Rikki-Tikki-tavi Compare and Contrast Mongooses can kill cobras in one single bite There once was a mongoose named Rikki-Tikki-tavi. He lived in the jungles of India. One day, Rikki was washed up to a house by a big storm. The family that lived there thought that Rikki had died but decided to wrap him in a warm cloth anyway. A little while later, Rikki woke up, ate some food, and wandered off to explore the garden outside the house. There he met a tailorbird named Darzee, and a muskrat named Chuchundra. They were sad because Nag, a cobra, ate a baby bird. Just then, Nag and his wife Nagaina showed up and introduced themselves to Rikki. They knew that Rikki-Tikki-tavi would eventually save the garden and they would then be forced to leave. Both the printed copy and video show the same plot but also have some differences. …show more content…
It is a short story. The book is about the adventure Rikki goes on to save the family that lives in India. The problem is that Rikki-tikki-tavi needs to find a way to kill Nag and Nagaina so they won't kill everyone and have the house and garden to themselves. Then Rikki heard their plan in the bathroom and had to plan a way to stop it. The cobra couple was expecting their babies to hatch soon so there will be a lot more cobras that could cause trouble. One very exciting part is when Rikki-Tikki-tavi was killing the cobra eggs. Nagaina decided to go to the family and threaten to kill the little boy, Teddy. Luckily, Rikki went and told Nagaina that she should not hurt Teddy and to come get her last egg. They fought over the egg and she went into a deep hole in the garden. The resolution is that Nagaina died in the hole with her last egg in her mouth. Now the family and animals can live in the house and garden together safely. There were no more cobras to hurt them. Rikki-Tikki-tavi had saved them
In the book Rikki crushes all but one egg of Nagaina’s to bribe Nagaina into staying away from the kid. Rikki said, “What’sthe price for a snake’s egg? For a young cobra? For a king cobra? For the last-the very last of the brood? The ants are eating all the others by the melon bed.” Also in the book the snake flees with the egg trying to outrun Rikki. In the book it states, “He had forgotten about the egg. It lay on the veranda and Nagaina came nearer and nearer to it, til at last, while Rikki-Tikki was drawing breath, She caught it in her mouth, turned to the veranda steps, and flew like an arrow down the path.” Also in the movie the mongoose booked it right into the snake hole where many mongooses never come out. (movie) The movie shows “Rikki chasing Nagaia down a hole where the snake lived.” Also in the movie Rikki killed Nagaina, and whatever cobra ever dared to try to threaten him or the family. In conclusion that is how the Resolution is related to the book and the
Many people assume that the book and movie of the same story are always very similar, but they are incorrect. In my comparison of the short story Rikki-tikki-tavi by Rudyard Kipling and the movie of Rikki-tikki-tavi, I found them to be rather different. There were many minor differences, but the three main topics in the short story that clearly differentiate it from the movie are the setting, the character traits, and the use of humor.
Rikki-tikki is proud of himself because he helps the animals and the humans by killing the snakes or dangerous animals. The humans first find him after the flood washes him out of his berrow. Teddy wants to give him a funeral but his mom seas that maybe he isn't dead. He helps a bird and he helps the humans. On Page 16 “Teddy shouted to the house: “Oh look here! Our mongoose is killing a snake.“ On Page 18 and 19 Rikki-tikki killed Nag, “The big man picked up Rikki-tikki and he had said it's the mongoose again, Alice: the little chap has saved our lives now.” Teddy's father, the big man beats the snakes after Rikki bites the snakes to make sure the snakes are dead. Rikki kills the eggs in the melon bead so that there aren't little Cobras around
The sight of the snake is so heartbreaking that even the man is left to rethink
Red Scarf Girl by Ji-Li Jiang is an inspiring true story about a young girl who is forced to make an agonizing decision of country versus family. In her story of joy, sorrow, lament, resentment, and countless other perplexing experiences, she must decide whether she is her family's child or Chairman Mao's. In Red Scarf Girl, Ji-li is faced with the heart-breaking decision of her future, and finally after years of confounding peer and family pressure, she resolves to love her family. Throughout the book she is a zealous supporter of Mao, though is constantly running into contradicting encounters in the beginning, middle, and end.
