English, asked by Faiqa93, 1 year ago

"Truth, I always believe, is not only stranger than a made up story, but also greatly more interesting. "
What does the speaker seem to be implying about the stories told by the others?
(From : The Face on the Wall by E V Lucas)
PLEASE ANSWER IT FAST!!
ITS URGENT!!

Answers

Answered by dhruvbheda3391
16

Truth, I always believe, is not only stranger than a made up story, but also greatly more interesting.  or two ago," he said, "I was in rooms in an old house in Great Ormond Street. The bedroom walls had been painted by the previous tenant, but the place was damp and there were great patches on the walls. One of these - as indeed often happens - exactly like a face. Lying on a bed in the morning and delaying getting up I came to think of it as real as my fellow lodger. In fact, the strange thing was that while the patches on the wall grew larger and changed their shapes, this never did. It remained just the same.

      "While there I fell ill with influenza, and all day long I had nothing to do but read or think, and it was then that the face began to get a firmer hold of me. It grew more and more real and remarkable. I may say that it filled my thoughts d


Faiqa93: what is this??
Answered by dateyriyaz
23

Truth can be stranger than fiction, and also more appealing. It means when we tell a lie, we create an incident from our imagination. But seldom, the truth can be beyond our thoughts. For example, a simple lie of an average child can be 'I did not eat it, in fact, I didn't come near the place' or 'I don't know what you are talking about'. Again, an example of a true incident in which there is a crime, and the criminals behave so brutally to their victims, that it is unimaginable. Thus, it shows that sometimes the truth can be even more stranger and interesting than unreal events/fiction.

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