Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Mr.Kelada Analysis and interpretation P.24

E:

1.Through out the story the narrator couldnt stand Mr.Kelada and wanted to be alone because the name Mr.Kelada wasnt a typical englishman name for the narrator, and that he was a very chatty and friendly person, because of that the narrator thought that Mr.Kelada wasnt english.

Mr.Kelada was a very chatty, friendly, warming person who knew everybody and was everywhere, he is the one that ren all the events onboard.

Mrs.Ramsay had a pleasant manners and a sense of humor, she was dressed always very simply but she knew how to wear her clothes.

2.The information we learn challenge these stereotypes later in the story because each one of them had to somewhat change their stereotype, like Mr.Kelada who wanted to be right about everything had to lie so that someone else could win, Mrs.Ramsay who was a sweet modest woman turned out to be cheating on her husband, and the narrator who disliked Mr.Kelada through out the story, in the end he disliked him less.

3.I think that the author is trying to pointout that sometimes all of us have to change for the better.

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Post-reading Mr.Know-all

3:

Even though Mrs.Ramsay had that desperate appeal in her eyes, which Mr.Kelada saw clearly enough to understand that she didnt want him to say that those pearls were actually real, he told at that table that the pearls were real none the less.
"I'm an expert at what I do, and quite good at it too, and I can tell you that these pearls are most certainly real and definitely worth more than eighteen dollars".
After that Mr.Kelada got up and went to his cabin.
The narrator was shocked, he went to the cabin as well and left Mr and Mrs Ramsay to discuss their situation.
"Have you no shame?" said the narrator, "the lady desperatly needed your help and you still went your own way?".
"I can't let something like that ruin my expertise, it was hard saying those pearls were real, but it would have been even harder saying that they aint" said Mr.Kelada.
"I was right about you from the beginning" said the narrator and went up to the deck to get some fresh air.
The narrator couldn't believe what Mr.Kelada did back at the table, "I hate Mr.Kelada".