Crispin: The Cross of Lead, is about a 13 year old boy named Crispin. Crispin lived in a village called Stromford with his mother. At the beginning of the book Crispin’s Mother Died. Later on, he escapes the village because he was proclaimed a wolf’s head by John Aycliffe. He is in an abandoned village when he meets a man named Bear. Bear takes Crispin as his slave. Later on, Crispin becomes Bear’s apprentice. Bear teaches him how to play a recorder and juggle. They travel from village to village performing. They stay at a place called the Green Man Inn. When Bear sneaks out to a secret meeting, Crispin is left at the Inn alone. He goes out to find Bear because he thinks Bear is in trouble. Bear gets captured by the soldiers and…
Following the murder, in which Marrow was beaten and shot twice, once in the leg and once in the head, the town is in an uproar. The Teels, even with witnesses to the murder and a confession from Teel’s stepson, are acquitted of the charges. The black residents of the town…
The story begins with the Brennans fleeing town. They packed all their belongings and left. They were ashamed of what went down just weeks recently. The harsh whispers that washed over and through the neighbourhood. They couldn’t handle it.…
Saxton , the daughter of a local banker. After the deaths of his mother and two daughters early…
In John Steinbeck’s East of Eden, the biblical stories of Adam and Eve and Cain and Abel are represented through the life of Adam Trask. Through mistakes and success, every character, no matter how minor or major, has something to give to readers to remember. Throughout East of Eden by John Steinbeck, the protagonist Adam Trask demonstrates several morals and life lessons. From watching Adam from the start to the end of the book, there are countless themes to learn. Adam’s many mistakes throughout his life show readers the consequences of what can happen if they do the same.…
This event haunts Gene even into his adult years. It haunts him so much that he comes back to Devon 15 years after he graduated to visit one of his fearful sites,…
A boy with no father, the bond becomes stronger with Bear and the promises to one and another are unbreakable. Throughout the book, Bear teaches Crispin how to play the recorder to help them earn money for them to eat. Bear becomes more like a father figure for Crispin. The first day of Crispin being his slave, he didn’t know anything. Progressing throughout the book Bear lets Crispin become his apprentice and learns new things. “You’ll practice more. You’ll add more balls as you go. Music too. And I vow, by the joy of Christ, you’ll learn it well.” (AVI 99). As Bear and Crispin continue their journey they build up a father and son connection.…
Joey R. Poole presents an intriguing story in “The Hand-Me-Downs.” Simon is a straight shooting kid that follows rules and does not ask many questions. But later in the story, the reader can tell that the violence surrounding Simon erodes his attitude. He begins to stand up to his brother and he begins to understand that he has free will. At the beginning of the story, the reader can tell that Simon is a typical innocent young kid but by the end of the story, the reader is convinced otherwise. Simon changes as the story progresses representing a dynamic character rather than a static character.…
Imagine Being a poor kid whose father and mother died in the year 1377 A.D. Imagine being accused of stealing from the person who owns the village you live in. Imagine being chased out of town by guards into the wilderness. That’s exactly what happened to a 13-year-old boy named Crispin. Earning only a penny a day, barely getting by Crispin and his mom survived until his mom died and that’s when he had to pay the death tax. Unable to pay the death tax he ran into the forest. He got caught listening to a private in meeting that made him a wolf’s head so that anyone may kill him for a prize of a handbag of pennies.…
readers, are able to see her innocence slowly taken away from her because of this perspective. As…
Following the Civil War corporations began to develop at a steady pace. The needed fast transportation and abundance of materials during the Civil War fueled the correct conditions to give rise to the large-scale enterprises and financial capitalism in the United States after the Civil War. Resources such as natural resources and a growing population, paired with large corporation and the government, were the conditions that gave rise to the large-scale enterprise and financial capitalism in the United States following the Civil War. Though there were many benefits from these conditions there were multiple problems that resulted.…
Denial, and acceptance, these words are intertwined with innocence, and the loss of said innocence. In order for one to mature one has to accept the truth and make necessary adjustments. The people who deny the truth don’t experience the “fall from innocence” and may be blind to the things going on around them. If the innocent chooses to accept the truth the characters “evolves” and falls from innocence. If a character chooses to deny the truth it will take a toll on the character mentally, or physically. In A Separate Peace, John Knowles uses the archetype of the Fall from Innocence in order to illustrate Leper’s philosophy, “Everything has to evolve or else it perishes.” He demonstrates this theme through the characters of Leper, Finny, and Gene.…
I think one point Fox is trying to make through this story can be summed up in that one phrase. Throughout the story it appears the characters are unaware of their actions and how it plays into the outcomes, they are even oblivious to the actions of those around them. “Don’t pay much attention to what people say. Then, someday, you’ll find out what you think yourself. Try to go to what is new as innocently as you can — let the surprise of it take you first,”(Fox, 37). What the reader can sense and what the characters of the story portray and different. For example I had an uncanny feeling that Nina and Len were lovers, the clues were there for the taking. In the end of the story when Helen finds out Len and Nina were lovers she is shocked and amazed. The innocents of her youth opened and the maturity of life allowed her to see what was had really occurred and how she played into it. Hence supporting the fact that people are unknown to themselves. I once had to take a seminar about the inner self awareness. The speaker used a window and divided into four panes much like child draw, and stated our “selves” are like windows. In one pane is what I know and others know about me, the next what others know about me that I am unaware of, the next is what I know about myself that others do not and finally what I am aware about myself as well as others. In order to truly grown in self-awareness we need to make the window…
In John Steinbeck’s novel, East of Eden, the deprivation of a sound conscience is a theme that is associated with Cathy Ames, and afflicts the people around her. The author uses foreshadowing to portray the future of Cathy and her multiple victims. By doing so, the author builds onto the characterization of Cathy, revealing how truly malevolent she is.…
In the novel “The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime” by Mark Haddon a young boy diagnosed with autism named Chris tries to uncover the murder of his neighbor’s dog. The story is written from first person point of view which is Chris’. By doing so the author allows us to step inside Chris’ mind and understand how he views and analyses things. If the novel were to be written in any other point of view it would not be near as good. The author also makes it easier to understand what living with autism is like.…