08 - Unit 7 (Pages 741-838)
08 - Unit 7 (Pages 741-838)
08 - Unit 7 (Pages 741-838)
in the World
unit
7
history, culture,
and the author
• In Fiction
• In Nonfiction
• In Media
• In Poetry
741
7
unit Share What You Know
What shapes
who we are?
If you were to write a book about your life, where would you begin?
If you’re like many authors and artists, what you say would probably
reflect the influence of your family, friends, and culture. Although you
can’t always see it, culture plays an important part in shaping your
world. The language you speak, the holidays you celebrate, the games
you play, and the music you listen to are all part of your culture.
ACTIVITY What parts of your history and culture influence you the
most? Think about the important people, places, and events in your
life. Then reflect on your family’s traditions and your own taste in
entertainment. Make a collage out of images and mementos that
symbolize what shapes you.
742
Literature and Reading Center
l i t e r at u r e Writing Center
classzone.com Vocabulary and Spelling Center
743
unit 7
Reader’s History, Culture, and the Author
Workshop Have you ever heard the lyrics to a song and wondered what motivated the musician
to write them? What about a work of literature—do you ever wonder what inspired
its creation? In this workshop, you’ll learn about different factors that can affect
writers. By examining the layers of a writer’s experience, you can “read into”
literature with far more insight.
from
Sonny’s Blues Short story by James Baldwin
questions to ask
What aspects of Baldwin’s
background are reflected in
the writing?
Baldwin uses words and
phrases like “smothering,”
“encircled by disaster,” and
“the trap” to describe the
poverty-stricken Harlem
neighborhood of his youth.
746
Reader’s Workshop
from
Beware of the Dog
Short story by Roald Dahl
“I believe there’s someone coming down to see you from the Air Ministry Close Read
after breakfast,” she went on. “They want a report or something. I expect you 1. What do you learn about
know all about it. How you got shot down and all that. I won’t let him stay the pilot in this passage?
long, so don’t worry.” 2. The hospital staff is
5 He did not answer. She finished washing him and gave him a toothbrush being kind to the pilot,
and some toothpowder. He brushed his teeth, rinsed his mouth, and spat the but he believes they
water out into the basin. are only trying to get
Later she brought him his breakfast on a tray, but he did not want to eat. information from him.
He was still feeling weak and sick and he wished only to lie still and think Which words and phrases
10 about what had happened. And there was a sentence running through his convey his anxiety?
head. It was a sentence which Johnny, the Intelligence Officer of his squadron,
always repeated to the pilots every day before they went out. He could see
Johnny now, leaning against the wall of the dispersal hut with his pipe in his
hand, saying, “And if they get you, don’t forget, just your name, rank, and
15 number. Nothing else. For God’s sake, say nothing else.”
World War II began with Germany’s 1939 invasion of Poland, which Close Read
caused Britain and France to declare war on Germany. By 1941, German 1. What exactly is the pilot
forces had occupied France and much of Western Europe, but Great Britain worried about? Explain
was still fighting back. Other countries joined the war on both sides of the how the background
5 conflict, dividing into the Axis forces and the Allies. France was not liberated helps you to understand
from German occupation until 1944. his situation.
Roald Dahl joined the British Royal Air Force in 1939. He became a 2. In your opinion, is
fighter pilot and flew missions over North Africa, Greece, and the Middle Dahl’s tone in the story
East during the war. After his plane crashed in Egypt, he spent six sympathetic to the pilot?
10 months in a hospital, recovering from a head injury. Explain.
When he was asked later to share his
experiences, Dahl’s career as a writer
began. “Beware of the Dog” was
published in 1944.
background
Crafting Words and Mending Old Wounds
ORIGAMI
from
I take my place, hesitantly, among the group of Japanese women, smile Close Read
back at the ones who look up from their task to nod at me. Their words float 1. Reread the boxed
around me like alphabet soup, familiar, comforting, but nothing that I clearly text. How does the
understand. The long cafeteria table blooms with folded paper birds of all background enhance
5 colors: royal purple, light gray, a small shimmering silver one. They’re weaving your reading of this
an origami wreath for Sunday’s memorial service, a thousand cranes for the passage?
souls of those who died at Tule Lake’s internment camp.
I spread the square of sky-blue paper flat under my hands, then fold it in 2. Why does the narrator
half. So far, this is easy. I’m going to follow all the directions. It’s going to be feel insecure in this
10 a perfect crane, tsuru, flying from my palm. Fold again, then flip that side of situation? Support your
the triangle under to make a box. Oh no. What? I didn’t get that. I’m lost. The answer.
women around me keep creasing, folding, spreading, their fingers moving with
easy grace. My thumbs are huge, thick, in the way of these paper wings that are 3. Does Ito seem to
trying to unfold but can’t. sympathize with the
15 My heart rises and flutters, beating against its cage in panic, in confusion. I narrator? Explain.
try to retrace my steps, turn the paper upside down, in reverse. It’s not working.
I want to crumple the paper into a blue ball, an origami rock. 4. Which details show you
But instead I unfold the paper with damp, shaking fingers. I persevere. that the narrator admires
Gambaro. Don’t give up. I’m going to make this crane if it kills me. I’m going people who are Japanese?
20 to prove that I can do this thing, this Japanese skill. I’m going to pull the
coordination out of my blood, make it flow into my fingers. I have to. 5. Which details in the
But what if I can’t? Then it only proves the thing that I fear the most, don’t background help you
want to believe. That I’m not really Japanese. That I’m just an imposter, a fake, understand why Ito
a watered-down, inauthentic K-mart version of the real thing. might have chosen to
write this story?
750
literary analysis: influence of author’s background 86A>;DGC>6
An author’s background, including life experiences and cultural
Writer and Storyteller
heritage, shapes his or her way of looking at the world and often Joseph Bruchac
affects what he or she writes. For example, Joseph Bruchac was was raised by his
raised by his grandparents, one of whom was Native American. grandparents in the
Many of his stories, in turn, have Native American characters foothills of New York
and reflect Native American values. State’s Adirondack
Mountains, in a
Before you read, learn more about Bruchac from the biography
house built by his
on this page. Then, as you read, notice how Bruchac’s characters grandfather. After
reflect his own cultural heritage, beliefs and values, and life story. leaving home to
study literature,
reading skill: compare and contrast Bruchac returned to Joseph Bruchac
his hometown. He born 1942
When you compare two or more things, you identify ways in and his wife now live
which they are alike. When you contrast them, you find ways in in the house where he grew up. Bruchac
which they are different. Thinking about characters’ similarities has published many books of stories and
and differences can help you recognize their qualities and values. poetry, and he founded his own publishing
company, the Greenfield Review Press.
In “The Snapping Turtle,” you will compare and contrast
In addition to being an author, Bruchac
• the narrator and other boys is a well-known professional storyteller,
performing the traditional stories of the
• the narrator’s grandmother and grandfather
Native Americans of the Northeast.
As you read, use Venn diagrams to compare and contrast
Hidden Heritage Bruchac’s grandfather was
these characters’ attitudes, backgrounds, and values. part Native American. He was descended
Narrator Other Boys from the Abenaki (äQbE-näPkC), a group
that originally lived in New England
loves nature and southern Canada. Bruchac did not
discover this heritage until he was a
teenager, because his grandfather feared
that he would be discriminated against
if he revealed his Native American roots.
vocabulary in context Although Bruchac did not know it at the
The boldfaced words help Bruchac tell about a boy’s relationship time, his grandfather raised him with
with nature. Try restating each sentence, using a different word traditional Abenaki values. The Abenaki
or phrase for the boldfaced word. believe in honoring their elders, treating
the earth with respect by not wasting its
1. My philosophy is “Leave nothing but footprints.” resources, and sharing food
2. The memorial garden seemed to give the hero immortality. and possessions with others.
3. Amy and I like to traipse around the meadow. more about the author
For more on Joseph Bruchac, visit the
4. I have no inclination to go indoors when it’s nice outside.
Literature Center at ClassZone.com.
