501 Critical Reading Questions

(Sean Pound) #1
the rich boys will run the government, run the world(lines 11–12).
The author and those in his socio-economic class will be laborers
(lines 12–14). The author emphasizes the certainty of this knowl-
edge with the repetition of the phrase we knowand the sentence
We know that(line 15). Thus he demonstrates that their future was
already set based upon their socio-economic standing.


  1. a. Lines 6-7 reveal that there are two rooms and lines 9–10 describe
    the truck delivering furniture downstairs.

  2. b.Lines 1–5 state that after Pauline became pregnant, Cholly had
    acted like the early days of their marriage when he would ask if she
    were tired or wanted him to bring her something from the store. This
    statement suggests that Cholly had not done that for a while, and
    therefore had begun to neglect Pauline.

  3. e Although there is a state of ease(line 5) in the relationship between
    Pauline and Cholly, there is intense loneliness for Pauline. There
    may be less tension in this state of ease, but there does not appear
    to be more intimacy, because the loneliness prevails. We can infer
    that back homeshe was living with her family, not Cholly, and that
    Pauline would expect her husband to fulfill her need for compan-
    ionship.

  4. a. At the end of the passage, Pauline rediscovers her dreams of
    romance. Line 14 tells us she succumbed to her earlier dreams, and
    the following sentence tells us what whose dreams were about:
    romantic love.

  5. c. Because the narrator states that romantic love and physical beauty
    are probably the most destructive ideas in the history of human thought
    (lines 15–16) because they both originated in envy, thrived in insecu-
    rity, and ended in disillusion, and because these are the two ideas
    Pauline was introduced to in the theater, we can infer that she will
    only become more unhappy as a result of going to the movies.

  6. e. Lines 4–5 refer to the reservation jukebox, and line 12 refers to the
    reservationas well. If Thomas, Chess, and Checkers live on a
    reservation, they are most likely Native American.

  7. c. Because their song is one of mourning, cis the most logical
    choice. In addition, the context clue Samuel was still alive, buttells
    us that the song is traditionally reserved for the dead.

  8. c. To sing a mourning song for someone who is still alive suggests
    that that person’s lifeis mournful—full of grief, sadness, or sorrow.

  9. b.In line 9, the narrator states that Thomas wanted his tears to be indi-
    vidual, not tribal, suggesting too that he felt his father deserved to
    be mourned as an individual.

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