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Anne Frank - Coggle Diagram
Anne Frank
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"I’ll try, Peter. The first minute I get I’ll try. But I’m afraid, with him gone a week"
"It’s terribly difficult to get them, Mr. Van Daan. But I’ll try. Good-bye."
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3.
Always wanting to say her opinion, outspoken
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curly, brown, bob haircut and she is skinny
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"In spite of everything, I still believe
that people are really good at heart." She was very positive (Act 2 Sc. 5)
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"Why is it that every grownup thinks he knows the way to bring up children? Particularly the grownups that never had any." This is true. How can a person without children now how to raise them. (Act 1 Sc. 3)
"You know what I do when it seems as if I couldn’t stand being cooped up for one more minute? I think myself out. I think myself on a walk in the park where I used to go with Pim." (Act 2 Sc. 4)
The days aren’t so bad. At least we know that Miep and Mr. Kraler are down there below us in the office. Our protectors, we call them.(Act 1 Sc. 2)
"I have often been downcast myself . . . but never in despair. I can shake off everything if I write." (Act 2 Sc. 3)
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3.
a young mother, gently bred, reserved
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4
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"I don’t mean to suggest anything wrong. I only wish that you wouldn’t expose yourself to criticism . . . that you wouldn’t give Mrs. Van Daan the opportunity to be unpleasant."
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"Think how lucky we are! Think of the thousands dying in the war, every day. Think of the people in concentration camps."
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"We are all here, alive. That is present enough."
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"You complain that I don’t treat you like a grownup. But when I do, you resent it."
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As I have often reminded Mrs. Van Daan, it’s very selfish of her to keep it when people outside are in such desperate need of clothing . . . (He gives the coat to Miep.) So if you will please to sell it for us?
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Look at you, talking that way in front of her! Don’t you know she puts it all down in that diary?
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It’s a wonder we weren’t arrested, walking along the streets . . . Petronella with a fur coat in July . . . and that cat of Peter’s crying all the way.
We could’ve been safe somewhere . . . in America or Switzerland. But no! No! You wouldn’t leave when I wanted to. You couldn’t leave your things. You couldn’t leave your precious furniture.
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1.Mr. Kraler
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This may be all my imagination. You get to a point, these days, where you suspect everyone and everything.
This isn’t the black market,4 Mrs. Frank. This is what we call the white market . . . helping all of the hundreds and hundreds who are hiding out in Amsterdam.
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He likes his cat, Mouschi
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It’s easier. A fight starts, or an argument . . . I duck in there.
Maybe Mouschi went back to our house . . . they say that cats . . . Do you ever get over there . . . ? I mean . . . do you suppose you could . . . ?
I heard about you . . . How you talked so much in class they called you Mrs. Quack Quack. How Mr. Smitter made you write a composition . . . “‘Quack, quack,’ said Mrs. Quack Quack.”
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I thought I might go off some place . . . work on a farm or something . . . some job that doesn’t take much brains.
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4.
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"It’s a phase . . . You heard Father . . . Most girls go through it . . . they turn to their fathers at this age . . . they give all their love to their fathers."
"It’s wonderful, Anne. Thank you. You’d never know it wasn’t new."
"What’s happened? Something’s happened! Hasn’t it, Mr. Kraler?"
"Of course I’m jealous . . . jealous that you’ve got something to get up in the morning for . . . But jealous of you and Peter? No."
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4.
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Putti, where’s our money? Get our money. I hear you can buy the Green Police off, so much a head. Go upstairs quick! Get the money!
No! No! No! Don’t you dare take that! You hear? It’s mine! My father gave me that! You didn’t give it to me. You have no right. Let go of it . . . you hear?
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He hasn’t finished his lessons, has he? His father’ll kill him if he catches him in there with that cat and his work not done.
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4.
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"There is so little that we parents can do to help our children. We can only try to set a good example . . . point the way."
"If we wait patiently, quietly, I believe that help will come."
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"Please, please! You see what a little sugar cake does to us? It goes right to our heads!" This shows he was trying to calm everybody.
"Have we lost all faith? All courage? A moment ago we thought that they’d come for us. We were sure it was the end. But it wasn’t the end. We’re alive, safe."
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"Something must be done about that child, Mrs. Frank. Yelling like that! Who knows but there’s somebody on the streets? She’s endangering all our lives."
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"I always get along very well with children. My patients all bring their children to me, because they know I get on well with them. So don’t you worry about that."
Wants Mr. Frank to answer phone, but he tries to do it himself
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"Is it possible? Is it possible that anyone is so silly as to worry about a fur coat in times like this?"
Something has happened, Mr. Frank. For three days now Miep hasn’t been to see us! And today not a man has come to work. There hasn’t been a sound in the building!
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