5. It takes craftiness to successfully trick a raccoon.
6. I cache my camping gear behind a tree while I hike.
7. Following their migration route, the geese flew north.
8. The thick undergrowth made the forest impregnable.
9. The basking sunbather enjoyed the afternoon breeze.
10. Undaunted, the bird flew on in search of food.
M y grandmother was working in the flower garden near the road that
morning when I came out with my fishing pole. She was separating
out the roots of iris. As far as flowers go, she and I were agreed that iris
ANALYZE VISUALS
What effect does the
artist’s use of color have
on what you notice in this
had the sweetest scent. Iris would grow about anywhere, shooting up green painting?
sword-shaped leaves like the mythical soldiers that sprang from the planted
teeth of a dragon. But iris needed some amount of care. Their roots would
multiply so thick and fast that they could crowd themselves right up out of
the soil. Spring separating and replanting were, as my grandmother put it,
just the ticket.1
10 Later that day, I knew, she would climb into our blue 1951 Plymouth to
drive around the back roads of Greenfield, a box of iris in the back seat. She
would stop at farms where she had noticed a certain color of iris that she didn’t
have yet. Up to the door she would go to ask for a root so that she could add
another splash of color to our garden. And, in exchange, she would give that philosophy (fG-lJsPE-fC)
person, most often a flowered-aproned and somewhat elderly woman like n. a system of values or
herself, some of her own iris. beliefs
It wasn’t just that she wanted more flowers herself. She had a philosophy.
immortality
If only one person keeps a plant, something might happen to it. Early frost, (GmQôr-tBlPG-tC) n. the
insects, animals, Lord knows what. But if many have that kind of plant, then it condition of having an
20 may survive. Sharing meant a kind of immortality. I didn’t quite understand endless life
it then, but I enjoyed taking those rides with her, carrying boxes and cans and
flowerpots with new kinds of iris back to the car. a a AUTHOR’S
“Going fishing, Sonny?” she said now. BACKGROUND
What is one attitude or
Of course, she knew where I was going. Not only the evidence of the pole in
belief expressed in lines
my hand, but also the simple facts that it was a Saturday morning in late May 10–22?
and I was a boy of ten, would have led her to that natural conclusion. But she
had to ask. It was part of our routine.
2. spading: digging.
3. a mess of: an amount of (food).
4. Attila the Hun: a barbarian leader who successfully invaded the Roman Empire in the A.D. 400s .
bank, thinking to circle back and pick up the creek farther down. For what ANALYZE VISUALS
purpose, I wasn’t sure, aside from just wanting to do it. I was nervous as a hen Compare the scene in
this painting with the
yard when a chicken hawk is circling overhead. But I was excited, too. This
way you picture the
was new ground to me, almost a mile from home. I’d gone farther from home culvert in the story.
in the familiar directions of north and west, into the safety of the woods, but What are the similarities
this was different: Across the state road, in the direction of town; someone and differences?
else’s hunting territory. I stayed low to the ground and hugged the edges of the
160 brush as I moved. Then I saw something that drew me away from the creek:
The glint of a wider expanse of water. The Rez, the old Greenfield Reservoir.
I’d never been to the Rez, though I knew the other boys went there. As I’d
sat alone on the bus, my bookbag clasped tightly to my chest, I’d heard them
talk about swimming there, fishing for bass, spearing bullfrogs five times as
big as the little frogs in Bell Brook.
I knew I shouldn’t be there, yet I was. Slowly I moved to the side of the wide
trail that led to the edge of the deep water, and it was just as well that I did:
Their bikes had been stashed in the brush down the other side of the path.
They’d been more quiet than usual. I might have walked up on them if I
170 hadn’t heard a voice. . . .
9. Nash . . . DeSoto: car brands that were popular during the 1950s.
B efore long, a smallish log that had been sticking up farther out in the pond
began to drift my way. It was, as I had expected, no log at all. It was a
turtle’s head. I stayed still. The sun’s heat beat on my back, but I lay there like
230 a basking lizard. Closer and closer the turtle came, heading right into water basking (bBskPGng)
less than waist deep. It was going right for shore, for the sandy bank bathed adj. warming oneself
pleasantly, as in sunlight
in sun. I didn’t think about why then, just wondered at the way my wanting
seemed to have called it to me.
When it was almost to shore, I slid into the water on the other side of the
log I’d been waiting on. The turtle surely sensed me, for it started to swing
around as I moved slowly toward it, swimming as much as walking. But I
lunged and grabbed it by the tail. Its tail was rough and ridged, as easy to hold
as if coated with sandpaper. I pulled hard and the turtle came toward me. I
stepped back, trying not to fall and pull it on top of me. My feet found the
240 bank, and I leaned hard to drag the turtle out, its clawed feet digging into the
dirt as it tried to get away. A roaring hiss like the rush of air from a punctured
tire came out of its mouth, and I stumbled, almost losing my grasp. Then I
took another step, heaved again, and it was mine.
Or at least it was until I let go. I knew I could not let go. I looked around,
holding its tail, moving my feet to keep it from walking its front legs around to
where it would snap at me. It felt as if it weighed a thousand pounds. I could
only lift up the back half of its body. I started dragging it toward the creek,
fifty yards away. It seemed to take hours, a kind of dance between me and the
great turtle, but I did it. I pulled it back through the roaring culvert, water
250 gushing over its shell, under the spider web, and past my hidden pole and creel.
I could come back later for the fish. Now there was only room in the world for
Bell Brook, the turtle, and me.
The long passage upstream is a blur in my memory. I thought of salmon
leaping over falls and learned a little that day how hard such a journey must be.
ANALYZE VISUALS
What details on the
snapping turtle do you
notice most? What
details are difficult
to see?
10. Harlem: a New York City neighborhood that was and is largely African American.
Comprehension 86A>;DGC>6
1. Recall What actions does the narrator take to make sure he fishes responsibly? R3.7 Analyze a work of literature,
showing how it reflects the heritage,
2. Recall Why does the narrator decide to cross under the state road? traditions, attitudes, and beliefs of its
author. (Biographical approach)
3. Represent How does the narrator get the snapping turtle out of the water?
Reread lines 234–243, and sketch the scene.
Literary Analysis
4. Visualize How well does Joseph Bruchac help you visualize the characters,
events, and settings in the story? Choose a passage that you find visually
descriptive and explain what words and phrases help you picture the scene.
5. Make Inferences About Relationships Describe the narrator’s relationship
with his grandparents. Do you think the other boys in the story would have
similar relationships with the adults in their lives? Explain your answer.
6. Compare and Contrast Characters What are the similarities and differences
between Grama and Grampa? Consider their backgrounds, values, and traits.
Use the notes from one of your Venn diagrams to help you answer the question,
and cite evidence from the story.
7. Analyze Influence of Author’s Background Reread Bruchac’s biography
on page 751 to remind you of his Abenaki beliefs. In what ways does
“The Snapping Turtle” reflect these values? In a graphic like the one shown,
give examples from the story.
Abenaki Values
8. Evaluate the Ending Reread the last paragraph of the story. How well do
you think it wraps up the plot and summarizes the theme? Refer to specific
phrases in the paragraph as you explain your answer.
research links
For more on Abenaki stories, visit the Research Center at ClassZone.com.
vocabulary in writing
Using at least two vocabulary words, write a paragraph telling about your own
views on nature. You may want to compare yourself with the boys in the story.
You could start this way.
example sentence
context. For example, you can determine the meaning of the word generations R1.1 Analyze idioms, analogies,
metaphors, and similes to infer the
from the thing it is compared to in this passage: literal and figurative meanings of
phrases.
Only ripples on the water, widening circles rolling on toward other shores
like generations following each other . . . . (lines 334–336)
PRACTICE Determine the literal meaning of each analogy, then the figurative.
Use that information to help you understand the boldfaced word.
1. Defunct Web sites are like ghost towns that once bustled with life.
2. Like a makeshift shelter, a flimsy excuse soon falls apart.
3. Carmina tended to the mold she was growing for the science fair the way vocabulary
practice
a mother bird looks after her nest. For more practice, go
4. Like a baseball player stealing second base, Tomás sprinted down the hall to the Vocabulary Center
at ClassZone.com.
and slid into his seat just as the bell finished ringing.
For more help with compound-complex sentences, see page R64 in the
Grammar Handbook.
Out of Bounds
Short Story by Beverley Naidoo
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literary analysis: cultural conflict 86A>;DGC>6
When you read a story set in another country, knowing about
Writing for Justice
the area’s history and culture can be important background. Beverley Naidoo grew
It can help you to understand the characters’ behavior and up in Johannesburg,
the cultural conflicts that unfold. A cultural conflict is a South Africa, when
struggle that arises because of the differing values, customs, the country was
or circumstances between groups of people. For example, if racially segregated.
It wasn’t until she
a story is set in a place where one religious group has been
went to college that
fighting against another, parents might be angry if their child she recognized the
becomes friends with someone from outside their group. injustice of the laws.
“Out of Bounds” takes place in South Africa. As you read After she moved to
the selection, notice how the conflicts reflect the history and England, she decided Beverley Naidoo
culture of South Africa. The background on this page will to write children’s born 1943
books that speak
provide you with some of the information you need.
honestly about South African society. She
published her first book, Journey to Jo’burg,
reading skill: make inferences in 1984. It was banned in her home country
until 1991.
