Explanation: From the various narratives provided, it seems after Mrs. Drover leaves the house, life continues for the characters in their respective stories just like before, with general day-to-day activities and personal struggles resuming. Each excerpt depicts a continuance of normalcy or the next event in their lives, with hints of
Mrs. Drover then remembers her past—particularly a week in August 1916, during World War I. The soldier to whom she was engaged was on leave for a week from France. … She is determined to leave the house before the hour of the arranged meeting strikes and hurries to the taxi line. She notices the normal flow of moving people around her and
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The Former Fiancé. Mrs. Drover is the protagonist of the story, a forty-four year old woman who has returned to her house in London during the Second World War to retrieve items for her family who are living in the English countryside. She prides herself on her dependability as a wife and mother, and when she first enters the house she seems
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The story ends with Mrs. Drover’s abduction, and so ultimately she is indeed punished for her failure to keep her promise: after all, she has married another man and made a life for herself, and she is determined to leave the house before the promised meeting can occur. However, Bowen’s sympathy for Mrs. Drover’s actions—regardless of
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Describe What Happens After Mrs Dover Leaves The House
The story ends with Mrs. Drover’s abduction, and so ultimately she is indeed punished for her failure to keep her promise: after all, she has married another man and made a life for herself, and she is determined to leave the house before the promised meeting can occur. However, Bowen’s sympathy for Mrs. Drover’s actions—regardless of Mrs. Drover returned to a London that had been badly damaged by bombings. As she walked toward her home, she noticed the “broken chimneys and parapets.” In 1940 and 1941, the Nazis bombed London
Support your response with two details from the story. They are both isolated. Both of them are kind of broken down, unsteady, unpleasant to look at. The house is looking forward to better times but in contrary she is looking forward to bad times because she is always worried.
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Support your response with two details from the story. They are both isolated. Both of them are kind of broken down, unsteady, unpleasant to look at. The house is looking forward to better times but in contrary she is looking forward to bad times because she is always worried.
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Explanation: From the various narratives provided, it seems after Mrs. Drover leaves the house, life continues for the characters in their respective stories just like before, with general day-to-day activities and personal struggles resuming. Each excerpt depicts a continuance of normalcy or the next event in their lives, with hints of
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The Former Fiancé. Mrs. Drover is the protagonist of the story, a forty-four year old woman who has returned to her house in London during the Second World War to retrieve items for her family who are living in the English countryside. She prides herself on her dependability as a wife and mother, and when she first enters the house she seems
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What happens after Mrs. Drover leaves the house in “The Demon Lover”? How is Mrs. Drover’s house described at the start of “The Demon Lover”? What is the central dramatic irony in “The Demon Lover”?
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The story ends with Mrs. Drover’s abduction, and so ultimately she is indeed punished for her failure to keep her promise: after all, she has married another man and made a life for herself, and she is determined to leave the house before the promised meeting can occur. However, Bowen’s sympathy for Mrs. Drover’s actions—regardless of
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Mrs. Drover returned to a London that had been badly damaged by bombings. As she walked toward her home, she noticed the “broken chimneys and parapets.” In 1940 and 1941, the Nazis bombed London
Source Image:
Download Image
Mrs. Drover then remembers her past—particularly a week in August 1916, during World War I. The soldier to whom she was engaged was on leave for a week from France. … She is determined to leave the house before the hour of the arranged meeting strikes and hurries to the taxi line. She notices the normal flow of moving people around her and
What happens after Mrs. Drover leaves the house in “The Demon Lover”? How is Mrs. Drover’s house described at the start of “The Demon Lover”? What is the central dramatic irony in “The Demon Lover”?