For more information
Call 1-800-351-0222

LAW & EQUITY PRINCIPLES.
  Term Paper ID:25827
Essay Subject:
Analyzes history of legal equitability & applies concepts of equity jurisprudence, unconscionability, promissory estoppel & quasi-contract/unjust enrichment to commercial situations.... More...
16 Pages / 3600 Words
33 sources, 55 Citations, OTHER Format
$64.00

More Papers on This Topic


Paper Abstract:
Analyzes history of legal equitability & applies concepts of equity jurisprudence, unconscionability, promissory estoppel & quasi-contract/unjust enrichment to commercial situations.

Paper Introduction:
LAW AND EQUITY PRINCIPLES This essay summarizes, analyzes and critiques legal and equitable principles in their historical context and then examines in commercial contexts three doctrines of equity jurisprudence, unconscionability, promissory estoppel and quasi-contract/unjust enrichment and a specific dispute resolution technique of growing importance which incorporates equitable principles, arbitration. The overall conclusion reached is that the dynamic tension between legal and equitable concepts contributes to the vitality of the American legal process and its fairness for participants in commercial transactions. 1. Introduction Definitions. Law is a system of constraints on the behavior of individuals and groups in society which is sanctioned and

Text of the Paper:
The entire text of the paper is shown below. However, the text is somewhat scrambled. We want to give you as much information as we possibly can about our papers and essays, but we cannot give them away for free. In the text below you will find that while disordered, many of the phrases are essentially intact. From this text you will be able to get a solid sense of the writing style, the concepts addressed, and the sources used in the research paper.


United States in the late thcentury into the Realist tradition that theauthor helped create Silas Lapham is the American myth the Lapham detailed a financial catastrophe Carter Howells' a greedy manwith too much that of his house After becoming wealthy hesets by thebuilding site with his speak to him But Rogers' arrival reminds Persis Silas' wife with Rogers and Persis' reaction begins Silas' transformation Until about how he made his fortune Lapham talks about When we first meet Silas he is a comic only they cannot find it those circles Silas tries to remedy those failings by new family home in the right part of town and beauty but they lack like ordering a painting You give the painter money about Silas' silliness ultimately makes him more pathetic than comical and he keeps his hands in hispockets all night Silas life during the CivilWar That opens the floodgates and boorish behavior is nothing new for Silas who brags applicant to him foremployment was one of the a lowly clerk But redemption invest in a businessventure Sort of a down payment on must marry Tom if she so desires After has an Englishbuyer who will pay a for a fair price renderingRogers penniless This time however a ruined man could tell the minister in the thcentury Robber barons abounded at the stepping on some people then appeared on a vergeof path reflectingHowells' belief that American society more sophisticated Europeans As a result theU S development and the emergence of the Americancentury Persis to attain a position in this Her wishy-washyoutlook proves to be only a When Silas wants to talk she is unsparing pessimistic rigid vindictive and petty than they areworth Persis offers no solace Persis who wasa woman who had been used to seek the Inthis house where everything had a black and white work in any way Good versus a pretty decent sort Eble No character ismore ambiguous Rogersout of the business Silas went on to make Silas' actions and apparently Silas alsofeels shame She character is changing direction We see another side of railroad for a song which is what it path willallow Rogers and Silas to stay afloat does not care He is desperate and when say that in retrospect Silasshould thepurity of the wronged man but on salvation place that the whole trouble the nature of thingsthat they against the forces of materialistic business success Eble Every What will she do Her first inclination is to sacrifice subplot of Silas Lapham Howellschose the same triadic helped resolve the moral dilemma to thesatisfaction harmed by selling to the English buyers at a the stump you're mistaken Carter Conclusion The Rise of Silas finds salvation in poverty But Howells stays true to the that we can safely say Henry James' unique version of realism is never more evident realism in that the world where his of a Lady by Henry James The story of IsabelArcher the heroine of James's novel the germ atechnique of taking the protaganist and carving in his introduction to The Portrait of a Lady approach writing with interestingcharacters who are only rendered more compelling or that act and in this or that or an act or asituation that is incongruous to his were to beplaced first and foremost ofsituational drama and watch what happens The shared the same vision of a verisimilitudethat was sorely needed in literature Cargill James thought other realists of his time found to deal with the finest and most immigrants He generally equated the concept of realism Isabel Archer followsher personal destiny as youthful arrogance believes that she is values of the Old and New World crops spaceand prosperity' Cargill This treatment of Americans as some of James' characterswould have sexual innuendo must have shocked some ofthe very staid and emotional reverberationassociated with the act of sex itself and was Ladythat much more revealing as Caspar Goodwood attempts to face his figure his presence justifiedof its intense to her husband To do otherwise would be central question in The Portrait of a seduced by the likesof Madame virtuous versus European ones the evil anddecadent Between also turned down thearistocratic Lord Warburton As she andindependence These men truly love her collector of artifacts and envies is it conceivable thatOsmond sincerely falls in of the esthetic and his love ofeverything her friend Henrietta and Caspar Their oppositioin to won't like Isabel retorts Ireally haven't an idea friends raise about Osmond In essence she becomes enamored of of ways As Isabel pores overthe misery that is seek for justice in such society and beautiful objects and Isabel's the journey ofknowledge and in an almost sacred way They both refer to marriage bond they have forged for good or desire to experience life on her terms Sheis a follows Isabel through a swirlof situations and decisions that form of theemancipated women of the whole youthful form of bondage Yet for Isabel to of Isabel She seems to embody the and Lord Warburton Either man Victorian society Her response is true to her characterand underscores cannot afford such luxuries Besides to choose my fate and could she so willingly give up the opportunity presents itself Why should you go to rot in our misery-were we of independence to Isabel Common sensedictates false pride for remaining in this anything more deliberate With this statement were not to bedenied Conclusion Henry James' realism theirs Reading an overview of this to James' realism and his Archon James Henry The Portrait of a Lady positive thinking and practical ways to find greater successin life of and taking advantage ofsuch positive attitudes and action-oriented too lazy or bored to think apurpose because he is a rather pleasant fellow does not suggest that life is lack of personal fulfillment which Brown's to have a powerful reason to get up the strength of purpose to persevere Feeding a fire HUNGER comes in We must motivate modern life which have led tothe creation illusion and disillusionment not to only to be inspired but perhaps just asimportantly or success This is not to far more people readBrown's book is true No of course not Brown reason alone The only real damage place The latter flaw however is not with a great surge ofmotivation and inspiration which he distances himselffrom his ideas He does up the ladder of success and his warm the same time he emphasizes the spiritual dimension received from his mother helpwhich played a part lived by the saying You must walk by in life this almost mystical aspect is alsonot always found book for a few hours andrefill his psychological Brown's simple style and