Fiction writers do not always make direct statements about
characters or the cultures in which they live. Instead, writers
provide certain details and expect readers to combine these Background
Apartheid South Africa is the southernmost
details with their own knowledge to “read between the lines”
country on the African continent. The nation
of a story. This process of forming logical guesses is called is ethnically diverse, with whites forming
making inferences. As you read, use a chart like the one shown the smallest group. However, up until 1994,
to record your inferences about the characters and their culture. whites ruled the country under a system
called apartheid (apartness). Apartheid was
Evidence from Story My Knowledge Inference based on segregation between the races.
The white government classified non-whites
Father tops wall with wire.
into three groups. Africans made up the
largest group but had the fewest rights.
“Coloureds” (people of mixed race) and those
vocabulary in context of Indian descent were granted limited rights
in 1984. The government decided where
The boldfaced words help Beverley Naidoo describe a society each group could live, conduct business, or
influenced by its history of racial injustice. Using context clues, own land. The effects of apartheid continue
try to write a definition for each word. to influence South African society today.
Africans, on average, remain poorer and have
1. Afraid to go to a school where they would be teased, the less access to education than other groups.
boys straggle behind their older brother.
Storms and Floods “Out of Bounds” is set in
2. The flood could maroon many people on rooftops.
2000. That year, severe storms devastated
3. Members of the newer sect didn’t agree with people from southern Africa. Floods swept away schools,
the orthodox church. roads, crops, and livestock. About 540,000
4. The Africans fought vigorously for equality. people were left homeless.
5. The peace talks gave people a glimmer of hope. more about the author
6. The evening news was interesting enough to engross him. and background
To learn more about Beverley Naidoo
7. We watched the energized boy bound up the hill. and South Africa, visit the Literature
Center at ClassZone.com.
8. Poor communication will hamper efforts to get along.
771
Text not available.
Please refer to the text in the textbook.
ANALYZE VISUALS
What do you think life
is like in the setting
pictured?
777
Text not available.
Please refer to the text in the textbook.
Comprehension 86A>;DGC>6
1. Recall Why doesn’t Rohan go to his hideout anymore? R3.7 Analyze a work of literature,
showing how it reflects the heritage,
2. Recall Where has Rohan seen Solani before Solani comes to his house? traditions, attitudes, and beliefs of its
author. (Biographical approach)
3. Represent Make a sketch showing Rohan’s house and the squatters’ camp.
Think about what these places look like and where they are in relation to
one another. Use descriptions in the story to guide you.
Literary Analysis
4. Make Inferences About Characters Review your chart of inferences about
the characters and their culture. Why does Rohan think it’s the right decision
to help Solani? Name three reasons why these two boys might be drawn
together.
Cause
5. Analyze Cultural Conflict What causes the
residents of Mount View to discriminate against Effect
Cause
the squatters? Consider what you know about discrimination
the history and culture of South Africa as well as against squatters
Cause
events in the story’s plot. Record your response
in a diagram like the one shown.
6. Evaluate Attitudes Describe the attitudes of Rohan’s mother and father
toward the squatters. Do you think they are prejudiced against Africans?
Then consider Rohan’s experience in the squatters’ camp. Do you think the
Africans are prejudiced against him? Explain your responses, citing evidence
from the story.
7. Make Judgments Who do you think took the greater risk by going out
of bounds—Rohan or Solani? Explain your answer.
8. Predict Do you think that Rohan and Solani will be able to maintain their
friendship? Why or why not?
research links
For more on Nelson Mandela, visit the Research Center at ClassZone.com.
Nelson Mandela
example sentence
I was afraid, but I couldn’t let that hamper me because my mother needed water.
PRACTICE Use context clues to define the boldfaced words. Then check your
definitions in a dictionary and note the word’s origin.
1. She said goodbye to him in front of a bank of elevators.
2. The goatherd drove his flock up the hill. vocabulary
practice
3. Great-Grandma’s lined face shows her age.
For more practice, go
4. Your pupils grow tiny when you step into bright sunlight. to the Vocabulary Center
at ClassZone.com.
5. Cowhands herded longhorn steers into a corral.
For more help with using colons correctly, see page R50 in the Grammar
Handbook.
Pecos Bill
Tall Tale Retold by Mary Pope Osborne
What is a
folk hero ?
KEY IDEA A steel-driving man who defeats a machine through
hard work and perseverance. An outlaw who steals from the rich
to give to the poor. A cowgirl who can circle the moon. Every
culture has its folk heroes, characters whose courage, generosity, or
accomplishments inspire ordinary people. Some folk heroes are real
people or are based on the lives of real people; others are invented
to symbolize the values of a particular culture. In the tall tale you are
about to read, you will meet a fictional American folk hero known
for his strength and bravery.
784
literary analysis: tall tale 86A>;DGC>6
Folk heroes often appear in tall tales, which are humorous
Finding Her Way
stories about impossible events. Many of these stories were After graduating from
originally passed down from generation to generation by being college, Mary Pope
told out loud. Some of them even started off with a kernel of Osborne decided to
truth, but as you’ll see, they aren’t exactly realistic. Tall tales explore the world.
have these characteristics: She traveled around
Europe, the Middle
• The hero or heroine is often larger than life, which means he East, and southern
or she is bigger, louder, stronger, or stranger than any real Asia. She slept
person could be. outdoors and bathed
in rivers in Iraq,
• Problems are solved in humorous ways. Afghanistan, and Mary Pope Osborne
• Hyperbole, or exaggeration, is used to emphasize the main India. And, she says, born 1949
character’s qualities and create humor. she was “terrified”
almost the whole time. She survived an
As you read, note how these characteristics apply to “Pecos Bill.” earthquake and a riot, only to end up sick
in a hospital, all alone and far from home.
While she rested, she read J. R. R. Tolkien’s
reading strategy: visualize The Lord of the Rings series. She identified
Tall tales are funny and action-packed. To enjoy them fully, with Tolkien’s hero, Frodo, whose dangerous
it helps to visualize, or picture in your mind, the incredible journey seemed to resemble her own.
events in the story as you read about them. To visualize, focus Says Osborne, “Ultimately Frodo’s courage
and powers of endurance became mine,”
on descriptions that appeal to your senses, especially those of
which helped her recover from her illness
sight, sound, and touch. Use these sensory details to form a and make her way home. Eventually, she
mental picture of the characters and action. As you read, use a began writing children’s stories for fun and
chart like the one shown to note descriptive words and phrases discovered her new career.
that help you visualize the tall tale.
more about the author
For more on Mary Pope Osborne, visit
Character or Event Descriptive Words or Phrases the Literature Center at ClassZone.com.
Little Bill falls out of “sat there in the dirt”
the wagon. “rattle off in a cloud of dust” Background
Tall Tales and the American Frontier
Tall tales are often set on the American
frontier—large parts of the West and
Southwest that had small populations
in the 19th century. Life on the frontier
was often adventurous and free-spirited,
and sharing stories became an important
social activity. Tall tales may have started
as bragging contests held by ranch hands
on the frontier. As they tried to outdo
each other, they exaggerated stories
about their abilities more and more. The
achievements described in tall tales often
center around the characteristics of courage,
determination, and cleverness, all of which
were needed to survive on the frontier.
sk any coyote near the Pecos River in western Texas who was the best ANALYZE VISUALS
cowboy who ever lived, and he’ll throw back his head and howl, What details make this
illustration humorous?
“Ah-hooo!” If you didn’t know already, that’s coyote language for Pecos Bill.
When Pecos Bill was a little baby, he was as tough as a pine knot. He
teethed on horseshoes instead of teething rings and played with grizzly bears
instead of teddy bears. He could have grown up just fine in the untamed land
of eastern Texas. But one day his pappy ran in from the fields, hollering, “Pack
up, Ma! Neighbors movin’ in fifty miles away! It’s gettin’ too crowded!”
Before sundown Bill’s folks loaded their fifteen kids and all their belongings
10 into their covered wagon and started west. a a TALL TALE
As they clattered across the desolate land of western Texas, the crushing heat Which of young Bill’s and
his father’s qualities are
nearly drove them all crazy. Baby Bill got so hot and cross that he began to
exaggerated?
wallop1 his big brothers. Pretty soon all fifteen kids were going at one another
tooth and nail.2 Before they turned each other into catfish bait, Bill fell out of
the wagon and landed kerplop on the sun-scorched desert. b b VISUALIZE
The others were so busy fighting that they didn’t even notice the baby was Reread lines 11–15.
