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'The Go-Between' by L.P.Hartley - "It did not occur to me that they had treated me badly" - What Sympathy do you have for Leo in the Go-Between?  

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'The Go-Between' by L.P.Hartley "It did not occur to me that they had treated me badly" What Sympathy do you have for Leo in the Go-Between? This essay is to assess how much sympathy is deserving of the young and naïve Leo Colston after being permanently emotionally damaged from a visit to a school friend in the country in the summer of 1900. The prologue acts as the introduction to the elder character of Leo Colston, a man in his sixties, and it is here that we are presented with the impact of his summer visit to Brandham Hall, over fifty years before. From the opening of the novel with "the past is a foreign country, they do things differently there", the reader is immediately made aware of the themes of past and of memory. Although these themes are initially conjured up, from the tone of narration, there is a much greater sense...

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