helena There is an underlying ambiguity in Helena 's character. Spreading the illustration over the four most disputed moments in All's Well, the virginity repartee, the miraculous cure of the King, the accomplishment of conditions and the bed - trick, one can detect the ''different shades'' of in her character - honourable, passionate, discreet, audacious, romantic, rational, tenacious, forgiving ... She can be sampled out to be basically

  • tempmagic Prospero's Magic in Shakespeare's The Tempest

    1403 Words  | 3 Pages

    Miranda. If he is to be believed within this speech, then he was only concerned with betterin... ... middle of paper ... ...s not corrupt him, but rather makes him blind to the truths that he started studying magic for in the first place. In the end, through use of his magic, and ultimately its refusal, he learns that he didn't need the magic all along. He just needed to believe in himself and his own abilities. Works Cited and Consulted Corfield, Cosmo. "Why Does Prospero Abjure His 'Rough

  • Conflict in All's Well That Ends Well

    1424 Words  | 3 Pages

    Conflict in All's Well That Ends Well One of the themes that emerges from Shakespeare's comedy All's Well That Ends Well is the conflict between old and new, age and youth, wisdom and folly, reason and passion. As one critic points out, a simple glance at the characters of the play reveals an almost equally balanced cast of old and young. "In performance it is apparent that the youth of the leading characters, Helena, Bertram, Diana and Parolles, is in each case precisely balanced by the greater

  • ?Words are more treacherous and powerful than we think?

    1324 Words  | 3 Pages

    sounds as signs of internal conceptions; and to make them stand as marks for the ideas within his own mind, whereby they might be made known to others, and to others, and the thoughts of men’s minds be conveyed from one to another.” What sometimes ends up happening is that the word can mean so many things in many situations, which gets confusing. Rather they have many different meanings, which can only be found through text that can be found through knowledge. Sometimes the meaning of words is so

  • Trapped In High School: A Narrative Fiction

    1260 Words  | 3 Pages

    “Hello?” The door clicked shut behind me, the quiet sound loud in the empty hallway. I didn’t notice, heading down the hallway, not realizing how bad of a situation I had gotten myself into. “Hello? Peyton? Dad?” I called again into the dark, scanning the walls as I walked down the hall, nearly blind in the dark. “Is anyone here?” There was no response. I was completely alone in the dark. Unbeknownst to me, I had just locked myself in the abandoned first grade pod. Just under an hour ago I had arrived

  • Witchcraft, Magic and Rationality

    2268 Words  | 5 Pages

    invalid. These are terms that can and are applied to practices such as witchcraft and magic. Witchcraft and magic are practices that call upon supernatural, unseen forces. Witchcraft is the use of these forces for negative ends, to extort evil, and magic asks for positive ends. Witchcraft has been found to exist in all corners of the globe at some point. It is no coincidence that during the Enlightenment, witch hunts in Europe and North America became common. The aim was to rid society of these

  • Sarah Polley's 2013 Stories We Tell

    853 Words  | 2 Pages

    As Margaret Atwood stated, “In the end, we’ll all become stories”. Although this quote can be translated as broad and obvious, there is a profound significance it carries in all lives because as stories accumulate and we reflect on them, they begin to define us. Sarah Polley’s 2013 Stories We Tell begins directly with Sarah Polley presenting her storytellers, who are all part of the family. Her father Micheal, her brothers, and her sisters. She simply asks her family to talk about, from the beginning

  • Everyone In A Man For All Seasons Is Pursuing Their Own Ends. What Mak

    2176 Words  | 5 Pages

    Everyone in A Man For All Seasons is Pursuing Their Own Ends. What Makes More Different? Often, it is impossible to reach our goals without resorting to some sort of pragmatism. In A Man For All Seasons every character has their own ends to meet, and the only distinguishable feature between them is how they go about it. Some characters disregard all sense of morality as they plunge into a approach which primarily encompasses self-interest. In all, most of the characters in the play personify selfishness

