Subtext essay
In the two stories the Landlady and the Lamb to the Slaughter both by Roald Dahl, subtext is used in these stories by how the author communicates through sounds, objects, jokes and smells.
In The landlady Roald Dahl uses subtext in how the landlady's too kind to be true character. Throughout the whole story the landlady seems like she's always watching like at the start when Billy rang the doorbell it seemed like just a second before she opened the door to greet him. When you read the story the landlady doesn’t seem like the murder that she is mostly because her kindness and her appearance with her blue eyes and how she looked like a caring and such a sweet lady, and also her red plump cheeks. The landlady also acts very …show more content…
The author writes that the fire place was bright and burning well to indicate that inside was warm and friendly. With the cold and deadly breeze outside the author uses this in way of humor because the story end's with death, so he purposely uses to describe the outside word with 'death'.
Subtext is also used in the 'Lamb to the Slaughter' like at the start of the story the author describes the room to be warm and clean, the house was just seemed so normal to any average house. But this warm setting doesn't stay for long.
Mary is a very irregular murder in a story, and how she is pregnant and she kills the father of her child you just expect someone who's holding your child to commit murder. Throughout the story you can tell that she tries hard to look after he husband, how she takes his coat from him and hangs it up. Roald Dahl also say that Mary loved to make sure her husband had luxury and how she loved being around