In "The Centipede," by Rony V. Diaz, the story is written in first person from Eddie's point of view, so we never truly know how Eddie's sister, Delia, views him. However, Eddie does say that she was very mean, and she "looked at me with increasing annoyance and contempt," and that "she destroyed willfully anything I liked."
. . .ewan kuh. . .
Here is a summary of The Centipede by Rony V. Diaz: Eddie is a little kid who often gets picked on by his sister. He describes a time when he went into her dollhouse and broke one of her dolls and she got so angry that she fell down, foaming at the mouth, and had to go to the hospital. Ever since then, the family has to be calm around her and work at not angering her or inspiring any extreme emotion because she has a weak heart. So Eddie takes it. He takes it when she complains about his pigeons and they have to let them go. He cries, but doesn't retaliate when she burns his butterflies. He says nothing when she asks that his monkey be killed because it is mocking her. He tells of a hunting trip with his father when they first met a dog that he adopts, and how it has helped him since, how he hangs out with it every day, why it is important to him. And one day he sees his sister beating it with a stick. He says nothing, because he shouldn't upset her, but his hatred is building from all the times that she has been cruel to him and destroyed the things that he loves. She tells him that if he allows it in the house again she will have the workman kill it, because it ruined her slippers. He runs after the dog, calling it. He finally gets close enough to see it, though it won't come to him or allow him to touch it, and he sees that his sister has punctured the dog's eye. When he comes home, the workman shows him a centipede that he found while chopping wood. Eddie kills it so that it won't hurt him to carry it, goes inside, and throws it in his sister's lap. She screams, accuses him of trying to kill her, and falls down, clutching her chest in pain, moaning. He feels bad, saying that the centipede is dead (it can't hurt her), but she doesn't move. That is how the story ends. The reader is left to wonder what happened to the sister, and what happens next. It seems to be a story about how not allowing our emotions to be vented in some way can be dangerous, but also about injustice, and how we deal with it.
☹️☹️☹️☹️☹️☹️☹️☹️☹️☹️☹️🙏☹️☹️☹️☹️☹️ amen tayo
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Blima mom dad sister freand from school and kakskdji
In the story of The Centipede,Eddie viewed his sister like a person that is always right because Eddie never complain to her..
In the story of The Centipede,Eddie viewed his sister like a person that is always right because Eddie never complain to her..
eddie(main character) delia(eddie's sister) biryuk(the dog) berto delia & eddies father
eddie viewed his sister as a bad person
eddie viewed his sister as a bad person
In the story of The Centipede,Eddie viewed his sister like a person that is always right because Eddie never complain to her..
In the story of The Centipede,Eddie viewed his sister like a person that is always right because Eddie never complain to her..
In the story of The Centipede,Eddie viewed his sister like a person that is always right because Eddie never complain to her..
Eddie was comparing his life to a Centipede in the story.
Eddie was comparing his life to a Centipede in the story.
the role of the centipede is to scare eddie's siater
The last ending of the story is her sister is died because of the centipede