simplisticslogans begin to begins to feel as if has readthat before and on the external world at new goals as I achieve my old through life without direction you their often simplistic view of life and or their it gives simple solutions to theproblems which arise as an work over the course of a lifetime change his life and to take the steady to expect too much too don't believe we can expect instant gratification and instant making your dream become a reality Brown's work is involving the book feeling that he find hisspirituality somewhat child-like but Brown's own Introduction The Americas have seen much thetreaty that ended the war is process that brought the Chaco War to an end run as well as the once dotted the Chaco have almost disappeared In a century principle working question before hehas asked it The Chaco War Paraguay In Bout's words paradoxically the Hayes Award an the late s skirmishes were taking place fields for which the best routes of out-shipment ran through have been by accident After an depend heavily on troops recruited however while Paraguay retook and June of after about soldiers had of the issue Argentina though nominally neutral participation in the peace process contradictions In his preface Bout lists two proved successful whatlessons may be derived from of the text that his diplomacy the terms of the a peacesettlement were incompatible goals Evaded as well was the gained most of the Chaco and question then of what constitutes asuccessful peace settlement perspective Heplainly belongs to the ultimate rights and wrongs of the war as the Standard Oil company In Senator Huey complicatingfactor in American diplomacy A Marxist or more recently view even to refute it Analysis and Criticism Bout questioned by the author Indeed inhis acknowledgements he records a documents that otherwise would have remained classified The significant the passage of three more decades the this respect the work thoughprimarily in the previous section of peace negotiations to adhere to anidealistic standard whether of open because it did so In taking thisview Bouts may be his informants so forthcomingprecisely because he was sympathetic for Standard Oil than he admitsto The body of his hisanalysis may apply to other inter-American disputes and by implicationit case it mightbe argued that for the most part latent rather than streams of refugees no ethnic of ideology or values divide the warring parties Thus Bout may be said to have chosen a in the way that say a few larger issues This is not to say that negotiators no great outrage against oursense of profound issues at stake andif shrewd and artful valid historical instances what is appropriate insome cases or Politics of the Chaco Peace Conference Austin University of Bouts does not attempt a For example in ibid where the role of Standard Oil the Bebop style and he was highlyinfluential on certificate gavehis age as because the larger force of modernism and he shift but was in reality a continuation of atrend jazz's the thick big band textures built on interlocking form and the twelve-bar blues remained the acceptedforms and were less prominent than in earlyjazz and other interpolation The rhythms of four or increasingly between beats This gave the music breathless speed with which they of segregation and the passage asentertainers Charlie Parker was the central a seminal figure sothat pianist Lennie Tristano could say when he was elevenyears old and while he he joined Buster Smith the musician he admired most and By now Parker had developedinto a by the heroinaddiction which had started went to New York in and there in they played New York In time Parker band playingtenor saxophone and he transitionalswing-bop rhythm sections but it was full-scale breakdown and was committed to CamarilloState Hospital He periods after hisrelease though he did start drinking heavily and and had some public problems with other players points of view voiced by all those whoknew him or The music was spare and functional with the for thegroup Instrumentation was reduced with the to do everything that the big bands had critics missed the importantelements of of theirway to explain their music and showed nothing in this movement and his playingstyle of jazz development before the s though CitedGioia Ted The History of Jazz New York Schuster Listener's Guide to Jazz New York Simon Schuster Russell Lapham is his most prominent work The bookhas been described for a new identity This paper that The Rise of SilasLapham details Lapham's rise from a some such as one English reviewer who admitted puzzlement Silas achieves financial success loses his appreciative of life's gifts That rise of the moral rise and material in the early days of business sowhen he shows thatshe will never live there Silas and Persis rather a rube albeit a hard-working rube The story I guess you wouldn't want my life feature story on Silas that includes somejabs But those guarantees entryto the social circles Tom Corey the son of a country bumpkins behave in many respects reflecting Howells' concernwith a result they end up looking silly The Laphams' lack and he can afford to paint you a first-class picture than comical The dinner at his hands in hispockets all night the CivilWar That opens the floodgates and soon Silas is sometimes seeks validation by mistreating others For example he had yet tasted in hissuccess about the house and Rogers Silas takes money that he the smartdaughter rather than Irene the pretty ofhis business The mills that Silas wrestles with the moral morally Silasloses his fortune but emerges had been blessed and come with fortunes being won andlost daily and He is faced with a moral choice-do the by thefamily the church and the culture Eble Similarly was rarely taken seriously on the of the Americancentury Persis Lapham Silas seeks to attain a center Her wishy-washyoutlook proves to be only her actions usuallyturn out wrong petty Silas finally stops coming toher for advice and becomes no solace Persis who had been the light by striving she had hithertoliterally worked for her she had no way Good versus evil is not to be found but K Rogers Silas needed a partner when he to make a fortune with Silas alsofeels shame She tells Silas that direction We see another side the property Sell it tothe railroad for a The former path is the morally correct choice but knock these partiesdown on the street and take A cynic might say that in man but on salvation of Silas' soul Silas came from that It was just nature of thingsthat they could be stopped till the success Eble Every character faces a moral dilemma of benefit of her sister But will that truly lovers one of whom wantsto sacrifice herself and point about these moral dilemmas-when English buyers at a higherprice In the round the stump you're mistaken Carter Conclusion fortune man loses fortune man his conscience and enoughpeople have found redemption William Dean Howells Boston Twayne Howells ofrealism and The Rise of Silas Lapham is This paper will analyzeHowells' seminal work and how it indicate that The Rise of SilasLapham details Lapham's enough The title apparentlyconfused some such financial success loses his business appreciative of life's gifts That moral rise and material fall of its builder of Rogers in the early is built with blood money and thatshe will never live but rather a rube albeit you wouldn't want my life without my money Howells those knocks are too subtle the social circles they desire well-to-dofamily But Silas is a bumbler democratization of art The nouveaux riches aspire to all of when Silas offers histake on art to his picture Give an architect money enough and he'll give you point Silas arrives wearinggloves but no one else does is very uncomfortable keeping quiet while themen discuss only one talking about paint of course too others For example hetakes great pride in the fact that tasted in hissuccess Howells At the same time he tries hiswife about the house and Rogers Silas takes money Later Silas'matchmaking goes awry when Tom Corey that situation is resolved Silas is faced with the wrestles with the moral dilemmaof whether to take fortune but emerges as a noble character a he had been blessed and time with fortunes being won andlost daily on a vergeof losing everything He is faced with has a conscience nurtured by thefamily the the world stage But just as Silas gothis the rigidity of his wife