having a affair‚ I couldn’t suspect anything else due to the fact of his absence. I can remember that very night when the inspector came home‚ inspector Goole he seemed a bit curious at first and said we had killed this girl called Eva smith I didn’t really recognize that girl or heard her name before. I was astonished to know father had something to do with this. Inspector Goole then came up to me enquiringly as he thought I was involved. I looked at the photograph I just noticed I knew this girl
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‘We do not live alone. We are members of one body.’ How does this play highlight the theme of responsibility? ‘An Inspector Calls’ is a detective/drama play written in 1945 by J.B. Priestley. Priestley believed in very socialist views that are very much about sharing and same values for all. Theses get reflected in the play‚ most notably as his role as the inspector‚ where Priestley most outputs his views in direct contrast with Mr Birling. Priestley portrays Birling as an idiotic capitalist that
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question: Was he happy? However‚ he is distracted when he discovers his wife had overdosed on sleeping tablets. When he meets Clarisse again‚ he finds himself behaving differently‚ starting with tasting the rain as Clarisse suggested. The Mechanical Hound is then introduced as it described as alive‚ but not truly. When Montag begins to wonder and question Beatty about the books‚ a report was rung in. The old woman‚ who was reported‚ stands in her house‚ surrounded by books. When the firemen are about
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Paper2 Prompt1 The Language of The Government Inspector Nikolay Gogol’s The Government Inspector does not simply exist to please the audience; it is a satire that deeply criticizes the corruption of the Russian government and the ugliness of human nature. A variety of techniques in the characters’ languages contribute to the success of this play‚ including different speaking styles‚ irony‚ exaggeration‚ asides and symbolism. These linguistic techniques and dramatic devices Gogol uses allow him
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God is Not a Fish Inspector There is no reason for me to stop fishing. I cannot stop‚ nor will I. Sure‚ there may be some discomfort‚ but I will never admit defeat to the elements. As long as I stand on my two feet‚ I will continue to fish‚ continue to inhale the fresh dawn air‚ and continue to feel the crisp morning breeze in my face. My mind is much too strong to lose to my body. If I wake up in the morning‚ I will cast my net‚ reel in my catch‚ and head for home‚ head back to my ungrateful
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What Do You Think is the Importance of Inspector Goole and How Does Priestly Present Him? An Inspector Calls is a play with lots of political messages as well as social messages. J. B. Priestley believed in socialism and he used large sections of his plays attempting to convince people of his way of thinking. It was written in a time when Britain was ruled by a Labour government and socialist policies were seen to be a good way to go. It was a common way of thinking at that time so Priestley’s
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In the short story “God is not a Fish Inspector” by W.D. Valgardson‚ the protagonist‚ Fusi Bergman‚ a 70-year old fisherman is reminded by multiple sources that he is too old to fish. This provides him with the necessary drive to prove that despite the physical ailments that come along with fishing‚ he is able to continue to do so. The story describes multiple incidences where Fusi’s daughter‚ the fish inspectors as well as society in general remind him that he should not be fishing at his age. When
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is hesitant. Sheila’s tone could be seen as joking but also even resentful. Towards the end of the play‚ priestly gives us the impression that Sheila has been influenced by the inspectors morals greatly‚ as when they are discussing as a family on how to act with the possibility that the inspector isn’t really an inspector. Sheila is presented as of less importance within the Birling hierocracy due to the fact of Sheila being a woman and due to the society at the time; Sheila presents “I behaved badly
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don’t know yet. You’ll see. You’ll see. (She looks at him almost in Triumph)” Shelia‚ shortly before the end of Act 1‚ crucially begins to understand the importance of the Inspector and the fact that he has more information than he is revealing. She is the first person in the play to really begin to perceive the inspector. Throughout the play‚ she becomes the most sympathetic family member‚ showing remorse and guilt on hearing the news of her part in the girl’s downfall‚ and encouraging
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| | | | |Email: |2008 MAR Inspector Trainee (Tubestar) worked extensively | |najmalbabuji@gmail.com |At onshore and offshore locations in India.
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