The bad guys who compare Fosco and Glide with evil people are jealous, unwieldy people, and in most cases he or she is smart. From white women to Charles Dickens' Oliver, there are villains in almost all excellent British literature. A villain usually plays a big part in a book, but usually it has two faces. They are playing in numerous ways to maximize the emotions of people, and in many cases. Among the white women, there are two villains: Count Fosco and Sir Percival Glide.
When Anne Catharic became sick, a London doctor, Alfred Goodrich, was called to the House of London in Earl Fosco. To the injured woman, I spent the last time with Lady Perseval's wife, Mrs. Grade. When she died of a heart attack, he recorded her death. This official record brought difficulties to the Count of Fosco and Serpelci. The day of death was inconsistent with the day Laura left Blackwater Park.
Six months later, Sir Percivale and Good Lady returned to his house at Blackwater Park in Hampshire State and returned home with Glide's friend Count Fosco (married Laura's aunt). At the request of Laura, Marian lived in Blackwater, and I learned that Glide was economically troubled. Pleased, Laura refused to bully with Laura, trying to sign a document that would allow him to use her £ 20,000 marriage settlement. Ann who got sick now went to the Black Water Park, contacted Laura and said she had a secret to destroy Glad 's life. Before she reveals that secret, Glide discovered communication between them, and Laura became very delusive, knowing his secret, and let her keep Blackwater I believed that. Because Laura refused to give up on his possessions and his secret knowledge of Anne, Fosco exchanged two identities using similarities between Laura and Anne.
The main characters are Walter Heart Lite, Miss Marian Halcom, Miss Laura Fairy, Uncasaric, Sir Percival Glide, Count Fosco. The 28 - year - old painting teacher Walter Heart - light started a story. Frederic Fairley hired him to teach him two young prostitutes at Limmeridge House. Before going to Limmeridge, he met overnight on his way to London, but a strange woman in white dress asked for help. She ran away. They did not talk much, but Walter learned that women knew where he wanted to teach pictures and people there.