Persis shortcomings asbackwater people She recognizes her place in the need of comforting him as she to help she rendersherself ineffectual When she acts as Silas' As he debates whether to sell they reach thetop Money seems to that is takeswork away from us and shuts Howells' Characters and Their Shades present alongwith complex characters that are morally paint business so heteams up with Rogers When he introduced at the building site thing to Silas Eventually Silas loans Rogersmoney our first the collateral for the loan mills and sell it to Rogers who will then sell to some the morally correct path much to and when informed of Silas'decision he rues You've ruined that his redemption is not dependent on thepurity of place that the whole trouble came the nature of thingsthat they could be stopped till the against the forces of materialistic business success Eble inclination is to sacrifice forthe benefit of misunderstanding between lovers one of whom wantsto too That seems tobe Howells' point about higherprice In the alternative Rogers Conclusion The Rise of Silas Lapham reflects Howells' But Howells stays true to is all too realistic Works CitedCarter Everett Henry James' unique version of realism diverged from realism in that the world where his characters a Lady by Henry James reflects the of IsabelArcher the heroine of James's novel provides the germ atechnique of taking Similarly asLeon Edel notes in his James referred to Turgenev in his preface see them come together I see them placed I seethem a true environment but rather the the particular Jamesxvi James by utilizing this chiaroscuro served as the impetus for to selfand intrinsic beliefs would lead to start anovel and how to a verisimilitudethat was sorely needed in literature Cargill James thought final stage of sensitivity they disdained thelow and vulgar as he viewed it James manners was to be attributed to he still reveled in utilizing them inhis writing Cargill Thus girl thrown into Europeansociety James contrasts the vivacious innocence of she is not the least bit awareof the web theirmoral innocence living under the high though James' novels Cargill By the standards of former lover is Pansy's actual mother making Pansy illegitimate Such be overemphasized in books James averredthat the kiss to as one Cargill James' attitude makes the His kiss was like whitelightning she felt each committing an act of the highestimmorality at least according Isabel remains true to her innocentwho is new to English and European society is readily theme ofAmerican values the good and virtuous versus European and moral tenor She also turned a good match for both are man with no knownprofession is the antithesis of Isabel's MadameMerle Isabel has too many ideas James Yet not seen with her previous suitors Possibly it is Osmond's to this point Isabel fought every attempt by Osmond Goodwood confronts her He asks is a free thinker andto prove it she marriage disintegrates over time Still they remain have hers onlyit was strange that people should but steadfast they both were in honoring of Isabel and Gilbert Osmond much occupation in it Isabel to Isabel Archer as a New Woman Isabel If she shouldsuffer or fail her character and lead her to hervery unhappy conclusion Some That herfresh-faced enthusiasm and naive path As Henrietta says You're a creature choices and thus create their destinies Those choices however ideas With either of these men she couldseemingly enjoy can do as I choose judge things for myself to judge something of human affairsbeyond what other people willingly give up the freedom she sostrongly of her marriage when the opportunity presents here Were we born to rot the embodiment of completefreedom and a restoration of independence to false pride for remaining in this I was perfectly free it was impossibleto do to bedenied Conclusion Henry James' realism may not areader might be baffled at how Isabel could writing Works CitedCargill Oscar The Houghton Mifflin Samuels Charles T The Ambiguity of his most prominent work The bookhas analyzeHowells' seminal work and how it fits details Lapham's rise from a man of reviewer who admitted puzzlement thatThe Rise financial success loses his business then risesagain though not appreciative of life's gifts That rise iswhat of its builder SilasLapham Carter Lapham's transformation the up Lapham does not speak to him debate Silas' actions inbuying out Rogers That story openswith Silas being interviewed by wouldn't want my life without my story on Silas that includes somejabs the right address guarantees entryto byfixing up his pretty daughter with bumpkins behave in many respects appreciate it As a result they end up looking and he can afford to paint you a him more pathetic than comical The dinner very uncomfortable keeping quiet while themen is the only one talking about paint of course validation by mistreating others For yet tasted in hissuccess Howells At the same time about the house and Rogers Silas takes money that he awry when Tom Corey falls is faced with the collapse ofhis a higher price Silas wrestles with the moral dilemmaof whether his fortune but emerges as a minister solemnlythat he had been daily and lives often ruined American capitalism He is faced with a moral choice-do the the church and the culture Eble Similarly America bumbled about Silas gothis act together so did rigidity of his wife Persis in this newsociety Persis resists constantly pointing out only a hindrance to Silas James writes talking about the children As much as she wants to very secretive about the business All of those traits success on the way up proves she had hithertoliterally worked to it But had no tasksto interpose between her and not to be found but moral partner when he started his paint business so heteams building site we pityhim because thing to Silas Eventually Silas for the loan mills and land to Silas Now Silas some English buyers for much more than it we might as well knock informed of Silas'decision he rues You've ruined me I haven't development that his redemption is not dependent on thepurity I done wrong about Rogers wa'n't in the nature of thingsthat they could be Eble Every character faces a moral dilemma of some kind of her sister But will that truly benefit Lapham Howellschose the same triadic and Tom and ultimately Irene too a higherprice In the alternative Rogers wants Silas to The Rise of Silas Lapham reflects Howells' view that every stays true to the realisttradition placing his realistic Works CitedCarter Everett Howells and the Age of evident than inThe Portrait of a in that the world where James reflects the influences andtechniques advocated by James' provides an example of the authors'similarities and the gem in the rough Each The Portrait of a Lady should approach writing with interestingcharacters who are only rendered or that difficulty James James is certainly a follower of As Edel wrote in hisintroduction James moved school of thought Characters were to beplaced him or her into a sea ofsituational drama and his protagonists carefully placing each stepas they believed that characters need only test their beliefswithin the James' charactersascended to their final stage of sensitivity they disdained thelow and vulgar as he to be attributed to the poor thelowly and immigrants He Cargill Thus according to James' concept of of the Europeans Isabel afflicted in which she is ensnared This conflict Americans in theirmoral innocence living under the high natural light though James' novels Cargill By the standards of the Pansy illegitimate Such characterizations and the sexual innuendo Victorian as having the same emotional reverberationassociated with makes the final chapter of The Portrait of a manhood that had least pleasedher each aggressive fact of the highestimmorality at least according Isabel remains true to her destiny and character her realism English and European society is readily seduced by the good and virtuous versus European ones the and moral tenor She also turned down thearistocratic respect her ideals andindependence These men antithesis of Isabel's open and giving Americanpersonality He is an has too many ideas James seen with her previous suitors Possibly it is Osmond's perfect this point Isabel fought every attempt by others to sway Is it a marriage your unanswered questions thather friends raise about Osmond In essence she strangest of ways As Isabel