Ernest Hemingway, the author of the book Men without Women, stated “When you lose yourself, you can't tell who you are anymore. I'm not afraid of losing myself. I'm afraid of being found by someone who won't know how to love me for who I am.” This quote relates to Vera Claythorn. She lost herself to love, and her lover did not even love her for who she was. This left her heart shattered. In the book And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie, there are 10 people on the island who have each committed a murder. In the beginning of the book there is a poem about 10 soldiers dying, which is the 10 people that have committed a crime. Each of the characters have committed a crime that cannot be proven. One of these Characters is Vera Claythorn. …show more content…
She thought he deserved the money and wanted to marry him. Since he was poor without the money they could not get married. She lost herself and was loved by someone who did not accept her for who she was. If he did he would not have left her with no explanation. Agatha Christie states “ “I love you, I love you. You know I love you, Vera.” Yes, she knew. ( Or thought she knew). “I can’t ask you to marry me. I’ve not got a penny. It’s all I can do to keep myself. Queer, you know once for three months, I had the chance of being a rich man to look forward to. Cyril wasn’t born until three months after Maurice died. If he’d been a girl.” If the child had been a girl, Hugo would have come into everything. He’d been disappointed, he admitted ( Christie Pg. 80 ).” Second, Agatha Christie implies that Vera feels bad and blames herself. Cyril said he could swim and always nagged her because he knew he could do it. So even though she killed a boy for love, she feels very sorry for it and still feels guilt everyday. She is not a cold hearted monster like Emily Brent, she feels empathy. Agatha Christie says “what did you feel like when you knew she’d done that? Weren’t you sorry? Didn’t you blame yourself ( Christie pg. 101
During the entire time up till her death, Vera was almost in a trance-like state. Almost blinded by what she wanted,
Throughout the book And Then There Were None, Vera Claythorne was a very quick-witted person. In order for her to try and make it out alive, she had to be courageous, reliable to the other guests, and stand her own ground. Vera was a courageous guest who had many strengths. “How was it worked-that trick with the marble bear (pg.262)?”
In Agatha Christie’s And Then There Were None there are at least two of the twenty rules from “Twenty Rules for Writing Detective Stories” by Van Dine used. These two rules being “The culprit must turn out to be a person who has played a more or less prominent part in the story — that is, a person with whom the reader is familiar and in whom he takes an interest” (Van Dine) and “No willful tricks or deceptions may be placed on the reader other than those played legitimately by the criminal on the detective himself” (Van Dine) In And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie One of the many rules from “Twenty Rules for Writing Detective Stories” by Van Dine shown is “The culprit must turn out to be a person who has played a more or less prominent part in the story. . .” (Van Dine).
He loved her, however she was not as willing to return the
After T-Ray came and found her , they talked at the end near the car. She was able to move on and continue with her live because she knew she could not do anything to change what had happened. There are two more characters that stand out, T-Ray and May.
However, during family therapy, her therapist Dr. B makes Vera and her dad do a role-playing exercise revealing that they still are not over her mom: “We are realizing, simultaneously, that we have never dealt with Mom leaving” (King 217). Vera’s therapist helps her and her dad to recognize that they have never confronted the issue of her mother leaving them and encourages them to talk more about it. During discussions, Vera understands that she is not to blame and reminds her father that her mom left “[b]ecause she never got over her own baggage, not because of you or me” (King 232). This realization leads her to begin moving on, and so she clears her mother out of the house: “That night, we rearrange the living room and Dad throws Mom’s clothing into a few black garbage bags for Goodwill” (King 243). By letting go of her mother’s belongings she lets go of the hope that her mother would return and the idea that her mom left because of her.
And Then There Were None Vera finds a poem in her room about little soldier boy, which foreshadows the coming deaths and sets the mood. The guests are at dinner when they realize that none of them actually knows the mysterious person who invited them to the island, which is one of the first signs that something is not right.
Though she loved a man, she decided that because he came from poor and had no money himself, she could not stay with him. This further proves the need she felt to fit into wealth standards in
What could love, the unsolved mystery, count for in the face of this possession of self-assertion which she suddenly recognized as the strongest impulse of her being! “Free! Body and soul free!” she kept whispering.” To her, her freedom and being capable of doing what she wanted was more important than her little amount of love towards her now dead husband. She felt splendid once he was
In the mystery, “And Then There Were None,” by Agatha Christie, Dr. Edward Armstrong is a character who deserves sympathy for many reasons. In the novel 10 people who are guilty of crimes not touchable by the law are placed on an island together. They receive letters from an unknown man named U.N Owen that invited them to a famous island called Soldier Island owned by a millionaire. U.N Owen has put himself on the island as one of the 10 guests where he kills all of the guests off in different ways. In the end, U.N Owen or Lawrence Wargrave leaves a note in a bottle and throws it into the sea for somebody to read, after everyone on the island is killed Lawrence Wargrave shoots himself in the forehead.
Armand’s father had brought him home from paris, when he was eight, after his mother died. He came from a wealthy family. According to the Armand’s father thought of Desiree didn’t seem like he was happy because the way he grew up, he wanted someone from the same wealth as them. After they had gotten married and they were expecting a baby, the day had come of the birth of the child Mrs. Valmonde was surprised about the baby when she saw it because perhaps the kid didn’t look like one of the parent’s. “ Marriage, and later the birth of his so had softened Armand Aubigny’s imperious and exacting nature greatly.”
This quote connects to how certain anxieties can ignite, for instance, since she has murdered people and will never be able to make love anymore,
Vera has a very abrupt personality she is upfront ad she will make sure she gets what she wants. Vera has no shame except for one thing. “I hate Mrs. Harding, Mack;...”(Kesey 142). Vera does not wants to be associated with her husband. She corrects people when they call her by her last name in the quote above she corrects McMurphy when he calls her Mrs. Harding.
And Then There Were None is a well known novel written by the amazing Agatha Christie it was later made into the film 10 Little Indians. Differences between these two works include character names and crimes, setting, the ending. In the movie seven of the ten guests on the island had different names. Anthony Marston was renamed as Mike Raven; Justice Wargrave was changed to Arthur Canon; General Macarthur was called General ManDrake; Mister and misses Rogers name change was mister and misses Groman; Vera Claythorn was referred to as Anne Clyde; Emily Brent did not exist and was replaced by a character by the name of Ilona Bergen.