Quote first line B. ... Smoked cigarettes (quote) 2. ... Quote VI. ... Under other circumstances, the narrator's wife's descriptions of experiences that summer and Robert's friendship and advice through her marriages might have left him enlightened as to the depth of their relationship. ...
In this quote, Jane expresses that she wants to be independent, and not always have to rely on others, trust them, and end up in a cage. ... Throughout the novel, Jane's search for true love and friendship often crossed paths with men who were just the opposite. ... A search that leads her to defy misogynistic odds and find true love and friendship. ...
Abigail, with the help of her family grew a very religious bond between each other and a long lasting friendship". ... The quote refers on how she's putting everything aside to support the war against Britain. ... From the beginning to the end, he supports it by using quotes form her letters to John Adams and Merry Otis Warren. ... He makes a big deal about this by using this quote about Abigail doing all the work: "discharge of a duty that is of the upmost importance to society...for a Number of Years...is almost wholly left to our Unstructured sex" (pg 31). ...
Dharmender's article opens with a quote written by Friedrich Nietzsche that says "One must have chaos in oneself in order to give birth to a dancing star"." ... She hopes that women can better learn how to recognize true friendships and in the event that they prove to be alluring or have a cruel edge, we should turn our backs and flee....
Adeline Virginia Woolf, better known to her readers as Virginia Woolf, also know to occasionally write under the pen name Stephen (if Woolf had been a man, she would probably had gone to university), was educated at home by her father: The women artists of the time were unwanted at the universities thus barred from attending and kept in solitude in there own homes tending to the children and/or other household necessities which led to the painful restriction of friendship. ... For this reason, most outside experiences were learned through the eyes of a woman's mother, hence Woolf's...
In One of Ours the main character, Claude, is confronted with life changing decisions in his social and personal lives. He does not conform to many of the ideals, which his family lives by and therefore has become an outcast at home. However, Claude's personal struggles do not reside strictly within the confines of his household. His troubles carry on through the story and become especially apparent in his sexual life. At times, Cather portrays Claude as man who is crippled in his sexuality and is this act is demonstrated with the way he handles himself with women. ...