Often when individuals face challenging circumstances, they do not think about helping others, especially when such decisions place them at risk. However, in Chaim Potok’s I am the Clay, an elderly couple during the Korean War decides to use their sparse resources to rescue an injured Korean boy from a ditch. Initially, the husband doesn’t want the child, but the wife sees the boy as a replacement for her lost child. In the process of saving someone who has little to offer them, the couple gets far more in return for their efforts as the young boy soon become the life saver for them. Thus, suggests thematically and initial burden can either become a blessing and can help one through the challenging times. The boy in I am the Clay epitomizes …show more content…
the saying of a burden becomes a blessing. In the story, the boy starts as a profound weight to the old couple but soon becomes a blessing as he provides for the family. At first, the old man perceives the boy as someone who has nothing to offer other then taking what little they have. Injured, the boy needs considerable care and causes the couple economic and social stress. In addition, the boy is also extremely and needs good food and medicine to get well. . The old man thinks “The boy eats for two. Suddenly stubborn as a pony. The boy will bring trouble, I feel it…What devil pushed us into the ditch with this boy? (52)” In this quote, the frustrated old man thinks the boy brings bad luck and his presence is a bad omen. However, the old man later recognizes the boy’s capabilities and love, and considers the boy a son. and begins to love him like a son. The boy saves the old man and women by finding both food and shelter. For example, the young boy uses in ingenuity to find fish underneath the ice in a lake located deep in a cave. The old man thinks, “… and at that precise moment the old man, gazing at the boy’s fearful and fragile face, his astonished eyes and trembling chine, realized he truly and deeply love him. (231)” As shown in the quote, the old man has the startling realizing that he misjudged his fortune and sees the boy as a heavenly gift. Thus, the old man changes his perspective of the boy and considers him a blessing, not a burden. Memories have also been a blessing and a curse to the Korean refugees.
In story the family’s memories bring distress to them. However, these reminders enable them to survive when they face extreme danger. Remembering his real family’s traumatized the boy, and memories often of his old life come back and haunt him. As the boy recalls his previous life to the old women, he says, “My mother has earth in her mouth and sings when she sews or prepares the most delicate of foods, my mother tells tigers of tigers and birds and swinging contests, my mother lies in the burning village in a grave so shallow it was not ever to her ears, but earth was in her mouth (76).” The memories cause the boy pain as he greatly misses his mother, but later on, memories like this allow him and his new family to survive. On guard duty at night, the boy uses his memories of his old life to stay awake and to tend the fire. Failure to do so would have resulted in certain death for the family because of the extreme coldness. In this quote, the memories of Kim Sin Gyu’s father and his mother’s keep him awake. “…I would have lost some of the fingers, and Father was dark with anger. This is a foolish boy, he said…Mountains, forests, valleys, caves and great open plains. And most especially the palace of the queen…More wood again? How quickly it burns down. (104)” Also, memories allow both Kim Sin Gyu and the old man to connect with each other because both of their uncles wanted them to be hunters, but their fathers disagreed. This memory strengthens the bonds between them. Although the old man regrets his decision to abide by his father’s wishes, he recognizes the young boy’s future is still not decided, and begins to help him. Memories have also been a curse and a blessing to me. Last year, I played in a Level 3 USTA tennis tournament. I got to the semifinals where I played against a 3 star player (the highest ranking is a 5 star). I lost to this kid 3-6, 2-6, and the memories of this loss
pained me for days. A few months later, I had to replay him in another tournament. This time, I used my painful memories of my loss and analyzed how I played, and how I could improve. Due to these memories, I changed my playing style accordingly and won 6-4, 6-4. Although memories causes pain to whomever caries them, they also protect that person and create emotional bonds. Although the saying a burden becomes a blessing sounds paradoxical, it does occur, as shown in Chaim Potok’s I am the Clay. Initially, saving a boy seems foolish but later becomes the best decision made. Memories, too, have the same effect as the painful ones lead to save the family and tie the family together. With grief comes joy as a proverb explains the paradox.
reacts to the crosser. At the beginning of the poem, the speaker’s first impression of the swamp
Help and devotion are shown in many different varieties throughout communities. These good acts are documented often in literature. Such is the topic in Ben Mikaelsen’s novel Touching Spirit Bear. People step out of their lives to help others become a better individual. Edwin and Garvey take on the challenge of making Cole Mathews a better person. In Ben Mikaelsen’s Touching Spirit Bear, the help of others enables an individual to transform as illustrated through characterization, epiphanies, and symbols, which shows others that even at peoples worst times, help is all they need.
