Saturday, October 12, 2019
Compare and Contrast Lamb to the Slaughter And The Speckled Band :: English Literature
Compare and Contrast Lamb to the Slaughter And The Speckled Band  As Murder Mysteries    When many people think of a murder mystery, they think of a dark and  stormy night, a large forbidding house, a gunshot heard by everyone  yet seen by no one, and the phrases "you're probably wondering why I  called you all here", "The butler did it", and of course not  forgetting "elementary, my dear Watson". In the end, the intelligent  and very observant detective solves the case, and justice, sometimes  through the courts and sometimes poetic is served.    'Lamb to the Slaughter' and 'The Speckled Band' are both stories based  around a suspicious death. Roald Dahl wrote 'Lamb to the Slaughter' in  1954. Roald Dahl is famous for writing children's stories, like  George's Marvellous Medicine and James and the Giant Peach. Roald Dalh  also writes stories for adults. They are usually about ordinary people  doing strange things. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle wrote 'The Speckled Band'  in 1892. His stories are about the famous detective Sherlock Holmes.  Before readings this story I knew that Sherlock Holmes was a famous  detective working with fellow college Doctor Watson and Scotland Yard.    Because of the times when they were written, the language is different  also. Conan Doyle uses the Victorian style of language. His writing is  more complex. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's language is more descriptive.  It takes him about half a page just to describe the setting of the  story. Conan Doyle sometimes uses phrases, which can now be quite  tricky to understand such as 'knock you up'. This is archaic language,  which is not regularly used nowadays. Roald Dahl uses short but sharp  sentences, and writes as if he is talking to a friend.    The two stories are both classed as murder mysteries, however when  comparing these two stories the styles of writing and the way in which  the stories are presented is completely different. An example of this  would be the chronological order of each of the stories. What I mean  by this is the traditional order of murder mysteries would be body, a  motive, a weapon, a death, a suspect, an alibi and detectives. Both  'Lamb to the Slaughter' and 'The Speckled Band' have all of these and  so are no exception to these 'guidelines'. However, 'The Speckled  Band' follows this order and is a very traditional murder mystery.  'Lamb to the Slaughter' on the other hand does not follow the  conventional style of murder mysteries and follows its own order. This  order is; a motive, a weapon, a death, a killer, an alibi and  detectives. In changing the traditional order of murder mysteries I    					    
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