What words and phrases
missing until it was too late to do anything about it.
help you picture the
Well, tough little Bill just sat there in the dirt, watching his family rattle off scene?
in a cloud of dust, until an old coyote walked over and sniffed him.
20 “Goo-goo!” Bill said.
Now it’s an amazing coincidence, but “Goo-goo” happens to mean
something similar to “Glad to meet you” in coyote language. Naturally the old
coyote figured he’d come across one of his own kind. He gave Bill a big lick
and picked him up by the scruff of the neck and carried him home to his den.
786 unit 7: history, culture, and the author Illustrations by Michael McCurdy.
Bill soon discovered the coyote’s kinfolk were about the wildest, roughest
bunch you could imagine. Before he knew it, he was roaming the prairies
with the pack. He howled at the moon, sniffed the brush, and chased lizards
across the sand. He was having such a good time, scuttling about naked
and dirty on all fours, that he completely forgot what it was like to be a
30 human. c c TALL TALE
Pecos Bill’s coyote days came to an end about seventeen years later. One Baby Bill gets separated
from his family. What’s
evening as he was sniffing the sagebrush, a cowpoke3 came loping by on a big
humorous about the way
horse. “Hey, you!” he shouted. “What in the world are you?” this problem gets solved?
Bill sat on his haunches and stared at the feller.
“What are you?” asked the cowpoke again.
“Varmint,”4 said Bill hoarsely, for he hadn’t used his human voice in
seventeen years.
“No, you ain’t!”
“Yeah, I am. I got fleas, don’t I?”
40 “Well, that don’t mean nothing. A lot of Texans got fleas. The thing
varmints got that you ain’t got is a tail.”
“Oh, yes, I do have a tail,” said Pecos Bill.
“Lemme see it then,” said the cowpoke.
Bill turned around to look at his rear end, and for the first time in his life he
realized he didn’t have a tail.
“Dang,” he said. “But if I’m not a varmint, what am I?”
“You’re a cowboy! So start acting like one!”
Bill just growled at the feller like any coyote worth his salt5 would. But
deep down in his heart of hearts he knew the cowpoke was right. For the last
50 seventeen years he’d had a sneaking suspicion that he was different from that
pack of coyotes. For one thing, none of them seemed to smell quite as bad as
he did. d d TALL TALE
So with a heavy heart he said good-bye to his four-legged friends and took Reread lines 39–52.
off with the cowpoke for the nearest ranch. Which lines, if any,
are funny to you?
Explain why.
cting like a human wasn’t all that easy for Pecos Bill. Even though he
soon started dressing right, he never bothered to shave or comb his hair.
He’d just throw some water on his face in the morning and go around the rest
of the day looking like a wet dog. Ignorant cowpokes claimed Bill wasn’t too
smart. Some of the meaner ones liked to joke that he wore a ten-dollar hat on a
60 five-cent head.
The truth was Pecos Bill would soon prove to be one of the greatest cowboys
who ever lived. He just needed to find the kind of folks who’d appreciate him.
One night when he was licking his dinner plate, his ears perked up. A couple
of ranch hands were going on about a gang of wild cowboys.
6. flint rock: a very hard, fine-grained quartz that sparks when struck with steel.
7. bobtailed: having a very short tail or one that has been bobbed (cut short).
8. cry uncle: give up fighting; admit that one has been beaten.
9. Rio Grande (rCPI grBndP): a river that forms part of the U.S.-Mexican border.
11. bustle (bOsPEl): a springy steel framework worn under the back of a woman’s skirt to make it puff out.
12. mesas (mAPsEs): high, flat-topped areas of land.
13. lariat (lBrPC-Et): a rope with a slip-knotted loop at one end that a cowhand throws over an animal’s
head or body and pulls tight.
Comprehension
1. Recall Why does a coyote decide to take care of Bill?
2. Clarify How does Bill become the leader of the Hell’s Gate Gang?
3. Summarize How do Bill and Sue end up leaving Earth and living in the sky?
Literary Analysis
4. Examine a Tall Tale In what ways does “Pecos Bill” exhibit the characteristics
of a tall tale? Review the characteristics on page 801. Give examples from
the story to support each one.
5. Visualize Review the chart you filled in as you read. What person or event
did you picture most clearly? Tell what descriptions and sensory details
helped you. Overall, how well do you think the author helped you visualize
the story? Explain.
6. Analyze Characterization How does the Bill’s Words, Thoughts,
Appearance:
author help you get to know what Pecos Bill and Actions:
never bothered to shave
is like? Use a character map to show what
or comb his hair
you learn about Bill through each of the four
methods of characterization. Pecos Bill
7. Draw Conclusions Why do you think Pecos
Other Comments: Narrator’s Comments:
Bill became a folk hero in American culture?
Consider what his personal characteristics and
achievements might represent to people.
research links
For more on 19th-century cowboys, visit the Research Center at ClassZone.com.
794
86A>;DGC>6
Read a Great Book
“If this story is a parable, perhaps everyone takes his own meaning
from it and reads his own life into it.” So begins the story of Kino,
the poor fisherman, his wife, Juana, their baby, Coyotito, and
the great pearl that was found and lost again. When Coyotito
is stung by a scorpion, Kino and Juana travel from their village
to take him to the nearest doctor. However, being poor, they
are unable to pay for treatment and are turned away. But once
they have a large pearl in their possession, the greedy doctor
makes a house call, hoping to get a share of the profits.
from
The
“It is as I thought,” he said. “The poison has gone inward and it will
strike soon. Come look!” He held the eyelid down. “See—it is blue.”
And Kino, looking anxiously, saw that indeed it was a little blue. And he
didn’t know whether or not it was always a little blue. But the trap was
set. He couldn’t take the chance.
The doctor’s eyes watered in their little hammocks. “I will give him
something to try to turn the poison aside,” he said. And he handed the
baby to Kino.
Then from his bag he took a little bottle of white powder and a
10 capsule of gelatine. He filled the capsule with the powder and closed
it, and then around the first capsule he fitted a second capsule and
closed it. Then he worked very deftly. He took the baby and pinched
its lower lip until it opened its mouth. His fat fingers placed the
capsule far back on the baby’s tongue, back of the point where he
could spit it out, and then from the floor he picked up the little
pitcher of pulque and gave Coyotito a drink, and it was done. He
looked again at the baby’s eyeball and he pursed his lips and seemed
to think.
795
At last he handed the baby back to Juana, and he turned to Kino.
20 “I think the poison will attack within the hour,” he said. “The medicine
may save the baby from hurt, but I will come back in an hour. Perhaps
I am in time to save him.” He took a deep breath and went out of the
hut, and his servant followed him with the lantern.
Now Juana had the baby under her shawl, and she stared at it with
anxiety and fear. Kino came to her, and he lifted the shawl and stared
at the baby. He moved his hand to look under the eyelid, and only
then saw that the pearl was still in his hand. Then he went to a box by
the wall, and from it he brought a piece of rag. He wrapped the pearl
in the rag, then went to the corner of the brush house and dug a little
30 hole with his fingers in the dirt floor, and he put the pearl in the hole
and covered it up and concealed the place. And then he went to the fire
where Juana was squatting, watching the baby’s face.
The doctor, back in his house, settled into his chair and looked at his
watch. His people brought him a little supper of chocolate and sweet
cakes and fruit, and he stared at the food discontentedly.
In the houses of the neighbors the subject that would lead all
conversations for a long time to come was aired for the first time to
see how it would go. The neighbors showed one another with their
thumbs how big the pearl was, and they made little caressing gestures
40 to show how lovely it was. From now on they would watch Kino and
Juana very closely to see whether riches turned their heads, as riches
turn all people’s heads. Everyone knew why the doctor had come.
He was not good at dissembling and he was very well understood.
Out in the estuary a tight woven school of small fishes glittered
and broke water to escape a school of great fishes that drove in to
eat them. And in the houses the people could hear the swish of the
small ones and the bouncing splash of the great ones as the slaughter
went on. The dampness arose out of the Gulf and was deposited on
bushes and cacti and on little trees in salty drops. And the night mice
50 crept about on the ground and the little night hawks hunted them
silently.
The skinny black puppy with flame spots over his eyes came to
Kino’s door and looked in. He nearly shook his hind quarters loose
when Kino glanced up at him, and he subsided when Kino looked
away. The puppy did not enter the house, but he watched with frantic
796
Great Reads
interest while Kino ate his beans from the little pottery dish and wiped
it clean with a corncake and ate the cake and washed the whole down
with a drink of pulque.
