Wednesday, January 22, 2020
A Vendetta :: English Literature
A Vendetta    A Short Story will typically contain only a few characters. The Plot  will usually be concerned with just one theme. These short stories are  written by a very famous author, Guy de Maupassant. Guy de Maupassant  was born in France in 1850.Maupassant developed to be one of the most  famous short story writers of all time.    In the short story 'A Vendetta' the title is a glimpse into the plot  of the story, telling us that that there is a vendetta involved but  doesn't reveal the nature of the vendetta and its aims. There are 3  main characters in the story, they are, Widow Saverini, Frisky the  dog, and Nicolas Ravolati.    The story is about, an assassin Nicolas Ravolati kills Widow  Saverini's son Antoine during a quarrel and over the dead body of her  son Widow Saverini swears vengance. She is unable to sleep until she  has an idea. She trains her dog Frisky to attack a dummy, by starving  her of food and hiding sausage inside the dummy's torso. The widow  takes the dog to Nicolas' Sardinian hideout and at the widows' word  the dog kills Nicolas Ravolati.    The moral of the story is that revenge can become destructive and  obsessive if we allow it to do so. Maupassant expresses this moral  when, In the story he talks about the Widow Saverini being unable to  sleep or make peace until she can complete this vendetta of when she  sleeps soundly.    During this story Guy de Maupassant uses several different literary  techniques to help express his views and to help explain and tell the  story.    He uses personification when describing the wind and sea on the coast  of Bonifacio. He uses the sentence "The wind harasses the sea  remorselessly." The words 'harasses' and 'remorselessly' are both  human characteristics it is as if Guy de Maupassant is saying the wind  has no conscience.    Maupassant uses detailed description of the town 'Bonifacio', where  the story is set, to get across the brutality and evil to come later  on in the story.    He also uses symbolism and imagery like "A gash in the cliffs," This  represents the gashes in the body of Antoine after the first  assassination, as does the simile used at the start of the story,"  Patches of whitish foam round the black tips of the countless reefs,  look like torn sheets drifting on the surface of the water." This to  me is the most important simile in the whole story because it sets the  mood and the scene of the horrific events to come, to continue the  scenery being set as an inhospitable place Maupassant uses the word    					    
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