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Saturday, December 15, 2018

'Compare The Character And Behaviour Essay\r'

'This es label is an in depth summary of how lead Mossop changes throughout the course of the play. We freshman alonet impart in Act 1 on page 9. Mrs Hepworth has recently bought an exceptionally well- do couple up of boots from the knock off and wishes to meet the man who made them, pull up stakes Mossop. However, she doesn’t tell the reason behind her bid and he believes that it is to scold Mossop about a gravely made brace of boots. Upon culmination ‘up hollow’, Mrs Hepworth produces a visiting card.\r\nHobson still believes that this is to be a dressing down for Mossop and tries to get ahead of the plot by saying, ‘I assure you it shall non get again.’ Realising that Hobson is trying to look good and enhance his reputation, Mrs Hepworth puts him in his place by asking him what will not happen again. Unable to termination, he mumbles nigh social function and is embarrassed. With that Mrs Hepworth says, â€Å"I’ve seek b oth shop in Manchester and these boots are the best-made pair of boots I’ve ever had. Now you’ll make my boots in future.’\r\nThroughout this passage Will Mossop doesn’t say a dozen words and is very timid. Our first view of the man is that he is a quiet, timid man and to a certain extent, finds it embarrassing to ack straightawayledge praise. I also get the feeling that because he is a typical working-class man he feels inferior to the Hobson family and especially Henry Hobson because he has made his own fortune.\r\nWe get our second look at Will Mossops geek on page 15 of the book. Maggie has decided that she wants to leave home, marry Will and set-up shop with him. She has come to this idea after her father says she is now too old to marry and must go forward with him to run the shop. Determined to prove her father wrong, she calls Will Mossop ‘up trap’. To begin with, she subtly drops the hints that she wants him, provided due to hi s lack of experience with the opposite sex, he doesn’t catch on and she has to tell him just what she means and wants. Willy feebly tries to push her away however it doesn’t work and she convinces him that it is for the best. Will half-heartedly agrees tear down though they haven’t been seeing from each one other at all. This leads me to believe that Will was bullied as a child and is used to universe told what to do no matter whether it was good or notional for his own prospects or what he wanted.\r\nOnly a few short pages later and Willies final character begins to emerge. He gets tired of being told what to do by Mr Hobson and being bullied by him. It all comes about when Maggie is obese her father of her utilisation to Will and Mr Hobson hits Will with a leather belt. To this he remarks, ‘And I’ve nobbut one answer back. Maggie, I’ve none kissed you yet. I shirked before. But by gum, I’ll kiss you now †and take you and clutch pedal you. And if Mr Hobson raises up that strap again, I’ll do more. I’ll walk straight out of shop with thee and us twain’ull set up for ourselves.’ With this outburst, Mr Hobson is taken aback.\r\nWith it coming from his faithful worker he doesn’t whop what to say next. Maggie is also taken aback but reacts differently to it saying, ‘Willie, I knew you had it in you lad’, and puts her lace round his neck as if he is a trophy. Later in the play, Mossop would stand by every word he ever said, but on this first rebellious occasion, he is not on the whole convinced that what he has done was the right thing and his hands fall limply to his sides.\r\nA month after this occasion, Vickey and Alice are the only ones left in the shop after Will and Maggie’s tone ending and with Hobson spending most of his time in the Moonrakers. Since Will left, all the high-class trade has gone with him and the take are very poor. The p air of them are controversy about this and blame all the problems on Maggie and Will. coincidently Maggie and Will walk through the door at this very moment accompanied by Freddy Beenstock. Alice and Vickey face taken aback at her appearance in the shop. Maggie now knows that Vickey and Freddy are going to be marital and she believes that without her help, they never will.\r\nMaggie offers her services to them saying, â€Å"You’ll get no further with it by yourselves from what I hear of fathers carryings-on.” Vickey intelligibly vexed by this replies, â€Å"That’s your fault. Yours and his”, as she points at Will. She is clearly very annoyed by the sudden engagement of the pair and in a way she is being extremely selfish. When Maggie was still working in the shop, she would hold the accounts and orders, leaving Vickey and Alice to sell the shoes to people of the streets. Suddenly, the two sisters have an increased workload and begrudge the position that the only reason they have to do some proper work is because Will and Maggie have left. They resent Will as they see him as the stemma of their own problems.\r\n'

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