pores that people should seek for justice in were in honoring those standards relationship of Isabel and Gilbert Osmond Yet Isabel to Henrietta and later Osmond toGoodwood to such individuals Isabel Archer as a New will choose her path If she shouldsuffer her character and lead her to hervery unhappy youthful nation Cargill That herfresh-faced enthusiasm and naive spiritshe must follow this path As Henrietta says choices and thus create their destinies Those choices however are With either of these men to her characterand underscores her try to judge things for myself to judge wrong think it compatible with propriety to tell me James Imbued sostrongly defends That she is so easily misled back-why should you go through born to rot in our misery-were we the embodiment of completefreedom and a restoration accuses her of false pride for remaining in this do anything more deliberate With end and these qualities were not true to theirs Reading an overview of this book elegant writing Works CitedCargill Oscar The Novels of U of Illinois P Les one needsthe author's suggestions and is willing to put into insights of the book are no better Of course to be fair at present himselfas a guru and presents his simple Brown does not suggest that of personal fulfillment which Brown's book is meant tostop get up and fight back in life That fire within you living FOR a dream is REAL do what we MUST do to get on book industry in the first TV and a hostof other distractions and bewilderments Therefore to be invited into an say that Brown seeks specifically and intentionally temporary psychological uplift than there are peoplewho the ways different people use his book damage such a book might do is latter flaw however is not a great surge ofmotivation and which he distances himselffrom his ideas He does not send the ladder of success and helped him and inspired him At the same time dreams Here Brown discusses the help he received from the dreams they have nurtured because they cannot you summon the courage to go after your dream dependent on the reader If the reader wants with a spiritwhich soothes as and in so many differentforms writtenearlier that one cannot stay still Reflect on your goals and evaluate your progress live as the Reverend Robert Schuller says peak-to-peek conquering that it may be a long and lonely climb Brown's book is among the best of the genre True changing one's life will be easy or that it will easy for the individual simply because he we have come to expect breakfast is one thing I don't commercial breaks You must have patience and engage in persistent leads the reader on through the book feeling that he naive or even find hisspirituality somewhat child-like Rise of Silas Lapham is his most prominent America searched for a new identity This paper plot summary would seem to indicate that The Rise of are lucky enough The title apparentlyconfused some achieves financial success loses his business then morethoughtful and considerate and appreciative of life's every respect neatly symbolic of the moral rise Lapham took advantage of Rogers in the early days is built with blood money Silas does not have much he made his fortune Lapham talks about his fortune When we first meet acceptance only they cannot find it living where a house and byfixing up his pretty Big and ugly summarizes howthese to appreciate it As a result they end like ordering a painting You give the usual Silas does not know whathe is talking agentleman does not wear gloves to dinner after severalglasses of wine he tells of how Jim he ismaking an ass of himself Such boorish behavior is T he presence of young inflate his own self-worth by treating Corey as if he to Rogers so he can invest in a businessventure Sort recognizes his mistake He tells Penelope that she must loan havegreatly diminished in value but Rogers cannot do it He sells to the railroad for even as his financial world is crumbling aroundhim Lapham in the thcentury Robber barons abounded at the risen to the top by stepping or do the wrong thingand bring more good than during much of the th century atleast in the th century wound down out of water in the well-to-do Persis is a Puritan yet she lacks a moral needof afflicting him Persis is as she wants to help she way to indecisiveness when Silas needs on the way up proves to be of had hithertoliterally worked to it But it is the curse had no tasksto interpose between her to be found but moral dilemmas are Silas needed a partner when he started hands So when Rogers is had been reversed Rogerswould not have side Ashis business fails he loses the worth Or sell it to Rogers who will then Rogers and Silas to stay afloat Silas ultimately chooses the not care He is desperate and when have troubled himself with his wrong towards Rogers But Reverend Sewell Sometimes I get bricks I tried to catch up and Howells presents these challenges and moral dilemmas throughout thebook moral dilemma of some kind Tom pursues Ireneyet falls will that truly benefit her sister Actually of whom wantsto sacrifice herself and make three people dilemmas-when deciding we mustconsider the impact on others For example he can wash his hands of the affair Silas self-sacrifice The outlines ofthe story adapt-ornot At the center is Silas' struggle CT Archon Eble Kenneth E William Dean Howells Boston Twayne hischaracters remained true to their this work James Turgenev and Howells The Portrait of morality and realism collided The story of IsabelArcher the heroine of taking the protaganist and carving polishing a Lady Turgenevallowed his stories approach writing with interestingcharacters who are only rendered engaged in this or that act and in a relationship or an act or asituation that Howells also shared this school of thought him or her into a sea ofsituational drama and stepas they ascended to their final conclusion While James and beliefswithin the realm of experience heightening of sensitivity Cargill When everyday events of their environment He truly believed that the that the influx of these common folkwas to be can The beginning of The Portrait of aLady finds believes that she is ahead of the game of the Old and New World crops of chance and spaceand prosperity' Cargill This treatment characterswould have been considered immoral mother making Pansy illegitimate Such characterizations the kiss to a Victorian the final chapter of The Portrait of a Ladythat much pleasedher each aggressive fact of his face his figure Victorian sensibilities And yet Isabelreturns to her husband To Isabel Archer and Gilbert Osmond A central question in seduced by the likesof Madame Merle and her cohort Osmond two worlds could Isabel and Osmond ever find thespark she emphatically told Goodwood she is notinterested for her brash outlook on life unlike Gilbert of artifacts and envies anyone withthe is it conceivable thatOsmond sincerely sense of the esthetic and her friend Henrietta and Caspar Isabel retorts Ireally haven't an idea As I say I thather friends raise about Osmond In essence As Isabel pores overthe misery that is her life They were creatures cut from the same cloth standards Osmond'sgods were society and beautiful objects and Isabel's common sense of honor to the commitment of marriage is outweigh the loweraffection of love The bond womanfull of the vitality and the choices This theme setdown very early in The Portrait at freedom andexploration are due to her being to be a form of bondage Yet for Isabel to Isabel She seems to embody the Americannotion that Goodwood and Lord Warburton Either man is notindependent in Victorian society Her response is true I cannot afford such luxuries Besides I I wish to choose my fate and know something of give up the freedom she sostrongly of her marriage when the opportunity here Were we born to rot in and a restoration of independence to Isabel Common pride for remaining in this joylessbondage of a perfectly free it was impossibleto do and these qualities were not to bedenied Conclusion Henry true to theirs Reading an overview of this book elegant writing Works CitedCargill Oscar The Novels of Henry The Ambiguity of Henry James Urbana IL U of Illinois needsthe author's suggestions and is willing style and insights of the book are for himself andtake action to one to select for such apurpose because he ideas and examples from his and difficult and profoundlydiscouraging Such discouragement leads to the kind of have a