|
|
 This is only a preview of the paper Click here to register and get the full text. Existing members click here to login
|
|
|
1) Robyn doesn't identify herself through money. a) Money is not important to her. "... she had (Robyn), by the force of her will, compelled her uncle Walter ... to put all the money he had on his person into a charity collecting-box ... as a result of which the uncle, too embarrassed to admit to this folly and borrow from his relatives, had run out of petrol on the way back to the sheep station. Robyn herself ... interpreted this anecdote in a light more favorable to herself, as anticipating her later commitment to progressive causes." (p. 55) Phillip Swallow: "Isn't it extraordinary how interesting money has become lately? Do you know, I've suddenly started reading the business pages in the Guardian after thirty years of skipping straight from the arts page to the sports reports." "I can't say it interests me much," said Robyn ..." (p.326) "Well, it's nice work. It's meaningful. It's rewarding. I don't mean in money terms. It would be doing even if it wasn't paid anything at all." (p.
Approximate Word count = 690 Approximate Pages = 2.8 (250 words per page double spaced)
|
|
|
|
|
|