<p>I think it's okay. My essay wasn't that long either.</p>
<p>Lol, I think my prompt was the least complicated: "Analyze any two poems we have studied in class so far." I did Robert Frost's * A Road Not Taken * and Sylvia Plath's * The Mirror. * It was around 1000 words.</p>
<p>I used an essay from AP English Langauge on Macbeth... it's really short, handwritten and stuff, but my teacher wrote some good comments on it and she even added more comments to it when I told her I would send it to Middlebury. My only concern that is that it might bee too short, because it was an inclass essay....</p>
<p>I sent an in-class essay too. Mine's 4 pages and I'm not worried about the length...</p>
<p>mine is barely over a page double spaced</p>
<p>I sent in a two page paper that examined the origins of the word "campaign", and how its military beginnings have incredible relevance to the battle-like rhetoric we see so often in today's political landscape.</p>
<p>Mine is an in-class 35 minute-timed analyzation between two marriage proposals.</p>
<p>I have small writing, and it's front and back on college-ruled paper.</p>
<p>However, there are a zillion things crossed out.</p>
<p>It's a first draft and a practice essay, but I thought I'd send that one in since it pretty much a true indicator my method of thinking and writing, like basically every other in-class essay I've written. I included the prompt, which I scribbled all over.</p>