>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<"> >> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<">

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Annie Dillard Living Like Weasels. >>> How to write an essay? Order on the website HelpWriting.Net <<<. Annie Dillard Living Like Weasels Annie Dillard.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Annie Dillard Living Like Weasels. >>> How to write an essay? Order on the website HelpWriting.Net <<<. Annie Dillard Living Like Weasels Annie Dillard."— Presentation transcript:

1 Annie Dillard Living Like Weasels. >>> How to write an essay? Order on the website HelpWriting.Net <<<. Annie Dillard Living Like Weasels Annie Dillard decided to name her essay Living Like Weasels in order to express her respect of the weasels' way of life and how someday she hopes to emulate it. Annie first expresses her respect for the weasel when she recalls the story of the eagle and the weasel's skull, this example showed how obedient a weasel is and how it sticks to its instincts. Next Annie shows her desire to live like a weasel when she compliments them repeatedly on their simple way of life. And lastly and perhaps the most striking way Annie shows us that she wants to live like a weasel is when she actually imagines her self grabbing a weasel and being brought down underground to live with them. While the tile of the essay might first be quite shocking, after reading >>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<

2 Essay Writers Service - " HelpWriting.Net ". Annie Dillard Living Like Weasels Summary Tenacity of the Weasel At the age of 10, Annie Dillard finds interest in nature. She expresses her interest in nature with her essay "Living Like Weasels". Her essay describes the importance of the weasels way of living in comparison to human lives. A lesson is believed to be derived from the weasels lifestyle. Dillard presents her essay to furthermore prove the level of greediness and overflow of luxuries that humans possess. The weasel relates closest to primitive humans. Weasels are described as very tenacious; meaning "persistent" or "determined". Dillard says "The man could in no way pry the tiny weasel off, and he had to walk half a mile to water, the weasel dangling from his palm, and soak him off like a stubborn label" (119). The persistence of the weasel is quite different than that of a modern human. People are often quick to give up and have little persistence. She mentions, "Sometimes he lives in his den for two days without leaving" (119). Yet again the weasels lifestyle differs from the standard human. Primitive humans are to most... Show more content on Helpwriting.net... Annie Dillard implies this throughout her essay. She writes, "I think I blinked, I think I retrieved my brain from the weasel's brain...the urgent current of instinct" (121). Because humans commonly make slower choices based on thought, the weasel is seen as superior for being able to instinctively decide often with positive outcomes. Though Dillard mentions "I don't think I can learn from a wild animal how to live in particular" (121), she does. Dillard states "The weasel lives in necessity and we live in choice, hating necessity and dying at the last ignobly in its talons" (121). This expresses the greed of humans and how they differ from weasels. From my experience, humans take much for granted and expect an abundance of luxuries. If humans lived like weasels, they would be more grateful for their necessities and less expecting of >>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<

3 Mba Essay Writing Services - " HelpWriting.Net ". Analysis Of Annie Dillard 's Living Like Weasels Rhetorical Analysis Essay Annie Dillard's "Living Like Weasels" details Dillard's encounter with a weasel in the wild, and her attempts to come to terms with her feelings about said meeting. Dillard not only goes into great detail about the experience itself, but she also provides a very good background on weasels, as well as others' experiences with the animal. Through her use of background analysis on weasels, as well as with her own experience, Dillard uses the three rhetorical appeals to argue why we humans could and should "live like weasels". Dillard starts "Living Like Weasels" by using the persuasion model of Pathos. Dillard describes how weasels behave and places a vivid image in the mind of the reader when she says: "A weasel is wild. Who knows what he thinks? He sleeps in his underground den, his tail draped over his nose.....Outside he stalks rabbits, mice, muskrats and birds, killing more bodies than he can eat warm" (Dillard 1). This example of pathos makes the reader feel as if they are seeing the weasel for themselves and also invokes carnal emotions within the reader, causing a sort of envy in the reader of the life that the weasel leads. Such a wild life would seem preferable to that of a monotonous one, which is the point that Ms. Dillard is attempting to make. Another example of pathos being used in the text is when Ms. Dillard says: "One naturalist refused to kill a weasel who was socketed into his hand deeply as a rattlesnake. The man could in no way pry >>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<

