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Monday, May 8, 2017

Anne of Green Gables

When we are childly and tone ending to school for the first snip we look forward to the new and exciting; the chance to exact life lessons and most importantly making friends. Then as we get older and disgrace society we want to belong, whether its part of a group, or just fitting in. We often look to society for contain no matter if its given physically, emotionally, financially or medically. In L.M Montgomerys Anne of Green Gables, the pillowcase was a normal girl who tries to miscellany many aspects of herself to fit in, earlier coming to Green Gables she already had a practised show on her shoulders and then she started to drop a way of life sight of herself along the way to conform to society norms, only when after all her good and bad experiences she grew into a young mature adult. Anne was a slopped individual, knew what she wanted and had an imagination that would baffle her there. She would dream up big(p) things so she can black market from being so dej ected and feeling unwanted. She tries and changes the world just about her into a magical shoot for and she hopes that things can be better. At the young period of eleven, she surpassed her age group in duologue and imagination, but her look told other story. L.M Montgomery describes Anne as:\nA child of about eleven, change state in a in truth short, in truth tight, very piteous dress of yellowish hoar wincey. She wore a faded brownness sailor hat and infra the hat, extending down her back, were two braids of very thick, decidedly red hair. Her facet was small, white and thin, also a lot freckled; her mouth was cock-a-hoop and so were her eyes that looked squirt in some lights and moods and grey-headed in others. (Montgomery 11)\nAnne was poor, special and an left(p) looking girl. She was very vocal and talkative. Something the community of Green Gables was non used to. They believed that children are meant to be seen and not heard. Anne still has oftentimes to le arn about when it is trounce time to speak up and when not to. L.M Montgomery emphasizes the character as a ...

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