Dawn’s answer to “Can someone explain the Flute part of the story to me? What was it and why was it so significant/im…” > Likes and Comments
16 likes · Like
		
				
				
		
	
		
			
  
  
    
  
         I wouldn't have thought of that - because Im not a particularly literary person! But of course you can put any interpretation on anything. However in this case its food for thought - because in fact Fen seems to be being drawn into their way of life and their supernatural beliefs - away from scientific fact. I thought that when he returned with the flute and claimed he survived because he was 'invisible'. but then again - he may have just been trying to assuage his guilt that the other man had died (can't remember his name!) and he hadn't.
      I wouldn't have thought of that - because Im not a particularly literary person! But of course you can put any interpretation on anything. However in this case its food for thought - because in fact Fen seems to be being drawn into their way of life and their supernatural beliefs - away from scientific fact. I thought that when he returned with the flute and claimed he survived because he was 'invisible'. but then again - he may have just been trying to assuage his guilt that the other man had died (can't remember his name!) and he hadn't.
    
  
    
  
	
	
		back to top
		  
  
  
  
      
					date newest »
						  
						newest »
				
		 newest »
						  
						newest »
				
        message 1:
      by
      
          Penny
      
        
          (new)
        
    
    
      Jun 22, 2016 04:54AM
    
     I wouldn't have thought of that - because Im not a particularly literary person! But of course you can put any interpretation on anything. However in this case its food for thought - because in fact Fen seems to be being drawn into their way of life and their supernatural beliefs - away from scientific fact. I thought that when he returned with the flute and claimed he survived because he was 'invisible'. but then again - he may have just been trying to assuage his guilt that the other man had died (can't remember his name!) and he hadn't.
      I wouldn't have thought of that - because Im not a particularly literary person! But of course you can put any interpretation on anything. However in this case its food for thought - because in fact Fen seems to be being drawn into their way of life and their supernatural beliefs - away from scientific fact. I thought that when he returned with the flute and claimed he survived because he was 'invisible'. but then again - he may have just been trying to assuage his guilt that the other man had died (can't remember his name!) and he hadn't.
    
          reply
          |
      
      flag
    
  
