This chapter is titled "What a Foolish Boy" because the Elisha Stockwell never thought he was gonna see people dying and he could get injured or even sick and his parents aren't even around to take care of him.He thought it was only gonna be like adventure and he was gonna have fun.According to the text on paragraph 7 it says,"And once they realized the war would last a long, long time, these boys began to miss the things they had left behind—namely their family and friends."(paragraph 7 sentence 4)Elisha and all the other boys that joined didn't think war was gonna be a long time.And those boys didn't think they were gonna miss their parents or friends but they do because war lasts a long time but they didn't know that and they started to
11. The narrative abruptly changes to first point of view in the beginning of this chapter. The narrator seems to be a fellow soldier during the war in chapter one as he recalls many events and expresses relativity to many of the familiar names of those in combat in chapter one. It is later revealed to be Tim O’Brien, the author.
In the story, To Kill A Mocking Bird, written by Harper Lee, originates in a small fictional town in Alabama called Maycomb. The main character, Scout, is a 6 year old girl who goes on many adventures which include going to school with her brother, to investigating the Radley’s after school. The time of her adventures takes place in the Great Depression, where Scout’s family was wealthier than most. Unlike most children, Scout has a few advantages. These include her ability to read and write, and her curiosity. Her adventures begin when she finds out about Boo Radley.
In Chapter four of Richard Wright’s Black Boy, he details an instance in which he ends up preparing to defend himself from his aunt Addie. The situation takes place with Richard at school in class with his Mom her desk and Aunt Addie who doubles as his school teacher. Richard’s Aunt Addie stands up from her desk and walks to Richard’s desk and accuses him of eating in class due to there being bits of walnuts under his desk. After being confronted and denying these allegations, Richard accidentally calls his aunt “Aunt Addie” instead of Miss Wilson. She, in turn, gets incredibly angry at Richard to the point that she tells him to go to the front of the class and admit what he’d done after he refuses she hits his hand with a ruler but Richard is left visibly unphased. Later in the chapter, once Richard is at home, His aunt confronts him again and they chase each other until Richard is
In Life at the Bottom, Dalrymple is suggesting that the description of the poor is changing and that using poverty and hunger can no longer fully cover all of the lower class. That new characteristics have risen, that many of the lower class have adopted. That those that are violent, those that have agonies and emptiness, and those that have horrid morals are now the way to depict the lower class. Dalrymple also argues that in order to rise out of the underclass that family ties are needed and without it there is hardly any way to do so. Dalrymple says that many of the issues that plague the underclass comes from a bourgeoisie society, that this upper class of liberals are feeding and fueling all of the problems and mentality that are
In chapter 10, Germany was receiving food from other countries. This is because the disagreements between some countries divided Germany. Joseph Stalin liked the idea of “collectivization.” As a result, many people died due to the lack of food. Mao Zedong did the same thing, and even more people died. Both of them wanted to promote communism, but they ended up killing millions of people. I thought this chapter had a lot of interesting facts like when it talked about Americans feeding the children in Berlin by flying and dropping candy into the area. I had no questions about the chapter.
At first, the war is so far away it seems unreal. The characters in the book are boys studying at a private school and are not directly involved in the war. “not a single shot is fired in the course of the story, no one dies in battle, and only the unfortunate Leper even joins the military before graduation.” The Summer Session is created at the Devon School to keep up with the war. The summer session allows the boys to complete their studies and graduate sooner so they could enlist in the war sooner. The seniors are also tied into this. Gene’s opinion of the seniors
Mr.Tate is called to the witness stand, and Mr.Gilmer asked him what happened the night of November 21st. Mr.Tate says that Bob Ewell brought him to the Ewell house, where he found Mr.Ewell’s daughter, who had been beaten badly. Atticus question Mr.Tate and asked if he called a doctor and he says no,Atticus asked Mr.Tate to describe Mayella's injuries and he says she had bruises and a black eye. Atticus asked which eyes was it and Mr.Tate says it was the left eye. Bob Ewell's was called to the witness stand and he was telling us what he saw the night of November 21st he says that he heard his daughter scream so he ran looked through the window and saw Tom Robinson raping his daughter.Atticus ask Mr.Ewell's if he could read and
Wanting for dreams to come true don’t do that themselves, it depends on what choices we do and don’t make that help us strive towards our longings. Unless, we are all controlled by fate, playing out the part in our lives that had been pre-organized for us. The unit selections Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer, a biographical novel, and Macbeth by William Shakespeare, a drama, both focus on things we can and can 't control in our lives, but Into the Wild does a better job answering the question in the prompt because rules are meant to be broken, Chris McCandless just took it to the next level. He was able to leave his life behind, making decisions most of us couldn 't even imagine making. He sets an example of what we can achieve in life. We
Ralph and Jack get into a quarrel over whether hunting or building shelters is the priority. Ralph rapidly notices the tension and pauses to avoid a rift. Readers see from this incident that Ralph is the ego of the island. He holds back his impulsiveness but ensures to convey his notion. Ultimately he succeeds in winning Jack’s acknowledging.
Chapters use KeyReports, Kappa’s internal chapter officer portal, to manage chapter rosters, add new members, update leadership rosters, view chapter finances, and submit reports. KeyReports can be accessed at any time, giving chapters autonomy over their rosters. •
What insight does the reader gain about race in Maycomb from observing Scout’s visit to Calpurnia’s church? Consider race, relations, racism, and community. Support your ideas with text-based evidence.
Most people have bad history with people in their family. They often feel abandoned. They eventually learn how to cope with it.
Throughout the novel, the war has caused great worry, wonder, and fear for the sixteen-year-old boys at Devon who could enlist anytime. When the Boys open a Winter Carnival, it helps them believe that the war does not exist and gets their mind off the war. Gene is caught up yet again in Finny’s upbeat world by helping run this carnival. The boys’ happiness is interrupted at the end of the carnival when a telegram is sent by Leper informing the boys he has escaped. The boys not only deal with military warfare, but personal wars and feelings of hostility and resentment. Gene learns that one mans only enemy was himself, “...this enemy they thought they saw across the frontier, this enemy who never attacked that way- if he never attacked at all; if he was indeed the enemy.” (196) Gene struggles
Roy links yellow to disgust, which creates a sense of foreboding in the reader’s mine when Estha first meets the Orangedrinklemondrink man who later molests him. Objects meant to disgust the reader are associated early on with the color in yellow in phrases like, “[Baby Kochamma] was wearing a limp checked seersucker nightgown with puffed sleeves and yellow turmeric stains.” and, “A yellow brook burbles through a mountain pass”. Later, when Estha meets the Orangedrinklemondrink for the first time, the scene is bathed in yellow, which mirrors Estha’s disgust. His teeth are, “ like yellow piano keys”, and the man’s name is usually forgone is favor of referring to him by his teeth. Even before Etha is molested, the author uses a tone of foreboding by introducing the color yellow.