Matthew Hale Essays

  • Personal Narrative: My Experience With Revenge

    1330 Words  | 6 Pages

    My Experience with Revenge It is possible to say that I know quite a lot about the revenge. I saw its examples both in the literature (cinema) and the real life. First source showed global, more dramatic types of revenge, like the blood feud, Poe’s story The Cask of Amontillado or many action movies where the antagonist retaliates for the death of his/her parents, family or friend. The real life demonstrated more routine, down-to-earth cases. These small revenges appear both at home and work. For

  • How Does People Make Personal Opinion In The Crucible

    1074 Words  | 5 Pages

    People will make personal opinions within the first 5 seconds of seeing another person even if they does not know them. Sometimes people don't know that their making opinions. Sometimes those opinions are accurate, but most of the time they are not. In Arthur Miller's The Crucible this can be read first hand. In modern day society, people make accusations and opinions based on prior knowledge and experiences. The premise of The Crucible is people making opinions of others based on prior knowledge

  • How Does Reverend Hale Quit The Court

    465 Words  | 2 Pages

    the play, Reverend Hale makes the title true by the way his essence was reduced. Reverend Hale’s essence was reduced when he was called to Salem, Massachusetts to help cast the devil’s spirit off young kids. Throughout the play, Reverend Hale’s main focus was to save people’s lives. In Act 3 it states Hale said, “I denounce these proceedings, I quit the court,” because he thought it was foolish, and back then anybody who stood up to the court was killed. In the last act, Hale began to ask people

  • Reverend Parris In Arthur Miller's The Crucible

    707 Words  | 3 Pages

    about his reputation and what people would think if they suspected witchcraft. This is repeated throughout the first act when he calls Mr. Hale claiming that he will be able to prove that there’s no witchcraft involved. “Thomas, Thomas, I pray you leap not to witchcraft.

  • Compare And Contrast Tell Tale Heart And The Raven

    930 Words  | 4 Pages

    Edgar Allan Poe’s frightening gothic style poetry and short novels about fear, love, death and horror are prominent to Gothic Literature and explore madness through a nerve-recking angle. The incredible, malformed author, poet, editor and novelist is recognized for his famous classical pieces such as “The Raven”, “Berenice” and “The Tell-Tale Heart”, pieces of work that mystically yet magnificently awakens readers with a gloomy spirit. Awakening the subject of madness through written work was viewed

  • Vulnerable Population Assessment

    1628 Words  | 7 Pages

    Vulnerable Population Assessment Christine Anderson Chamberlain College of Nursing NR443 Community Health Nursing January,2018 Elderly the Vulnerable Population Noticing a group of middle age men, smoking and drinking aside a low-income apartment complex during week daytime hours is not a typical activity for the normal middle-class population. A certain uneasiness or concern comes over a person when you walk or drive by, especially with the elderly population present in the same low-income housing

  • Dorothy Parker's Poem 'Symptom Recital'

    700 Words  | 3 Pages

    Brooke Jakins Mrs. Huval English II-H 6th 18 September 2015 The Wittiest Woman in America Poetry is an escape from emotion. It doesn’t show someone’s character, but how they escape it. Only people who have emotions and character would know what it feels like to want to escape them. In Dorothy Parker’s poem “Symptom Recital” she states, “My soul is crushed, my spirit sore; I do not like me anymore” (15-16). Dorothy Parker, the wittiest woman in America, captures her audiences with poems expressing

  • Creative Writing: Home

    1001 Words  | 5 Pages

    Laying on the dirty mattress and watching the television flash bright colors in the dark. He waits for him to come home. When he hears the door open he calls out, “Daniel, I’ve been waiting.” The boy at the door is sheepish and tries not to make much noise as he creeps across the filthy floor, careful not to make a board squeak. It would be a mistake to wake the other residents of the tiny victorian. The paint in the house was peeling and the boards inside and out were starting to rot. He steps

  • Examples Of Adam As An Exterminator

    532 Words  | 3 Pages

    Adam is an exterminator that doesn't really like his job so he is on his way home after a long day of work he goes home and sits on his couch and watches TV, as he watching the football game right as they are getting ready to touch down it says, “This is an important interruption, I am Spid the god of all spiders and I will take over your city New York and then take over the world, so be ready for me”. Adam runs to his closet to his life's work/prized possession his raid gun it has the poison of

  • Compare And Contrast The Crucible And John Proctor

    2003 Words  | 9 Pages

    Two Heroes Through Time: Proctor, a Tragic Hero and his Comparison to Christ in The Crucible "The change in the hero's fortunes be not from misery to happiness, but on the contrary, from happiness to misery, and the cause of it must not lie in any depravity but in some great error on his part." - Aristotle Human nature has shown to be mostly ignorant but also shows prejudice to those who serve and bring benefit to society. In Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, John Proctor is a perfect example of a person

