David Young
Recent graduate from UC Davis in Comparative Literature and Spanish, and just completed first year of teaching Spanish to high school students in Vacaville, CA.
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Displaying Results 1 - 12 (of 12) for Yahoo! Voices
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The Value of Human LifeIt is a profound thing to hold a baby in your arms. To cradle him, to rock her, to feel the soft warmth of tiny toes and wet red cheeks.
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Does God Want You to Be Rich?But beyond all my trite mockery of the more fortunate, I think Jesus really meant to just let us all know that the things we own eventually begin to own us.
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In Boxers on a Tuesday Night in the Darkaccount of a quiet moment in the dark
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How to Be a PeacemakerNo longer point the finger, but ask what you can do for your world.
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How to Write a Good LetterThe art of letter-writing, the ancient practice of communication through the written word, is largely lost on this generation. With the advent of electronic mail has come the imminent neglect of the world of pen and paper and stamps and postmen.
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A Critical Analysis of BeowulfA close reading and analysis of the attack on Heorot hall and its symbolism for a world in need of solidarity.
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Politics and the English LanguageA critical analysis of George Orwell's "Politics and the English Language".
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A Critical Analysis of Jean Jaques Rousseau's Reveries of a Solitary WalkerRuminations on the romantic ideals expressed in Jean Jacques Rousseau's Reveries of a Solitary Walker.
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A Critical Literary Review of Devised for the Sake of Company by Samuel BeckettAn entrance into the imaginative world of a great author in a work of fragmented memories and abstractions.
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Nature and Literature: Living in the FlickerJacquetta Hawkes, Norman McLean and Joseph Conrad point their readers to ancient worlds and link humanity to the place from which it came in order to comment on our pride and arrogance. They tell stories that rinvite us to live in the flicker.
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Sacrificed Child, Beheaded Child, Buried Child : Dead Children as Tragic DevicesThe essential importance of family to the human struggle offers the tragedian a door through which he may instill fear and pity. By showing or alluding to the death of a child, Aeshylus, Euripides, and Shepard make us feel profoundly afraid.
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God-scented HalitosisPoems and stories life and love and the audacity of one whose life is well lived and filled with the pungent aroma of God on their breath with a hint of eternity in their shadow and a mouth filled with flowers and winds of change.