No, the plan to kill the American did not succeed because for three consecutive nights Sadao kept awake, feeling a little disturbed but all the three nights no assassins came and the young prisoner was still there. Later the general confessed to Sadao that he had forgotten his promise of having him killed because he was preoccupied with his own sufferings.
Yes, the plan to kill the American was successful in the story "The Enemy" by Pearl S. Buck. The protagonist, Ituen, carries out the plan to assassinate the American soldier, Major Scobie.
When the American was departing from the place, He first tried to understand all the instructions given to him by Sadao and then dressed in the Japanese clothes Sadao had given him, he shook his hand warmly and left for the island from which he had to escape.
The US underestimated the enemy; and the target was there.
The Japanese
In "The Pearl" by John Steinbeck, the natural world is portrayed as both a friend and an enemy to Kino. It is a friend in its beauty and the sustenance it provides, symbolized by the pearl itself. However, it becomes an enemy through the dangers it presents and the greed it awakens in others, leading to tragedy for Kino and his family.
Sadao and his wife were standing in the verandah when they saw a man who had been flung out of the ocean by a wave. At first they thought him to be a fisherman but on closer look they saw that it was a white man, an American prisoner of war who had escaped. He was injured badly and was bleeding profusely
Kino became everyone's enemy when they found a large pearl and decided to keep it for themselves instead of sharing it with the community. This decision led to betrayal, greed, and violence from those around them who desired the pearl.
you
Song of the Family, Song of Evil/Enemy, Song/Music of the Ppearl, (Song of The Pearl That Might Be)
Yes, he apologizes and appeases the enemy of America and has made American friends enemies and American enemies friends.
Stealthy enemy movements into attacking positions.
The first and greates lesson of the Sioux Indians was to never cry, because if they did cry then that might scare away the prey they were hunting or give the enemy the location of the village.
The king