Thursday, October 24, 2019
Comparing Lamb to the Slaughter to The Speckled Band Essay -- English
Comparing Lamb to the Slaughter to The Speckled Band    'Lamb to the Slaughter' and 'The Speckled Band' are both murder  mysteries. Like most murder mysteries each of the stories have a  murderer, a victim and characters acting in a suspicious or unusual  way.    'Lamb to the Slaughter' is a 20th century story about a woman called  Mary who kills her husband, Patrick Maloney, using a leg of lamb. This  seems quite surprising at first as she seems quite loving and devoted  to him- 'she loved to luxuriate in the presence of this man.' However  a lot of Mary Maloney's behaviour in the first scene does seem quite  worrying and peculiar. It seems that she is almost obsessed with her  husband and this is shown by the way she is constantly trying to  please him. Although the murder is a crime of passion Mrs Maloney  manages to deal with it quite well. She is very calculating when  realising quite what she has done and providing herself with a  convincing alibi. When the detectives arrive to investigate the murder  they seem to be taking it very seriously, however they don't really  seem to consider Mrs Maloney as a real suspect. There is one point in  the story where one of the detectives says    'acted quite normal very cheerful impossible that she' but this is  an idea which is soon discarded. After a while the attitude of the  detectives becomes more relaxed and not so professional. Mrs Maloney  takes advantage of this by asking the detectives to stay for dinner.  She then goes on to feed them the leg of lamb thus destroying the  evidence. There is a moment of irony towards the end because when  talking about the murder weapon one of the detectives says    'Probably right under our very nose' just as they are eating the leg  of lamb. ...              ...and' and 'Lamb to the Slaughter' are  very diverse. In 'Lamb to the Slaughter' Mr and Mrs Maloney both lived  in a 'warm and clean' home. The atmosphere is of a happy and content  household. In 'The Speckled Band' the murder takes place in an old,  grey, stone house. The setting seems colder and emptier. The fact that  Roylott keeps animals such as cheetahs and baboons adds a darker adds  a more sinister feel to the story. This is more typical of a murder  mystery but it may not have seemed so unusual when it was first  written in the 19th century. I think the author of ' Lamb to the  Slaughter' wants the reader to see Mrs Maloney as quite cunning and  deceitful. He does this by showing that Mrs Maloney can use the fact  that she was married to Mr Maloney and that she is six months pregnant  to her advantage. Holmes would probably not have fallen into this same  trap.                      
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