The Lady With The Pet Dog Summary

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Focus on Point of View
The Lady with the Pet Dog – Anton Chekhow
1) The person who made that statement is only looking at the aspect of betrayal. I agree the main characters are selfish and irresponsible but for different reasons. I think they should come forward and admit their love, even though it may hurt as adults. I do not think the entire story is immoral because it still shows the reality of passionate love that can happen between two people, and the tragedy of finding the person you love so late in life.
2) Gurov’s view of women as an “inferior race” changed throughout the tale. The reader can see that Anna changed his mentally and personality. Gurov needed that women so badly in his life that he even went to find her after she said …show more content…

The story could still be interesting: however, by starting the short story with the end, it builds more tension. The reader automatically see how significant the mysterious man will be from the start, making the reader want to discover what it is about the man that is so important. Part 2 and 3 slowly unravel the answers the readers from Part 1 making the details of Part 1 more visible and clear.
2. Women are seen as fragile, emotional, and detail orientated in most society and cultures. The author was able to make the short story in the perspective of women, but over analyzing situations and by jumping from topic to topic to make the story appear faster and more stressful for the main character. If the story were told in a man’s perspective, it would most likely lack close details and provide the ready with an over view of what happened and what it made him feel.
3. Anna is full of shame and feels as though she sin so badly noting can save her. She wants to kill herself to leave her misery. She loves Gurov: however, regrets falling for him because of all the stress it had created. It is impossible in her eye to be cleaned her from sin and she found relief in cutting herself to see her blood …show more content…

I prefer the version by Chekhov because I grew a love-hate relationship with Gurov. I dispraised his view on women which made me want to read more, and his sweet words about Anna gave me pleasure but disguise because he was cheating on his wife. At some point during the short story I would forget that Gurov was married, then remember again, cycling my opinions about him.
“Roselily” by Alice Walker
1. The point of view is directed on Roselily, a black women about to be married. Roselily has 3 children, the 4th gone, and has a hard life filled with financial issues. The point of view affects a reader understanding of Roselily because we see how she feels about what is occurring directly. She questions her for future husband and shares how impatient she was to leave the sewing factory. Roselyn has many thoughts that come rapidly, which is seen in how the author structured her thoughts between the preacher’s sentences.
2. The first words “dearly beloved” shows that the story is of a wedding. Than the paragraph says she is falling into quick sand. By having both these sentences in the paragraph, a reader can quickly see that the married is not something plan or wanted by

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