mr whites third wish was to for his son to disappear/ go back to the grave. he wished this because when he had to choose which one was his sons body he had to choose by looking at the clothing not the face. he had to choose that way because his sons body was mutilated and disfigured. so when he wished for his son back.. his son would come back in that gross disfigured appearance.. and also since he as been in the grave for a while he would also be decomposing. and he didn't want his hysterical wife to see her son like that.
to reverse his second wish
No Mr. Peters didn't use his third wish. he died with it instead with a smile on his face
Hggg
they have two hundred pound.
the second wish in the monkey's paw by Mr. White is "I wish my son alive again"
Mr. Whites 200 pounds mortgage owing is important because it foreshadows the compensation the whites got for Herbert's death and it foreshadows Mr. Whites first wish.
to live !
When Mr. Peters uses his second wish to wish back his wife to being a swan because he had seen how lonely his wife was .
In "The Third Wish" by Joan Aiken, the conclusion sees Mr. Peters fulfilling his third wish, which is for the Kingfisher to be freed. The Kingfisher transforms back into a beautiful woman and Mr. Peters learns a valuable lesson about the consequences of his wishes and the nature of true happiness.
The characters in the short story "The Third Wish" by Joan Aiken are Mr. Peters, Leita, and the magical talking fish. The story follows Mr. Peters as he uses his last wish to free the fish from a magical curse, leading to unexpected consequences.
Mr Peters wife's name was Leita the swan ?
the King of the Forest, Mr. Peters, Leita, and Rhea