Monday, February 25, 2019

What are the similarities and differences in the very disturbed or disturbing characters which are presented in Havisham, Hitcher and The Laboratory?

There are legion(predicate) similarities between either(prenominal) of the subjects in these poems and they also all vary in humanityy focal points.It appears that all of the characters are homicidal or otherwise intent on violence towards some other person,but each of the characters does it in a different way.The poem Havisham is is a monologue spoken by Miss Havisham, a character in Dickens Great Expectations.After being left at the transfigure by he fianc, she continues to wear her wedding dress and sit in her room without washing or changing her clothes for the rest of her life, spell she plots revenge on all men.She tells the lecturer that has has prayed everyday for the death of her fiance and that her eyes have shrunk hard and her hands have sinews strong plenty to strangle with which fits her murderous wish for revenge on her, beloved steady bastard.Not a day since then have I not wished him dead. conduct thisRespiratory ActivityThough Miss Havisham has not ra ttling harmed another person she is willing to and wants to either kill or badly injury the man who left her standing at the altar.She is similar to the speaker system in Hitcher by her wish to hurt another person but she is has more than in common with the speaker from The Laboratory because she has also been hurt by a man and wishes revenge.The poem Hitcher has a character who expresses violence in a completely different manner.The poem is a sort of monlogue where the speaker casually admits to possibly murdering an innocent hitchhiker.The speaker tells us that he has been taking time off work faking illness and not answering his phone. world threatened with the sack, he goes in to work again and gets a mug up to his hired car. As he drives out of Leeds he picks up a hitchhiker who is travelling light and has no set destination. Some little way later he attacks his passenger, and throws him out of the quieten-moving car. The last he sees of the hiker, he is live off the kerb, then disappearing down the verge we do not know if he is dead or just badly injured. The number one wood does not appear to care.The speaker in this poem has actually harmed or possibly killed another person and does not seem even reasonably troubled by what he has done.This person is similar to the other speakers because he wants to hurt people but is largely different because he has actually carried out his actions by killing or injuring somone instead of wishing or plotting.The Laboratory is a poem about a woman in 18th century France who is planning to kill her rival in motility of her lover at the Kings palace. It is in the form of a monologue and she is at an alchemists shop or an apothacary, telling the proprieter about her plans.As she tells the shop owner and the reader of what she plans to do she expresses an interest in the type of poison the old man is preparing and exactly what it will do to her victim- bid the gum in the trench mortar.This seems to sugges t that she is unstable in someway or becoming deluded.The speaker has begun with a specific purpose of poisoning one person but now she seems to want to poison more than one person (Pauline and Elise).The lust and will to inflict pain on others is a similarity is still present in this poem.The speaker in this poem is closer to actually set uping murder than the speaker in Havisham but has not yet deceased as far as possibly killing someone like in Hitcher.Overall there are many similarities and differences between all of the speakers in the poems.All show signs of a decaying sanity because of what has happened to them.Though each either plans to commit murder or has commited murder because of a different reason or in a different manner.

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