|
|
Up |
|
|
  |
Author: William Blake Jr.William Blake Jr. Date: Oct 10, 2007 19:47
The Little Red Riding Hood's father killed the wolf that had tried to
eat her. On their way back home, he admonished her. "You are too
gullible," he said. "You must exercise discretion about whom you
should trust." She said, "But Daddy, the wolf was hungry." Her father
replied, "Yes, the wolf was hungry. But that doesn't mean that I'll
let him eat my daughter. The world is cruel, and we have to survive.
If it's wolf against you, it better be you."
But the Little Red Riding Hood felt guilty over the death of the wolf.
She knew in her heart that there had to be a better way to live, and
she tried to make life better for everyone. She would take birds with
broken wings in her home and care for them until their wings grew
together and they could fly away. She picked a squirrel that boys were
beating and brought her home and made her a pet. She would play with
geese during the summer and cry when they were slaughtered in autumn.
She had long curly blond hair and giant, sensitive blue eyes. She had
an elegant manner and beautiful posture. She drew beautiful pictures
and made beautiful sculptures. She would climb trees and swim in the
lake for hours, lost in her thoughts.
|
| Show full article (8.58Kb) |
|
| | 6 Comments |
|
  |
Author: slunkyslunky Date: Oct 10, 2007 19:51
_/ William Blake Jr. hotmail.com> wrote \_
> Copyright Ilya Shambat 2005
Why are you posting stuff from 2005?
--
-slunky
|
| |
|
| | no comments |
|
  |
Date: Oct 10, 2007 19:52
On Oct 11, 12:51 pm, slunky globalzero.org> wrote:
> _/ William Blake Jr. hotmail.com> wrote \_
>
>> Copyright Ilya Shambat 2005
>
> Why are you posting stuff from 2005?
Don't you have the same hands that you did in 2005?
So why are you posting with them?
|
| |
| no comments |
|
  |
Author: CharlesCharles Date: Oct 10, 2007 19:52
On Wed, 10 Oct 2007 19:47:31 -0700, "William Blake Jr."
hotmail.com> wrote:
>The Little Red Riding Hood's father killed the wolf that had tried to
>eat her. On their way back home, he admonished her. "You are too
>gullible," he said. "You must exercise discretion about whom you...
|
| Show full article (8.86Kb) |
| no comments |
|
  |
Author: slunkyslunky Date: Oct 10, 2007 19:53
> Don't you have the same hands that you did in 2005?
> So why are you posting with them?
Why are you posting stuff from 2005?
--
-slunky
|
| |
| no comments |
|
  |
Author: used2beused2be Date: Oct 10, 2007 20:57
> The Little Red Riding Hood's father killed the wolf that had tried to
> eat her. On their way back home, he admonished her. "You are too
> gullible," he said. "You must exercise discretion about whom you
> should trust." She said, "But Daddy, the wolf was hungry." Her father
> replied, "Yes, the wolf was hungry. But that doesn't mean that I'll
> let him eat my daughter. The world is cruel, and we have to survive.
> If it's wolf against you, it better be you."
>
> But the Little Red Riding Hood felt guilty over the death of the wolf.
> She knew in her heart that there had to be a better way to live, and
> she tried to make life better for everyone. She would take birds with
> broken wings in her home and care for them until their wings grew
> together and they could fly away. She picked a squirrel that boys were
> beating and brought her home and made her a pet. She would play with
> geese during the summer and cry when they were slaughtered in autumn.
>
> She had long curly blond hair and giant, sensitive blue eyes. She had
> an elegant manner and beautiful posture. She drew beautiful pictures ...
|
| Show full article (9.01Kb) |
| no comments |
|
  |
|
|
  |
Author: ImmortalistImmortalist Date: Oct 10, 2007 21:58
On Oct 10, 7:47 pm, "William Blake Jr." hotmail.com> wrote:
> The Little Red Riding Hood's father killed the wolf ...
Through whose perspective do we see the story? It starts out as a
Limited Omniscience or Third Person Limited, but then changes to Third
Person Omniscient, in that the narrator has completely detatched
itself from Riding Hood.
UNDERSTANDING POINT OF VIEW
A piece of fiction can be narrated from several different
perspectives. How (or where) the writer positions him or herself has
an enormous affect on the story.
1. Omniscient Author or Third Person Omniscient
Weary in every limb, the ant tugged over the snow a piece of corn he
had stored up last summer. It would taste mighty good at dinner
tonight.
A grasshopper, cold and hungry, looked on. Finally he could bear it
no
longer. "Please, friend ant, may I have a bite of corn?"
|
| Show full article (3.55Kb) |
| no comments |
|
|