Use the textbook to complete these charts and submit as a File Upload
Cells Characteristics Chart Eukaryotic Cells
Viruses Prokaryotic Cells Animal Cells Plant Cells
Domain
Size (μm)
Presence of Internal
Compartments (Y/N)
Cell Wall (Y/N)
Cell Membrane (Y/N)
Nucleus Present (YN)
Protein Capsid (Y/N)
Genome Material
(DNA/RNA/Either)
Organelles Chart Present in…
Description of Function Plant
Cells? Animal
Cells? Prokaryotic
Cells?
Nucleus
Genome
Nucleolus
Cytosol
Plasma Membrane
Cell Wall
Cytoskeleton
Ribosomes
Rough
Endoplasmic
Reticulum
Organelles Chart (continued) Present in…
Description of Function Plant
Cells? Animal
Cells? Prokaryotic
Cells?
Smooth
Endoplasmic
Reticulum
Golgi Complex
Transport vesicles
Central vacuole
Lysosomes
Cilia
Flagella
Mitochondria
Chloroplast
The Masque of the Red Death is the ultimate example of how inferior humans try to overcome against their final destiny, and greatest demon: Death itself. The Prince Prospero laughs at Death “while the pestilence raged most furiously abroad…he entertained his thousand friends at a masked ball of the most unusual magnificence.” (83). The prince believes that his special group of nobles is exempt from the suffering occurring around them, and can celebrate with ease. Prince Prospero imagines that he is not destined to die like the others, and so fortifies himself with false illusions that depict harmony and pleasure. These illusions, however, are all stripped away when the ebony clock chimes and “…the giddiest grew pale, and the more age and sedate passed their hands over their brows as if in confused reverie or meditation.” (85) The people realize that to evade death is the greatest risk one can take, and the clock is reminding them of how futile this gesture is. When the clock’s chime fades away, the people forget about their inevitable demise and go back to believing that they are invincible, only to be reminded an hour later when the clock strikes again. After midnight tolls, a ghastly figure appears who had “…out-Heroded Herod, and gone beyond the bounds of even the prince’s indefinite decorum.” (87). The figure is the messenger of Death himself, coming to destroy the inferior beings that do not fall beneath its supreme power. The prince is the first to die, as he was the one who believed wholeheartedly that he could evade the End. When all of the nobles are vanquished, Death gloats in silence about its triumph over those who believed they could substitute suffering for pleasure, and how it is the only dominant factor in the world. Mankind has tried to conquer its hidden demons because it is afraid of them. But despite all of the technological advances that have been made, they are still being undermined by emotional demons like jealousy, hatred, and arrogance. The human race fears these demons for they unleash the worst qualities in people, and can not be conquered by the machines that are revered so much. It is naïve of humans to believe that they can ever vanquish the demons that lurk within their souls, but they are intent on driving out any human qualities that would make them imperfect. Yet they do not realize that imperfection is humanity’s greatest trait and weakness at the same time, and that these demons exist to make this fact obvious to all. Analysis This sample high school English essay sufficiently argues that when man attempts to combat fate, obsession and death, he is ultimately destroyed. The essay is simply organized, with each paragraph devoted to a short story. The paragraph on the Masque of the Red Death is the essay’s strong point, perhaps because Poe’s story is the most explicit about what happens when people try to combat one of these “demons.”