ENGL 1006 (2015-16): Trees of Life and Death: January - April 2016
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Second essay

Write a short essay of four to five pages on one of the topics below. Essays shorter than four pages or longer than six pages will be returned unread and ungraded.

Your essay must use the Times New Roman font, 12-point in size. There must be one inch (2.5 cm) margins on all four sides of the essay. The essay must have double-spaced lineation. The essay must include a separate page for a Works Cited list (which is not included in the page count). The essay should not have a title page.

Your essay must follow the Modern Language Association (MLA) bibliographic, citation, and presentation guidelines. You can consult the Purdue Online Writing Lab for information about using MLA format. See especially the example essay and the sample Works Cited page they have on their site. Please also follow the checklist items listed below.

For each option, you are expected to develop a thesis that responds to the topic outlined by the questions. The whole essay will attempt to support the thesis, using careful argumentation and supporting examples where needed. Your essay is meant to reflect your own interpretation of the texts. As with any English Studies essay, value will be awarded based on the depth of the analysis, the complexity of the discussion, the solidity of the writing, and the thoroughness of the support to the thesis.

For this assignment, you are welcome to use reputable reference sources, but you should limit your use of other sources of interpretation and information. Remember that plagiarism will not be tolerated. (This includes using any source for an idea without proper documentation: even if you try “to make the words your own” by rearranging and rewriting them, you still must identify the source of the ideas.) Cite all sources of interpretation and information properly.

The essay is due in class on April 7. Consult the lateness policy for late papers.

  1. Compare the portrayal of the courtship of Rosalind and Orlando in As You Like It to that of Dick and Fancy in Under the Greenwood Tree. Focus on the settings / locations for these courtships. What is the importance of having these two pairs develop their relationships where they do?
  2. Respond to Walter E. Anderson’s academic article “The Hidden Love Triangle in Mansfield’s ‘Bliss.’” How valid and strong are Anderson’s arguments? Is there anything you disagree with?
  3. Compare Touchstone and Thomas Leaf. How do their portrayals and functions differ within their stories?
  4. Compare the use of trees and nature in World of Warcraft (within our course’s parameters) to their use in one or two other course texts.
  5. Compare the treatment of nature in Emerson’s “Nature” (the first eleven pages) to its treatment in Weisman’s “Earth without People.” You are welcome to draw upon other course texts to help your comparison of these two essays.
  6. Discuss the various types of transformations that happen in the woods, using all three ballads: “Lord Randall,” “Thomas Rhymer,” and “Robin Hood and Little John.” What are the significances of these transformations?

Essay Checklist

  1. No title page
  2. One-inch (2.5 cm) margins on all sides.
  3. 12-point Times New Roman font.
  4. Four lines of identifying information in the top left corner of the first page: your name, prof name, course, and date you submit.
  5. Title of essay: centred and not underlined, bolded, or in a larger font.
  6. The first lines of all paragraphs (except perhaps the first) are indented.
  7. All lines are double spaced. Block quotations and first-page identifying information can be single spaced.
  8. No extra blank space between paragraphs.
  9. Use left-margin justification (“align text left”): not full justification.
  10. Do not use subheadings for this essay.
  11. Make sure all your quotations are accurate.
  12. Prose quotations of more than four lines of your essay are presented as block quotations.
  13. Poetry quotations of more than three lines of the poem are presented as block quotations.
  14. Poetry quotations of three lines or less: please use “|” (not “/”) to separate lines of the poem: “Behold her, single in the field, | Yon solitary Highland Lass!” (1-2).
  15. Do not use the following words in your own writing: amongst, amidst, whilst.
  16. A Works Cited page is included, on a separate page.
  17. Please always include a URL in your Works Cited list when citing an online resource.
  18. Do not use underline anywhere in your essay: use italics instead. The only reason to use underline is when you are quoting something that itself uses underline.


Marc R. Plamondon, Ph.D. Department of English Studies Nipissing University