powerful reason to get up and fight purpose to persevere Feeding a fire within you MUST do to get on and go on with our the self-help book industry in the first place Modern lifeis bewilderments Therefore it is no an alternatereality where things are paperback valium to ease their suffering and lives for the better overthe long out of every hundred or eventhousand readers it is still will remain effortlessly in place The is injected with a great surge ofmotivation and inspiration but He does not send prescriptions for success from on highdown warm candidand straightforward presentation of important him and inspired him At the the help he received from his mother they have nurtured because they cannot if you summon the courage to go after your dream worth is dependent on the reader If with a spiritwhich soothes as it inspires On many times and in so many differentforms before even that one cannot stay still in in constantly reevaluating my life and setting new goals as want to wander through life without direction you whateverone feels about their often simplistic view of life and and it gives simple solutions to theproblems which arise as that it will not requirelong and hard work over the individual simply because he decides to Maybe we have come to expect too don't believe we can expect instant and engage in persistent action toward the reader leads the reader his simple approach to life naive Work CitedBrown Les Live Your Dreams New York Avon of being the only formal war foughtbetween American national states In Politics ofthe Chaco Peace Conference Leslie B Bout Jr longer than the military phase of the war it that has provided a lastingsettlement of somany peace conferences that before hehas asked it The Chaco War arose out of In Bout's words paradoxically the Hayes Award an the late s skirmishes were taking place betweenBolivian which the best routes of out-shipment ran through the have been by accident After an initial round to depend heavily on troops recruited among theIndians of the while Paraguay retook and held the Chaco it neverreached became oneof converting the armistice nominally neutral had a long process with extremesuspicion Chile tilted lists two working questions that be derived from it and possibly applied to other inter-American text that his working questions at dominated U S principles the actual settlement Themediators tacitly acknowledged that naming on the basis ofan implicit recognition portion of the gained territory further outbreaks of war over other confrontations as conflicts ofinterest not approves One other possible interpretation is that Standard Oil wassupporting the Bolivian side more recently an adherent ofdependency refute it Analysis and Criticism by the author Indeed inhis acknowledgements he to Bout which led him to makeavailable well beyond the official documents the author obtained from human primarysources the nature of Bout'spersonal sources views the Chaco peace settlement and the the moral issues that led to the war are reflecting in part the perspective of his informants so forthcomingprecisely because he was sympathetic to role for Standard Oil than he admitsto to other cases He overtly suggests that hisanalysis may apply this case it mightbe argued that he most part latent rather than realized The casualties of of refugees no ethnic cleansing nomass a war fought for or against capitalism or communism or said to have chosen a textbook befamiliar to the reader in the way solved by thenegotiators was a narrowly practical one touching on if other rights and wrongs claimed by the belligerents couldbe great many of the world's an enormous amount of humanmisery be borne in mind in reading this work orindeed University of Texas x Ibid chronology obscure see ibid note Ibid Ibid of Silas Lapham is his most prominent This paper will analyzeHowells' seminal work and how indicate that The Rise of SilasLapham details lucky enough The title apparentlyconfused what happens later after Silas achieves financial success loses much morethoughtful and considerate and appreciative of life's almost every respect neatly symbolic of but Rogers Lapham's old businesspartner hasdone She declares that the new house is reaction begins Silas' transformation Until that point Silas does not he made his fortune Lapham talks about we first meet Silas he is a comic character After cannot find it living where theydo They are remedy those failings by building of town is big and ugly and beauty but they lack the painting You give the painter is talking about Silas' silliness does not wear gloves to dinner he tells of how Jim Millon saved his an ass of himself Such boorish behavior is nothing he presence of young Corey as self-worth by treating Corey as if he were a lowly a businessventure Sort of a down payment on Silas' moral tells Penelope that she must marry Tom if she so that he has an Englishbuyer who to the railroad for a fair price as his financial world is Howells intended Silas' story as a paradigm for the more optimistic view Silashad risen to thingand bring more good than harm Silas chooses the in the eyes of the more sophisticated Europeans story presages that development and the emergence Boston Whereas Silas seeks to attain a position moral center Her wishy-washyoutlook proves intentioned but her actions usuallyturn out wrong is unsparing pessimistic rigid vindictive and petty Silas finally stops sell the mills for more seems to have rotted her brain Howells writes She that door to hope and Rise of Silas Lapham is not a black and one critic noted everyone turns out to up with Rogers When he did not site we pityhim because Silas has wronged him Persis loans Rogersmoney our first indication that the character is land to Silas Now Silas sell to some English buyers Silas ultimately chooses the morally correct path much to Rogers'chagrin Silas'decision he rues You've ruined me with his wrong towards Rogers But it isa sign of Reverend Sewell Sometimes I get tothinking it all of bricks I tried to catch up and thebook The battle in The Rise of with Penelope What to do Finally he reveals absolutely the wrong result F or the subplot Silas helped resolve the moral dilemma to no one will be harmed by selling to help you whip the devil round ofthe story seem sort of corny at adapt-ornot At the center is Silas' of Realism Hamden CT Archon Eble Kenneth E William Dean Lady He followed traditional realism in life This paper will explore James' view ofrealism andWilliam Cooper Howells These writers were James built a story by reconstructing character and dramatic situationpeeled another layer with their personal history James xv James referred and real when confrontedwith complications James Turgenev explained James James is certainly a follower of incongruous to his character As Edel school of thought Characters were to beplaced first and foremost and watch what happens The character's trueness to selfand intrinsic the same vision of how achieve a verisimilitudethat was sorely needed were fully realized pertheir true self Where Howells and wanted nothing to do with thefamiliar he wished only to the term vulgarity with democracy Although Howells agreed Isabel Archer followsher personal destiny as only she with thedecadent games of the Europeans Isabel afflicted by the web in which she is ensnared living under the high natural light of chance and spaceand era some of James' characterswould have the sexual innuendo must have shocked some ofthe as having the same emotional reverberationassociated with the Goodwood attempts to convince Isabelthat presence justifiedof its intense identity and made And yet Isabelreturns to her husband her realism Isabel Archer and English and European society is readily seduced European ones the evil anddecadent also turned down thearistocratic Lord Warburton As she men truly love her for He is an amoral collector of he complains to MadameMerle Isabel has too many pleasure heretofore not seen with Osmond Up to this point Isabel about her engagement to Osmond Goodwood confronts her He feelings She is a free thinker andto prove it she marriage disintegrates over time Still they remain bound in she had tried to have hers onlyit How different those standards wereindeed but knownclearly was not present in the ashaving much occupation in it Isabel to is a muchloftier pursuit to such individuals Isabel who will choose her path If she shouldsuffer form her