In the short story “Cornet at night” by Sinclair Ross, Tom Dickson is a young farm boy who lives on a farm with his parents. He is very naive and has not had a chance to experience the outside world for his own. He knows only what he learns from the farm and school, but now that he gets to go on a small adventure on his on, he grows up in a variety of ways. One way in which Tom grows up is when he goes to town by himself. He has gone before, but with the security of his parents with him, and for a young boy to go to another town “eight miles north of here” is a large task for such a young boy, thus showing one way that he matures. To illustrate this, as Tom rolls into town with Rock he says, “I remember nothing but a smug satisfaction with myself, an exhilarating conviction of importance and
The short story, Ashes for the Wind by Hernando Tellez, the central conflict is focused around two groups, the all-powerful government and powerless farmers. The struggle that is going on is one that is commonly seen in poor third world countries where the government controls everything and where the people make up the complete work force. The story reveals Juan Martinez’s inner beliefs, that he is a stubborn yet proud man that will stand for everything that he owns even if that means death. Even after voting for the wrong side, Juan protects his family from the evil that is the law. Arevalo’s motivations were such that he did not stand up for the family that he grew up with. His betrayal of the political system and his father leaves Simon’s
When the man and boy meet people on the road, the boy has sympathy for them, but his father is more concerned with keeping them both alive. The boy is able to get his father to show kindness to the strangers (McCarthy), however reluctantly the kindness is given. The boy’s main concern is to be a good guy. Being the good guy is one of the major reasons the boy has for continuing down the road with his father. He does not see there is much of a point to life if he is not helping other people. The boy wants to be sure he and his father help people and continue to carry the fire. The boy is the man’s strength and therefore courage, but the man does not know how the boy worries about him how the boy’s will to live depends so much on his
Without memories, nobody can make the right decision, which will lead to a bad choice. Without memories, one cannot shape his or her future. In addition, when Jonas describes the pain he feel when experiencing a sunburn when, “‘It hurts a lot,’ Jonas said, ‘but I’m glad you gave it to me. It was interesting,”(Lowry 86). This quote show that Jonas does not understand
Through this short story we are taken through one of Vic Lang’s memories narrated by his wife struggling to figure out why a memory of Strawberry Alison is effecting their marriage and why she won’t give up on their relationship. Winton’s perspective of the theme memory is that even as you get older your past will follow you good, bad or ugly, you can’t always forget. E.g. “He didn’t just rattle these memories off.” (page 55) and ( I always assumed Vic’s infatuation with Strawberry Alison was all in the past, a mortifying memory.” (page 57). Memories are relevant to today’s society because it is our past, things or previous events that have happened to you in which we remembered them as good, bad, sad, angry etc. memories that you can’t forget. Winton has communicated this to his audience by sharing with us how a memory from your past if it is good or bad can still have an effect on you even as you get older. From the description of Vic’s memory being the major theme is that it just goes to show that that your past can haunt or follow you but it’s spur choice whether you chose to let it affect you in the
In I Am The Messenger by Markus Zusak, the main character Ed is a nineteen-year-old cab driver in Australia who has never amounted to anything. One day, while with his three best friends, an event occurs that forever changes his life. While in a bank, they are held up at gunpoint. Ed ends up stopping the criminal and saving the day. Days later, as the bank robber’s trial is ending, he tells Ed that he is “a dead man… [And to] [r]emember it every day when [he] look[s] in the mirror” (Zusak 38). This overlooked statement by the reader comes back in the end of the novel to reveal an important message that “everyone can live beyond what they’re capable of” (535). Before attending the trial though, Ed begins to receive playing cards with addresses, names, times, and movie titles on them that require him to complete tasks, which challenge him in more ways than he could ever imagine. In the short story “Good People” by David Foster Wallace, the two characters, Lane and Sheri, are faced with a situation that changes their lives as well; Sheri is pregnant with Lane’s baby. Even though Lane’s and Sheri’s situation is a little different than that of Ed’s, they relate greatly as all the characters are forced to make decisions that can alter the rest of their lives. In the novel, morality is used to accomplish self-discovery and growth of Ed’s personality by pushing his boundaries, and in the short story “Good People” by David Foster Wallace, morality is used to accomplish growth and the realization of consequences of one’s actions by placing the young couple in a faith questioning situation no adolescent wants to face.
