English, asked by manjurakhatun1993, 9 months ago

what precautions would you take if you were in the narrators place in an uncomfortable bed story​

Answers

Answered by sushrisimtan
1

Answer:

mark my answer as brainlist

Explanation:

Maupassant is one of those writers whose contribution to literature is often overshadowed by the tragic facts of his life and whose unique experimentation is often ignored in favour of his more popular innovations. It is unsurprising that Guy de Maupassant work is often celebrated for its economy. Yet the praise applies more to the form and structure of these stories than his truncated career. Many cite de Maupassant as one of the progenitors of the modern short story. Much of his work is celebrated for its ability to create time, place, and character in succinct but rich detail. While he is best remembered for his piquant short fiction and clever novels, de Maupassant also wrote a tome of poetry as well as extensive travelogues.

Analysis

It’s actually a somewhat amusing story, where a man is staying with several of his friends at a chateau. Now this man knows that his friends are found of practical jokes. When he arrives at the chateau, his friends greet him enthusiastically, are laughing too much at dinner. The funny part is that he works himself up into such a state that through his own actions and an unfortunate coincidence, his friends certainly do end up laughing at him. The sense of humour we see in the story that, the friends make fun of him and every time whatever he does become a joke. But it is difficult to understand because we need to concentrate between the lines. It is also obvious that what so ever the friends did that were to make him frightened. So all his actions were very funny though he did not feel .

Humour is an integral part of Guy de Maupassant’s short story “The Uncomfortable Bed.” The narrator arrives at a hunting lodge and immediately begins to suspect that his friends are planning a practical joke at his expense, noting that my friends were fond of practical joking. He is absolutely convinced that he will be the target of a prank, declaring that he can smell a practical joke in the air, as a dog smells game. While he remains convinced that his friends have something humiliating in mind for him, he cannot figure out what it is. He cautiously searches his darkened room for anything astray or suspicious, dependent upon candles for lights. He continues to search for any sign of the practical joke he firmly believes awaits him, finally settling on the bed as the probable source of danger. Confident that the bed has been sabotaged in some way, and assuming that his actions are being monitored by his friends, he drags the mattress and bedding onto the floor, and lies down to sleep with the suspicious bed frame left unused. Much to his chagrin, he discovers that no such prank is in store. Instead the valet, not knowing the room has been rearranged and the narrator is sleeping on the floor, trips over him, landing on the narrator and spilling the morning cup of tea all over the narrator. In closing, he notes: The precautions I had taken in closing the shutters and going to sleep in the middle of the room had only brought about the interlude I had been striving to avoid. Searching in the dark for the source of danger is as inherently humorous as the ironic chain of events would prove to be humorous.

Three main points that can provide the basis for a paper include the irony of de Maupassant story – in effect, the narrator’s paranoia leads to the very outcome he feared. The terror inherent in being rudely awakened by the full weight of another human being suddenly collapsing onto oneself is genuine terror, no matter how harmless or benign the circumstances; and the narrator’s distrust of his friends has compelled a sequence of events that invalidates that distrust while subjecting himself to the full measure of humiliation. When the narrator arrives at the hunting lodge, he is entering environment later readers and audiences would identify with an Agatha Christie motif, wherein the narrator arrives at a destination only to find him- or herself immersed in a terrifying mystery involving murder. That the psychological terror he experiences is entirely a product of his own imagination provides the story’s main humour.

However, the story of Uncomfortable Bed is often too difficult to comprehend in common man’s language, because as it is said, double meaning is applied. Therefore it is advised to read it carefully and understand it meaning and humour.

Answered by kanishk200775
1

Explanation:

describe the dinner time at the chateau in your own words. How did it arouse the narrator's suspicious?

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