Kino was finished and was rolling a cigarette when Juana spoke
60 sharply. “Kino.” He glanced at her and then got up and went quickly to
her for he saw fright in her eyes. He stood over her, looking down, but
the light was very dim. He kicked a pile of twigs into the fire hole to
make a blaze, and then he could see the face of Coyotito. The baby’s face
was flushed and his throat was working and a little thick drool of saliva
issued from his lips. The spasm of the stomach muscles began, and the
baby was very sick.
Kino knelt beside his wife. “So the doctor knew,” he said, but he said
it for himself as well as for his wife, for his mind was hard and suspicious
and he was remembering the white powder. Juana rocked from side to
70 side and moaned out the little Song of the Family as though it could
ward off the danger, and the baby vomited and writhed in her arms.
Now uncertainty was in Kino, and the music of evil throbbed in his
head and nearly drove out Juana’s song.
The doctor finished his chocolate and nibbled the little fallen pieces
of sweet cake. He brushed his fingers on a napkin, looked at his watch,
arose, and took up his little bag.
The news of the baby’s illness traveled quickly among the brush
houses, for sickness is second only to hunger as the enemy of poor
people. And some said softly, “Luck, you see, brings bitter friends.”
80 And they nodded and got up to go to Kino’s house. The neighbors
scuttled with covered noses through the dark until they crowded
into Kino’s house again. They stood and gazed, and they made little
comments on the sadness that this should happen at a time of joy, and
they said, “All things are in God’s hands.” The old women squatted
down beside Juana to try to give her aid if they could and comfort if
they could not.
Then the doctor hurried in, followed by his man. He scattered the
old women like chickens. He took the baby and examined it and felt
its head. “The poison it has worked,” he said. “I think I can defeat
90 it. I will try my best.” He asked for water, and in the cup of it he
put three drops of ammonia, and he pried open the baby’s mouth
and poured it down. The baby spluttered and screeched under the
797
treatment, and Juana watched him with haunted eyes. The doctor
spoke a little as he worked. “It is lucky that I know about the poison
of the scorpion, otherwise—” and he shrugged to show what could
have happened.
But Kino was suspicious, and he could not take his eyes from the
doctor’s open bag, and from the bottle of white powder there. Gradually
the spasms subsided and the baby relaxed under the doctor’s hands. And
100 then Coyotito sighed deeply and went to sleep, for he was very tired
with vomiting.
The doctor put the baby in Juana’s arms. “He will get well now,” he
said. “I have won the fight.” And Juana looked at him with adoration.
The doctor was closing his bag now. He said, “When do you think
you can pay this bill?” He said it even kindly.
“When I have sold my pearl I will pay you,” Kino said.
“You have a pearl? A good pearl?” the doctor asked with interest.
And then the chorus of the neighbors broke in. “He has found the
Pearl of the World,” they cried, and they joined forefinger with thumb
110 to show how great the pearl was.
“Kino will be a rich man,” they clamored. “It is a pearl such as one
has never seen.”
The doctor looked surprised. “I had not heard of it. Do you keep
this pearl in a safe place? Perhaps you would like me to put it in
my safe?”
Kino’s eyes were hooded now, his cheeks were drawn taut. “I have it
secure,” he said. “Tomorrow I will sell it and then I will pay you.”
The doctor shrugged, and his wet eyes never left Kino’s eyes. He
knew the pearl would be buried in the house, and he thought Kino
120 might look toward the place where it was buried. “It would be a shame
to have it stolen before you could sell it,” the doctor said, and he saw
Kino’s eyes flick involuntarily to the floor near the side post of the
brush house.
When the doctor had gone and all the neighbors had reluctantly
returned to their houses, Kino squatted beside the little glowing coals
in the fire hole and listened to the night sound, the soft sweep of the
little waves on the shore and the distant barking of dogs, the creeping
of the breeze through the brush house roof and the soft speech of his
neighbors in their houses in the village. For these people do not sleep
798
Great Reads
130 soundly all night; they awaken at intervals and talk a little and then
go to sleep again. And after a while Kino got up and went to the door
of his house.
He smelled the breeze and he listened for any foreign sound of secrecy
or creeping, and his eyes searched the darkness, for the music of evil was
sounding in his head and he was fierce and afraid. After he had probed
the night with his senses he went to the place by the side post where the
pearl was buried, and he dug it up and brought it to his sleeping mat,
and under his sleeping mat he dug another little hole in the dirt floor
and buried the pearl and covered it up again.
140 And Juana, sitting by the fire hole, watched him with questioning
eyes, and when he had buried his pearl she asked, “Who do you fear?”
Keep Reading
Is Kino right to fear that something bad is going to happen
now that he has the “Pearl of the World”? As you continue to
read the novella, you’ll follow Kino and Juana as they seek their
fortune, dodging danger at every turn. Discover how finding
the pearl will change their lives forever.
799
Before Reading
800
literary analysis: author’s perspective 86A>;DGC>6
Your view of the world is based on the people you know, the
Saved by Poetry
places you’ve lived, and the experiences you’ve had. Similarly, Born to parents of
an author’s perspective—the way a writer looks at a topic—is Mexican descent,
shaped by his or her experiences, environment, and values. Gary Soto grew up
In his memoir, Gary Soto describes his teenage years working in Fresno, California.
as a field laborer. As you read, look for direct statements, When Soto was five
years old, his father
thoughts, and actions that reflect Soto’s heritage, attitudes,
died in an industrial
and beliefs. accident, which
left Soto feeling
reading strategy: analyze sensory details alone and confused.
Struggling in school, Gary Soto
Does it ever feel like you’re actually seeing or hearing the he assumed he would born 1952
experiences described on the page? If so, it’s probably because lead a life much like
of the author’s expert use of sensory details. Sensory details that of his parents, who worked at picking
are words and phrases that appeal to a reader’s five senses. crops and other low-paying jobs. However,
By using such details, a writer helps the reader create vivid he chose to enroll in college. Soto planned
to study geography, but in his second year,
mental pictures of settings, people, and events.
he stumbled across a book of modern
For example, in “One Last Time” Soto describes a bus that American poetry. This book changed his
“started off in slow chugs”—a detail that helps you “hear” the goals for the future. Soto was inspired
rickety old bus. As you read, look for two or three details that to become a writer and began studying
appeal to each sense and record them in a web. literature. Writing poetry and prose helped
him reflect on his life and express himself in
a new way.
Sight
Writing from Experience Soto began
Taste Hearing “started off writing for young readers in the 1990s.
Sensory in slow chugs .” In his poetry and fiction, he draws on
Details
his personal experience in books such as
Baseball in April and Other Stories (1990),
Smell Touch
which describes the joys and challenges
of Mexican-American boys and girls living
in California. Soto also began writing
vocabulary in context biographies and other nonfiction. He says
the greatest challenge of writing nonfiction
The words in Column A help Soto describe his jobs. See how
is “making it exciting,” although he adds
many you know by matching each word to the word or phrase that any reader who claims to be bored by
in Column B that is closest in meaning. the book should “cut grapes for a season.
Then he or she will know boredom.”
Column A Column B
1. ramble a. weak more about the author
For more on Gary Soto, visit the
2. foreman b. angry Literature Center at ClassZone.com.
3. grope c. workers’ boss
4. stoop d. bend over at the waist
5. contractor e. unpleasant situation
6. irate f. awkwardly grab for
7. feeble g. talk on and on
8. predicament h. one who provides services for a price
one last time 801
One
Last
Time g a ry soto
Y esterday I saw the movie Gandhi 1 and recognized a few of the people—
not in the theater but in the film. I saw my relatives, dusty and thin as
sparrows, returning from the fields with hoes balanced on their shoulders.
ANALYZE VISUALS
What can you infer about
the boys based on their
posture and clothing?
The workers were squinting, eyes small and veined, and were using their
hands to say what there was to say to those in the audience with popcorn. . . .
I didn’t have any, though. I sat thinking of my family and their years in the
fields, beginning with Grandmother who came to the United States after the
Mexican revolution2 to settle in Fresno where she met her husband and bore
children, many of them. She worked in the fields around Fresno, picking
10 grapes, oranges, plums, peaches, and cotton, dragging a large white sack like
a sled. She worked in the packing houses, Bonner and Sun-Maid Raisin, where
she stood at a conveyor belt passing her hand over streams of raisins to pluck
out leaves and pebbles. For over twenty years she worked at a machine that
boxed raisins until she retired at sixty-five. a a AUTHOR’S
Grandfather worked in the fields, as did his children. Mother also found PERSPECTIVE
What does Soto think
herself out there when she separated from Father for three weeks. I remember
about when he sees the
her coming home, dusty and so tired that she had to rest on the porch before working people in the
she trudged inside to wash and start dinner. I didn’t understand the complaints movie? As you continue
about her ankles or the small of her back, even though I had been in the grape reading, notice how his
20 fields watching her work. With my brother and sister I ran in and out of the family history affects his
view of field work.
rows; we enjoyed ourselves and pretended not to hear Mother scolding us to
sit down and behave ourselves. A few years later, however, I caught on when
I went to pick grapes rather than play in the rows.