4 Cheap Essay Writer Service - " HelpWriting.Net ". Summary Of Living Like Weasels Pursuit of Calling In "Living Like Weasels," Annie Dillard recalls an encounter with a weasel and connects the weasel's tenacity to the human pursuit of one's calling. In a forest, Dillard describes the encounter with the weasel when they lock eyes; she then explains what is inside of the weasel's brain, his habits and traits. (MS7) She explains that a weasel's living is one desire: instinct, a weasel's tenacity to lock onto its prey and to not let go. Dillard then compares the weasel's tenacity with the human calling; humans urge to understand their calling and refuse to quit until they have achieved their goal. Additionally, Dillard offers an exhortation to live in obedience to that calling. (MS6) As well as obedience, instinct requires the human capacity for reason. Though animals respond unquestioningly to instinct, human obedience to instinct implies choice. Dillard explains the choice to pursue your calling: "We could, you know. We can live any way we want. People take vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience– even of silence – by choice" (1994, p. 110). Dillard states that humans all have a choice for what they end up pursuing. They have a reason to pursue it. Although the weasel only lives by instinct and does not have any reason, humans desire to understand their calling and pursuit it; not letting go until the calling is achieved. All animals follow their instincts, it is all they recognize to do: "I was seeing, and the weasel felt the yank of separation, the >>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<

5 Higher English Essay Help - " HelpWriting.Net ". Living Like Weasels Summary Annie Dillard's "Living Like Weasels" provides the reader with insight into a fateful encounter that caused Dillard to delve into how she, and human beings as a whole, decides what she devotes her lifetime to. Dillard compares humanity's choice to the life of the weasel, an animal that only lives for itself and in the moment rather than the comfortable and planned life of a person. During this story, the reader is given some backstory into how weasels function in their world and how it can be compared to human life. Dillard opens her story detailing a weasel's livelihood, painting a vivid portrait of the weasel in its natural habitat and how it functions. We are absorbed into the weasel's psyche as we are given an example of the weasel's self–destructive and stubborn determination to fiercely grip onto an eagle's neck, a fatal choice that ensures that weasel's demise. This awe– inspiring and captivating event creates a sense of mystery and brews a plethora of inquiries in the readers' and writer's minds, it makes one... Show more content on Helpwriting.net... Humans typically live more refined lives compared to that of a wild animal, but what if, like the weasel, we all lived a life controlled by instinct rather than insight? Dillard goes on to express her regret of not seizing the moment and, like the eagle, becoming one with the weasel to bask in nature and think of time as merely a life source like blood rather than a measurement of deadlines. Unlike weasels and other wild animals, we as humans have the choice to live as we please so we could either transform ourselves into a more primitive being or resume our domesticated life. Choice is an important part of human life, but is not only an ability possessed by us as some animals can have the pleasure of choosing what they can do; but not necessarily choices that can completely revolutionize how they >>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<

6 College Essay Writing Services - " HelpWriting.Net ". Living Like Weasels Summary In the essay "Living like Weasels" the author analogizes the rugged lifestyle that is a weasels' to that of a complex humans'. He jumpstarts his writing by repeating the masculine pronouns, "he" and "his" numerously to describe this four legged mammal. Later encroaching on almost alarming territory filling his audience in on two grotesque stories exemplifying a weasels savage behavior. After an encounter with a weasel in its natural wooded habitat the author begins to trail about how this wild animal was able to get inside his head and inhabit it for quite a long amount of time. The author explains this exhilarating vividly as, "a certain beating of the brains with all the charge and intimate grate of rubbed balloons." Should the audience be >>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<