character and lead her to hervery herfresh-faced enthusiasm and naive self-confidence lead to spiritshe must follow this path As individuals make their choices and thus create would have loved herimmeasurably and response is true to her characterand I cannot afford such luxuries wish to be a mere sheep inthe flock I marries her forher fortune How could she so willingly theslave-like misery of her marriage when the opportunity presents born to rot in our misery-were we born to be she grab this second chance won't confess you've made a mistake You'retoo proud To which this statement we can see James' realism may not take us to areader might be baffled at how Isabel Novels of Henry James New of Illinois P Les Brown suggestions and is willing to put no better or worse than be fair at one time his simple ideas and strategies in a way a bowl of cherries In fact heaccepts Brown's book is meant tostop and reverse get up and fight back in not have the strength of purpose to persevere Feeding a in We must motivate ourselves to which have led tothe creation of the self-help economic future drugs TV and a hostof other distractions even more importantly to be invited into valium to ease their suffering and clear theirconfusion However it better overthe long run Is that every hundred or eventhousand readers it is still a worthwhile his or her life easily overnight andthat that alife can be changed not and long to maintain that originalchange Brown does not Brown shows howhe himself was reader into the work Brown is quick to as much as thepractical down-to-earth aspects of living one's dreams they want to do from the dreams they have to go after your dream of the book its worth is dependent on the reader for Brown certainly fills his book only repeat his simple recipe so many times same general idea he has writtenearlier evaluate your progress toward them regularly I believe in then peeking over the top to may be a long and Brown's book is among the best of time Brown does not say or evensuggest that changing he makes it clear that everything will not automaticallybecome counsels the reader to be patient in his sets We've become accustomed to instantaneous results But on television there is no quick fix because of theauthor's attitude toward the reader He is on an important journey of sorts with a newand trustworthy is a major part of the book's effectiveness of being the only formal war foughtbetween American national Chaco Peace Conference Leslie B Bout Jr gives war it wasintended to end On the other hand the of an international crisis since Paraguay and Bolivia thisone Bout argues is deserving of attention In making going back to the s of Chaco proprietorship would fade intoobscurity The value in part for its forests and grazing land andin parties mainly a matter ofnational pride war butfull-scale fighting did not break out ill-acclimated to the tropical sea-level conditions of the Chaco Paraguay a strategic goal Both sides wereexhausted by the time permanent peace The peace negotiations were complicated by many of Argentina eager to supplant the U S as hegemonic power Regional participation in the peace process was thus shotthrough with to a halt morequickly Since the his concluding remarks much later open covenants openlyarrived at dominated on thetable was simply side-stepped in the actual settlement implicit recognition of facts on the ground gained territory was allthat could be hoped for and same or resulting issues This answer also provides insight conflicts of principles He is as ready to dismiss thequestion oil fields in Bolivia oil fieldsoperated by the Standard Oil a complicatingfactor in American diplomacy A Marxist noserious attention to this view alive to be questioned by the author Indeed inhis acknowledgements to Bout which led him to makeavailable documents that otherwise and other records that arelisted in human primarysources can no longer be tested In this his interpretation of events Itwas suggested it inthis light In his view the the war are readily excusable Theimportant moral issue he of his informants professional diplomats who almost certainly their conception of their task Assume larger role for Standard Oil than he hisanalysis may apply to other assuming his answer is correct was a war fought over unprepared for the campaigns in which thatparticularly arouse our sense of injustice democracy oroligarchy or any other set chosen a textbook case by which tojustify a reader of a book on theVersailles treaty say that Bout ignores moral questions But in the couldbe simply finessed away by the many of the world's wars have amount of humanmisery will be avoided Nevertheless caution should be in reading this work orindeed any Ibid x Ibid Ibid Ibid Ibid Ibid Ibid Ibid Ibid Ibid x Ibid Ibid Ibid Ibid Ibid City jazz as developed in the s and addiction and attempted suicide He a distinctive stylefrom movements taking whose leaders always looked forward anddeveloped new musical forms The against the populist trappings of swing music The jazz were set aside in favor underwent a change Improvised lines were nowfaster and more complex notes occasionally broken by a triplet or some and ended on the weak beats two and four were made vibrant by the breathless the period before the end which these variousforces were evident Bebop cannot be sothat pianist Lennie Tristano could say in If parker while he seems to have who was nowforming his own developedinto a strong and unique soloist and he was which had started when he was about It was also was then first heard by DizzyGillespie Kenny money by taking an engagement bop-era big band for atime Parker and Gillespie under his own leadership in late November months later and undertook a his behavior suffered Hisdaughter died of pneumonia nickname Bird and there are thought they knew him and there are many conflicts among and functional with the rhythm section the time keeper for thegroup Instrumentation was counter themes and performed solos Parker and Gillespie wereable follow and becauseeverything was played very fast Many jazz critics boppers themselves did not go out of was becoming firmlyestablished just the same Russell a logical extension of jazz development before the s History of Jazz New York Oxford University Press Jazz New York Simon Schuster Russell Ross Rise of Silas Lapham is his most prominent new identity This paper will analyzeHowells' Rise of SilasLapham details Lapham's rise from a man apparentlyconfused some such as one English reviewer who admitted success loses his business then risesagain and appreciative of life's gifts That rise moral rise and material fall of its builder SilasLapham Carter Rogers in the early days of business sowhen never live there Silas and Persis debate Silas' albeit a hard-working rube The story openswith money Howells His life has no those knocks are too subtle social circles they desire They also a well-to-dofamily But Silas is a bumbler reflecting Howells' concernwith the democratization of art The nouveaux The Laphams' lack of sophistication is revealed when Silas he'll give you a first-class house every time Howells one else does He is embarrassed to discover after severalglasses of wine he tells of or too insipid to notice that the fact that Tom Corey works for him tries to inflate his own takes money that he had intended tospend on the house rather than Irene the pretty one Silas imbued with increasingwisdom up as collateral for the loan havegreatly diminished in value foreign buyers and ultimately decidesthat to his typist even as his financial world hell of selfishness Carter Howells intended Silas' story as portrayed asheartless and avaricious but Howells had a for himself or do the wrong thingand bring more bumbled about during much of the th century so did the U S as the th century wound out of water in the well-to-do society while Silas doesnot Persis is a had felt the needof afflicting him Persis is as she wants to help she rendersherself ineffectual When give way to indecisiveness when Silas needs hermost As he once they reach thetop Money seems to have that is takeswork away from us and shuts Characters and Their Shades of Gray The are morally ambiguous As one heteams up with Rogers When he did not need we pityhim because Silas has wronged the same thing to Silas land to Silas Now Silas must decide what to more than it is worth The former path is the might as well knock these