understanding of the ending

Clotilde 2022-04-21 09:03:14


Bigger brains
but it feels like a perfect understanding

when Gerald points out that the woman they know may not be the same woman, more subtly making this dramatic particular coincidence more general

I tend to think that Gerald's conjecture was correct

When the family repented for what they had done, it made people feel that similar tragedies could be avoided in the future, but immediately they began to absolve themselves of their guilt and put their guilt behind them,

and history repeats itself
at the end of the story of the young female worker. The experience, it is to show that the same fate is repeating itself
The death of the female worker heralds the same fate for many people.

The phone at the end is also the same, it should be an unrelated and similar event

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Extended Reading

An Inspector Calls quotes

  • Arthur Birling: [about his workers] If you don't come down hard on some of these people, they'll soon be asking for the earth.

    Gerald Croft: [obsequiously] That's right.

    The Inspector: They might. But it's better to ask for the earth than to take it.

  • [last lines]

    Arthur Birling: [hanging up the phone] A girl has died. Suicide. A police inspector is on his way to ask us some questions.