7 College Essay Review Services - " HelpWriting.Net ". Annie Dillard Living Like Weasels Summary The essay "Living Like Weasels" is written by Annie Dillard. Dillard appears to be an eccentric nature lover who's trying to make sense of her life. She proclaims that we should live like weasels because they live only by their one necessity. At first, this does seem like an admirable way to live. We often perceive weasels as these small, innocent creatures that can do no harm to us. Besides, what harm could an animal 7 ounces heavy and the size of our finger do? It's easy to see why Annie Dillard would want us to live like weasels. After all, these creatures live with a sense of simplicity by chasing after their one necessity. By living like weasels we are able to live without a bias. Dillard sees that finding our one necessity is crucial to survival. She wants us to "stalk" our one necessity and see where it takes us without interfering with it. Dillard encourages this philosophy onto the reader, presenting it as the best way to live life and maybe even the only to live. (Dillard 15)... Show more content on Helpwriting.net... Despite, a weasels small size,it is a ferocious animal. In fact, she begins theessay describing the fierce nature of the weasel, She paints us this scenario of an eagle being shot out of the sky and the skull of a weasel still holding on for dear life. She later mentions the weasel's "fierce and pointed will." It seems odd then, to hold this lifestyle to such a high prestige. As the essay progresses, she begins to instill this motif of living mindlessly. Dillard goes on to describe the weasel's lifestyle as one of which they see everything and remember nothing. She even says that she might even learn something from living mindlessly. She follows this by saying, it is a "pure"way to live. So if living like weasels not only promotes, but encourages violence and mindlessness, what does Dillard truly mean by living like >>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<

8 Custom Essay Services - " HelpWriting.Net ". Annie Dillard's Essay 'Living Like Weasels' In the essay, "Living Like Weasels", Annie Dillard analyzes a weasel and how its behavior can be viewed as a lesson toward people who want to live a perfect life. Dillard relates her observations of a weasel to the characteristics of a human in this essay. The overall subject of the essay would be the idea of freedom. The theme that this work of literature addresses is that people should go after their ambitions no matter what hindrance is trying to stop their dreams from coming true. This piece of literature is addressed toward people who want live in necessity like a weasel instead of like a human who lives in choice. The author, Annie Dillard, has an attitude that is highly passionate about how people should live their lives. Dillard's >>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<

9 I Need Help Writing A Essay - " HelpWriting.Net ". Living Like Weasels By Annie Dillard In the essay that I chose "Living like Weasels" the author, Annie Dillard wrote about her encounter after seeing a wild weasel for the first time in her life. The weasel was ten inches long, thin as a curve, a muscled ribbon, brown as fruitwood, soft – furred, and alert. His face was fierce, small, pointed as Lizard's, and with two black eyes. Her idea is that humans can benefit from living as wild and as free as a weasel. Dillard uses comparisons between the life of a wild weasel and the life of humans while exploring the theme of the quest for identity/coming of age. This essay begins with the author presenting a description of weasels, giving the audience heaps of details about the habits of the weasel, a physical description, where it lives, its environment, and how it acts. She also tells us how Ernest Thompson shot an eagle from the sky and found the skull of a weasel clinging to its throat symbolizing how the weasel died protecting its life. Dillard then moves on to elaborate on her experience where she is sitting on a tree trunk near Hollins Pond, "a remarkable piece of shallowness" (146), then weasel appears from a wild rose bush and presents itself in front of her. She looks it in the eyes as it looks back, then the weasel disappeared following its instincts. After observing the weasel, she emphasizes her thoughts on how humans should live more like them. The significance of this story and its title lies in the desire to be able to live life aggressive, vicious, and >>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<

10 Legitimate Essay Writing Service - " HelpWriting.Net ". Analysis Of Living Like Weasels By Annie Dillard In "Living Like Weasels" by Annie Dillard she argues that a wild animal, a weasel, can show us how to live a meaningful life. Just like in the myth both authors believe their is a connection between humanity and nature. For example when Dillard says "a weasel lives as he's meant to yielding at every moment to the perfect freedom of single necessity". (Dillard, Annie. "Living Like Weasel.") Dillard is saying that we should live the life we're meant to. Another quote is "I would like to live as I should, as the weasel lives as he should". (Dillard, Annie. "Living Like Weasel.") She argues both her and the weasel should live their lives as they should, they don't have to live a specific one. In the myth they don't have one specific animal to >>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<

