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W ELCOME. REG. NO.: 13116003. NAFIS KAMAL. BA ( Hons ) in English UNIVERSITY OF ASIA PACIFIC. The Appointment in Samarra. As retold by William Somerset Maugham (The speaker is Death). THEME OF THE STORY.
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REG. NO.: 13116003 NAFIS KAMAL BA (Hons) in English UNIVERSITY OF ASIA PACIFIC
The Appointment in Samarra • As retold by • William Somerset Maugham • (The speaker is Death)
THEME OF THE STORY The theme of this story is anyone can’t escape death. A servant is thought that he will escape from death, but he doesn’t know, death had an appointment with him in Samarra.
CHARACTERS OF THE STORY In this story there are three characters. The Merchant The Servant A Woman
PLOT OF THE STORY The Appointment in Samarra is a short story about a merchant’s servant who tries to avoid his appointment with Death. In the story the servant meets with Death at Baghdad then he lends a horse from the merchant and flees to Samarra. He is thought that he will escape from death, but he doesn’t know, death had an appointment with him in Samarra.
RHETORIC OF THE STORY • Personification:In this story the writer represents “death” as a human and a woman. And at end of the story the merchant made a conversation with death. In this story “death” is a lifeless idea but it represents a human. So, it is a cause of personification. • Alliteration: The consonant sound “t” (trembling, and tells) and “s” (start of surprise) repeats about two times in this story. So, it is a cause of alliteration.
RHETORIC OF THE STORY • Irony:In the story the servant meets with Death at Baghdad then he lends a horse from the merchant and flees to Samarra. The servant thought that he will escape from death, but he doesn’t know, death had an appointment with him in Samarra. This situation actually means opposite of its surface meaning. So, it is a cause of irony. • Symbol: In this story “a woman” refers Death. So, it is cause of symbol.
MORAL OF THE STORY In this world there is an appointed time and place for everyone to die.
OWN COMMENT If death is destined to happen it will happen; you can’t run from your destiny.