1. Gandhi (gänPdC): a 1982 film biography of Mohandas Gandhi (1869–1948), an Indian spiritual and
political leader who, through nonviolent struggle, forced England to grant India’s independence.
2. Mexican revolution (1910–1920): an armed conflict during which revolutionaries overthrew Mexico’s
longtime dictator and reformed the government.
Detail of Los Comaradas del
Barrio (1976), Jesse Treviño. Acrylic on
802 unit 7: history, culture, and the author canvas, 36˝ × 48˝. Collection of the artist.
Mother and I got up before dawn and ate quick bowls of cereal. She drove
in silence while I rambled on how everything was now solved, how I was ramble (rBmPbEl) v. to talk
going to make enough money to end our misery and even buy her a beautiful at length and aimlessly
copper tea pot, the one I had shown her in Long’s Drugs. When we arrived I
was frisky and ready to go, self-consciously aware of my grape knife dangling at
my wrist. I almost ran to the row the foreman had pointed out, but I returned foreman (fôrPmEn) n. the
30 to help Mother with the grape pans and jug of water. She told me to settle leader of a work crew
down and reminded me not to lose my knife. I walked at her side and listened
to her explain how to cut grapes; bent down, hands on knees, I watched her
demonstrate by cutting a few bunches into my pan. She stood over me as I
tried it myself, tugging at a bunch of grapes that pulled loose like beads from
a necklace. “Cut the stem all the way,” she told me as last advice before she
walked away, her shoes sinking in the loose dirt, to begin work on her own row.
I cut another bunch, then another, fighting the snap and whip of vines.
After ten minutes of groping for grapes, my first pan brimmed with bunches. grope (grIp) v. to reach
I poured them on the paper tray, which was bordered by a wooden frame that about with uncertainty
40 kept the grapes from rolling off, and they spilled like jewels from a pirate’s
chest. The tray was only half filled, so I hurried to jump under the vines and
begin groping, cutting, and tugging at the grapes again. I emptied the pan,
raked the grapes with my hands to make them look like they filled the tray,
and jumped back under the vine on my knees. I tried to cut faster because
Mother, in the next row, was slowly moving ahead. I peeked into her row and
saw five trays gleaming in the early morning. I cut, pulled hard, and stopped
to gather the grapes that missed the pan; already bored, I spat on a few to wash
them before tossing them like popcorn into my mouth. b b SENSORY DETAILS
So it went. Two pans equaled one tray—or six cents. By lunchtime I had What details in lines 37–48
50 a trail of thirty-seven trays behind me while Mother had sixty or more. We help you understand the
experience of cutting
met about halfway from our last trays, and I sat down with a grunt, knees wet grapes? Add this
from kneeling on dropped grapes. I washed my hands with the water from the information to your web.
jug, drying them on the inside of my shirt sleeve before I opened the paper
bag for the first sandwich, which I gave to Mother. I dipped my hand in again
to unwrap a sandwich without looking at it. I took a first bite and chewed it
slowly for the tang of mustard. Eating in silence I looked straight ahead at the
vines, and only when we were finished with cookies did we talk.
“Are you tired?” she asked.
“No, but I got a sliver from the frame,” I told her. I showed her the web of
60 skin between my thumb and index finger. She wrinkled her forehead but said
it was nothing.
“How many trays did you do?”
I looked straight ahead, not answering at first. I recounted in my mind the
whole morning of bend, cut, pour again and again, before answering a feeble feeble (fCPbEl) adj. weak
“thirty-seven.” No elaboration, no detail. Without looking at me she told me or faint
how she had done field work in Texas and Michigan as a child. But I had a
difficult time listening to her stories. I played with my grape knife, stabbing it
T
What effect does
he next day I woke tired and started picking tired. The grapes rained into
the author’s work
the pan, slowly filling like a belly, until I had my first tray and started environment have on his
my second. So it went all day, and the next, and all through the following week, life away from work?
so that by the end of thirteen days the foreman counted out, in tens mostly, my
pay of fifty-three dollars. Mother earned one hundred and forty-eight dollars.
She wrote this on her envelope, with a message I didn’t bother to ask her about.
La Calle Cuatro (2001), Emigdio Vasquez. Oil on canvas, 22˝ × 28˝. © Emigdio Vasquez.
The next day I walked with my friend Scott to the downtown mall where
110 we drooled over the clothes behind fancy windows, bought popcorn, and sat
at a tier of outdoor fountains to talk about girls. Finally we went into Penney’s
for more popcorn, which we ate walking around, before we returned home
without buying anything. It wasn’t until a few days before school that I let
my fifty-three dollars slip quietly from my hands, buying a pair of pants, two
shirts, and a maroon T-shirt, the kind that was in style. At home I tried them
on while Rick looked on enviously; later, the day before school started, I tried
them on again wondering not so much if they were worth it as who would see
me first in those clothes.
Along with my brother and sister I picked grapes until I was fifteen,
120 before giving up and saying that I’d rather wear old clothes than stoop like stoop (stLp) v. to bend
a Mexican. Mother thought I was being stuck-up, even stupid, because there forward and down from
the waist or the middle of
would be no clothes for me in the fall. I told her I didn’t care, but when Rick
the back
and Debra rose at five in the morning, I lay awake in bed feeling that perhaps
I had made a mistake but unwilling to change my mind. That fall Mother
bought me two pairs of socks, a packet of colored T-shirts, and underwear.
The T-shirts would help, I thought, but who would see that I had new
underwear and socks? I wore a new T-shirt on the first day of school, then an
old shirt on Tuesday, then another T-shirt on Wednesday, and on Thursday
an old Nehru shirt5 that was embarrassingly out of style. On Friday I changed
130 into the corduroy pants my brother had handed down to me and slipped into
my last new T-shirt. I worked like a magician, blinding my classmates, who
were all clothes conscious and small-time social climbers, by arranging my
wardrobe to make it seem larger than it really was. But by spring I had to
do something—my blue jeans were almost silver and my shoes had lost their
form, puddling like black ice around my feet. That spring of my sixteenth year,
6. Okies (IPkCz): people from Oklahoma and other midwestern states who moved to California to find
work during the Great Depression of the 1930s.
7. Tejanos (tA-häPnIs): Texans of Mexican ancestry.
How
Things
Work
g a ry soto
Comprehension 86A>;DGC>6
1. Recall What does Gary Soto dream of buying his mother? R3.7 Analyze a work of literature,
showing how it reflects the heritage,
2. Recall What does Soto think about when he is bored at work? traditions, attitudes, and beliefs of its
author. (Biographical approach)
3. Summarize Describe Soto’s first day chopping cotton.
Literary Analysis
4. Make Inferences How might Soto’s family history affect his thoughts and
feelings about working in the fields? Cite evidence from the story and the
biography on page 817 to support your response.
5. Analyze Sensory Details Review the sensory details you noted in your web.
What single detail best captures for you what it was like to pick grapes or
chop cotton?
6. Compare and Contrast Which does Soto like more, picking grapes or
chopping cotton? Note the similarities and differences between the two
jobs. Then explain why Soto prefers the one he does.
7. Examine Author’s Perspective In what ways does Gary Soto’s perspective
toward work change throughout the selection? Consider what happens to
Soto’s dreams the longer he works in the fields. Track his attitude toward his
jobs on a timeline like the one shown. Record his positive feelings above the
line and negative feelings below the line.
Positive enthusiastic about
Feelings job and making money
Negative
Feelings
example sentence
dust and sand flying into their moving bus was “whipping around like irate R1.1 Analyze idioms, analogies,
metaphors, and similes to infer the
wasps.” This simile helps readers imagine what it would feel like to be riding literal and figurative meanings of
in the bus. phrases.
Similes can also provide context clues to help you figure out unfamiliar word
meanings. If you know that “whipping around” implies fast, curving motion and
that wasps move more quickly when they’re angered, then you can figure out
that irate means “very angry.”
PRACTICE Use the simile in each sentence as a context clue to help you define
the boldfaced word.