11 Buy Cheap Essays Online - " HelpWriting.Net ". Living Like Weasels By Annie Dillard "That is, I don't think I can learn from a wild animal how to live in particular – shall I suck warm blood, hold my tail high, walk with my footprints precisely over the prints of my hands?– but I might learn something of mindlessness, something of the purity of living in the physical senses and the dignity of living without bias or motive." In "Living Like Weasels", the author Annie Dillard, encounters a weasel. Typically, in the animal kingdom a weasel is viewed as an unremarkable, and even disgusting animal. However, with the appearance of a weasel, Annie encounters a sort of revelation, or epiphany, about life and how it should be lived. In a particularly poignant quotation in paragraph 14, Annie says, "That is, I don't think I can... Show more content on Helpwriting.net... She missed her chance of grasping the weasel, her chance in living like the weasel, to live in simplicity and necessity. "I missed my chance; I should have gone for the throat." She has a powerful urge in transforming her life. The weasel's mode of existence evokes the instinct in preservation of her own human manner of being. Annie also shows her entrapment; whether she has the ability to live with "mindlessness" like the weasel or not. Ultimately she means that we should grasp the necessities of life and never let it go. She continues with juxtapositions between man and nature and how man is capable of "living under the wild rose as wild weasels" and how we can all go "wild" referring animals. "Down is a good place to go where the mind is single," this refers to a simple or single mind is the best place to be. "Down is out" means to come out of your current mindset and go to your "careless senses," like the weasel's. Then Annie goes on and asks a rhetorical question; "could two live that way?" meaning if we as humans can actually live "unchallenged" and like the weasel. Rhetorical Devices: Alliteration and Repetition: "held on, held on"–emphasizing that she should of held on to the weasel. "We could live under the wild rose wild as weasels." Parallelism: "I could live two days.....sniffing bird bones, blinking, >>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<

12 Essay Editing Services - " HelpWriting.Net ". Purpose Of Living Like Weasels In the short story "Living Like Weasels" authored by Annie Dillard, the role of a small, furry, brown–colored rodent's life develops an extreme significance as the story progresses. According to Dillard, the life that a weasel lives is care free and passionate. Weasels are very tenacious creatures and what they have their eye set on something they want, they go and get it. Also, when Dillard says "The weasel lives in necessity and we live in choice" in "Living Like Weasels," the words can be deeply felt by the reader; we are able to not only feel Dillard's passion for this underlying opinion of hers, but readers can also develop their own view on what she is saying and find evidence to prove their thoughts (121). The way that everyday... Show more content on Helpwriting.net... Secondly, Dillard believes also that the lifestyle of a weasel, if lived and followed by a human, will deliver this person to a successful life. As Dillard references in the story, and also in the introductory paragraph, Weasels live on necessity while people are living on choice. By this, she is implying that weasels live their everyday lives day by day, they do not stress about what is to come next, the focus on what they need to get done at that moment, not what is down the road. Weasels intellectual ability allows them to base their actions off of instinct, rather than off of research, predictions and estimations. Weasels are able to figure out what the best option is for them at any given moment, they do not over – analyze what may be coming their way; weasels just live their lives the way they should believe: carefree. When Dillard describes humans as thriving off of choice, this really begins to make readers think that what she is saying is true. Everyday that a person wakes up, he/she is immediately bombarded with possibility and question. Should I make my bed? Which bottle of shampoo should I use? What shirt should I wear to day? Are some of the question people may ask themselves as they wake up and prepare for the day. We are able to make decision at every point in are life, and some decisions can make or break your career; one bad decision could even take away your family, house >>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<

