A Tree Grows in Brooklyn Essay

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    The Hebrews served a monotheistic God, who they called Yahweh. He is an all-powerful and non human like being. They believed he made them in his image and gave them dominion over the earth. Their God was unlike any other gods at the time because he was friendly, compassionate, forgiving and all-powerful. God gave the Hebrews structure, a background, hope, and purpose. Every society needs rules to protect and keep the community in line. God gave Moses the ten commandments which they lived on.1 The

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    724 Metropolitan Avenue, which was where I now lived. The three-storey champaign house with a total of twelve bedrooms, six large bathrooms and six small. The expensive house was decorated in the theme of the Victorian era from the 1830s to 1901, with the main palette consisting of exquisite and aristocratic furnitures contrasting with pale walls. The furnitures were predominantly decorative delicate flowers exquisite beauty but equally splendid. Olivia liked the shades of red and purple, Edward

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    crime and alcohol consumption, and some simply fell ill to the unsanitary conditions. The harsh reality of these immigrants and the challenges they would have to overcome in order to succeed were made quite prevalent. In his famous book, How the Other Half Lives, Jacob Riis dug deeper into the lives of the lower class. While analyzing the relationships between tenement residents and their backgrounds, Riis recognized the global representation beyond simply being ‘American’. He wrote, "The one thing

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    undeniably be two completely opposite things, at the same time. In the three works I chose, I found that each displayed both the greatness of New York City, as well as the loneliness and alienation people face while living here. To start, in “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry”, Walt Whitman describes the admiration he feels for New York during a ferry ride; he writes with exhilaration about

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    the seeds for the garden. These symbols represent Willy’s attempts to be successful and his impending failure. When Willy and Linda purchased their home in Brooklyn, it seemed far removed form the city. Willy was young and strong and he believed he had a future full of success. He and his sons cut the tree limbs that threatened his home and put up a hammock that he would enjoy with his children. The green fields

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    constant theme of the link between nature/natural experience and humans. He expresses his emotions and opinions through his poems. Some of his poems are very personable, which makes them very easier to understand and more enjoyable to read. "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry" is a poem about the sharing of experiences. All humans are somehow connected through the common experiences they encounter. It has no rhyme scheme or form and it is end-stopped. 1 Flood-tide below me! I see you face to face! Clouds of the

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    any capacity he has for success, he is never given a chance to fulfill it in a racist society. He is a tree that cannot grow in Brooklyn, so-to-speak, because the concrete in which the child is expected to grow is not only hard and lacking nourishment, but it blatantly refuses to give root to a "black" tree. The environment in which Bigger must form his perspective of the world and try to grow is one infested with rats, with a lack of water, where food is scarce, money even scarcer and one that

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    Personal Narrative: Hair

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    Hair Here, there, everywhere, all I see is more hair. Wild and untamable like a jungle, running freely all over me. Dark as the night, contrasting with my porcelain skin. Sure, I did start the bold brows trend, but that was short lived. While I look like a wildebeest, my mother resembles a Sphynx cat. Sometimes, I wish I looked like her, not having to care about wearing shorts or going down to the beach. Other times I desire to be like my brother, who doesn’t have to worry about his hair because

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    Nandini Islam gives an insider look into the intricacy of a modern day family. Anwar, Hashi, Ella, and Charu are a family that emigrated from Bangladesh to Brooklyn. All of them go through the struggles of finding themselves and who they are in connection to the family unit as a whole. Anwar and Hashi grew up in Bangladesh and moved to Brooklyn. They have been married for over thirty years, but still go through hard times. Ella, their orphaned niece, has lived with them since she was a small child

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    My greatest enemy is the American Education System. I could talk for hours about how flawed, corrupt, unjust, behind, and untruthful American schools are, yet I could not for the life of me write about how I truly feel. Knowledge, wisdom, and passion are by far my favorite attributes in a person, and I am constantly searching for someone who possesses these three qualities so I can finally have a fulfilling conversation. The closest things I have to passionate people are my books. Gabriel García

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