In Robert Newton’s novel “Runner, Charlie Feehan, the 15-year-old main character, lives with his Ma and younger brother in the slums of Richmond. Charlie's father died from Spanish flu three months before the events in the novel happened, After Charlie's father died and got taken away therefore Charlie had to support his Ma. Charlie Feehan respects his family along with friends above all else. Essentially , For Ma and Jack, Charlie takes over the role of his father to keep his family happy and living. Charlie’s childhood got taken away when the undertakers taken his lifeless dad away, since then Charlie had to become the role of a father. As a result Charlie takes dangerous risks to keep his family together. Charlie gave up his school time …show more content…
Charlie was a supportive friend and was always there to backing his mates. Sadly, Charlie was there when Norman was almost killed by Jimmy Barlow. Nevertheless, Charlie did not stop Jimmy and his gang from “teaching Norman a lesson”. Charlie did however, take Norman to hospital. 2 weeks after when Charlie won the Ballarat Mile, Charlie brought Porter’s wood yard for Norman and him for an apology to for not sticking up for him when he was getting bashed up by Jimmy as a consequence Charlie was still guilty, he decided to help both of their families they brought the Porter company, their company was named ‘The Health and Freehan wood yard’. “...I give ya, The Health and Feehan Timber Company!...Seems only fair’,...Nostrils stood completely still, staring at the keys in his hand.” (pg 215). Throughout the novel, Charlie takes dangerous risks to help his family. Charlie started working for Squizzy Taylor after his father died. This was a risk considering that Charlie would be working for a criminal, Charlie continues working for Squizzy, until in Chapter 18, Charlie quits working for Squizzy due to him not caring that one of his runners, Norman got bashed up by Jimmy Barrow together with his gang after the liquor run. “...My days running for Squizzy Taylor were over, Now I was running for me.” (pg 170). For the events working for Squizzy Taylor, Charlie could’ve ended up in
If Phillip Malloy had sued the schools the school would have won. There were plenty of witnesses telling of what Philip did, and plenty of examples of why Philip was wrong.
Charlie’s friends even take advantage of how nice he is. They always make him the root of their jokes. When Charlie asks a barber shop owner to move his illegally parked car, the owner laughs at him and just throws him the keys to the car and tells him to move it himself. The whole town takes advantage of Charlie though, not only his friends. In the supermarket a woman asks to cut in front of him inline and then ends up having a cart full of groceries. This is Charlies breaking point. He starts tensing up, you can tell something is happening. All of a sudden he starts talking in a different voice, and finds vagaclean in the woman’s cart that cut in front of him. So to take his anger out on her he gets on the store microphone and announces she has vagaclean in her cart. We learn this new personalities name when he is drowning a young girl in the water fountain who disobeyed him earlier. When the girl says she is going to tell her father on him, he announces that he is Hank. After this change in personality he starts going
Victor Frankenstien was a Outgoing and courageous man. Victor wanted to do what no person done before make a being come to alive from the dead. But victor dont realise Is when Professor Krempe told victor this was a horrible idea. But victor never listened and brought him back to life and Victor was terrified an ran.
In a different fashion, Charlie is also similarly thrusted upon the knowledge that his way of life has been negatively affected by the war. While working on the farm like any other day, the neighbors slave, Gabriel, who was spending time with his son Boy, came with inauspicious news that Boy had been taken by Union soldiers. Here Charlie learns that his son who meant so much to him because he was born the day his wife died, has been taken which puts an immediate stop to his thinking that everything is okay. This further promits him, like Joe, to go and search for Boy who represents the past and normal life that has been taken away by war. Even though Joe and Charlie find out what the war has taken from them in unmistakably different ways, they both begin searching for a part of their previous life that has been forcibly taken away from them because of war.
Charlie deceives Will about his true identity and portrays himself as the character of Titus, a crazy man roaming the grain elevators of Thunder Bay. He never tells Will that he is his biological uncle, the brother of his mother, until it is later discovered nearing the end of the book. After Charlie’s lies are uncovered, it leads to another life long lie he has been keeping from his family. He was never killed, his best friend, Whalen was and he throw his lifeless body into the river. Charlie’s deceitfulness was to protect himself against the Butler and to cover up his deceitful lies from the past. Charlie not directly punished for his actions the day Whalen died, but his experiences working under the Butler actually shaped him to be a better person because it showed him the karma that come with deceitful decisions, especially regarding those that cared about him the most.
