Hello! William Fryer Harvey (1885-1937) is an author who mainly writes psychological thrillers, mysterious stories, and horror stories. As an enthusiastic member of Quaker, his work seems to oppose his religious beliefs (contrary) explore the themes of violence, death and fear. Harvey served during the First World War and received a heroic medal to save the life of a small officer caught by a damaged sunken destroyer. Note: For your convenience, I encourage you to use the "find" button in your browser to search Harvey's Navy Rescue on the link above.
Harvey does not seem to be afraid to explore his own Quaker 's thoughts on pacifism, destiny, or free will. His story attracts all the common fears in our subconscious mind, and he suddenly stops the end master. The end is what you do, your fear of personal fear is limited only by your imagination. For this purpose, the end of Harvey's short story is very effective. So, I recommend that there are several possible endings below:
1) Withencroft finally recognized Atkinson as a person of the past. Is Atkinson a potential malicious influence or threat a few years ago? This may have some reason; Let your imagination work here. Does Atkinson receive plastic surgery? Does Withencroft identify who Atkinson is? It is from the viewpoint of opportunity or recognition characteristics of birth marks. Will these two fight?
b) If they are really fighting, is the death of Withencroft symbolic? Perhaps Withencroft becomes a rookie as he dared to face the death of now.
c) If they do not fight, Atkinson and Wittcroft will make a choice, so does the prophecy have no influence on the behavior of these two people? Ask yourself what it means to you. Who decides the destiny of prophecies? Does your action determine your future, or can not you fight for someone else 's decision? Is it freedom to be important?
When Harvey entered a broken hut of a destroyer to save one officer, he made a choice. For everyone, a small official is the cause of failure. But Harvey does not think so. Because of his courage, he spent the rest of his life producing smoke for the oil sucked into his lungs. I say that Harvey bravely explored the unpleasant theme as a Quaker; he studied in detail the human aspect that most of us would not consider. He is facing the possibility of evil in our nature. So, does Withencroft or Atkinson show hidden evil or sadistic nature? The answer depends on your own decision. This is the beauty of your homework.
d) You can make everything a continuous series of dreams with ambiguous fear of Withencroft's past. Perhaps he was married to someone in the past and his subconscious mind allowed him to analyze it in a nightmare. Can a man in that dream become Atkinson?
For your interest, here is a good article on how to add a horror element to one of the above scenarios. Unknown, unexpected, incredible, invisible, unconscious, unstoppable - these elements are necessary for horror fiction
"The fever of August" was adapted from the story of William Fryer Harvey (1885-1937) and tells the story of the artist and tombstone sculptor. I work to express myself. Ronald Coleman (1891-1958, above), a famous actor on the early screen, was a star of the artist and his singer's tone and English accent reflected the building tension due to the development of the event .
First, the author William Fryer Harvey makes a complicated story about sudden flaws by his work August Heat. The whole story is stitched together with irony and a symbol, all of them point to the main premature death. Character, Withencroft. At the beginning of the story, Withencroft made a sketch. And he called it the best sketch, a huge person standing in the courtroom, and I was disappointed in his face. Ironically, the man in this proud sketch is the murderer of Withencroft. After his sketch was completed, Withencroft tripped over a small shop he called "Oasis" in the heat wave. Atkinson lives in this so-called "oasis" as it is depicted in the picture of Witten Croft. Atkinson shook the symbolic flag of future dangers soon and bleeds through his red handkerchief. Like Atkinson, this stone has cracks hidden behind it.