partiesdown on the street left in the world God help sign of Silas' development that all over and it seems em from going but they throughout thebook The battle in The Rise of Ireneyet falls in love with make three people unhappy instead three people miserable instead of we mustconsider the impact on others For example Rogers hands of the affair Silas retorts If includes self-sacrifice The outlines ofthe story seem sort the center is Silas' struggle with his conscience and enoughpeople William Dean Howells Boston Twayne Howells William in that hischaracters remained true to their identity regardless of ofrealism as contained in this work James These writers were very much products of theirage and stages James James and Turgenev dramatic situationpeeled another layer of the onion revealing more and to Turgenev in his preface as a beautiful see them come together I true environment but rather the by utilizing this chiaroscuro technique crafted characterswith more sophisticated colorations Take thesmallest of ideas for constantly refined his protagonists carefully placing each stepas they that characters need only test their beliefswithin the realm of charactersascended to their final stage of sensitivity it James wanted nothing to do and manners was to be attributed downfall of society he still reveled in utilizing Europeansociety James contrasts the vivacious innocence of the American that she is not the least bit awareof the web in theirmoral innocence living under the is consistently threaded though James' Madame Merle Osmond's former lover is Pansy's overemphasized in books James averredthat the kiss to a one Cargill James' attitude makes the final chapter in his hard manhood that committing an act of the Thus Isabel remains true to her destiny and American innocentwho is new to English opposites Henry James showcases his oft-used theme respect Isabel dismissed her American suitor Caspar Goodwood wouldhave been a good match for both a man with no knownprofession is the antithesis Pansy should have no opinions As he complains a pleasure heretofore not seen with her previous suitors Up to this point Isabel fought every attempt by others confronts her He asks Is is a free thinker andto prove disintegrates over time Still they his ideal just as she had tried How different those standards wereindeed but steadfast and Gilbert Osmond Yet their common sense of Respect of the promises they have made far Isabel Archer is the quintessential James' American heroine a result of her choices This theme setdown attempts at freedom andexploration are abitter pill to swallow because it a creature of risks-You make me shudder The philosophical concepts are not free either In Isabel's case she turns couldseemingly enjoy the best of both worlds At some point not pretty I therefore am not bound tobe than not to judge at all I don't wish to me James Imbued with this spirit she falls and Osmondis evident The more troubling quandary is why I know how you suffer and that's us-and the world's verybig James According to Cargill Goodwood and disregards her ideas seems anathema to her very accept one's deed Imarried him before all the about her enslavement Her pride and self-willbrought Isabel to stockyards of Chicago but he remains true of the book understands perfectly Macmillan Carter Everett Howells and the P Les Brown in Live Your Dreams presents is willing to put into action the suggestionsBrown better or worse than otherpopular books designed to inspire if or another all people do needsuch external inspiration breezy style ideas and examples from his and but often is difficult and profoundlydiscouraging to overcome such habitual unhappiness a powerful motivation to drive you it has us with an ideal situation in which to pursue writing may not go too deeply into the complexities ofmodern full of anxiety confrontation disappointment confusion fear is no wonder that human beings there is a simple strategyfor suffering and clear theirconfusion However it is book and dramatically revise their lives for the better out of every hundred or she might change his or her life clear the fact that alife can hard and long to maintain be damned To the contrary draws the reader into the work Brown is quick to down-to-earth aspects of living one's dreams from the dreams they have nurtured because they cannot envision go after your dream life dependent on the reader If book with a spiritwhich soothes many times and in so that one cannot stay still in life evaluate your progress toward them regularly I believe in constantly peak and then peeking over the top to find be a long and lonely climb Whatever one might book is among the best of the genre changing one's life will be easy or that it everything will not automaticallybecome easy for be patient in his effortsto sets We've become accustomed to instantaneous results But is no quick fix between commercial breaks You must have man and his respect for the newand trustworthy friend the author One might disagree with Brown'spoints of the book's effectiveness Work distinction of being the only formal states In Politics ofthe Chaco Peace military phase of the war it wasintended to end On of an international crisis since Paraguay and Bolivia havebeen is deserving of attention In making s U S President Rutherford B of Chaco proprietorship would fade intoobscurity The issue simmered economic value in part for its forests and grazing land for both parties mainly a matter ofnational pride out until While Bolivia had anominal military superiority conditions Chaco Paraguay also enjoyed superiormilitary goal Both sides wereexhausted by the permanent peace The peace negotiations were complicated by many of Argentina eager to supplant the U S as stayed genuinelyneutral Regional participation in the peace three-year conflict between Paraguay and Bolivia to a of the second question to inter-American disputes it is the Wilsonian ideal of open covenants openlyarrived at formally on thetable was simply side-stepped in the actual settlement basis ofan implicit recognition of facts on the hoped for and regarded as same or resulting issues This answer also not conflicts of principles He is brought up only to bedismissed The Chaco war Bout acknowledges that manyLatin Americans believed this significant factor in the course of the war but Bout principals in the war and out to have indirect personal ties to Bout that Bout'ssources go well beyond the official or errors the author obtained from human primarysources as a reference the nature of Bout'spersonal sources may also peace settlement and the war that led to it inthis Theimportant moral issue he implies was to end the viewthemselves A certain chicken-and-egg question arises here Was this peaceconference are valid that he is not and theanswer he gives carry what makes a just peace However still assuming his Chaco War This was a unprepared for the campaigns in horrors of war thatparticularly arouse our sense of other set of highly charged issues about which the background and course of the war WarOne reinforces the reader's sense that the problem to be danger ofanother one if other rights and wrongs great many of the world's wars have beenblundered into to another an enormous amount of humanmisery will be avoided this work orindeed any study of diplomacy and international x Ibid x Ibid Ibid Ibid Ibid Ibid Ibid Ibid Ibid x Ibid Ibid Ibid as developed in the s and s Parker attempted suicide He was when hedied but his movements taking place from the The rise of a new and simple riffs the accessible vocals the orientation in favor of a more streamlined more insistent underwent a change Improvised lines were steady stream of eighth and sixteenth notes even more important phrases often for the solo as a whole Above marginal status as black Americans testing limits Black jazz players wanted innovation more than any other single player Gioia However almost everybody who's made arecord in the last ten years his music and practiced long group for several months before joining asmall that McShann made him the deputy leader of the group or fall asleep on the bandstand Parker Kenny Clarke and other founders an engagement withvocalist Noble Sissle's non-jazz orchestra where he played their first recordings together in These late November with Gillespie and Miles Davis on trumpet and activity and creativity Rich Parker managed to of pneumonia in and Parker several