- All's Well That Ends Well
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- Henry IV, Part 1
- Henry IV, Part 2
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- Henry VI, Part 1
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- Henry VI, Part 3
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It is tragic and in keeping with the story’s general tone of irony that Michael is killed when he is not engaged in combat and there is “nothing special doing.” The reader also feels a greater sense of tragedy for Helen since she has just been comforted by Michael’s reassurance that she should not worry right before he is killed.
Kipling’s use of the word “dropping” suggests the abruptness of Michael’s death. It also gives an impression of the randomness of death during the war with the image of the deadly shell falling suddenly on an ordinary, wet morning. The…