The children are afraid of him because of all the stories they hear about him from the people in Maycomb. For example, Miss Stephanie tells the children that while Boo was sitting in the living room cutting a magazine, he "drove the scissors into his parent's leg, pulled them out, wiped them on his pants, and resumed his activities." (p.11) After hearing stories like these, the children consider him to be evil. Gradually they assume more about Boo
You can tell he is having a fit because he will be frothing at the mouth and flailing his arms above his head and acting like the cookie monster from Sesame Street. Producer: Why was he put into an Institution in the first place? Old Fork used to be a plumber but was kidnapped in 1997 and tortured and forced to watch ever single Cookie Monster scene ever made and even a Pokémon episode, this is what made him insane and start his first rampage and then sentenced to the Asylum. Producer: Is there any idea where he is at the moment? We think that he is in the North Lintiest area.
He slowly opens his victims door and he shines a single ray of light on his employers eye. “And this I did for seven long nights...but I found the eye always closed and so it was imposible to do the work”. This nightly ritual ends when the caretaker begins to hear a heart beat. The caretaker's insanity led him to hallucinate. On the eighth night, as usual, the caretaker is at the bedroom door and he sees the eye is open.
“As l leave, I know I am leaving my Best-Friend.” The floorboards creak beneath my feet. The sound pierces the dead of night, echoes throughout the landing, and fills me with terror. Oh no! Had I blown my cover? I check the door behind me, the one where the dreaded monster sleeps, listening for any warning signs that he had woken and would come flying out the door in rage.
He suspects more than one murderer was involved. He is unsure of motive, because there was little money in the house that could be stolen. Also, he guesses that the murderers were close to the family because they seem to have known the layout of the house. Mr. Clutter was tied down in the furnace room, his neck was slit, and he was shot in the head. Kenyon was tied down to a couch in the basement rec room and shot, while Nancy and Mrs. Clutter were tied down and shot in their respective beds.
Curley made life really unpleasent for his wife on the ranch. He never had a proper conversation with her throughout the book and never cared how she felt. Curley kept “his hand soft for his wife” and went around showing off to other men about it. Curley is always resentful and angry towards everyone on the ranch, he has a problem with big men even though he is described as small in the book. Everyone on the ranch called Curleys Wife a ''tart'' because she flirts and the ranch men said ''Shes got the eyes''.
However, I feel no more fear toward him now but only pity and sympathy. If he was in front of me, I would hug him and cry together for his tragedy. This novel, Frankenstein, is not the amusing horror story that conveys thrill to the readers all the time, but opaque story that makes reader think more seriously toward the world and themselves. Irresponsible Frankenstein who created the monster and left him behind and the monster which wanted to get harmony with human but
In the opening scene of the novel, Bigger must confront a rat in his family’s one-room apartment. He overcomes the rat by throwing a shoe at it and killing it. The rat symbolizes the fate, feelings, and actions of the main character. The parallels between the rat and Bigger Thomas are unmistakable. Bigger enters civilization like the rat cunningly enters his family’s home and is killed.
I guess you could say I liked bad boys back in the day. “Davie, what’s wrong? Tell me why you’re in time-out.” Davie kept his face in his knees and said, “I hit Mary, so Ms. Karen said I can’t help hang up the Christmas decorations and my decorations won’t get put up either.” I patted Davie on the head. Even though I loved Davie, I didn’t like the fact that he hit Mary. Mary was my friend, and my mother always told me brother that hitting a girl was wrong.
The word “Daddy” also reveals how young she is to call her father daddy. Her innocence is primarily shown when she discuss the “wooly-headed [man]”. This man is equivalent to the boogey man in that he roams the night and scares young children. The “hairy man”, is presumed to be an actual person, but his mythical like qualities make him appear to be a monster running wildly through the dark. The narrator’s innocence is shown through the boogey man figure because most children don’t know about the real monsters of the world.