Finally, when he knew that he could bear it no longer and would welcome death itself, he opened his eyes and was once again on the bed,” (Lowry 120). Jonas has lived his life in a Community that does not learn about the past memories. Due to this ignorance that the Community instilled in him, it is harder for him to deal with the memory of war. Moreover, the Community uses ignorance as a temporary solution so that the residents feel a false sense of happiness. Jonas can only now see that this is a temporary fix by experiencing the memories through his training.
In her novel The Daughter of Time Josephine Tey looks at how history can be misconstrued through the more convenient reinterpretation of the person in power, and as such, can become part of our common understanding, not being true knowledge at all, but simply hearsay. In The Daughter of Time Josephine claims that 40 million school books can’t be wrong but then goes on to argue that the traditional view of Richard III as a power obsessed, blood thirsty monster is fiction made credible by Thomas More and given authenticity by William Shakespeare. Inspector Alan Grant looks into the murder of the princes in the tower out of boredom. Tey uses Grant to critique the way history is delivered to the public and the ability of historians to shape facts to present the argument they believe.
Who is the birthday party a rite of passage for, the birthday boy or his mother?
Kathy is engaged in the difficulty of understand life in order to comfort themselves, even if she has to lie in order to discover the truth. Kathy speaking about her life when she is older, signifies that she wants to be felt important and have her own impact to others lives in some way. In depicting the dynamics of memory, Kathy rewrites their past so they can have access to her identity. However, memory can be twisted so easily that she hides the failure in her life by bending the truth of what happened. Ishiguro explores the profound effect of memory in a manner in which it shapes one’s life as well as how humans subject events incoherently.
Jonas misses the way it was before he had memories where there was no pain or feeling, because everything was innocent. But he understands that although there was innocence nobody feels true happiness.Jonas thinks: “But he knew he couldn’t go back to that world of no feelings that he had lived in so long” (Lowry 131). Jonas wishes he could go back when everything was innocent and when he had no burden of pain, but although there was innocence the bad memories were stripped away to avoid the feeling of pain but also leaves everyone emotionless. But he knows it can never be the same again because of all the knowledge he gained from memories. He learns that memoires need to be valued, even the painful ones. Jonas feels that his community can change and things could be different. He thinks they should live in a world with memories. Jonas says: “Things could be different. I don’t know how, but there must be some way for things to be different. There could be colours [...] and everybody would have memories [...] There could be love” (Lowry 128). Jonas wishes that they could all have memories because everyone would be able to experience love. Love is one of the most important things in human life. He knows that there are bad memories, but without them, he wouldn’t be able to enjoy the good ones. Eventually, with his feelings
Powder, a short story written by Tobias Wolff, is about a boy and his father on a Christmas Eve outing. As the story unfolds, it appears to run deeper than only a story about a boy and his father on a simple adventure in the snow. It is an account of a boy and his father’s relationship, or maybe the lack of one. Powder is narrated by a grown-up version of the boy. In this tale, the roles of the boy and his father emerge completely opposite than what they are supposed to be but may prove to be entirely different from the reader’s first observation.
In the book by Carl Rogers, A Way of Being, Rogers describes his life in the way he sees it as an older gentleman in his seventies. In the book Rogers discusses the changes he sees that he has made throughout the duration of his life. The book written by Rogers, as he describes it is not a set down written book in the likes of an autobiography, but is rather a series of papers which he has written and has linked together. Rogers breaks his book into four parts.