Mrs. Pearce has
two main objections when Higgins wants to have Eliza stay at his house. The first is that it is
simply not proper in that time and place. Eliza is a young, unmarried woman, and such things are
not done by proper people. Mrs. Pearce also knows Higgins well, and is concerned with what will
become of Eliza after Higgins is finished with her. Eliza will be someone with the correct
social skills and accents to fit in with the wealthy people, but will have no resources after
Higgins is done with her. There is also fear on her part of what the interaction will do to
Higgins--it seems there is some part of Mrs. Pearce that is simply distressed about how Higgins
treats people as subjects, and what it will do to him eventually.
Friday, 11 August 2017
Act II What are Mrs. Pearce's objections when Higgins decides to keep Eliza in his house?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
In 1984, is Julia a spy? Please provide specific examples from the book. My teacher says that he knows of 17 pieces of evidence which proves that Julia...
There is some evidence to suggest thatwas a spy throughout 's classic novel . Julia portrays herself as a loyal admirer of Big ...
-
A central theme of "" is that of age: in this poem, we don't encounter the hero of The Iliad and The Odyssey . Rather...
-
feels great compassion towards the poor. She loves the sunshine and fresh air of her country home, but has also gone to visit the t...
-
Nicholas is a very smart young man who has planned out this day very carefully. He is dying to get into that lumber room. There is...
No comments:
Post a Comment