This adds to the reader’s sympathy because he didn’t provoke the man’s attack and did nothing to deserve what happened to him. He was punished despite being completely innocent. Though the snake does not pose a direct threat, he is an extremely powerful creature and a great asset to the beauty of nature. He “felt no necessity of getting out of anybody’s path,” showing his confidence in himself. Though he is confident, he is not arrogant. He does not cower at the sight of the man, nor does he try to threaten him. He simply stands his ground confidently, waiting for the man to dictate his next move. This trait of the snake causes the reader to respect him and appreciate his position of power, reinforcing their sympathetic feelings. The snake’s death was slow and painful, and the author described all of the gruesome details in order to further affect the reader. The man himself admits that “it was a nasty sight”. First, he hacked about in the paper bag bush until he “dragged
Mongooses can usually fight off snakes and so his family puts him in charge of protecting Teddy. Later on in the day, Rikki-Tikki-Tavi hears Kariat and approaches him, making sure Teddy is safe. Rikki-Tikki-Tavi swings his body in side-to-side motions, so he can make a move in any which way. Kariat makes a move and Rikki-Tikki-Tavi jumps and land on his back. Rikki-Tikki-Tavi bites his neck and paralyzed Karait. If Rikki-Tikki-Tavi never killed Karait, he could’ve easily killed Teddy. But Rikki-Tikki-Tavi saves his family by risking his life again, to ensure the safety of them
The comparison of the rattlesnake to a bigger, more frightening, and yet less deadly creature makes the former seem dangerous. While a blacksnake would “flee at the sight of a man”, the rattler proved its fearlessness with the way he “held his ground”. The rattler is cocky, and for good reason, because his poison could kill the man much easier than the theoretical blacksnake could. The man is in a life-threatening situation and the reader is likely to sympathize with his fear and worry. The author uses violent diction when describing the snake to make us see him as a vicious creature, in need of killing to keep others safe. Even dead, the rattler “may still bite”. He needs to be kept as far as possible from people - especially vulnerable people, such as young children - in order to protect them. The author includes this hostile wording to bring awareness to the fact that the snake is remorseless, even in death, and that taking its life is noble and just. Finally, the snake’s “little song of death” is personified negatively by the man to show that the snake is the villain in the story. Life is, according to the rattlesnake, “dear and would be dearly sold”. It comes to light in this phrase that the snake is looking for revenge from the man’s actions. The rattler is not as innocent as he may have initially seemed. As he attempts at the man’s life to bring
The book Rikki Tikki Tavi is about a mongoose who saves a human family from snakes. In the beginning Rikki Tikki is washed away from his home in a summer flood, where humans rescue him. He decides to stay and meets Nag and Nagaina ,two king cobras who try to kill him. The young boy who saved Rikki finds him in the garden but
A red-eyed beast. A fuzzy mammal. A snake killer. A mongoose? In the short story Rikki-Tikki-Tavi written by:Rudyard Kipling. His story takes place in India,when a mongoose gets flooded out of his home in a storm, he ends up in a garden. A family finds him and takes him into their bungalow. He goes around their garden and meets all the other creatures and introduces himself as Rikki-Tikki-Tavi when Nag starts threatening Rikki-Tikki. Rikki barely has time to jump when Nag’s evil wife,Nagaina come whizzing under Rikki. This starts the war between the mongoose and snakes. Rikki kills Karait and Nag and is coming for Nagaina. When Darzee’s wife tells Rikki-Tikki about Nagaina’s eggs that are soon going to hatch, he knows
The snake was not aware of the man’s intentions was cautious but not yet preparing for an attack. The rattlesnake “lay ridged” through its mistrust of the man did not feel threatened so his “body was undulant” not preparing for an attack. Because of its natural instincts the snake was wary of the man’s presence but did not feel provoked enough to set up a defense. The usual instincts would have been to give a strong attack but choose not to do so. Still attentive to the man’s possible actions, the snake presents him with a warning for both their sake. Therefore as the man raised his weapon the snake set up its rattling and “shook his fair but furious signal” warning the man he “made an unprovoked attack”. The snake had not planned on attacking the man so instead of reacting swiftly the snake had given the man a warning. By doing so the snake shows its value of life because he left the man chance in avoiding an outcome with death for either side. Consequently having misjudged the man’s intent it is left with little time to protect itself from an unexpected attack. With the man suddenly attacking the snake with a hoe it “struck passionately” until it “was soon dead”. As a result of not being able to assemble an attack the snake is left with it’s only chance of winning by striking hard but with ineffective moves. Thus readers feel sympathy for the snake because it had not called for an attack that would have taken either
This book is about a boy named Brian Roberson who gets stuck in the wilderness when his plane crash-lands because the pilot has a heart attack. It all started when Brian's parents had a divorce. He was sent away on a plane by his mother because it was summertime when his dad had custody. The parting gift his mother gave him was a hatchet. He wore the hatchet on a belt. When he left on the private little Cessna 406 plane in the copilot's seat he never could imagine how this little trip would change his life. In the airplane he thought a lot about his parents and the secret he kept. The secret was that he knew that his mom was having an affair with another man when she was still married to his father. Brian was thinking this until the pilot interrupted his thoughts and asked him if he has ever been in a copilot's seat before. He answered by saying that he has never been on an airplane. The pilot showed Brian how to fly the airplane by letting him fly for a !
Abraham Lincoln and Hector both lived centuries apart, despite having many contrasts, especially in the beginning stages of their lives, their final results were that they had several astounding similarities. Hector lived as royalty whom was willing to live, fight, and die for his country. Lincoln lived as a poor, young boy until he became the leader of a country that was in desperate need of help. Even though they may have died for diverse reasons, they both died as heroes for many.
Through the use of false truths, Sherman Alexie and Jhumpa Lahiri illustrate the point that things are not always as they seem, and how your reality can just be an illusion.
The book is called Of Beetles and Angels. It is written by Mawi Asgedom. It was written in 2001. It’s about a family of refugees that came to america for a better life. The main character is Mawi, two big characters are Tewolde and Haileab. Hope and optimism play a big role in this story.