  • Life

    630 Words  | 2 Pages

    Work In Progress The average person has a grand total of 2 billion seconds to live out their existance. For those of us lucky enough to live out this time in relative health, or to exceed it, shouldn't we be trying for something more? It ends, people. Life ends. There is coming a time when your heart stops beating and you lie dead and cold on the floor somewhere--and that is it. No redo's, no timeouts, no second chances. Only the bittersweet what-ifs that you will have plagued yourself with for the

  • Imaginary Invalid

    583 Words  | 2 Pages

    Imaginary Invalid Moliere’s “The Imaginary Invalid” is a play about a hypochondriac who is so obsessed with his health and money that he ends up neglecting his family’s needs to better his own. Moliere sets up the exposition of the play in Act I by the apothecary bills Argon is reading aloud. After Toinette, the maid, then enters the scene she sarcastically makes a comment about all of the bills lying on the table. Toinette lets the audience know that Argon is a hypochondriac by rebutting everything

  • Civilize The Wilderness

    514 Words  | 2 Pages

    Civilize the Wilderness Wilderness, why civilize it? This is an interesting question, and one that is hard to answer. Why not just leave the wilderness alone, and let it grow and decide it's own beginnings and ends? Does civilizing the wilderness make it better or worse? In what ways is it better or worse if we leave it alone or it we civilize it? These are all excellent questions and are all worthwhile to think about. Western culture has tried to civilize the wilderness for quite sometime now

  • Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics: Happiness

    1043 Words  | 3 Pages

    body and what its role is in pursuing true happiness and reaching a desirable end. Aristotle defines good'; as that which everything aims.(Aristotle, 459) Humans have an insatiable need to achieve goodness and eventual happiness. Sometimes the end that people aim for is the activity they perform, and other times the end is something we attempt to achieve by means of that activity. Aristotle claims that there must be some end since everything cannot be means to something else.(Aristotle, 460) In this

  • Tragedy in Sophocles' Oedipus The King and Antigone

    1405 Words  | 3 Pages

    tragic ends for the characters were not ordained or set by fate, but rather caused by certain characteristics belonging to that person.  Such is the case with the characters of Sophocles' plays Oedipus the King and Antigone.  Oedipus from King Oedipus, and Antigone and Creon from Antigone posses characteristics, especially pride, that caused their tragic ends.  As the play progress, other characteristics appear and further add to the problem to such a point that it is inevitable that it will end in tragedy

  • Comparing Sexuality in All's Well That Ends Well, Measure for Measure, and Troilus and Cressida

    1424 Words  | 3 Pages

    Female Sexuality in All's Well That Ends Well, Measure for Measure, and Troilus and Cressida Although strict chronology is a problematic proposition, most scholars believe that the problem plays - All's Well That Ends Well, Measure for Measure, and Troilus and Cressida - were composed in the period between Hamlet and Othello (Mabillard), a period in which Shakespeare was focusing his energies on his great tragedies.  This fact, some believe, may help to account for the darker mood of these ostensible

  • Mind and Body

    2614 Words  | 6 Pages

    published only well after its author's death. In this essay, he proposed a mechanism for automatic reaction in response to external events. According to his proposal, external motions affect the peripheral ends of the nerve fibrils, which in turn displace the central ends. As the central ends are displaced, the pattern of interfibrillar space is rearranged and the flow of animal spirits is thereby directed into the appropriate nerves. This is the reason he has been credited with the founding of the

  • Love Is Essential for Survival

    578 Words  | 2 Pages

    Love Is Essential for Survival Many historians believe that fire was the most important discovery in all of prehistory. They are in fact, wrong. If it hadn't been for another discovery long before that, fire may have never been found. The most important discovery was love. Many people would argue, saying, "How can we know if they loved?". I can only prove it by the fact that they survived. If it had not been for love, there would be no reason to live. There must have been, and must now be

  • Instrumental Rationality and the Instrumental Doctrine

    3442 Words  | 7 Pages

    rationality, I argue that the rationality of the end served by a strategy is a necessary condition of the rationality of the strategy itself: means to ends cannot be rational unless the ends are rational. First, I explore cases-involving ‘proximate’ ends (that is, ends whose achievement is instrumental to the pursuit of some more fundamental end) — where even instrumentalists must concede that the rationality of a strategy presupposes the rationality of the end it serves. Second, I draw attention to the