Instructions

Hello, Sixth Period!

For your ORB written assignment, I am requiring that you make three postings to this blog about your ORB. You must choose three different options from the "blogging options" handout (on First Class). I am looking for superb commentary, which should make obvious why your ORB "educates your conscience."

Please, adhere to the expectations on the rubric (also on First Class).

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Theme

Berry Boeckman

spoiler

In Rebecca, by Daphne Du Maurier, the author teaches us that bad things we do will come back to haunt us. When Mr. De Winter shows little affection for his new wife, it is not because he does not love her but because he is haunted by a horrid memory. The memory of the late Mrs. De Winter, his first wife, whom he had murdered.

The late Mrs. De Winter had been elegant, graceful and beautiful. She was thought to be the perfect person, but Maxim (Mr. De Winter) soon found out after their marriage that that was entirely wrong. She cared about no one and had to have every man fall in love with her, it was a sort of trick. Mr. De Winter would often think about ways to get rid of her. One time he thought about pushing her off a cliff even, for he could not divorce her because it would look bad, so he was stuck and the only way to get out of his horrible marriage was the death of either of them.

One night, Maxim went down to Rebecca’s boathouse with a gun. He had one intention, and that was to kill Rebecca. He shot her and dragged her body to her boat, and sunk the boat. Everyone had thought she had drowned and Mr. De Winter was mourning over her loss, but in reality he was fretting over the thought about someone finding out his secret, that he was responsible for the death of his wife, not the ocean.

A year after Rebecca’s death, a boat got stuck in the cove where Rebecca’s boat lay. In order to get it out, I diver had to swim down and inspect the bottom of the ship, not only did he find the problem, he also found a small sailboat with a body in it, this was the body that had belonged to Rebecca.

It was very hard for anyone to believe that Rebecca would have let her ship sink because she was an excellent sailor and knew what she was doing and the boat was made very well, so Mr. De Winter was put on trial, and got away with it. Then, as he drove home to Manderley, his beautiful, romantic, fairy tale like estate he and Mrs. De Winter notice that, “The sky above [their] heads was inky black. But the sky on the horizon was not dark at all. It was shot with crimson, like a splash of blood. And the ashes blew towards [them] with the salt wind from the sea” (380). Mrs. Danvers, the women who helped the late Mrs. De Winter with everything since she was a child, had burned the entire estate down. The late Mrs. De Winters was dead, and took with her the life of Manderley. Maxim had been punished for a murder, with another one.

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