13 Essays Help - " HelpWriting.Net ". Annie Dillard's essay "Living Like Weasels" exhibits the mindless, unbiased, and instinctive ways she proposes humans should live by observing a weasel at a nearby pond close to her home. Dillard encounters about a sixty second gaze with a weasel she seems to entirely connect with. In turn, this preludes a rapid sequence of questions and propositions about "living as we should". Unfortunately, we tend to consume our self with our surroundings and distractions in life, which is not a problem until we are blatantly told. How have we strayed so far from our once instinctive lifestyle? The idea of "living as we should" or living in purity and necessity can be quite impressionistic, especially if viewed in the correct way. Dillard begins her... Show more content on Helpwriting.net... Dillard never fully states how or why she has decided to adopt this quality she learned from an animal, but instead discusses the topic more broadly in order for the idea to have more expansive applications. When discussing purity, necessity, and persistency, Dillard states, "I think it would be well, and proper, and obedient, and pure, to grasp your one necessity and not let it go, to dangle from it limp wherever it takes you." Not defining her necessity in life or the necessity she believes we should grasp tightly to, directly contributes to the intricacy of this essay. This statement could make her audience think, "How could I relate this to my life?" One could relate this idea to relationships in general, spiritual relationships, or relationships with themselves. The possibilities are endless. Dillard has used her personal experiences to communicate a compelling message of "living as we should". In some ways, David Searcy also uses these methods to indirectly portray these thoughts of "living in the moment" in his essay "The Hudson River School." Uncovering the title of Searcy's essay is substantial in order to find meaning. The Hudson River School was a mid–nineteenth century American art movement by landscape painters whose aesthetic views were influenced by romanticism. A story about the death of a bothersome coyote prevails, but the same idea of connection to the world–rather than our >>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<

14 Essay Writing Service Cheap - " HelpWriting.Net ". Living like Weasels In the essay "Living like Weasels", the author Annie Dillard wrote about her first encounter after she saw a real wild weasel for the first time in her life. The story began when she went to Hollins Pond which is a remarkable place of shallowness where she likes to go at sunset and sit on a tree trunk. Dillard traced the motorcycle path in all gratitude through the wild rose up in to high grassy fields and while she was looking down, a weasel caught her eyes attention; he was looking up at her too. The weasel was ten inches long, thin as a curve, a muscled ribbon, brown as fruitwood, soft –furred, and alert. His face was fierce, small, pointed as Lizard's, and with two black eyes. They exchanged the glances as... Show more content on Helpwriting.net... Then she began to talk about her own story with weasels, by describing the scene and the place of her story; she explained why did she go to Hollins Pond? And what she used to do in that place? To give an image to the audience about the place where she saw the weasels for the first time in her life. After that Dillard started to put the events of her story together, like how was her first meeting with the weasel and what she experienced from that meeting. The author also has a distinctive way of description. She described the weasels in such a creative way. She could give a sample picture about the weasel without drawing it. Also, Dillard used an emotional style when she wrote about her first incident with the weasel and how they exchanged the glances as lovers. Finally, I believe that Annie Dillard is a very skilled author. At the beginning she attracted the audience attention by a question, then she started to communicate with the audience brains, sometime she made the audience used their imagination to think about how do weasels look like and sometimes she pulled their emotions, and at the end she made the audience thought about their lives and compare it with weasel's >>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<

15 Top Essay Writing Websites - " HelpWriting.Net ". Annie Dillard Living Like Weasels Summary An Analysis of Naturalism and the Artist in and "Living Like Weasels" and "Total Eclipse" Annie Dillard Question 1: The transformative experience that Dillard experiences occurs when she is traveling through the mountainous regions of washing state en route to see an eclipse. During the eclipse Dillard begins to realize that she cannot measure life through her limited mind. The effect of the eclipse o the colorations of the natural surroundings define a transformative event, which she could never imagine in the limitless possibilities of nature: "I turned back to the sun. It was going. The sun was going, and the world was wrong. The grasses were wrong; they were platinum (Dillard, "Total Eclipse" 8). These experiences define the slow realization that the human ego wants to control our perception of the world, but nature can always... Show more content on Helpwriting.net... In many ways, she sat by her tree in order to empty her mind of the busy thoughts, and the emotional pressures of daily life. However, when she observed the fierceness of the weasel, Dillard began to understand a deeper understanding of life through necessity in the wild and the comfort of human life in Nature. "The weasel lives in necessity and we live in choice hating necessity and dying at the ignobly in its talons" (Dillard "Living Like Weasels" 125). In my own life, I am constantly under pressure to be a stay home mother and raise my children, which I feel is not being appreciated by my husband. On the other hand, I am trying to finish my degree, so that I have a certified background to be independently employed outside of the home. I can relate to Dillard's point of view because of the shortness of life, and the necessity of living it to the fullest. In this context, it is important to understand the fulfillment of life in the present tense versus being regretful about opportunities not >>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<