1. His elaborate story was as layered as a wedding cake.
2. The idling engine purred like a lazy kitten. vocabulary
practice
3. She stared at me as intently as a cat watches a bird. For more practice, go
4. The lightning illuminated the sky like a fireworks display. to the Vocabulary Center
at ClassZone.com.
5. Her excruciating sense of homesickness felt like physical pain.
For more help with semicolons, see page R49 in the Grammar Handbook.
Can cartoons
have a point?
KEY IDEA In the United States, everyone can express an opinion, and
there are countless ways opinions are expressed. In this lesson, you’ll
look at how images and words can be carefully combined to make
86A>;DGC>6
timely statements about American life.
LS 1.9 Interpret and evaluate
the various ways in which visual
image makers (e.g, graphic artists,
illustrators, news photographers) Background
communicate information and affect
impressions and opinions. Cartoon Comments A political cartoon is a humorous drawing
that makes a comment about a political issue or an event.
Political cartoons usually appear on the editorial pages of
newspapers, alongside writings that express opinions. These
cartoons can reflect current topics in a funny or serious way.
The following cartoon presents two characters who might
look familiar. In political cartoons, the elephant often appears as
the symbol of the Republican Party and the donkey stands for the
Democratic Party. These characters often represent two sides of
an issue. In this case, though, does the cartoonist seem to think
that either side is correct?
814 © 20 06 La rry W
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86A>;DGC>6
Media Literacy: Messages in Political Cartoons
For any cartoon, the cartoonist’s aim is to include images and details that help
you figure out his or her message. One of the most enduring images in political
cartoons is the figure of Uncle Sam. Political cartoonists use him as a symbol for
the United States. His appearance may vary from cartoon to cartoon. However,
he’s usually easy to recognize, and the message he communicates is tied to a
national issue. Use the following strategies to analyze political cartoons.
Notice how the art elements are used to catch the eye and to create certain effects.
• Political cartoons usually appear in black and white. When you spot any other color, consider what the
cartoonist is highlighting and what message he or she is communicating.
• Lines convey certain moods. Straight lines can signal an issue is serious. Curvy lines convey playfulness.
• To get your attention, cartoonists exaggerate shapes, often making objects appear to be larger than life.
Most often, cartoonists exaggerate by changing the sizes of familiar objects or of labels.
now view
1. Identify Name any object that appears unusually large in size in the
“Acid Rain” political cartoon.
2. Clarify Apart from the title, “The Silver Sun of Prosperity,” what helps
you to understand the subject of this political cartoon?
816
Media Study
Write or Discuss
Compare Political Cartoons You’ve seen how the image of Uncle Sam has
spanned generations. The political cartoons in this lesson were created at
different times to address different issues. How else are they alike or different?
Write a brief comparison-contrast paragraph that describes at least two more
differences. Think about
• whether the political cartoon includes many details or only a few
• the message of each political cartoon
• whether each cartoonist uses color
student model
Tech Tip
If available, use a software
program to make a slideshow
of the cartoons in your class.
I Want to Write
Sit-Ins
Poems by Margaret Walker
818
literary analysis: historical context 86A>;DGC>6
Just as a writer’s cultural background can affect his or her work,
Privilege and Pain
the time period in which a writer lives also can influence his or Margaret Walker
her subject matter and attitude. When you look at literature had a middle-class
in its historical context, you consider what was happening in upbringing in the
society at the time a piece of writing was created. South at a time
Margaret Walker wrote the two poems you are about to when many African
Americans weren’t so
read in different decades. She wrote “I Want to Write” in the
lucky. Her parents’
1930s and “Sit-Ins” in the 1960s. First study the background on jobs provided a nice
this page, and read the excerpt from A Dream of Freedom on income, but the family
page 823. Then, as you read the poems, try to connect historical still suffered from
events with Margaret Walker’s words. discrimination. In an Margaret Walker
interview, she recalled 1915–1998
the effects of racial
reading skill: analyze repetition prejudice: “Before I was 10, I knew what it was
Sound devices can add interest and appeal to all types of poems, to step off the sidewalk to let a white man
whether long, short, funny, or serious. One of the sound devices pass; otherwise he might knock me off. . . .”
used in Walker’s poems is repetition, in which a sound, word, For Her People While Walker was growing
phrase, or line is repeated for emphasis or unity. To understand up in the 1920s, an African-American cultural
the effect of repetition in a poem, follow these steps: movement called the Harlem Renaissance
was flourishing in New York City. Walker
• Write down repeated words, phrases, or lines. discovered the works of these new writers
• Think about what ideas these repeated elements emphasize. when she was 11 years old. Already showing
a gift for writing, Walker knew that she,
• Notice how the repetition relates to the poem’s overall message. too, wanted to tell the stories of African
As you read each poem, record examples of repetition in a chart Americans. Encouraged by poet Langston
Hughes, Walker went to college in the North
like the one shown, and describe the effect each has on your
in 1932. Ten years later, Yale University
understanding of Walker’s ideas. published her first collection of poetry,
For My People.
Repetition Effect
Background
Civil Rights In the South, “Jim Crow” laws
kept blacks and whites separated in public
places, such as schools and restaurants. In
the 1960s, Martin Luther King Jr. and other
leaders organized nonviolent protests
against segregation. Tactics included
boycotts (refusing to buy products from
companies that supported segregation)
and sit-ins (peacefully demanding service
at segregated businesses).
1. strains: tunes.
You were our first brave ones to defy their dissonance of hate ANALYZE VISUALS
With your silence What can you infer about
why the woman and child
With your willingness to suffer
might be walking away
Without violence from the counter?
5 Those first bright young to fling your names across pages
Of new southern history
With courage and faith, convictions, and intelligence b b REPETITION
The first to blaze a flaming path for justice Reread lines 1–7. What
does the repetition help
And awaken consciences you to understand about
10 Of these stony ones. the people Walker is
describing?
Come, Lord Jesus, Bold Young Galilean1
Sit Beside this Counter, Lord, with Me! c c HISTORICAL CONTEXT
What historical details
does Walker cite in the
poem?
1. Galilean (gBlQE-lCPEn): According to the Bible, Jesus lived near the Sea of Galilee, in Israel.
Comprehension 86A>;DGC>6
1. Recall In “I Want to Write,” what does the speaker want to write about? R3.6 Identify significant literary
devices (e.g., metaphor, symbolism,
2. Recall In “Sit-Ins,” what qualities do the people participating in the sit-ins have? dialect, irony) that define a writer’s
style and use those elements to
interpret the work.
Literary Analysis R3.7 Analyze a work of literature,
showing how it reflects the heritage,
3. Understand Imagery Recall that imagery consists of words and phrases that traditions, attitudes, and beliefs of its
author. (Biographical approach)
appeal to readers’ senses. In a chart like the one shown, note the images
in “I Want to Write” that appeal to the
Hearing Sight Touch
senses of hearing, sight, and touch.
What do these images help you to “singing
understand about the people Walker melodies”
wants to write about?
4. Examine Historical Context Margaret Walker writes, “I want to write the songs
of my people.” Tell what you know about conditions and events that affected
African Americans in the 1930s. How might Walker have been trying to protest
racial injustice in “I Want to Write”? Support your answer with quotations from
the poem.
5. Interpret a Passage In “Sit-Ins,” Walker describes those participating in
the sit-ins as “The first to blaze a flaming path for justice/And awaken
consciences/Of these stony ones.” Who might the “stony ones” be? Think
about the qualities the word stony suggests.
6. Compare Texts What information in the excerpt from A Dream of Freedom
does the most to help you understand the poem “Sit-Ins”? What details do
you get in the poem that help you understand the book excerpt? Explain.
7. Analyze Repetition Look at the chart you completed as you read. Decide
which poem makes greater use of repetition. What is the overall effect
of this repetition on your understanding of Walker’s ideas?
research links
For more on the civil rights movement, visit the Research Center at ClassZone.com.
On the last day of January 1960, a North cash register. One of the most insulting
Carolina teenager named Ezell Blair Jr. hypocrisies of segregation was that stores
announced to his mother, “Mom, we are in the South, as Franklin McCain put it,
going to do something tomorrow that “don’t separate your money in this cash
may change history, that might change register, but, no, please don’t step down
the world.” Blair attended a black college to the hot dog stand.”
in Greensboro called North Carolina The youths sat at the counter for
Agricultural and Technical. On Monday an hour. They were heckled by a black
afternoon, February 1, he and three A&T dishwasher, and stared at by a white
classmates, Franklin McCain, David policeman. An elderly white woman
Richmond, and Joseph McNeil, went cheered in a loud whisper: “You should
downtown to Woolworth’s department have done it ten years ago!”
store, took a seat at the lunch counter, The store manager turned off the lights
and ordered a doughnut and coffee. at five-thirty, half an hour before closing
“I’m sorry,” said the waitress, “we don’t time. “By then,” McCain recalled, “we
serve you here.” had the confidence, my goodness, of a
Though white-only lunch counters Mack truck.” In a week, the Greensboro
were a fact of southern life, one of the Four had grown to hundreds. Within two
students replied, “We just beg to disagree months, protests had taken place in 125
with you.” Before sitting down, they had cities in nine states. . . .
deliberately bought some school supplies. The sit-ins, as the lunch counter
Holding up a receipt, they pointed out campaign became known, sparked a
that they had just been served at a nearby freedom flame.
