1.Bravery
2.Responsibility
3.Caring
THE ENDING
I like the ending because the true finally come out.I like when the little girl get scared when Emily manage to overcome the fear.Besides that,I like the fact that we can overcome our own fear in order to stay alive and be brave to face it.I like the way Emily try so hard to stop the little girl which teach me to work for something that we know it right.Other than that,I love the way the car been jump into the river bank and sees Emily struggle to come out from the car while try to stop Lily.
Nor azlinda Mohamad
Monday, October 18, 2010
NOVEL ASSIGNMENT
As you read the synopsis it about a guy name Rudolf who ressemble with the king.The point here is that he willingly let go his love for the country.Which I will do the same,my love towards the country can not be count.Besides that,Rudolf would sacrifice his own life to make sure the king's life safe.I as the citizen would do the same as the king had do so many things to run the country.The king life's is much more important than mine.In addition,if I love someone I will love hom dearly juust like Rudolf love Princess Flavia.Eventhoug
they come from different walks of life but true love do not see that.Rudolf has another similarities with me about the responsibilities.Once a person ask me to carry a job I will accomplish that job with honor and take all the consequences whether positive or negative.
they come from different walks of life but true love do not see that.Rudolf has another similarities with me about the responsibilities.Once a person ask me to carry a job I will accomplish that job with honor and take all the consequences whether positive or negative.
bel assignment(how the main charaters relates to me)
The narrator is the Hon. Rudolf Rassendyll, twenty-nine year old younger brother of the Earl of Burlesdon and a distant cousin and look-alike of Rudolf V, the soon-to-be-crowned King of Ruritania, a "highly interesting and important" Germanic kingdom somewhere imprecisely between the German and Austrian Empires. The reason for this was because a great-great grandfather of both Rudolfs—also named Rudolf—had an affair with an English noblewoman. He acknowledged the son that resulted from this union and provided for them.
Ruritania is, like Germany and Austria-Hungary at that time, a monarchy. The red-headed Rudolf Elphberg, the crown prince, is a hard-drinking playboy, unpopular with the common people, but supported by the aristocracy, the Catholic Church, the army, and the upper classes in general. The political rival to this absolute monarch is his younger half-brother Michael, the dark-haired Duke and Governor of Strelsau, the capital. Black Michael has no legitimate claim to the throne, because he is the son of their father's second, morganatic marriage —in other words his mother was not of royal blood, and the next in line of succession is the beautiful and popular Princess Flavia. Michael is regarded as champion of Strelsau's working classes, both the proletariat and the peasants, and of what Hope refers to as the criminal classes. The novel seems sympathetic, however, with those who would support the dissolute monarch, King Rudolf.
When Michael has King Rudolf drugged, Rassendyll must impersonate the King at the coronation, and then when the King is abducted and imprisoned in his castle in the small town of Zenda, until he can be rescued. There are complications, plots, and counter-plots, among them the schemes of Michael's mistress Antoinette de Mauban, and those of his dashing but villainous henchman Rupert of Hentzau, and Rassendyll falling in love with Princess Flavia, the King's betrothed. In the end, the King is restored to his throne—but the lovers, in duty bound, must part forever.
Ruritania is, like Germany and Austria-Hungary at that time, a monarchy. The red-headed Rudolf Elphberg, the crown prince, is a hard-drinking playboy, unpopular with the common people, but supported by the aristocracy, the Catholic Church, the army, and the upper classes in general. The political rival to this absolute monarch is his younger half-brother Michael, the dark-haired Duke and Governor of Strelsau, the capital. Black Michael has no legitimate claim to the throne, because he is the son of their father's second, morganatic marriage —in other words his mother was not of royal blood, and the next in line of succession is the beautiful and popular Princess Flavia. Michael is regarded as champion of Strelsau's working classes, both the proletariat and the peasants, and of what Hope refers to as the criminal classes. The novel seems sympathetic, however, with those who would support the dissolute monarch, King Rudolf.
When Michael has King Rudolf drugged, Rassendyll must impersonate the King at the coronation, and then when the King is abducted and imprisoned in his castle in the small town of Zenda, until he can be rescued. There are complications, plots, and counter-plots, among them the schemes of Michael's mistress Antoinette de Mauban, and those of his dashing but villainous henchman Rupert of Hentzau, and Rassendyll falling in love with Princess Flavia, the King's betrothed. In the end, the King is restored to his throne—but the lovers, in duty bound, must part forever.
Sunday, August 29, 2010
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