Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Nicole
Renard
- Appearance vs Reality
- Appears innocent
- "The pale purity
of her face
reminded me of
the statue of St
Therese" - Francis
- In reality, she enjoys the
attention she gets from
Francis and Larry. She isn't
as innocent as she seems
- She ignores
Francis and this
makes him want her
even more
- "Don't fall off,
Francis" -
Nicole
- "I wondered if
she'd been waving
at Joey LeBlanc or
me"- Francis
- She knows it is
inappropriate and she
is teasing Larry when
she dances with him
- "He allowed her
to slip down
against his body"
- "My hand lingered there for
a moment and she didn't
protest" - Francis
- She is easily
influenced, when
she is around
nuns she wants
to be a nurse,
when she lives in
a school, she
wants to be a
teacher.
- She would be an easy target
for Larry to manipulate
- Acts like she's okay in the end
- In reality she hasn't dealt
with what's happened to
her, being raped defines
who she is now
- "'Fine" she says, but
the softness is gone
from her face"
- Heroism
- Brave as she
carried on and kept
her rape a secret
- Is she trying to protect
Larry, or does she
think that nobody
would believe her?
- "Who was I going to tell?
My mother and father? It
would have killed them,
ruined them forever"- Nicole
- "I'm adjusting.
Getting better at it all
the time" - Nicole
- Consequences of war
- Being raped
wasn't the only
thing that
changed Nicole
- When Larry went off to
war she focused her
attention on Francis, this
was her last bit of normality
- "The world
was not a safe
place any
more"
- "I'd like to help
more in the war.
Maybe become a
nurse" - Nicole
- After the war, she changes
her dream to being a teacher,
suggesting she doesn't want
anything to do with the war.
- "She wants to be a
teacher, English maybe"
- End of childhood
- When Francis goes
to see her she wears
a green cardigan
over a white top
- White represents purity and she
is always described as pure,
maybe the green cardigan is
wrapped around her to shield her
innocence that has been taken
- However, she still wears the white
underneath, suggesting she has
not had sex with anyone else since,
the cardigan is protecting her
- She also wears a white top when
she is raped, it is ripped and ruined,
symbolising her loss of innocence
- She has cut her hair off, the
bluntness of her new hair
could be a metaphor for the
change inside of her, her
sharp haircut matches her
sharp, bitter personality
- "I don't recognize her, fail to see
Nicole Renard in the girl who just
entered the room" - Francis
- Love/Hate
- Francis loves Nicole
unconditionally, but we get the
impression it is unrequited
- "She looks at me with
affection, but affection is
not love" - Francis
- "It would always be
Nicole Renard" -
Francis
- Forgiveness
- At first Nicole
blames Francis
because he didn't do
anything to stop Larry
- "I recognized in her eyes
now what I could not
deny: betrayal" - Francis
- At the end of the novel we
find out that she had
forgiven him, she just
didn't get the chance to
tell him
- "You weren't to
blame for what
happened"-
Nicole