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  1. Analysis. Stevens wishes to return to the question of anti-Semitism, which has become so sensitive today, especially regarding Lord Darlington’s purported ban of Jewish staff—something that Stevens can refute entirely. There were many Jewish people on staff during his years there, and he can’t imagine how such a rumor started—unless ...

  2. Summary strictly focuses on the overall plot and characters of a work. Summary can be described as a retelling of the material you have read. The summary should provide your reader with an overview of the text in the briefest manner possible. Only mention the important plot details. Keep your writing in the present tense.

  3. Andrew Stevens Biography (1955-) Born June 10, 1955, in Memphis, TN; son of Noble Herman and Stella (an actress) Stevens; married Kate Jackson (an actress), 1979 (divorced, 1980); marriedRobyn; children: (second marriage) one son. Education: Attended Immaculate Heart College (Los Angeles, CA), 1973-74; attended West Los Angeles College and Los ...

  4. Summary. ‘Sunday Morning’ is divided into eight sections or stanzas, and focuses on a woman who stays at home, lounging around, on a Sunday morning, when virtually everyone else is at church. In the first stanza, we find the woman lounging around in her ‘peignoir’ (a dressing gown), drinking coffee and eating oranges with her green ...

  5. Summary. Analysis. The story opens with an extended description of a train station located in Spain’s Ebro valley. In these opening details the landscape’s barren, hot, and shadeless nature is emphasized. Into this landscape appear an American man and his female partner, called the girl or “Jig,” who are waiting for an express train to ...

  6. Analysis: Act I, scenes iii–iv. Sir Toby, Sir Andrew, and Maria are Twelfth Night ’s most explicitly comic characters, since they take themselves less seriously than the play’s romantic leads. (Furthermore, the two noblemen’s very names—“Belch” and “Aguecheek”—seem comically out of place.) These three provide amusement in ...

  7. Analysis. Connie is a pretty fifteen-year-old girl with a “nervous, giggling habit of craning her neck to glance into mirrors,” as well as a tendency to “check other people’s faces to make sure her own was all right.”. Her mother, who “noticed everything and knew everything,” is irritated by Connie’s vanity and often tells her ...