Klaus Baudelaire

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    their fate. The characters are forced to deal with people who seem simple and friendly, but are devious and are almost always out to get them. The flock and the Baudelaires are constantly moving from place to place, seeking a place of refuge from the continuous…

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    Count Olaf Essay

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    The Baudelaire children have been in and out of foster homes, trying to find a parent who will take good care of them. Unfortunately, they don’t exactly have close family. So they were taken in by this man named Count Olaf who is absolutely evil and trying to take the children’s fortune. These children aren’t your average 14,12, and 2 year olds.They have managed to escape him each time. Violet, the oldest has an amazing brain to make up inventions. Klaus is able to read and obtain all of that…

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    My Hero's Journey

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    survive on this journey without her, just as my father cannot survive on his journey without his mom. There is a special bond between a mother and daughter, an unbreakable bond that is necessary in order to for me to get to my goal one day. I could never be able to raise a child of my own if my mother was not accompanying, helping me along the way. That is why her existence on this journey that we are taking, is so crucial to getting to the destination. I have also grown close with very old…

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    Kylin Munger Intro to Literature Poetry Analysis Due: 2-23-18 Poetry Analysis: “Daddy” and “How Do I Love Thee” Sylvia Plath was an author in the Modern Era in which she wrote her poem entitled “Daddy” (Plath). In her poem, Plath reflects the Modern Era in which her attitude and words convey the relationship she had with her father. The second author, Elizabeth Barrett Browning with her poem, “How Do I Love Thee” (Barrett Browning) was a poet in the Victorian Era. Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s…

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    She would then meet her Soviet contact at a local grocery store and would identify the individuals sent to meet her by using the side of a Jell-O box. The Soviet agent would have the matching piece of the box and once positively identified, Ruth would swap purses with the Soviet Agent and leave the store. Significant pieces of information were provided by Harry Gold who was working as a Soviet source under the control of Anatoli Yakovlev, Soviet Vice-Consul in New York City. Coordination…

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    In the nineteenth century, Paris became the epitome of the modern city, at least in the eyes of its upper class bourgeois elite and the tourists who visited the modern marvel. This “modern vision” of Paris was developed by people willing to look at and into their surroundings and themselves critically. In fact, it is those people looking at themselves and others in a critical sense and being conscious of the effect their way of seeing the world can have on others that drove who Parisian…

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    The Slippery Slope In The Slippery Slope, Violet, Klaus, and Sunny Baudelaire struggled to find the last safe place, which was also known as Hotel Denouement. After falling into the Stricken Stream and floating away, the author (Lemony Snicket) revealed a poem’s certain quatrain portrayed their dire situation. Another picture did the same and showed their nervousness and confusion throughout the perilous adventure. As described by Lemony Snicket, the first…

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    The book The Wide Window by Lemony Snicket consists many diverse characters. Including Klaus, one of the three Baudelaire, who is simply one of the smartest twelve year olds and the grammar obsessed Aunt Josephine who lost her “dear Ike” in a terrible leech accident. Both characters are somewhat important to the plot of the story and are involved into this particular book. These two characters can be alike in some aspects but are also very different at the same time. There aren't many…

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    The Reptile Room Summary

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    The Reptile Room begins with the three Baudelaire orphans, Violet, Klaus, and Sunny. The became orphans do to a very sad event. This sad event started with a fire that burned their house down and killed their loving parents.After, they were sent to a distant relative named Count Olaf. Count Olaf is a greedy man that wants the Baudelaire families’s fortune. He was caught, but escaped. They are now traveling to their new guardian's home along Lousy Lane. Dr. Montgomery turns out to be much more…

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    one agree with this, especially after the Baudelaires did some terrible things, but with good reasons. The Baudelaires had had a dreadful life, yet they still tried to be polite to others, even when others were not. Their sentence of being “comparatively innocent” is factual, as all of their actions combined were many times better than the murderous Count Olaf’s. With all the people the Baudelaires have faced, the vicious ones always made them look better, even if they tried to be evil. After…

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