16 Rutgers Essay Help - " HelpWriting.Net ". Living Like Weasels Rhetorical Analysis Living Like Weasels Rhetorical Analysis In her essay "Living Like Weasels", Annie Dillard explores the idea of following a single calling in life, and attaching one's self it this calling as the weasel on Ernest Thompson Seton's eagle had. Dillard presents her argument using the analogy of a weasel and how the; "weasel lives as he's meant to, yielding at every moment to the perfect freedom of single necessity" (Dillard). In constructing her argument, however, she often contradicts herself undermining the effectiveness of her argument and leaving the reader confused. Dillard primarily uses ethos and pathos to support her argument and concerning both, the reader discovers; inconsistencies in her character, and conflicts between her perceptions of the weasel's emotions and its actions. Concerning her ethos, Dillard presents herself as a part of suburbia and then is suddenly, inexplicably overcome by the desire to live wild. Dillard also uses very detailed language throughout the essay in describing her surroundings and thoughts, however; this further undermines her argument and ethos as she is trying to convince the reader that she could simply become as simple and single minded as the weasel she has focused her argument around. With her use of pathos, Dillard begins her essay with descriptions of the weasel's brutality, yet; she concludes by stating the weasel lives as is necessary. By simplifying her experience and presenting a reasonable explanation for why she wanted to >>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<

17 Essayhelp - " HelpWriting.Net ". In "Living like Weasels", author Annie Dillard uses rhetorical devices to convey that life would be better lived solely in a physical capacity, governed by "necessity", executed by instinct. Through Dillard's use of descriptive imagery, indulging her audience, radical comparisons of nature and civilization and anecdotal evidence, this concept is ultimately conveyed. Incontrovertibly, one of the first things one may notice upon reading the work, is the use of highly explicit imagery connecting her thoughts and ideologies. With these techniques, her whole impression of the essay establishes an adversary relationship between the natural world and the human world. In summary, the author imposes that with weasels, much more freedom is granted through instinctual living, rather than as humans, who live with choices. Through her vivid and truly descriptive imagery, one may see emphasize and glorification to the way of life these little creatures live. Dillard writes "I think I retrieved my brain from the weasel's brain," from this hyperbole, she greatly induces her extreme and genuine fascination with these weasels. This device ultimately emphasizes the central idea that we as humans would be better off living and thinking like weasels. When exploring future into the work, one may continue seeing this technique into play as Dillard states, "The man could in no way pry the tiny weasels off, and he had to walk half a mile to water, the weasels dangling from his palm, and soak hi, >>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<

18 Essay On Community Service - " HelpWriting.Net ". Living Like Weasels Annie Dillard In "Living Like Weasels" by Annie Dillard, I believe "The weasel lives in necessity and we live in choice," is one of the core ideas discussed in the essay. This made me think about humans' current situation, as compared to the weasel's day– to– day life of acquiring necessities. Although Annie Dillard speaks towards living in necessity and against choice, I believe our so– called "choice" came from humans' past achievements, innovations in technology, and development in thought. Humans weren't born with choice, we also were living in necessity for some time near the origination of humans. I interpret living in necessity as living solely for oxygen, food, water, shelter, and sleep. But others may interpret it differently, as the term "necessity" >>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<

19 Custom College Essay - " HelpWriting.Net ". Annie Dillard's Essay 'Living Like Weasels' In Annie Dillard's essay "Living Like Weasels" she describes her encounter with a wild weasel. Dillard conveys the idea that humans live so much by choice it is becoming a burden, and that we need to live more through necessity. By focusing on purpose you will prosper more in life. Dillard stresses the idea that humans should live more like weasels by comparing man vs. nature and a weasel's natural instinct. Annie Dillard begins by comparing man vs nature to show how our freedom to choose has caused us to ruin our surroundings. She begins to describe the area by the pond to show how peaceful and clean nature is while society is messy and chaotic. She says that "Under every bush is a muskrat hole or a beer can." this shows how society thinks >>> Get more content on Helpwriting.net <<<


Download ppt "Annie Dillard Living Like Weasels. >>> How to write an essay? Order on the website HelpWriting.Net <<<. Annie Dillard Living Like Weasels Annie Dillard."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google