Cellar Dwellers 1
Cellar Dwellers 2
What a way to go...
Symple Symbols
Doves, Gardens, and Highwaymen, oh my!
100

This student gets a little prideful when everyone starts expressing that they feel better that he is with them in the cellar.

The "Doctor"

100

This young lady catches her hair on fire while reading by candlelight.

Christine

100

Pista

A bomb explodes and shrapnel pierces him, causing him to quickly bleed to death.

100

Christine knows her childhood is over then this item is destroyed.  It represents her former innocence.  

Piano

100

Mrs. Dove teaches this well-rounded subject.

Geography

200

These two have a cask of wine that they refuse to share.

The janitor and his wife

200

These two only survive because they were running an errand when the munitions train exploded.

Eve and Gabriel

200
Ilus and her baby

Their boat hits a bridge pier rigged with explosives as they try to cross the Danube.

200

The white wedding veil becoming Pista's funeral pall and slowly being saturated with blood is symbolic of this great event.

Jesus sacrificing himself and making us clean by His blood.

200

Laura is distracted from her crusade to stop the party by this item.

A hat

300

This woman's loud voice and demanding manner made her jaw injury rather ironic.

The Colonel's wife

300

This young man's smile haunts Christine's dreams.

Pista

300
Bess ("The Highwayman")

Pulls the trigger on the gun tied to her chest.

300

This horrible thing in the Turkish baths symbolizes the indiscriminate brutality of war and that death is the great equalizer.

The dead body floating in the pool

300

The highwayman told Bess that he planned to come to her in the morning.  However, if anything went wrong, she should look for her by this time.

Moonlight

400
This newly single lady penciled in her eyebrows even in the worst conditions.

Ilus

400

This woman is from a neutral country.

The district attorney's wife.

400

Mr. Radnai

Is shot in the stomach

400

Christine is proud of having this article of adult clothing.  She is later embarrassed by its appearance in public.  It symbolizes her awkward, interrupted transition to adulthood.

Her silk nightgown.

400

To show that she isn't a snob and is comfortable around the workmen, Laura Sheridan does this.

Takes a big bite of bread and butter.

500

This man usually didn't wear his "emblem of the persecuted."

Mr. Radnai

500

This woman wears her jewelry in a bag tied around her neck.

The banker's wife

500
Laura's neighbor in "The Garden-Party"

He hits his head on the pavement when thrown from his carriage by his spooked horse.

500

This item which Christine steps on causes her to have nightmares.  It symbolizes the horrible devastation on all sides of the war.

The severed arm wearing a wedding ring

500
After being kissed by Randy Baker on behalf of his brother Thomas, the class is in an uproar.  Miss Dove brings it back to order by tying back this child's wild red hair.

Jincey (Webb)