  • How Does Hale Change In The Crucible

    1146 Words  | 5 Pages

    Reverend John Hale was among some of the most powerful people in his day and age. Because of his education from Harvard and his relationship with God, he was armed with all he would need to get people on his side. However, throughout The Crucible a dramatic change is seen in his character and it throws everything that he believes into question. Once a man who believed in the fact that Satan was taking control of his town of Salem, turned into a man who believed that there's no way that can happen

  • Reverend Hale In The Crucible By Arthur Miller

    640 Words  | 3 Pages

    Reverend Hale - Grandiose to Guilt When Reverend John Hale of Beverly arrived in the secretly psychotic town of Salem, he was carrying books “weighted with authority” (Miller 844). In the progressing scenes, the Reverend quickly made icy contact with the citizens of Salem, starting with the revered Rebecca Nurse and then the general public of Salem (Miller 844). Thankfully, Arthur Miller (the author of The Crucible) wrote Hale as a dynamic character. In this essay, I explain how Reverend Hale changed

  • Ap English Drama Script

    1806 Words  | 8 Pages

    FADE IN: EXT. NARROW ALLEYWAY - NIGHT A quiet sideway street. A lantern throws dim light onto the pavement below it. There’s garbage on the ground. The surroundings look unattractive. We start to hear running footsteps that grow louder. This continues for a split second until -- BANG!!! A GUNSHOT restores the silence. INT. GREG’S APARTMENT - BEDROOM/HALL - MORNING OVER BLACK A SOUND OF A DOOR BELL BZZZZZZZZZ! We see GREG (27, a go-getter, successful and arrogant) lying face down in his bed. BZZZZZZZZZ

  • Rev Hale In The Crucible By Arthur Miller

    780 Words  | 4 Pages

    is taken over by the devil, and your limited knowledge decides their fate. Rev Hale is a very influential man of the village in Arthur Miller's Crucible as he was the only guy anybody trusted about the devil. He was the most knowledgeable as he could be on a topic that is known to few. Everything Hale said everyone believed leading to false beliefs and many preventable deaths and unfairness through trials. . Rev Hale should be pitied because he actually wants to help people, he wants to fix the blood

  • Symbolism In Lolita

    1128 Words  | 5 Pages

    The very name of a character is a vital aspect of one’s personal identity, revealing particular details of a place of origin or background. In Vladmir Nabokov’s, Lolita, the role of naming takes various forms as a motif and both a characterization and stylistic device. In order to understand Nabokov’s use of names, one must understand first that the novel is written by protagonist, Humbert Humber, as confessional for a murder he has committed. Therefore, false names are used to protect the identity

  • Literary Elements In Edgar Allan Poe

    1208 Words  | 5 Pages

    In many stories and poems; such as the Tell Tale Heart, The Cask of Amontillado, The Raven, Annabel Lee, The House of Usher, and so many more timeless works, Edgar Allan Poe has been captivating his audiences with spine tingling thrillers through the words and style of his own twisted ways. The only way to describe where Poe’s writing belongs in history, would be classified as gothic genre. From the start of the 1800’s to present day and the future of literature, through irony, repetition, imagery

  • Narrative Essay On The Relationship Between Henry And Colleen

    799 Words  | 4 Pages

    Sam rushes from his bed to his telephone , dialing out to Henry to warn him about what just happened . The line rings and rings with no answer , Sam looks at his clock seeing it is late , Henry and Colleen sometimes sneak out . He lays back down breathing heavy into a deep sweat , trying to close his eyes to go to sleep. He raises up to every sound he hears surrounding him . Only to lay back down crying himself to a deep sleep , this goes on the whole night till dawn. Henry and Colleen in the car

  • The Great Gatsby Plot

    1460 Words  | 6 Pages

    “What an idiot,” he mumbles in a panic, realizing his girl may be in trouble by the desperate cries that penetrated the night. Pulling himself together, leaning back, he immediately tries to get up by placing his weight on his right knee. As he moves forward, there is a shuffling in the bushes just to his right. Bobby looks up to see an abrupt movement. Something is there all right, his eyes widen in disbelief as the bushes start to separate, leaving no doubt, something or someone is screwing with

  • It's The Most Dangerous Game-Personal Narrative

    451 Words  | 2 Pages

    Whitney woke up to a knock on his door when the steward told him that breakfast was ready. He woke up eager to find his friend and continue their journey to the Amazon. Upon arriving at the dining hall he noticed Rainsford was not there, confused, he started to his partner's bedroom to see what was causing his absence. He began knocking on the door a couple of times, and out of frustration he barged into the room, swinging the door open, he saw no Rainsford. He was very puzzled, so he asked one

  • Reverend Parris In The Crucible By Arthur Miller

    636 Words  | 3 Pages

    Reverend Parris is a middle aged man, who we first meet in The Crucible by Arthur Miller, around his late 30’s or mid 40’s. He has a high status. He is the one of the town pastors. Parris has a ill daughter, Betty Parris. Who he discovered dancing in the forest with his teenage niece, Abigail Williams. However, he seemly worries about his town reputation, not his young Betty, clearly in some form of coma. Multiple visitors come to his home and tell him there’s rumors of wtchcraft afoot, that Tituba