Paragraph 1: Introduction
II. A-Have you ever wondered what the future would be like?, Would you like to learn what the future whould be like ? In this short story it gives you many examples of foreshadowing which is a warning of a future event.
B-The book is by John Steinbeck
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D.This story is about 2 men named Geroge and Lennie, Geroge is more of the leader of the two. Lennie if more like a big baby, He is a giant tall man but has the brain of a child because he has mental issues. They both have many conflicts with the other seconday charactars that also play a big role in the story.
E.The story starts of with George and Lennie running away from a party of men because Lennie started to pet a women’s dress and didn’t let go of here, Remember now Lennie has mental issues he knew no better he just really liked the dress and didn’t want to stop,The petting is a big issue for Lennie. The reason why the party of men were chasing Lennie was because they thought he was molesting the girl. But since Geroge is with Lennie he had to run away with him. Afterwards they end up getting new jobs as Migrant workers at a farm, which will take them to big conflicts in the future.
F-In this story the Author John Steinsbeck claims that foreshadowing provides an important path for any book and also in the readers minds when reading a book, when reading a book it gives clues of what choices will the a charactars might make in near future. Or what will this lead to in the
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First Body Paragraph-First on pg (35) A.The author shows foreshadowing with a Character.
B. Slim complained about Candy’s dog stinking the bunk room, and he wanted to get rid of the dog.
C.Carlson says “That dog of Candy’s is so God Damn old he can’t hardly walk. Stinks like hell, too Ever’ time he comes into the bunk house i can smell him for two, three days, Whyn’t you get Candy to shoot his old dog and give him one of the new pups to raise up? .
D.Later on on pg(47) Carlson said “We can’t sleep with him stinkin’ around here.” he put the piston in his hip pocket. “Come on, boy.” the old dog got slowly and stiffly to his feet and followed Carlson to the door. Slims said, “Carlson.” “Yeah?” “You kno what to do.” ‘What ya mean, Slim?” “Take a shovel,” said Slim. So from before on pg(35) Slim complained about Candy’s dog stinking the bunk room, and he wanted to get rid of the dog. On pg(47) Carlson kills the dog.
E.This is an example of foreshadowing letting the reader know that Carlson might do something to the dog.
IV. Second Body paragraph-
A.Second the author uses
The defence questioned Candy about his dog, and why Carlson shot his dog. The defence asked Candy, “So Carlson killed your dog so it would be put out of misery?” Candy said that yes that was true. This is relevant because Curley, the husband of the woman killed by Lennie Small, admitted to the defence that he said, “I’m going to get him. I’m going to kill that son of a bitch myself.
Page 49 paragraph 3 And this harsh conversation goes on until Candy says just take him, as if he has lost all hope. Now why would Candy want to live either he lost his only friend and now inside has a bubbling boil of lava that hurts him. So with Carlson put up with the dog he can’t take it anymore and kills the dog on the spot without Candy saying
Foreshadowing means to show or indicate beforehand, and in the novel Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck, foreshadowing plays a major role in the storyline. Many events in the story foreshadow things that later happen, and once they do, the relationships between the events are very clear. Of Mice and Men follows the lives of George Milton and Lennie Small after they have run away from a town named Weed because of a situation Lennie had with a girl. George and Lennie work as migrant workers traveling together to different ranches in order to make money. A big part of the George and Lennie’s lives is the dream that they share: to make enough money and buy their own ranch and be able to grow crops and raise animals.
During chapter three, Candy’s will is challenged in relation to his dog being killed. After Slim suggests to “...put the old devil out of his misery”, the power dynamic between the two characters becomes evident. It is clear that Candy does not wish for his dog to be shot, but he has no real choice. Steinbeck writes, “Candy looked a long time at Slim to try to find
What About A Little Murder Right now in the world, there is a murder. A utterly perfect murder. Ralph Underhill bullied Doug when they went to school together, which now Doug is an adult he decides he wants payback of murder. He finds Ralph who is very sick and thinks to himself, should I kill him?
Without exceptions, many novels include foreshadowing events that take place in the future. The author Charles Dickens wrote a novel titled “A Tale of Two Cities”. The historical story is set two powerful cities London and Paris. It takes place in 1775 essentially before and during the French Revolution. The novel was published in weekly installments.
Candy’s regret for not shooting his own dog, for letting someone else kill it, mirrors how George shoots Lennie, instead of letting Curley's kill his best friend, George does it himself.. When George shots Lennie he does it the way Carlson did to Candy’s dog, right in the back of the head, where the spine meets the
“She thought, I’m not going to see my mother again. She thought, I’m not going to sleep in my bed again”. Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been is a short store by Carol Oates. In the story, Connie was a 15 year old girl, and lived she out in a rural area. She lived with her parents, and her sister June.
Another example of why the ranch has a hostile atmosphere is because Carlson wants Slim to shoot Candy’s dog. Carlson hates Candy’s dog because it smells bad, has no teeth, can’t eat, and is almost completely blind. Carlson has a hand in making the atmosphere hostile because he is unsympathetic and heartless for wanting to
When George tells Lennie to meet him in the bushes if anything bad happens this is foreshadowing to the ending of the book when Lennie has to meet him there. Also, Candy telling George that he regretted not killing his dog himself leads to the end where George kills Lennie because he didn't want to live with the same regret as Candy. Lastly, all of the times that Lennie kills animals by petting them foreshadows to when Lennie kills Curley’s wife. The ending of John Steinbeck’s book would not make sense without him putting examples of foreshadowing in the
Knowing that Lennie has killed Curley’s wife and will be shot by Curley, George rushes to the river to get to Lennie first. The two men talk for a short while, then George silently brings the gun to Lennie’s head and shoots him. Steinbeck’s use of foreshadowing effective in this novel. Steinbeck
Think Question 1: Foreshadowing is a literary device in which a writer gives an advance hint of what is to come later in the story. How does the author of “The Monkey’s Paw” use foreshadowing in the first chapter to suggest that the spell placed on the paw might not bring happiness to whoever possesses it? Cite textual evidence from the selection to support your answer. Response 1: W. W. Jacobs uses foreshadowing in "The Monkey 's Paw" by having Sergeant-Major Morris recount his experience with the monkey’s paw. After Herbert asked Morris if he already requested his three wishes, Morris replies with, “‘I have,’...and his blotchy face whitened” (Jacobs).
In William Shakespeare’s play, The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet, two lovers are bound to death by fate, and the audience is informed of this fact by the large amount of foreshadowing seen throughout the play. In each scene, at least one example of foreshadowing can be seen. This literary device is used to help form the tone of the story and give readers a feeling for what is going to happen next. For example, before the Capulet party, Romeo says that he had a dream, in which he had died, and that his death in the dream was linked to his attending the Capulet party.
The dog was not given its full opportunity to live out its life. Carlson says "I'll put the old devil out of his misery right now" (47). Carlson thinks of the dog as nothing and does not have anything feelings towards it. He shoots the dog and kills it not allowing it to live out its life. Before Carlson ever shoots the dog he says "He won't even feel it" (48).
Writer’s Craft: Foreshadowing in the Lord of the Flies William Golding uses foreshadowing in Lord of the Flies right from the beginning to give subtle hints of what is going to happen in the future. “All round him [Ralph] the long scar smashed into the jungle was a bath of heat (pg.7).” The scar, made from the crash airplane foreshadows that something evil will occur or fall down upon them.