[In Lamb to the Slaughter]How is the relationship between Mary Maloney and her husband?( from 3rd person Perspective)
[2023-04-03 12:52:58]
Please tell the story from the perspective of the third person centering on Mary Maloney. On the surface, she and her husband seem to be sending a healthy and healthy married life. She is a kind and devoted wife who loves her husband and fetus.
"For her and everything she did was doing a slow smile all the time when she sat down and stitched her head was hung down very quietly, with a wonderful translucent quality, soft mouth, The eyes, and their new serene looks, looks darker than before.
The room was warm and clean, the curtains were opened, the two lamps fell on her and the other was opposite the empty chair. On the sideboard behind her, two tall glasses, soda, whiskey. Fresh ice cube in the thermos.
Mary seems to be the perfect wife defined by the early society, like the first few decades of the 20th century. She met her husband at the door, picked her coat and hung it in the closet. Then she will offer slippers and drinks. As she knew that he needed a quiet time to relax after a day's work, she sit and quietly stitched. She knew him intimately, she loved him till night, complaining of tiredness until night, "He is sitting in a chair, because he enters the door, or slowly goes through the room." There was not.
On the other hand, Patrick seems to provide their important needs. He was hoping for a good husband - he went to work, he came back at the same time everyday, he followed the same everyday work everyday
The audience was able to discover the boredom and dullness of this life, so when announcing that he wanted to leave her tonight it was not quite surprising. He promised to care for Mary and his children economically, and it was totally insensitive. "But do not make a big fuss anyway, I hope not to do it.
It is obvious at this point that their marriage is not so happy. Mary lives in a place like a dream. "She likes to enjoy in front of this man, and it feels as if the person sunbathing feels the sun," I realized she was a wife and a pregnant mother, but her husband It was not the case.
The reader was very sympathetic to Mary as she stumbled upon refusal and efforts to maintain normal conditions. When she eventually killed her husband, some readers may think that makes sense because she wanted that person and was rejected. Others may feel her dedication suffocated, and marriage always ends in some form of collapse.
In the LAMB to the Slaughter class we read "Lamb to the Slaughter" written by Roal Dahl. The story happened overnight at the house of Maloneese, they seemed to be ordinary couple. Mary Maloney is waiting for her husband Patrick, the policeman to go home. Mary is happy to be pregnant, and I am looking forward to his return home. But Patrick brought her an annoying surprise. He said he was leaving her. Mary entered the state of shock and whiteness (Dahl 24) Patrick's existence completed Mary as she was economically and emotionally dependent on him. Her behavior at the beginning of the story is quiet, hence socially accepted, and a housewife that all women should be willingly responsible. She did not do it.
Roald Dahl's "Lamb to Slaughter" is a short story that police were murdered by his wife Mary, Patrick Maloney. Mary immediately resumed her murder case after her husband incorrectly announced her withdrawal from her unborn child. Due to the close relationship with Patrick's police colleagues and the inefficiency of the investigation of crime scene in the 1950s, she was able to hide her own truck and avoid doubt. The story title is actually a phrase that conveys two meanings - a surprise to make Patrick's murder and a weapon to commit it.
In the lamb for the slaughter, the villain is Mary Maloney. She married the victim Patrick Maloney. Mary Maloney looks pretty and looks very beautiful "Her skin is her sixth month with her child ... so wonderful translucent quality, soft mouth, eyes kill her husband The reason for doing it is to tell her that she will leave her to others.Mary was