Sometimes, she tries to keep a positive tone and be grateful for all she has, such as in Friday, July 21, 1944’s entry: “Now I am really getting hopeful, now things are going well at last. Yes, really, they’re going well! Super news!” (Frank 264). The usage of words like “hopeful” and “well” cause the reader to feel joyful for the Secret Annexe members. Other times, she is boiling with rage, or weeping her heart out, like when she writes about learning that Margot was called up by the S.S. She wrote, “When we were alone in our bedroom, Margot told me that the call-up was not for Daddy, but for her. I was more frightened than ever and began to cry. Margot was sixteen; would they really take girls away of that age alone?” (Frank 14) in Wednesday, July 8, 1942’s diary entry. When describing this event, Anne has a sorrowful tone, implied by words like “frightened” and “cry”. Her sorrowful tone makes the reader feel a gloomy
Sometimes, she tries to keep a positive tone and be grateful for all she has, such as in Friday, July 21, 1944’s entry: “Now I am really getting hopeful, now things are going well at last. Yes, really, they’re going well! Super news!” (Frank 264). The usage of words like “hopeful” and “well” cause the reader to feel joyful for the Secret Annexe members. Other times, she is boiling with rage, or weeping her heart out, like when she writes about learning that Margot was called up by the S.S. She wrote, “When we were alone in our bedroom, Margot told me that the call-up was not for Daddy, but for her. I was more frightened than ever and began to cry. Margot was sixteen; would they really take girls away of that age alone?” (Frank 14) in Wednesday, July 8, 1942’s diary entry. When describing this event, Anne has a sorrowful tone, implied by words like “frightened” and “cry”. Her sorrowful tone makes the reader feel a gloomy