Ursula Burns

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    Forest Fires In Canada

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    Forest fires occur frequently in Canada, in fact, approximately 10,100 fires annually. Forest fires can help replenish the landscape however, they can possibly pose a threat to local communities. For example, the 2011 Slave Lake wildfire had left the town in ashes and caused over 1.8 billion dollars and 4,700 hectares of damage. Wildfires are caused mainly as a result of human impact rather than natural sources such as lightning. Fires should be managed but just to a certain extent, where the…

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    Robert Burns, a Scottish poet and lyricist was born January 25 of 1759 and died July 21 of 1796. He is known for his writing on Romanticism poetry and his way of portraying feeling and emotion throughout his writings. Two of his famous poems A Red, Red Rose and Ye Flowery Banks (Bonie Doon) are examples of romanticism, which was an intellectual movement that originating Europe toward the end of the 18th century. Burns’s poems are full of emotion such as happiness, sadness, anger and despair.…

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    this mouse displays that he has no control over his own strength. This incidental death foreshadows that there may be more casualties coming. In the poem To a Mouse by Robert Burns, he states, “The best laid schemes of mice and men often go askew” anticipating that regardless of George’s best plans, something may go wrong. Burns’ poem was a big inspiration for Of Mice and Men. Reading back, foreshadowing is used throughout the entirety of the book, and much like the quote from the poem, the…

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    mice and men/ often go awry” (Burns 38). Steinbeck adapted this quote from Robert Burns to write his novel, Of Mice and Men, indicating similar themes such as companionship. Dreams of the characters are also mentioned in both works, along with how they are not achieved at the end. The characters and their personalities also tend to resemble each other between the works. John Steinbeck’s book Of Mice and Men shows many allusions to the poem “To a Mouse” by Robert Burns through unachieved dreams,…

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    Of Mice And Men Have-Nots

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    3. Of Mice and Men (1937) The novel Of Mice and Men is specifically a drama of dreams of a pair of have-nots but in a broader perspective, it is a beautiful "study of the dreams and pleasures of everyone in the world" (Lisca, Steinbeck .qtd 1958: 139). George and Lennie are migrant agricultural labourers. Their dreams and aspirations connote to those of millions of have-nots who are living the life of underdogs. They do not dream of a utopian change in their life status. They only want economic…

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    Tragic Friendship Killing your best friend is tragic, but it might not always be the wrong decision. In Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, George and Lennie have a long lasting relationship. They both aspire to have a farm with a garden, rabbits, cows, and chickens. Due to disastrous events, Lennie and George will never have the opportunity of owning their dream farm. George is justified in killing Lennie because it’s for Lennie’s own good, he spared him a harsh death, and he prevented…

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    Cadence Lee Kasey Lutrell English 11:B 5 February 2018 Literary Analysis: A World of Pure Discrimination Set in the 1930s, the classic novella Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck follows the actions of two men, George Milton and Lennie Smalls, as they yearn for and work toward their American Dream. They meet many characters that have been unable to achieve this dream for various reasons. Candy, a poor, old, one-handed swamper gives the two men hope, when he offers to pay a large portion of the…

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    The American dream was a time in the 1920s during the great depression where George and Lennie attempt their success in there dream, but face many obstacles as they try to achieve it. As George and Lennie’s dream is to raise a farm with there own animals, Lennie’s minor mental disability is tough as Lennie tends to kill anything he he gets attached to. George sees Lennie stroking a dead mouse that Lennie killed unintentionally George says “you gonna give me that mouse or do I have to sock you.”…

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    The poem “To a Mouse” by Robert Burns clearly reflects the naturalistic themes in John Steinbeck’s “Of Mice and Men”. A naturalist would state that the “struggle against forces beyond an organism’s control”, “survival of the fittest”, and “nothing ever goes as planned” are some naturalistic elements that can be identified both in the poem and the book. In the book, the clash of Lennie's physical strength and mental weakness was beyond his control. This made him struggle throughout the entire…

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    been used worldwide to describe wildfire or forest fire (e.g. Hardy, 2005; Bento-Gonçalves et al., 2012; Eriksen and Prior, 2013; Mhawej et al., 2015). Generally in the United States, these definitions included prescribed fire - which is a controlled burn ignited by human under a controlled environment and on a limited spatial scale. However, in this chapter, we only focus on uncontrolled fire that occurs in the countryside or wildland. Studies such as Kumagai et al. (2004), Lentile et al.…

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