Monday, 25 January 2016
The Pardoner's Tale
YouTube links to the pardoner's tale;
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jPkhuvI3Y8Y
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h19FASnB1vo
Tuesday, 12 January 2016
no. 2
2.
How they are described
Gretl: Hard-working pg12 'Gretl the little barmaid, the landlords daughter, was hurrying to and fro with foaming mugs and steaming plates.'
Karl: Anxious pg12 'He's anxious about tomorrow.'
Fritz: Good writer pg15 'They all enjoyed ghost stories, and Fritz's in particular, for he was a talented storyteller.'
How they think
Gretl: Cleverly pg92 'because the one person who might wave been able to tell the them the truth'
Karl: Worried pg26 'Put poison in and I'll drink it then, muttered Karl.'
Fritz: Cowardly pg20 'He swallowed, and his eyes moved to the door.'
How they act
Gretl: Bravely pg83 'And they were darker, too; and there were bats that flitted through the air; and the wind groaned through the mouths of the mighty bells,'
Karl: Worried pg17 'Karl looked at him with a face full of savage bitterness.'
Fritz: Scared pg31 'And like someone who has seen the Devil, he ran out of the inn as fast as he could.'
How they change
Gretl: pg43 From a little bar maid to a hero, 'What a strange story that was going to be!'
Fritz: pg31 From a joking funny writer to a completely hysteric crippled person, 'And like someone who has seen the Devil, he ran out of the inn as fast as he could.'
Karl: pg81 From a worried pessimist to a dead and murdered man. 'and Karl stumbled away, trying to hum, to sing to whistle, and all he could do was cry and stammer and sob, and the knight came closer and closer.'
Their role in the story
Gretl's role in the story was the hero/ protagonist. 'She turned the key in he lock and begun to climb for the second time that night,'
Fritz's role in the story was the foil.
Karl: 'I can't!'
Gretl: 'You must.'
Karl: 'I couldn't!'
Gretl: 'You have to.'
Karl's role in the story was the archetype. 'I've failed, Fritz.'
What happens to them in the end
Gretl: Shares her heart with prince Florian, and becomes braver.
Fritz: Runs away like a coward to Berlin.
Karl: Is killed by a robot/figure made by Dr Kalmenius.
Fritz: Cowardly pg20 'He swallowed, and his eyes moved to the door.'
How they act
Gretl: Bravely pg83 'And they were darker, too; and there were bats that flitted through the air; and the wind groaned through the mouths of the mighty bells,'
Karl: Worried pg17 'Karl looked at him with a face full of savage bitterness.'
Fritz: Scared pg31 'And like someone who has seen the Devil, he ran out of the inn as fast as he could.'
How they change
Gretl: pg43 From a little bar maid to a hero, 'What a strange story that was going to be!'
Fritz: pg31 From a joking funny writer to a completely hysteric crippled person, 'And like someone who has seen the Devil, he ran out of the inn as fast as he could.'
Karl: pg81 From a worried pessimist to a dead and murdered man. 'and Karl stumbled away, trying to hum, to sing to whistle, and all he could do was cry and stammer and sob, and the knight came closer and closer.'
Their role in the story
Gretl's role in the story was the hero/ protagonist. 'She turned the key in he lock and begun to climb for the second time that night,'
Fritz's role in the story was the foil.
Karl: 'I can't!'
Gretl: 'You must.'
Karl: 'I couldn't!'
Gretl: 'You have to.'
Karl's role in the story was the archetype. 'I've failed, Fritz.'
What happens to them in the end
Gretl: Shares her heart with prince Florian, and becomes braver.
Fritz: Runs away like a coward to Berlin.
Karl: Is killed by a robot/figure made by Dr Kalmenius.
character
Man vs Man - is a story were the humans are fighting each other.
Man vs Society - is a story with someone trying to persuade or make a group do something
Man vs Self - is a story were a human is fighting his or her self
Man vs Environment- were man against animals or nature
Man vs Technology- against robots
Archetype is a character that is only one character.
Man vs Society - is a story with someone trying to persuade or make a group do something
Man vs Self - is a story were a human is fighting his or her self
Man vs Environment- were man against animals or nature
Man vs Technology- against robots
Archetype is a character that is only one character.
Saturday, 9 January 2016
Clock work answers
Answers
3.
The author means that Karl is lazy and it's a lot of hooey.
Also he thinks that Karl should pull his act together and not be so pessimistic.
4.
'As sound as a bell and as true as a clock'; 'as' is the simile.
'she felt her heart lift.' this is the metaphor part.
5.
'I mean, springs and cogwheels and gears' This is sight imagery and a list of clock parts.
"I haven't made a figure,' he muttered' The figure is the characterisation of something or someone, in this case the clock is being characterised. This is also a bit of sight imagery (the figure).
'I command you to make me a child of clockwork who will not die.' People are like clocks once the battery dies you die, also clocks are filled with allsorts of things like us humans.
'Can't you just wind him up?' This represents a simile winding someone up and winding a clock up.
'It's full of miscellaneous bits and pieces, and they're not even connected up properly: broken springs, wheels with cogs missing, rusty gears- worthless rubbish, all of it! I do hope Karl didn't make it; I thought better of him than that.' This is a list of the bad things in the figure.
3.
The author means that Karl is lazy and it's a lot of hooey.
Also he thinks that Karl should pull his act together and not be so pessimistic.
4.
'As sound as a bell and as true as a clock'; 'as' is the simile.
'she felt her heart lift.' this is the metaphor part.
5.
'I mean, springs and cogwheels and gears' This is sight imagery and a list of clock parts.
"I haven't made a figure,' he muttered' The figure is the characterisation of something or someone, in this case the clock is being characterised. This is also a bit of sight imagery (the figure).
'I command you to make me a child of clockwork who will not die.' People are like clocks once the battery dies you die, also clocks are filled with allsorts of things like us humans.
'Can't you just wind him up?' This represents a simile winding someone up and winding a clock up.
'It's full of miscellaneous bits and pieces, and they're not even connected up properly: broken springs, wheels with cogs missing, rusty gears- worthless rubbish, all of it! I do hope Karl didn't make it; I thought better of him than that.' This is a list of the bad things in the figure.
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