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Leper Lepelliers Functions As A Minor Character

2023-03-22 06:31:14

After returning to school 15 years after graduation, Gene Forrester remembered his era at Devonshire. In his own words, "I always think that there was a Devonschool on the day I was enrolled, so that my emotions are stronger than deep tacit. I am like a candle full of energy and blinking I left that day.

Elwin 'Leper' Leepierier: Leper is a friend of Finny and Gene, an important member of the Summer Super Suicide Association. He was the first student to join the class. At the latter stage of the novel, Riper joined the army, so I felt spiritual confusion. He is a witness to Jean's "trial" and proves that Gene is the cause of Finnish collapse. All parties allege that this novel suggests homosexuality between the gene and Finney, including those who support homosexual reading novels and those who treat homosexuality as immorality. For example, there is no substantial female character (and a descriptive activity), but this book was challenged as "dirty, useless sexual novel" at New York school district Vernon-Verona-Sherill (1980).

The three main characters of the novel are Jean, Phineas (Finney) and Edwin Ruppelier (Riper), and Jean is a novelist who tells his experience in Devon, 16 and 17 years old. He is a close friend of Finney. Finny is a roommate, a close friend of Gene. He is considered to be the best athlete in Devon. He is also known as a boy who does not make a mistake. Leper is always being made a fool of his classmates. When Fanny "falls" out of oak, he is an important person in the novel as he exists.

Of the students in Devon State, Leper Lepellier was adopted by the US Army and shipped to Europe. However, when Leper was considered to be in Europe, Gene received a letter to ask Leper to come to his house. I learned that Leper quit his job. He is crazy again. The war changed him from a harmless youth to a crazy person. He began to tell Jean all the horror stories about war until at least Jean's anger got up and ran away quickly. After Finney broke his feet for the second time, Gene went to visit him. Lying there, bound to the hospital bed, I was not happy to see Gene. FINNE 's temperament spewed out in a very inhumane way. He cried Jean constantly and blamed him for broken legs. But when Jean admitted that he did it, Finney began to cry. If he sees a real, honest gene, he believes it.