Users' questions

What purpose does the fly have?

What purpose does the fly have?

Flies act as scavengers consuming rotting organic matter so we don’t have to deal with it which is a very important role in the environment. If it wasn’t for flies, there would be rubbish and dead animal carcasses everywhere.

Are flies good for anything?

The biggest benefit from flies comes from the parasitic species. They attack caterpillars, grasshoppers, and other insects that eat our food plants. Some flies also help pollinate plants that we grow. Flies are also important food source for other animals that we value, like fish.

What purpose do flies serve to humans?

Pollinating plants, cleaning up carcasses, swabbing drains — flies are part of every strand of the web of life. For each person on earth, there are 17 million flies. They pollinate plants, consume decomposing bodies, eat the sludge in your drainpipes, damage crops, spread disease, kill spiders, hunt dragonflies.

What does the boss see in the fly?

The boss watches the fly as it begins to slowly clean itself, ridding itself of the ink that clings to its wings so that it might fly again. The boss sees in the fly’s attitude a sense of joy, that life is about to begin again. But then the boss has an idea.

Why did the boss never want to see his son’s grave in the fly?

Why did the boss never want to see his son’s grave in The Fly? The narrator does not tell readers that the boss never wanted to see his son’s grave. The story tells us that it has been six years since his son was killed in the war, and the boss has not gone to…

What makes the story of the fly so powerful?

The focus on inner life as opposed to linear narrative is characteristic of formalism. The story is rendered even more powerful by the subtle slide from an interaction between two men to one man’s internal experience.

How is Mr Woodifield different from the boss in the fly?

Mr. Woodifield’s lack of memory renders him pathetic, even emasculated, compared to a baby in a pram. In contrast, the boss is “still going strong” and feels satisfied at the contrast between him and his friend. Yet by the end of the story, the boss, too, has experienced lapses of memory that threaten to destabilize his sense of his own competence.

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