Three Versions of The Demon Lover Contain a Common Message

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All three versions of “The Demon Lover has the same common messages: to be careful in trust, be careful of the vows you make, and that the decisions of the young often come back around negatively. All three pieces exemplify these messages heavily. Of all of the works maintaining these themes, Elizabeth Bowen’s “The Demon Lover” displays these messages the most vehemently. Bowen’s version of “The Demon Lover” take on the principles of Harris’ “The Demon Lover” and makes the ideals more noticeable to the novice reader.
Kathleen/Mrs. Drover is a perfect rendition of the original. She blatantly displays youth, as well as a true inability to make or remember promises made during major events in her life.
It is quite peculiar that “the young girl talking to the soldier in the garden had not ever completely seen his face” (Bowen 2). When has a person had a positive relationship with someone they never knew, much less fall in love and vow to marry a man whose face she has never seen nor known. Kathleen makes one mistake after another with the faceless soldier over her promise to him. She ...

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