When are the events related supposed to have taken place?
Why does Mrs. Gaskell pay so little attention to the details of time and place?
Could the scene of this story be changed to some other place and time without difficulty? Give reasons. Compare Cranford with some place that you know in respect to the poverty, aristocracy, social etiquette, employments, and peculiar ways of the people.
Plot.—What relation does Chapter I bear to the rest of the book? Are there suggestions in it that make you expectant of what is to come in the ensuing chapters?
What connection has Chapter II with the preceding chapter? with the following?
Are Chapters III and IV connected? Are they connected with what follows?
Group the remaining chapters to show which belong together.
How many separate stories do you find with no connection except for the presence of the same characters?
We are told that a good story has a beginning, a middle, and an end. What seems to be lacking in Cranford?
If we were to consider as complete stories the incident of Miss Matty's love affair or of Poor Peter, should we find the same lack?