Before the enhancing surgery, Charlie Gordon seemed to have depend and trust others, while those people didn’t have his back. This could be a problem in the future, because people have to learn to be independent so when they lose someone important, they don’t crack under pressure. In the story, Keyes writes, “Sometimes somebody will say hey look at Joe or Frank or George he really pulled a Charlie Gordon. I dont know why they say that but they always laft” (Keyes, 289). Daniel Keyes uses dramatic irony as a way of displaying Charlies perception of his friends. Charlie assumes he has very nice friends, but the audience knows that his
Charles Foster Kane was a man with an enormous amount of wealth and clout. He had it all, money, women, anything he could possibly want. But for a man who seems like he has everything, in reality he is missing one of the only things that money can’t buy, his childhood and happiness. Throughout his life he is desperately searching for the thing that can return his childhood. He searches so desperately that he pushes himself into solitude, and ends up dying alone.
Ned Begay transformed himself throughout the book from a sad, lost, and frustrated child to a prideful, confident, and highly respected leader. When Ned’s uncle brought him to the mission school, Ned was nervous and uneasy. He didn’t know what to expect even though his uncle tried to prepare him, and he felt sad and alone once his uncle left. “So I was left standing there, a sad little boy holding tight against my chest the thin blanket in which my few belongings were tied.” (Bruchac 12).
Benny Wilder is the one man Beth never wanted to see again. She avoided the NHL games when he played, and had moved half a country away, but fate is an evil and twisted mother-f*cker; just like her ex.
It is important to be courageous to show people the true braver and how far people will go for something. In the book Jasper Jones. Charlie and his friends had several courageous acts. One these courageous acts that stood out to me the most was when Charlie decided to help jasper so he wouldn’t get into trouble. This is courageous because it shows the risk that Charlie is willing to take for someone he doesn’t even know.
The question of why Charlie himself did not put a stop to this is definite in the reader's eyes. We may conclude, with the information given in the exposition that Charlie knew he had the option of never seeing his father again. The train could symbolize that this encounter with his father was a quick stop' in his journey in life. By not reacting with the same negative energy and by avoiding confrontation we see the growth in Charlie. We see that he has surpassed the necessity of a father figure and acceptance of being without one, even though he in fact would've rather have one. "I was terribly happy to see him again" (p207) "I hoped that someone would see us together. I wished that we could be photographed. I wanted some record of our having been together." (p208) and then he simply says, "Goodbye, daddy."
Charlie 's parents, though strict, always cared about their children, and tried their hardest to give their three sons everything they wanted, and everything they needed.
If this story was a narrative, there would be more thoughts of Charlie’s in each situation. As he closes the day or, writes about a previous day, it is impossible to record all his thoughts; to add to this, he knows that others will be reading it and has admitted that it is hard for him to openly admit everything (Keyes 59). Although these are rather minor problems, each affects the story in small ways. The story is so focused on Charlie and he doesn’t know everyone’s stories that it causes him to be blindsided and not understand why a character acts the way they do. This is most prevalent when Burt tells Charlie about Professor Nemur wife’s character (Keyes 152). At this point, Charlie learns that Nemur’s wife has a lot of control over his career and without her, he wouldn’t be where he is now. Other details, like these, would help add to the story to give a more complete view of each character.
While Mrs. Mallard remembers Mr. Mallard as a kind and tender man who loved her, she also viewed him as the oppression that marriage put upon women and men. While Mr. Mallard was kind and loving to his wife, he was also controlling and overbearing. Josephine, Mrs. Mallard’s sister and Richards, Mr. Mallard’s friend is there to break the news of Mr. Mallard’s death. Richards has learned of Mr. Mallard’s death at the newspaper office, not wanting to believe the information that was received, Richards waited for the new to be delivered for a second time before enlisting the help of Josephine. They are both there to support Mrs. Mallard and their support shows that they care for Mr. and Mrs. Mallard.
His meltdown in Alan's office one could have seen from a mile away, with it the ultimate heralding of displacement for Charlie's pain, and final straw to let Charlie live his life alone. (Displacement is but one of many defense mechanisms that involves shifting aggressive or hurtful emotions away from one’s self to a more “acceptable” or less threatening outlet.) Yet for most who watched the movie most likely, Charlie didn't get immediately better right away to their surprise. In honest words taken from an episode of House I once watched, he uttered a line that rings particularly true in this circumstance: "We tell ourselves it helps. To make [them] talk about it. To help... heal. When all you've done is make [someone] cry." After Charlie's reveal of his true past he seems to be by all standards progressing. That is until he sets out to kill himself, if not by his own gun then a police officer's. In all three main areas of his mental make-up Charlie has been both affected and ravaged, his entire being but a husk of what he accomplished four years prior. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder is illustrated through Charlie as a life-changer, a psychological diagnosis that alters your entire core of being without proper therapy or treatment. (Diagnosis in