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    The Secret Garden

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    THE SECRET GARDEN Stage 3 ’We’re alike‚ you and me‚’ old Ben Weatherstaff said to Mary. ’We’re not pretty to look at and we’re both very disagreeable.’ Poor Mary! Nobody wants her‚ nobody likes her. Her parents have died‚ and she is sent home from India to live in her uncle’s house in Yorkshire. It is a big old house‚ with nearly a hundred rooms‚ but most of them are shut and locked. Mary is cross and bored‚ and lonely. There is nothing to do all day‚ and no one to talk to‚ except old Ben Weatherstaff

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    Rose Garden

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    First Name Last Name Professor Mancia English 28 September 27th‚ 2007 Not A Rose Garden The real world might not be as beautiful as a rose garden‚ but roses have a tendency to grow tenaciously in almost any land with a little bit of care‚ love‚ and courage. How wise is nature that our lives are just like roses planted in all sorts of environments. We have the freedom to choose whether we want to daringly grow in spite of the tribulations that we might encounter in the road

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    Romanticism and Delacroix

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    Eugene Delacroix’s Contributions to Romanticism Ferdinand Victor Eugene Delacroix was a French artist‚ best known for his significant contributions to the Romantic Movement during the early 1800s. Throughout his career as an artist‚ Delacroix has produced over 9‚000 art works. As such the thesis for this paper will focus on acknowledging Eugene Delacroix’s influence and contributions to Romanticism. Delacroix was born in Charenton-St.Maurice‚ near Paris on April 1798. His father‚ Charles

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    English Romanticism

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    English Romanticism 1798-1832 Historical Background Industrial Revolution 1776 American Revolution 1789 - 1815 Revolutionary and Napoleonic Period in France 1789 storming of the Bastille 1793 King Louis XVI executed Political unrest in Britain‚ harsh repressive measures against radicals Edmund Burke‚ Reflections on the Revolution of France 1790 Tom Paine‚ Rights of Man 1791 Mary Wollstonecraft‚ A Vindication of the Rights of Woman 1792 1793 Britain at war with France

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    Romanticism: Coleridge

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    ‘More than anything else‚ Romanticism is a celebration of Self; and‚ to the Romantic composer‚ it was the expression of a personal experience that links one human being to another and all human beings to the larger truth.’ A multitude of modes and doctrines encapsulated the Romantic revolt‚ the basis of which lie within such tenets as imagination‚ individualism and idealism. This paved the way for Romantic composers such as Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth to convey an appreciation

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    Throughout the Romanticism era‚ authors often looked to nature as an ideal for humanity. Famous Romantic author Mary Shelley wrote the novel Frankenstein centers on Victor Frankenstein bringing a creature into the natural realm of the living. Another famous author‚ William Wordsworth‚ wrote the poem “The World is Too Much with Us; Late and Soon‚” to reveal a personal perspective on the evolving relationship between mankind and nature. Shelley’s novel Frankenstein and Wordsworth’s poem "The World"

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    Romanticism and Realism

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    Romanticism and Realism Romanticism: [pic] Francisco De Goya. “The Third of May 1808” Oil on Canvas - Imagination and emotion are more valuable than reason. The romantics championed the struggle for human liberty. They celebrated nature‚ rural life‚ common people‚ exotic subjects in art and literature. - Era: Industrial and French Revolutions - Technique: Dramatic scenes of nature or man and ideal landscapes. - Artists: Goya‚ Delacroix‚ Constable‚ Duncauson

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    My Garden

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    My Garden of Eden Presented in Partial Fulfillment of Course Requirements Rhetoric and style‚ EN 151-1 Mrs. Susan Schwendener Geneva A.C Harris Summer Semester 2013 7/17/13 When I first laid eyes on the on the Harold Washington library I fell in I’ve with the gargantuan building. It had so many imperfections on the outside made it beautiful. Most people would call the building beautiful right off the back‚ I like noticing the smaller imperfections because it helps me appreciate the

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    Write an essay in which you explore the interplay of imagination and the human experience in Romanticism. Composers in the Romantic era challenged the constraints of a society upheaved by events such as the Enlightenment and the Industrial Revolution‚ which they perceived to be devoid of meaning. They hence championed that the individual should embrace a relationship involving the interplay of the imagination with the human experience of nature and of emotion. Composers such as Samuel Coleridge

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    Garden Cities

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    ------------------------------------------------- Garden city movement From Wikipedia‚ the free encyclopedia Ebenezer Howard ’s 3 magnets diagram which addressed the question ’Where will the people go? ’‚ the choices being ’Town ’‚ ’Country ’ or ’Town-Country ’ The garden city movement is a method of urban planning that was initiated in 1898 by Sir Ebenezer Howard in the United Kingdom. Garden cities were intended to be planned‚ self-contained communities surrounded by "greenbelts"‚ containing

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