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  1. Jun 29, 2024 · - "How can I sit there and eat when.." - "I was so keen" - "A youngster straight from school the kind that do the best" - "Frightfully excited" - "I'm awfully proud to call him my friend - That's boy's a heroworshipper" - "Small boys generally have their own heroes" Stanhope refers to him by 'boy' which is marginalising him + potentially labelling him as uneducated because he is young and ...

  2. Jul 2, 2024 · Rick wrote: Look Into The Future released January 1976. Leftoverture released October 1976. My vote was correct. You can't really go off of release dates Rick...Journey could have recorded it a year prior, and it just released in January.

  3. Jun 20, 2024 · Sherriff's honest depiction of loss and grief in the trenches may have come as a cathartic relief to his early audiences who would have all lost men in the war. Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like Key Point 1, KP1 - stage directions, KP1 - Osborne family and more.

  4. Jun 27, 2024 · What can we assume from the stage directions at the end of the play? Answer: That Stanhope dies In the final moments of the play, a shell hits the dug-out which cause the timber props of the door cave in and the sandbags to fall and block the passage to the open air.

  5. 2 days ago · Answer: Neuralgia. Earlier in the play, Stanhope says that neuralgia is a "splendid idea" because there is no proof, but Hibbert continues to complain of it until he "can't stick it any longer" and attempts to leave. Stanhope, seeing this coming, saw the doctor before this argument and insists that Hibbert stay. 11.

  6. Jun 20, 2024 · Study with Quizlet and memorise flashcards containing terms like "Stanhope goes on sticking it, day in and day out", "Yes, I'm his hero", "I rather liked the idea of looking after him" and others.

  7. Jun 28, 2024 · Journey's End, by English playwright R. C. Sherriff, is widely regarded as one of the most famous plays ever written about the First World War, and its first production, in 1928, starred a young Laurence Olivier.

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