Changes In And Then There Were None By Agatha Christie

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In the novel And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie, General Macauthor changes from the beginning to the end. This is because at the beginning of the book, he was open-minded and confident, but near the end of his life he became sorrowful and prejudiced. You can see at the beginning of the book, he is brought to the island as a guest, and he completely secludes his feelings about the island, or what he had done from anyone. He was staying confident, and professional with the rest. Though he had wanted to leave the island as he felt insecure about being there, he had not told anyone. Though once the murders had started, he had given up and was sitting at sea awaiting his death in the guilt of the crime he had done, with the death of his wife... He had let out all of his feelings to Vera Claythorne, letting go of his confined definition. (Christie 129). …show more content…

Though as he let go of his confined definition of himself. He had given up being professional, as death was gonna await him soon. He was first invited to the island because of a crime he had done that was gossiped about through a bar. He had lived a quiet and melancholy life after the death of his wife Leslie. Though if he had let his past mistake, of his crime, go, he wouldn’t have been invited to the island in the first place. Though as why he became confined, as he was being gossiped in by in the