<h2>Who will bell the cat?</h2>
Grace Manor was a huge house and had a mistress who was not only rich but wanted the Manor clean and in pristine order, and at the same time, never wanting for grain- something the mice loved.
Due to the constant raids by the mice, the mistress of the house brought in a hungry cat and he began to hunt the mice and kill them.
There was peace, quiet, and most importantly, orderliness in the Manor, but the mice were starving so they came up with a plan to bell the hungry cat so they can scamper before he was able to sneak up on them.
The big question was: "Who will bell the (hungry) cat?"
No other mice wanted to do so because they were all scared of the cat, but Meachum, the smallest of the mice decided to do it and was successful now the mice could raid the barn in peace, due to the courage of Meachum.
answer:
here's what i believe the theme to be-
pygmalion explores and touches on how social identity is formed not only through patterns of speech, but also through one's general appearance. and much like speech, one's physical appearance signals, social class.
what makes pygmalion different in my opinion is that it talks about real life and isn't sugar-coated and movie-like as most plays are. for me, i feel as if this play gives people the relatability that is usually missing.
good luck :)
i hope this helps
brainliest would be highly appreciated
have a nice day!
To be 100% sure he saw what he saw and he was curious
I like writing fantasies. Filled with dragons, griffins, and magic.