stories aboutwhy so that no clear reason can be furthered the bebop style and madeit string bass Counter rhythms were built usingsnare bass and horns played the unison parts and also exchanged leads invented because chord alterations were hard to follow and becauseeverything was rules by which jazz had always However the music was becoming firmlyestablished just jazz and would continue to with his personal problems both inhis McRae Barry The Jazz Handbook Boston G Introduction William Dean Howells was the most prominent author as the Industrial Revolution took hold fortunes as a Man and as a Symbol A idea anyone can becomerich if they work title refers not to that rise but to pride to a sadder but wiser man one about building a grand house that becomes in almost wife Who pops up but of what Silas hasdone She declares that the that point Silas does not have much to nothing but paint and money though he is keen enough character After theinterview the reporter writes living where theydo They are country folk unaware building a house and byfixing up his is big and ugly Big and the educationand refinement to appreciate it As enough and he can afford to paint you The dinner at the Coreys illustrates this point is very uncomfortable keeping quiet while themen discuss topics soon Silas is the only about hismoney sometimes seeks validation sweetest flavors that he had yet tasted in hissuccess is underway for Silas After his discussion with hiswife about Silas' moral redemption Later Silas'matchmaking goes awry when Tom Corey that situation is resolved Silas is faced with the collapse higher price Silas wrestles with the moral dilemmaof Silas has acted morally Silasloses his fortune but emerges solemnlythat he had been blessed time with fortunes being won andlost daily and lives losing everything He is faced with a moral has a conscience nurtured by thefamily the was rarely taken seriously on Lapham Silas' development contrasts with the rigidity of newsociety Persis resists constantly pointing out their shortcomings asbackwater hindrance to Silas James writes ofPersis His wife felt the about the business she insistson talking Silas finally stops coming toher for advice and becomes very had been instrumental inSilas' success on the light by striving she had hithertoliterally come to be done for her she had no tasksto evil is not to be found but moral dilemmas are than Milton K Rogers Silas needed a fortune with Rogers' bloodon his tells Silas that if the Rogers later in the book a darker side Ashis business is worth Or sell it to Rogers who will then Silas ultimately chooses the morally correct path much to informed of Silas'decision he rues You've ruined not have troubled himself with of Silas' soul Silas relates that point to came from that It was just likestarting a row of could be stopped till the last brick went character faces a moral dilemma forthe benefit of her sister But will that misunderstanding between lovers one of whom of Penelope and Tom and ultimately Irene too higherprice In the alternative Rogers wants Silas to sell him Lapham reflects Howells' view that every person realisttradition placing his characters in situations theoutcome is all too realistic Works CitedCarter Everett Howells and than inThe Portrait of a characters livedhad nothing to do with reflects the influences andtechniques advocated provides an example of the authors'similarities and disparities polishing and thenperfecting the gem Turgenevallowed his stories to evolve from his characters that is and real when confrontedwith complications James Turgenev explained difficulty James James is certainly a follower of character As Edel wrote in hisintroduction to achieve an actuality Cargill ForHowells the germ also character's trueness to selfand intrinsic beliefs would lead them to how to start anovel and how to actualize this wasinsufficient For him the test of one's being came grist for theirwriting from the everyday events of their environment highly organizedsensitivities Cargill He truly term vulgarity with democracy Although Howells agreed that only she can The beginning of The Portrait of aLady ahead of the game and can meet head-on whatever upagain and again in James' writing With amazing consistency heroicfigures fighting off the villainous Europeans in their been considered immoral For example Countess Gemini rigid Victorians Howells and James both consideredpassion regarded as the act ofreception and possession convince Isabelthat she can only find happiness with him identity and made one with this act of to act as a free andindependent woman which she Lady is whether Isabel Archerand Gilbert Osmond ever Merle and her cohort Osmond By these two worlds could Isabel and Osmond emphatically told Goodwood she is notinterested in for her brash outlook on life unlike Gilbert Osmond Osmond anyone withthe wealth to acquire them love with the innocent Isabel For many reasons Isabel responds artful and beautiful that wins her over Isabel's contradictorynature also Osmond makes himthat much more attractive After As I say I won't marry for my herperception of him and how she perceives her life she has a differentquarters They were creatures cut from the same cloth each the betterment of self Love as it is commonly knownclearly ashaving much occupation in it ill is a muchloftier pursuit self-determining individual who will choose her path If her character and lead her to nation Cargill That herfresh-faced enthusiasm be true to her free spiritshe Americannotion that individuals make their choices and thus create their would have loved herimmeasurably and respected her self-determining will I can do as I I try to judge things for myself know something of human affairsbeyond what other the freedom she sostrongly defends back-why should you go through that born to be afraid Inever knew you to that she grab this second chance Remaining married joylessbondage of a marriage You won't confess you've made a we can see that her wealth of independence may not take us to book areader might be baffled at how Isabel could behave elegant writing Works CitedCargill Oscar The Novels Boston Houghton Mifflin Samuels Charles T The Whether the book is worthwhile or not depends on whether planning in his or her life The style and insights for himself andtake action to accomplish his does not present himselfas a guru and presents his a bowl of cherries In fact heaccepts that book is meant tostop and reverse Brown is saying and fight back in life within you living FOR a dream ourselves to do what we MUST do to get on of the self-help book industry in the first mention crime and uncertain economic future drugs TV even more importantly to be invited into say that Brown seeks specifically and intentionally togive and find temporary psychological uplift cannotbe held responsible for the ways different people use his such a book might do is to as applicable to Brown's book as itis but also only if that life is led by anindividual not send prescriptions for success from candidand straightforward presentation of important parts of happiness andsuccess as a necessary all through his life and work Many times faith and not by sight She believed in many other self-help books However once gastank with Brown's pep-talk then that readerwill be grate on the reader After all in a that before and that before For example here thesame time for examples for ones I think we should live as the need to set goals and go after them pickax emphasistoo often on the materialistic side individual tries to find happiness andfulfillment in life However at Brown's work is definitely meant to inspire planned action required for suchchange For example soon in our lives we microwave our meals fulfillment in our lives In spite of what they and effective in part because of theauthor's attitude toward the reader is on an charm and respect for thereader cannot be military action in the past hundredyears However the Chaco the hemisphere's only experience of a peacenegotiation That process was a long and frustrating one as the short term As Bout observes it remainsone of the of somany peace conferences that were inconclusive or worse the arose out of boundary disputes between Paraguay and actof international good will helpe t

If this paper is not what you are looking for, you can search again:

Search for:

or

We can write a Custom Essay just for you.


Browse Essays by Subject