What does he want and when did he start wanting it? What is his modus operandi? Would his methods work in the real world, or is such behavior merely a convenient trope of fiction?Ĥ. Claude is a mysterious presence in this story. How does this manifest itself? What is the "wildest" element in the story? What is the most "domestic"?ģ. In one of Edgar's favorite passages from The Jungle Book, Bagheera tells Mowgli that he was once a caged animal, until "one night I felt that I was Bagheera-the Panther-and no man's plaything, and I broke the silly lock with one blow of my paw and came away." There is a dialectic in Edgar's story that is similarly concerned with the ideas of wildness and domestication. What does that reveal about Edgar's character or his state of mind? Do you think he might have made a different decision earlier in the story?Ģ. Yet when Trudy finally offers to tell him, he decides he'd rather not know. In fact, Edgar is an inveterate snoop about it. One of the abiding mysteries in Edgar's life concerns how his parents met.
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