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Target one of the bells beside the cages and shoot it, whilst dodging the snake's attacks. When it starts to look at the bell, quickly grapple the metallic wheel and pull it so the cage drops onto the snake's head. do this with the other three and you can proceed.

(The snake isn't dead, it's just knocked out - use its body to exit the chamber.)

You face it afterwards in a button sequence, and if you do it wrong, Lara gets eaten.

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14y ago
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14y ago

I don't really remember... i haven't played that game in a super long time. But what i do know is that you have to us the chandelier. I'm sorry that i don't know much but this is coming from a bad memory.

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14y ago

If you are talking about the sea serphent, you first have to shoot the cage things. Then you have to keep shooting it and eventually it will die but don't go into the water when it is alive

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14y ago

It depends where you are. Please include where you are in the tomb x

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13y ago

Level 6. Consult a walkthrough if you're stuck.

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Q: On Lara Croft tombraider legend how do you break the statue of King Arthur?
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In 1964, an Indian man leaves his native country to sail to London. He studies at the London School of Economics, sharing an apartment with a group of other expatriate Bengalis. Five years later, at age 36, the man gets a job offer from a library at MIT. Around the same time, his marriage was arranged so he flies first to his wedding in Calcutta and then onwards to Boston. He reads a guidebook warning that America is less friendly than Britain. On the plane he learns that two men have landed on the moon. He studies the differences and expectations and finds a cheap room at the YMCA in Central Square for his first weeks in the country. The fist meal he has in America is a bowl of cornflakes. He is on a budget, resolving to spend little money until his wife arrives, but the noise of Massachusetts Avenue outside his window is too much to bear. He spends each day drinking tea out of a newly purchased thermos, reading the Boston Globe cover to cover and then sleeping fitfully in his room. He comes across an ad for a room for rent and calls. He is told the room is only rented to boys from Harvard or Tech (MIT). He makes an appointment for the following day. He finds the house with the room for rent on a pretty, tree-lined street. It would be the first detached house he lived in, and the first home without Indians. The woman who owns the house is the quite old Mrs. Croft. She is dressed as if she lived in the turn of the century. They talk of the moon landing and Mrs. Croft demands that the man call it "splendid." The man is baffled, but clearly she is impressed that he is punctual, that he declares the event "splendid," and that he does indeed work for MIT. He moves in. warned against "no lady visitors." He thinks about his wife Mala in Calcutta awaiting her green card. After their wedding, she wept every night thinking of her family only five miles away. He reflects on the death of his mother, which happened in the same bed, years before. She had gone crazy after the death of her husband and it fell to the narrator to take care of her and light her funeral pyre. When the narrator moves in, he finds Mrs. Croft sitting on the piano bench. She slaps the seat next to her, imploring him to sit down. This becomes a routine, the pair sitting together for 10 minutes a day and declaring the moon walk splendid. He does not have the heart to tell her that there is no longer a flag on the moon -- that the astronauts took it with them when they flew back to earth. When rent is due, instead of putting it on the ledge above the piano as requested, he hands the envelope stuffed with dollar bills to Mrs. Croft. She is confused and doesn't take it at first. That night, when he returns from work, she is still holding the envelope. They do not talk about the moon walk. She tells him that what he had done was very kind. Mrs. Croft's daughter Helen, dressed in modern clothes, comes to visit and to bring her mother food. Helen tours the narrator's room and they chat. She says he is the first boarder her mother has called a gentleman. Mrs. Croft yells for them to come downstairs and they fear the worst. But Mrs. Croft chides them for the indecency of a man and woman sharing a room without a chaperone. The narrator helps Helen carry the groceries to the kitchen. The narrator is shocked to learn that Mrs. Croft is 103 years old. The piano, Helen explains, was the source of income when Mrs. Croft was widowed. The narrator thinks of his own mother, destroyed by her widowhood. Six weeks are spent with the narrator worrying about Mrs. Croft's health, but, ultimately, he has no obligation to her. He prepares for his wife's arrival from Calcutta, anticipating it as if simply another season. He sees an Indian woman walking in Cambridge, an overcoat fastened over a sari. A dog tugs at the free end of her sari and the narrator thinks of Mala and the protection she will need in her new home. 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Finding himself on her street, the narrator takes Mala to Mrs. Croft's house. Helen answers the door. He is alarmed to realize that Mrs. Croft has broken her hip. She tells the narrator that she called the police and he responds "Splendid!" Mala laughs. Mrs. Croft tells Mala to stand up. Mrs. Croft appraises her and the narrator wonders if she had ever seen a woman in a sari. But Mrs. Croft is pleased -- Mala is a lady! The narrator laughs now, and he and Mala share a smile, the first real intimacy they've shared. From that moment on, Mala and the narrator explore Boston with each other and fellow Bengalis. The time is like a honeymoon. Month later, Mala consoles the narrator when he learns that Mrs. Croft has died. She is the first person he mourns in America. It is a sad milestone. The narrator continues to present day, when he and Mala have been married for decades and can barely remember a time when they didn't know each other. They have a son who attends Harvard. They haven't strayed much farther than Boston, living outside of the city and still remembering important landmarks from their lives despite the changing city. He and Mala have chosen to live their lives in this country. The narrator knows he is not the first person to seek fortune in another country, another life. But he still marvels at the distance traveled.


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