The widow must've been a very enduring woman, cunning and very intelligent as day by day she plotted and schemed a plan which seemed nearly infallible. Her son was the only thing in her life so when he died, the author made the dog Semillante the only thing going in the widow's life, and the writer made it so that no one would take away the widow's son that easily. Even though she was very enduring, the author also says that the widow was very "fidgety" as she looked at "the killer"; the writer here is referring to the dog as the murderer. His style of writing about the dog is very bright, as before in the story he was giving the dog a spirit almost, and now this soul had turned black, and no feeling or nothing is in it apart from just anger and appetite for food.
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Friday, November 16, 2007
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