Because employees at stores could get overwhelmed while customers can become frustrated when things do go as planned or they can't get what they want
Answer
The Island of Doctor Moreau is a science fiction novel written by H. G. Wells in 1896. The narrator of the story is Edward Prendick who narrates his story in first person narrative after his shipwreck.
1:
a) He is Kind with beast people.
b) M'ling is Montgomery's attendant.
2:
Because spell of hypnotism in beast people weakens at night.
3:
They are less numerous.
Explanation:
1:
a) How does Montgomery feel about the Beast People?
Montgomery has been with these beasts for a long time and regards them as almost human beings. He has kindness and sympathy for most of them.
b) What is M'ling's relationship with Montgomery?
M’ling, the black-faced man is Montgomery’s devout and well-trained attendant. However, Montgomery is either very kind or very abusive to M’ling depending on whether he is drunk or not.
2: Why is the Leopard Man more dangerous at night?
Dr. Moreau has hypnotized the beasts on the island by a law. By this hypnotism certain things (such as attacking human beings or each other) have been made impossible for them. These prohibitions have been made part of their personality by weaving in their minds. However this hypnotism is weakened at night. In feline beast people, such as Leopard Man this weakness of hypnotism is even more evident, so Leopard Man becomes more dangerous at night.
3: What does Prendick observe about the female Beast People?
Prendick the narrator observes that female beast people are less numerous than their males. In spite of the monogamy law (the practice of marrying or state of being married to one person at a time) females were secretly abused. Prendick also mentions that female beasts were instinctively aware of their repulsive clumsiness, and took more care in wearing decorative clothes like humans.
Bill displays mastery in his work: Bill turned and looked, then quietly · stopped the dogs.
The idea that Shakespeare presents in the play is that the order of things will fall into anarchy in the play.
Explanation:
This is the first scene of the tragedy of Macbeth and serves as one of the best introductions to a play as it is simultaneously revealing an important plot element and making a case for a major theme of the play.
The phrase 'fair is foul, foul is fair' shows this.
It is a paradoxical argument that shows the anarchy that the system is going to fall into when the characters of the play decide to think that foul is indeed fair for their own means.
In that sense, the idea of losing morality and a sense of paradox is what is primal in the play.