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  1. The difference in Stanley’s and Mitchs treatment of Blanche at the play’s end underscores Mitchs fundamental gentlemanliness. Though he desires and makes clear that he wants to sleep with Blanche, Mitch does not rape her and leaves when she cries out.

  2. www.cliffsnotes.com › literature › sScene 3 - CliffsNotes

    A Streetcar Named Desire. Scene 3. Summary and Analysis Scene 3. Later that night Mitch, Stanley's friend, wants to drop out of the poker game because his mother is sick. Stella and Blanche return from the show, and Blanche is introduced to the other players.

  3. As they kiss, Blanche sobs, “Sometimes––there’s God––so quickly!”. The tender, sad story draws Mitch in and wins his sympathy for Blanche. Blanche comments on how quickly everything is moving, but of course she's done a lot of quick-moving in the past. She's still playing the innocent ingénue.

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  5. A Streetcar Named Desire Characters. Next. Blanche DuBois. Stella’s older sister, about thirty years old, was a high school English teacher in Laurel, Mississippi until recently forced to leave her position. Blanche is nervous and appears constantly on edge, as though any slight… read analysis of Blanche DuBois. Stanley Kowalski.

  6. Blanche DuBois Character Analysis. Next. Stanley Kowalski. Stella’s older sister, about thirty years old, was a high school English teacher in Laurel, Mississippi until recently forced to leave her position. Blanche is nervous and appears constantly on edge, as though any slight disturbance could shatter her sanity.