Why Is It So Noisy?
One afternoon last week, I was sitting in the park, trying to relax. I
had gone there because I thought the sound of the wind in the trees and key traits in action
the waves on the shore of the lake would help get my mind off a problem
Introduction includes an
that was bothering me. What I heard instead wasn’t soothing natural anecdote that gets the
5 sounds, but noise, noise, and more noise. The blaring car horns, beeping reader interested.
sound of a jet taking off can actually cause buildings near an airport to
vibrate, so just imagine what it does to our bodies.
Another cause of noise pollution is machinery like jackhammers, Entire essay has a parallel
structure. The writer
20 bulldozers, leaf blowers, and lawnmowers. As anyone who lives in the city has already discussed
or suburbs knows, the annoying vibrations from these machines can have the major cause of noise
pollution and moves on
immediate and dramatic effects. The noise interrupts our thoughts, makes to other sources in this
conversations difficult, and can even be painful to our ears. paragraph.
now view
1. Identify Name any object that appears unusually large in size in the
“Acid Rain” political cartoon.
2. Clarify Apart from the title, “The Silver Sun of Prosperity,” what helps
you to understand the subject of this political cartoon?
832
“Amazing,” I said aloud. It was amazing that I would be greeted on the sea
with such enthusiasm, amazing that on one of the most populated coasts in
the world, near a metropolis that stretched nearly two hundred miles from
San Diego to Santa Barbara, where nearly eighteen million people jammed the
freeways and sidewalks, I would be completely alone with the sea and my boat;
40 amazing that the planet still held such a place.
And at two in the morning he saw the light in the water. He saw it first to
the stern. In his wake, in the silent bubbles left by the Frog moving through
the water, there was a rippled, dotted line of eerie light glowing up from the
water. It was blue-green, seemed to come from down in the water, and at first
it startled and frightened him. But then he remembered hearing about it.
Small animals in the water, microscopic organisms, sometimes
phosphoresced—gave off light almost like lightning bugs—when disturbed.
He must be going through a mass of them. In back of the Frog was a long line
of blue light, fading as the water settled down again.
10 He tied the tiller off, leaned over the side, and looked toward the front
where the bow cut a wave that curled over.
“Ohhh . . .” It slipped out of his mouth unbidden, almost a sigh of
amazement. The boat was moving through blue fire, blue fire in the night.
The bow wave was a rolling curve of blue light, sparkled with bits of green
that seemed to want to crawl up the side of the boat and then fold back and
over, splashing out in ripples and droplets of light.
It could not be as beautiful as it was—not be that beautiful and be real.
It was so bright and shining a thing that the Frog seemed to be moving
through, a lake of cold fire, and as he watched he saw a form move beneath
20 the boat, caught in the blue glow of the bow wave, a torpedo form that shot
forward with an incredible burst of speed. He saw first the glowing curved line
around the head of the creature and the line showed him that it was the front
of a dolphin. All in seconds, in short parts of seconds, he saw the head and the
body moving forward beneath the boat and then it exploded—the dolphin
blew out of the water in front of the boat.
It rose in a clean curve just in front of the bowsprit, five, six feet out of the
water in a leap of joy that only dolphins can make, carrying with it a shroud go on
of splashing blue-green fire that whirled and spiraled in the darkness to follow
834
Assessment Practice
DIRECTIONS Answer these questions about the excerpt DIRECTIONS Refer to both selections to answer
from The Voyage of the Frog. this question.
8. Paulsen’s experience as an outdoorsman 14. The excerpt from The Voyage of the Frog
is reflected in the story’s reflects which experience in Paulsen’s
A point of view C setting background?
B conflict D chronology A staying up all night to watch the sunrise
B getting an unexpected glimpse of sea
9. At first, the “eerie light glowing up from animals
the water” in lines 3–5 causes David to feel C cooking and sleeping on a boat
A scared C alone D learning how to operate a sailboat
B giddy D confused
go on
835
Vocabulary
DIRECTIONS Use context clues and your knowledge 4. Which sentence uses fold as it is used in line 15
of homographs to answer the following questions. of the excerpt from The Voyage of the Frog?
1. Which sentence uses pod as it is used in line 27 “The bow wave was a rolling curve of blue
of the excerpt from Caught by the Sea? light, sparkled with bits of green that seemed
to want to crawl up the side of the boat and
“. . . within minutes a huge pod of dolphins,
then fold back and over. . . .”
hundreds of them, showed up.”
A You can fold the newspaper so it will fit
A The divers descended to the ocean floor in
into your backpack.
a small pod.
B The owner had to fold his company
B A pod of gray whales was visible from the
because he was leaving the city.
shore.
C The farmer kept his sheep in a large fold
C The pod separated from the spacecraft
behind the barn.
during reentry.
D The grandparents welcomed the new baby
D Some insects lay eggs in clusters that are
into the fold.
called pods.
2. Which sentence uses wake as it is used in line 2 DIRECTIONS Use context clues and your knowledge
of the excerpt from The Voyage of the Frog? of similes to help you determine the meaning of each
boldfaced word.
“In his wake, in the silent bubbles left by the
5. The microscopic organisms phosphoresced in
Frog moving through the water. . . .”
the water like lightning bugs illuminating a
A The floodwaters ruined every house and dark night.
barn in their wake. A crawled C glowed
B After the admiral died, the sailors held his B splashed D danced
wake at sea.
C A small boat can be swamped in the wake 6. The boat was as marooned as a car without
of a larger ship. wheels.
D Some of the passengers on the cruise ship A quiet C abandoned
did not wake up until noon. B lifeless D old
3. Which sentence uses bow as it is used in line 11 7. The commotion around the boat was like
of the excerpt from The Voyage of the Frog? rush hour traffic.
“He tied the tiller off, leaned over the side, A noisy activity C speedy pursuit
and looked toward the front where the bow B peaceful calm D crashing and
cut a wave that curled over.” churning
A The pianist took a bow after her
performance.
B He wrapped a big blue bow across the boat.
C It is hard to catch fish with a bow and arrow.
D I saw the sunrise from the bow of the ship.
836
Assessment Practice
(1) Dolphins live in water. (2) Many people think of them as fish. (3) They are
actually mammals. (4) The following are different types of dolphins the bottle-nosed
dolphin, the common dolphin, and the white-sided dolphin. (5) All dolphins share
the following characteristics smooth skin, flippers, and a blowhole. (6) Dolphins have
no sense of smell. (7) They have a keen sense of hearing. (8) They can detect sounds
that humans cannot. (9) Dolphins have been trained to perform in amusement parks,
zoos, and aquariums, to retrieve objects, and to guard military ships.
1. Choose the correct way to combine sentences 4. Choose the correct way to combine sentences
1, 2, and 3 into one compound-complex 6, 7, and 8 into one compound-complex
sentence. sentence.
A Dolphins live in water, so many people A Though dolphins have no sense of smell,
think of them as fish, but they are actually they have a keen sense of hearing, and they
mammals. can detect sounds that humans cannot.
B Dolphins live in water, and many people B Having no sense of smell but a keen sense
think of them as fish, but they are actually of hearing, dolphins can detect sounds that
mammals. humans cannot.
C Because dolphins live in water, many C Dolphins have no sense of smell but a keen
people think of them as fish, but they are sense of hearing, enabling them to detect
actually mammals. sounds that humans cannot.
D Dolphins are actually mammals living in D Despite having no sense of smell, dolphins
water, although many people think of them have a keen sense of hearing, detecting
as fish. sounds that humans cannot.
2. In sentence 4, a colon should be placed after 5. In sentence 9, a semicolon should be placed
which word? after which words?
A following A to, aquariums, objects
B are B parks, zoos, aquariums, objects
C of C perform, retrieve, guard
D dolphins D aquariums, objects
3. In sentence 5, a colon should be placed after
which word?
A share
B following
C characteristics
D skin
STOP
837
7
unit