Friday, July 19, 2019
Pre-1914 Prose :: English Literature
Pre-1914 Prose     All five Victorian writers use mystery in there story's, but the word  mystery does not just mean one thing. The mystery in these story's are  either a whodunit or a superstitious type of mystery. A whodunit is  where the people in the story or the reader try and work out what the  mystery is, and a superstitious mystery is where it can not be  explained.    "Napoleon and The Spectre" by Charlotte Bronte is a traditional ghost  story where Napoleon is woken by a ghost. It is a suppositious mystery  as the reader does not know if the ghost actually exists. "The Red  Room" by H.G Wells is also a superstitious mystery. It is a  superstitious mystery because the reader does not know if the  happenings in "The Red Room" are a result of paranoia, or of a  supernatural cause.    "The Adventure of the Speckled Band" by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is  different to "Napoleon and The Spectre" and "The Red Room". As it is a  whodunit story. It is a whodunit story because the lead character  Sherlock Holmes, is trying to solve the mystery of if the woman was  killed or died of natural causes.    In the five stories there are two types of main characters. There's  the victim of the mystery and there is the solver of the mystery. The  victim is usually some one who is effected in a negative way by the  mystery. Also many of the victims are outsiders and loners. The solver  of the mystery is usually someone like Sherlock Holmes who solves the  mystery.    In "The Adventure of the Speckled Band", the main character is  Sherlock Holmes. He is the solver of the mystery. He is presented as a  man who has a great eye for detail. The reader can tell this because  he notices that the lady travelled by dog cart when he says "The left  arm of your jacket is splattered with mud." This makes him seem like  he has a good eye for detail as it is a unusual thing to notice  something so small.    In "The Red Room" the old couple are put across as very mysterious by  the way they are described and by the things they say. An example of  the way they are described is when the old woman is said to be "sat  staring hard into the fire, her pale eyes wide open." This makes the  old woman sound very mysterious as it is not a normal thing to be  staring hard into a fire and this makes her seem very strange. An  example of them being described as mysterious is when the narrator    					  Pre-1914 Prose  ::  English Literature  Pre-1914 Prose     All five Victorian writers use mystery in there story's, but the word  mystery does not just mean one thing. The mystery in these story's are  either a whodunit or a superstitious type of mystery. A whodunit is  where the people in the story or the reader try and work out what the  mystery is, and a superstitious mystery is where it can not be  explained.    "Napoleon and The Spectre" by Charlotte Bronte is a traditional ghost  story where Napoleon is woken by a ghost. It is a suppositious mystery  as the reader does not know if the ghost actually exists. "The Red  Room" by H.G Wells is also a superstitious mystery. It is a  superstitious mystery because the reader does not know if the  happenings in "The Red Room" are a result of paranoia, or of a  supernatural cause.    "The Adventure of the Speckled Band" by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is  different to "Napoleon and The Spectre" and "The Red Room". As it is a  whodunit story. It is a whodunit story because the lead character  Sherlock Holmes, is trying to solve the mystery of if the woman was  killed or died of natural causes.    In the five stories there are two types of main characters. There's  the victim of the mystery and there is the solver of the mystery. The  victim is usually some one who is effected in a negative way by the  mystery. Also many of the victims are outsiders and loners. The solver  of the mystery is usually someone like Sherlock Holmes who solves the  mystery.    In "The Adventure of the Speckled Band", the main character is  Sherlock Holmes. He is the solver of the mystery. He is presented as a  man who has a great eye for detail. The reader can tell this because  he notices that the lady travelled by dog cart when he says "The left  arm of your jacket is splattered with mud." This makes him seem like  he has a good eye for detail as it is a unusual thing to notice  something so small.    In "The Red Room" the old couple are put across as very mysterious by  the way they are described and by the things they say. An example of  the way they are described is when the old woman is said to be "sat  staring hard into the fire, her pale eyes wide open." This makes the  old woman sound very mysterious as it is not a normal thing to be  staring hard into a fire and this makes her seem very strange. An  example of them being described as mysterious is when the narrator    					    
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