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    school, his father didn’t approve of this and beat him for it. Penn joined the Religious Society five years later known as the Quaker religion. While participating, he went to jail several times for resisting the Church of England. At that time, Friends, commonly called "Quakers," were subject to official persecution which is what landed him in jail. In 1647 the religion Quaker was established for those who were tired of being taught about Christ through a church or minister. The…

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    Quaker's Lawrence

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    branch in Canada. The Friends, as they call their members settled in the Niagara region in 1786 many from New Jersey in Sussex County, the same county in which Hannah was born. As Quaker’s they disavowed anything to do with violence and hence took no active part in the Revolutionary War. This stance of neutrality had members suffer double taxation and the loss of some civil rights – and not just during the war, for many sanctions continued after the war as well. Many Friends could see the…

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    Great Expectations by Charles Dickens tells the story of Pip, a common orphan boy who dreams of being a gentleman. The novel is set in Victorian England and follows Pip’s encounters with many colorful characters throughout his rise through the social classes. At the center of Pip’s story is the weather. Dickens uses it as a tool to share aspects of the story. Although he may use the weather just to explain the setting of the novel, Dickens actually utilizes it to foreshadow what will happen next…

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    Pip’s embarrassment and stubbornness almost lost him a friendship between him and his brother in-law Joe, who was his great friend before he lived in London: “I had been mistaken in my fancy that there was a simple dignity in him. The fashion of his dress could no more on its way than when he…

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    tax payment, but to be accumulated from his debt. Finally the maltia could be recognized. This recognized malitia and all its outfitters could hardly be seen as an army of trues soldiers. This group had no idea what they were doing. The Society of Friends thought it was a slap in the face to create this malitia because it went against all that William Penn wanted and worked hard at trying to create. The French-Indian War continued on. Pacifist Quakers wrote a letter to Morris in 1756 labeling it…

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    Quakerism Beliefs

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    Liberty can be defined as having freedom from control and restriction. A person who has liberty is not restricted, by the government, more than the people around him, and has the ability to do anything or think any idea that others around him or her can. As the Quakers fought to attain liberty and free themselves from the oppressive restrictions of the Puritan Government they did so with little aid from government entities. The Quakers were a relatively new sect of Christianity that was formed…

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    Great Expectations is solely about Pip and his expectations over time and for the reader to be able to understand how and why his expectations change, Dickens purposely has Pip describe his life as a child, adolescent and mild aged man. The purpose of Dickens using a bildungsroman is to have Pip grow from a young boy who has many fears and expectations into a man who can then reflect on his mistakes and his life as a whole. One of the first scenes of the novel begins with Pip running into…

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    Summer Of Barshinskey

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    INTRODUCTION When I discovered that I had to write a dissertation as part of a history honours course at the University of North London I naturally turned to the library and archive of my employer: the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) in Britain. The library is a treasure trove of fascinating archives and artefacts recording Quaker history over a period of 300 and more years. Discussions with the Head Librarian, Malcolm Thomas, narrowed the immense range of dissertation possibilities to…

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    "I, the said William Penn, have declared, granted, and confirmed, and by these presents, for me, my heirs and assigns, do declare, grant, and confirm unto all the freemen, planters and adventurers of, in and to the said province, these liberties, franchises, and properties, to be held, enjoyed and kept by the freemen, planters, and inhabitants of the said province of Pennsylvania for ever," said William Penn in his First Frame of Government. His ideas here clearly mirror the Declaration of…

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    comic to create humor, the tragic to create melancholy, and the grotesque to create sentimentality. He creates his humor through the use of irony. An example of irony would be how the boy Pip fights at Miss Havisham’s house later becomes his best friend. With the use of irony, Dickens is able to lighten the mood of the novel and bring in the humorous aspects. Then Dickens uses tragedy to create the melancholy feeling. The tragic events in the story leave the reader with the feeling of sadness…

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