Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. John Patrick Shanley. Mrs. Muller Character Analysis. Mrs. Muller is Donald ’s mother. When she learns from Sister Aloysius that Father Flynn might be sexually abusing her son, she refuses to do anything about the situation. This is because she thinks doing something to stop Father Flynn will ultimately have a negative impact on Donald’s ...

  2. John Patrick Shanley. Doubt: A Parable: Scene 8 Summary & Analysis. LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Doubt: A Parable, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work. Mrs. Muller visits Sister Aloysius ’s office. She is hesitant and clearly afraid that Donald has gotten into trouble.

  3. Part 1: The Jesse Owens Incident. Themes and Colors Key. Summary. Analysis. Death introduces some of the other characters that live on Himmel Street: the Nazi-supporting Frau Diller, twitchy Tommy Müller, and the vulgar Pfiffikus. Everyone on the street is generally poor. Next door is the Steiner family whose son Rudy is obsessed with the ...

  4. If kissing is part of the search for self-definition that occurs in adolescence, as the authors propose, that first kiss could help you gain some clarity into your own goals and values. Apart from ...

  5. Summary: Chapter 17. The governess begins writing to the children’s uncle that windy evening. Restless, she gets up to listen at Miles’s door. Miles calls out for her to come in, saying he heard her walk across the passage. When the governess enters his room, Miles brings up the “queer business” of how the governess is bringing him up.

  6. The children began to grow up. Mr and Mrs Müller found jobs for them. The children could earn their living now. Mr and Mrs Müller gave them some money. They gave them some clothes. They gave them a Bible of their own. Now the children were ready to look after themselves. But where did the money come from? It cost a great deal to build a big ...

  7. People also ask

  8. When they mention the presentation at dinner, Mr. and Mrs. Forrester dismiss Mrs. Müller and seem eager to stop talking about her. Simon tells them about the graffiti at school, and the Forrester parents accept that it was the work of an evacuee, who Simon says “were never taught proper manners from the start” (117).