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Teddy JD Salinger 1953

Teddy JD Salinger 1953. What is this? What could it be symbolic of?. What is this? What color is it? How do you know?. What is this? Describe it. Life is a gift horse. What does the phrase mean?. Nothing in the voice of the cicada intimates (announces) how soon it will die.

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Teddy JD Salinger 1953

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  1. Teddy JD Salinger 1953

  2. What is this? What could it be symbolic of?

  3. What is this? What color is it? How do you know?

  4. What is this? Describe it.

  5. Life is a gift horse. What does the phrase mean?

  6. Nothing in the voice of the cicada intimates (announces) how soon it will die

  7. Along this road goes no one this autumn eve.

  8. The Ending: Based on four lines in the story that provide you with four key clues, you should be able to reasonably conclude what happened to Teddy at the end of the story and how it happened. Find and write down the following on your own sheet of paper: 1. A key quote from Teddy’s little sister Booper that captures her perspective and emotions that day: 2. A key quote from Teddy himself that he wrote in his diary that day. 3. A key quote from Teddy’s conversation with Bob Nicholson, the young man Teddy talks to on the ship, that connects the key quote from #1 to the key quote from #2 above: 4. The last line of the story that describes what the young man hears as he enters the pool deck:

  9. The Ending: • A key quote from Teddy’s little sister Booper that captures her perspective and emotions that day: • “ I hate you! I hate everybody in this ocean!” Booper called after him. (6)

  10. The Ending: 2. A key quote from Teddy himself that he wrote in his diary that day. It will either happen today or February 14, 1955 when I am sixteen. It is ridiculous to mention even. (8)

  11. The Ending: 3. A key quote from Teddy’s conversation with Bob Nicholson, the young man Teddy talks to on the ship, that connects the key quote from #1 to the key quote from #2 above: “It is so silly,” Teddy said again. “For example, I have a swimming lesson in about five minutes. I could go downstairs to the pool, and there might not be any water in it. This might be the day they change the water or something. What might happen, though, I might walk up to the edge of it, just to have a look at the bottom, for instance, and my sister might come up and sort of push me in. I could fracture my skull and die instantaneously.” (14)

  12. The Ending: 4. The last line of the story that describes what the young man hears as he enters the pool deck: “He was little more than halfway down the staircase when he heard an all-piercing, sustained scream– clearly coming from a small, female child. It was highly acoustical, as though it were reverberating within four tiled walls.” (16)

  13. The Ending: • Now, using those four key lines as evidence, what is the reasonable conclusion you can make about what happened to Teddy at the end of the story and how it happened? Explain how those four lines connect and provide you with the evidence you would need to support your conclusion about how Salinger uses foreshadowing.

  14. Direct Characterization: Booper:

  15. Most people are limited in their view of the world. We see things in a singular or focused way. Knowledge. What we think we know. “You know what was in that apple? Logic. Logic and intellectual stuff…” (13) “An elephant is only big when it is next to something else– a dog or lady for example” (15) Most people gain knowledge only when people tell them what is so. Education system, or the way we learn. We don’t generally question that knowledge we are given. “Colors are only names. I mean if you tell them the grass is green, it makes them start expecting grass to look a certain way…” (15) Methods of communica-tion, the status quo. We aren’t guaranteed to take the most from life. A larger approach to living. Beliefs. “Life is a gift horse in my opinion.” (8)

  16. Things Teddy Believes Evidence Humans are overly emotional creatures, limited by their feelings and desires. “Poets are always taking the weather so personally. They are always sticking their emotions in things that have no emotions. (12) “I have a very strong affinity for them.” (14) [His parents]

  17. Teddy says we are all a bunch of “appleeaters” who have lost sight of who and what we really are. He blames parents, schools, and education in America for making us all appleaters. What does he mean by the term appleater? Are there things that you think and believe to be true that you learned from your parents, school, and your education that as you got older you now believe not to be true? What are some of those truths that you no longer believe in or at least highly question and doubt?

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