Life just wasn't fair! Thought the once famous detective of east as he slowly followed the procession making it's way though endless rows and past countless more. It felt like an eternity had gone by before they came to a stop at their destination. He cast his gaze beyond the procession and watched with eyes that had once shone a cerulean blue as deep as the sea and endless as the sky. Now cold, lifeless, empty as if they'd been replaced with glass, as they placed the grave marker in the ground.
Why, did it have to be you? You didn't deserve this, not you, you were an angel! You were always helping every and anyone who needed it and you changed so many lives for the better, he thought, remembering her loving, kind, yet sad face.
You shouldn't
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His heart ached for the future he'd never see because of his own selfish pride. He'd left her standing there in Tropical Land with a wave of his hand. He had told her he would catch up with her later, but that never happened. She had warned him earlier that day about sticking his nose into that type of thing, but he did so anyways, out of his pride as the best detective Baika had to offer. He was too clever to be caught. He had followed a suspicious man dressed in black and witnessed a transaction between the man in black and the owner of what he assumed to be a large company. While he was taking pictures of the scene, the partner of the man in black snuck up behind him and bashed him over the head with a rod knocking him to the ground, stunned. To silence him, they fed him APTX 4869 a poison that was supposed to kill him, but he got a rare side effect that shrunk him …show more content…
There's nothing left of you, you're gone just like that, as if you were never there in the first place. But you were real and you were here with everyone. Ran you are dearly missed. No one here will ever be able to forget you . It's me who should be there, not you Ran. There was so much left for you to do, and everyone still needs you, but you're gone forever and it's all my fault. I'm the one to blame, I took you away from
He felt a sincere feeling of guilt at first, but that feeling was soon replaced with a rush. The petty beatings he had been giving out soon morphed into murders, with him killing anyone who had wronged him. He felt nothing
He has finally built up the courage to go after Arturo and get revenge on the killer of his uncle (Arturo). He knows that Arturo killed his uncle and framed his death. He has been waiting for years now to get revenge and decides that the best way to do so, is to set Arturo up so he gets captured by the police. His job is to help the Los Angeles Police Department capture Arturo, who he believes is the killer of his uncle. Relationship-
Resonance from the guns roared as its dense smoke engulfed the blood-stained Reservation. The pungent odor from the corpses accumulated in the mass grave overwhelmed Chaska’s puny unfledged proboscis. Chaska’s mother and father were a part of that pile. His mother tried to save his father from dying, but the result was both of them getting shot and killed. Chaska was a timid and timorous eight-year-old boy with short black hair and a tanned colored body.
All my loved ones are dead, and I killed them all myself. I don’t know where to turn. I don’t know who to talk to. I don’t know what to do. Everything that I touch breaks into little pieces.
Do you know how much that killed me? I took your life away. I didn’t mean to. I was just a kid when it happened. I just wanted to help
A war had just ended between the French and the British. Although they won, Britain was suppressed. The King used the colonies to regain money, supplies, and numbers. Not only were soldiers allowed to take colonist’s houses and food, but the colonies were forced to pay tax on all paper goods. That extra tax, called the Stamp Act, started a rebellion in the colonies.
Dade was very excited to catch the woman, he planned and waited for weeks to catch the woman Dade only stayed in the store just to see if the woman would come in. When Dade eventually caught the woman, he was quite surprised and ecstatic, during the long awaited walk to the stockroom he saw his mother crying behind the register, and his father told him that he would be there soon. “I felt good and strong” (Canin, 16). When Dade and the woman finally arrive to the stockroom he looked around and saw the sign that read “DO YOU KNOW WHAT YOU HAVE DONE?”(Canin, 16), but didn’t know what to say to her. Then all of a sudden Daded asks the question “Do you want to go out the back”(Canin, 16).
Sadness pushed me to the edge, You could see the fear in my eyes You’d abuse me Till I bleed and I cry Congratulations, you’ll always have a place in my mind But I’m gonna leave the doors locked and keep my feelings inside
But nobody knows what’s going on inside the preparation room, all they see is their deceased relative, good as new, when they walk by the open casket during the funeral. Mitford depicts the American funeral industry’s manipulation of death throughout the essay with either blatant or thinly-veiled verbal irony. In the last paragraph, Mitford states that the funeral director has put on a “well-oiled performance" where "the concept of death played no part whatsoever”, unless providing it was “inconsiderately mentioned” by the funeral conductors. This is extremely ironic because a funeral is supposed to revolved around death, and this makes us think about funerals and the embalmment process in a way that we usually don’t. These processes takes away the cruelty and brutality of death and make it seem trivial while making our deceased relatives life-like, with pink toned skin and a smile on their face, and death is not like that at all.
Both Joe and Tea Cake’s funerals are representative of how they lived as people. Joe constantly exuded an aura of power and dominance and made people respect him. As a result, he was seen as a god-like figure by many and in a sense was impossible to relate to. The imagery of “[p]eople on farm horses and mules; babies riding astride of brothers ' and sisters ' backs” (88) makes it seem as though they are going on a religious pilgrimage rather than grieving over a loved one. By mentioning how the “expensive black folds” of the coffin “were resurrection and life” Joe may be likened to Jesus in how he was resurrected after three days of being killed (88).
I started crying thinking this is my last time with everyone. Was I going to come back? Why isn’t my other siblings coming? but all I knew was it was me and my dad. It’s been four year since i have seen a part of my family.
I will write you some more tomorrow but right now I have to eat suffer. It’s not as good as your cooking but it is something. So goodbye and remember that I love and miss you so much
”/ “Not one day has gone by without me thinking of you, remembering. I carry the burden of your death like I would a child. I will carry it till the day I die. Sometimes, I want to die.
Virgil once said, “Each of us bears his own hell” (“Virgil”). In Mary Shelley Wollenscraft’s Frankenstein, Victor bear his own hell when living through the persecution of his creation. Victor Frankenstein experiences a complete katabasis through: his descent into hell by destroying his mind, his lowest points when the monster torments him, and his decision to not let the monster ruin his life, which allows him to arise from hell. Victors treatment of his own psyche during the construction of his creation leads to Victors descent into hell.
Prompt #3: “Sonny’s Blues” (James Baldwin, 1957). In the story, the characters come in conflict with the culture in which he lives. Working Thesis: The main point of this source that gives you the backstory and background and detailed of James Baldwin who is Sonny’s Blues explaining his life in a short story. The topics that we will be covering is major work, critical reception, major theme and conflict because of James being an African American.