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Harry Bittering Character Analysis

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As the “newcomers” went to Mars to rescue the people that once lived there to escape a world war, they met the martians. But yet to know that these martians, were once the people that lived there many years ago. The newcomers thought that the martians were friendly but what they didn't know is that the martians were secretly trying to infect the newcomers with a plague that would turn them into a new form of martian. A destructive type of martian. So, the martians invited the newcomers to dinner at the dining hall in the leader of the martians house. This leader was Harry Bittering. At dinner Harry noticed Jake Locke, an army sergeant who volunteered to lead the newcomers to rescue the survivors. As everyone was drinking their fine grape juice, (school appropriate :) Harry slipped a liquid version of the plague into Jakes drink. Jake then got tired and suddenly passed out as quick as a sloth. (Simile) …show more content…
Then Harry locked up Jake in a cell to see if he had any life threatening symptoms or if the plague would transform him. When Harry went to check on him, he was no longer “Jake”. The plague had altered his appearance and looked like a very muscular martian. He was a walking ogre. (Metaphor) Now knowing that the plague worked, he slipped it into the drinking water of all of the newcomers “homes”. One of the newcomers was a scientist so he was testing the water to see if it was water or a different liquid. So while he was testing the water he found the plague mixed into the water. He didn't know what the plague would do so he tested the water on a rat. The rat immediately passed out and within an hour grew 2 feet larger almost like the beanstalk from Jack and the Beanstalk and looked like it wanted to terrorize the newcomers. The scientist kept the rat caged so it would not do

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...Theme Analysis Prompt Are you pleased or satisfied of where you are from? Or would you change it? In the story, “Dark They Were and Golden Eyed” by Ray Bradbury, a character named Harry Bittering adapted to the lifestyle of becoming a Martian, or in other words, he changed his culture. In the article, ‘I Am From” by Alicia Bareno, Alicia is possibly an immigrant who refuses to forget her culture. In each of these texts, the characters or authors themself either lose a culture or holds onto one. Changing or keeping a culture changes who you are, inside and out. Changing a culture affects you because it determines what you look like and what you act like. ”Mr. Bittering gazed at the Earth settlement far way in the low valley. ‘Such odd, such ridiculous houses the Earth people built.” This quote from the text indicates that Mr. Bittering (and his family) are no longer accepting their culture they had when they were on Earth, that he is not even referring to himself. Because Mr. Bittering and his family drew away from their original culture, it has changed what they act and look like. “The town’s empty, but we found native life in the hills, sir. Dark people. Yellow eyes. Very friendly. We talked a bit, not much. They learn English fast. I’m sure our relations will be most friendly with them, sir.” Because the Bittering family was willing to lose their culture they became Martians. The story acts as a metaphor, because people are willing to give up a culture, they will become...

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