Pollen states in his book, “You can eat whatever you want as long as you make it yourself. ” In Othello by William Shakespeare, Iago says in Act II, scene iii, “Reputation is an idle and most false imposition; oft got without merit and lost without deserving. ”
Shakespeare notes in his diary, “I am the poor man’s playwright. ” Pollen recommends, “Eat food. Mostly plants. ”
Pollen advocates for taking responsibility for one’s food choices, for eating “whatever you want as long as you make it yourself,” a tall order for some.
Othello notes, “For she has eyes and she chose me. ” Pollen asks the question, “Why don’t we get to know our food?” The last line of the poem “Sestina: Altaforte” by Ezra Pound states, “Hell blot black for always the thought ‘Peace’!”
Everyone knows the saying, “What goes in must come out. ” One is reminded of the familiar phrase, “It takes one to know one. ”
She did not want to bring up his “issue” in mixed company. The “in depth discussion” of the problem felt insufficient at best.
“Where is my cat?” the woman screamed. I demanded, “Let me see her. ”
“What time is it?” the man asked. “Chop, chop,” she said.
He said, “I can’t make ballet class tonight, son. ” They yelled, “You hooligans!” “We’re late,” she said to her sister. “Tell me you love me, “ he said to his lover.
“The best way to eat food,” Pollen argues, “is to make it yourself. ” (From the original quote, “The best way to eat food is to make it yourself at home, whenever you can. ”) “The best investments today,” according to Smith, “are commodities and emerging-market stocks. ” (From the original quote, “The best investments today are commodities and emerging-market stocks, not domestic stocks and bonds. ”
“So he said to me, ‘You’re going to be a great success,’ and I believed him. ”
For example, if you were citing the poem One Art by Elizabeth Bishop, it would appear as “One Art” by Elizabeth Bishop. If you were citing the short story Ironhead by Aimee Bender, it would appear as “Ironhead” by Aimee Bender. If you were citing the chapter The Boy Who Lived from Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone by J. K. Rowling, it would appear as “The Boy Who Lived” from Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone by J. K. Rowling.
For example, if you were citing the article The President Wants to Keep Us in the Dark by Marc Decosta, it would appear as “The President Wants to Keep Us in the Dark” by Marc Decosta. If you were citing the essay The Fourth State of Matter by Jo Ann Beard, it would appear as “The Fourth State of Matter” by Jo Ann Beard.
Do not use italics or underline the title of plays. If you are citing a collection of plays by the same playwright, for example, The Collected Plays of Arthur Miller, you would use italics for the title, not quotation marks: The Collected Plays of Arthur Miller.
Did you like “The Crucible”? I read “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” by Edward Albee on the train today.