Jimmy Valentine is a deflated balloon. The balloon should always be inflated with good actions, but bad actions can cause the balloon to deflate. Once the balloon does not have any more air, it is hard to fulfill with air again. The balloon represents the difference between an honest life and a dishonest life. Because Jimmy Valentine was truly dedicated to living a moral life, Jimmy Valentine quit robbing banks, started making a living, and he was about to marry Annabel Adams. Since, Jimmy Valentine quit robbing banks, he has been much more successful in his life. Jimmy Valentine opened up a shoe store that makes a lot of profit, therefore he is doing financially well. There was not any shoe stores in Eleanor. Before Jimmy’s shoe store, shoes …show more content…
He did not immediately make quality choices right away. When Jimmy Valentine was released from prison, the warden gave him some advice stating, “You’re not a bad fellow at heart. Stop cracking safes, and live straight.” (A Reformed Reformation, O. Henry) At first, Jimmy did not take him seriously, he continued to rob safes for awhile. When Jimmy came across a little town called Eleanor, he had a change of heart. He changed his perspective towards the warden’s advice about poor choices. Jimmy Valentine did start living straight, he was doing very well doing so. The balloon was equally balanced between beneficial and defective choices at this point. Furthermore, Jimmy Valentine quit breaking into safes. It was a sacrifice he was willing to make because it meant him being able to be with Annabel. This is a giant step towards going down the correct pathway because the crimes Jimmy was doing were not small, but they were big, serious crimes that would cause huge punishment. Finally, Jimmy changed his identity to Ralph D. Spencer so that no one would recognize his past of robbing safes. Jimmy was giving himself a fresh new start towards success that could lead towards new
James Riddle was born on 14th February 1913 in Brazil. He was the second born in a family of four children and was an athlete. He started working full time while still a teenager in a department store as a stock boy after quitting school at the ninth grade. In 1930, he started working in a warehouse as a freight handler. This provided a platform for his career.
Jimmy likes his horns, mud holes, fire, hair, rabbits, and he really likes pencils. On the flip side, he doesn’t like air, food, trees, cars, police officers, and politicians. Jimmy
Lieutenant Cross' “Jimmy Cross” name is a symbol of sacrifices for others. O'Brien's characters carry both passionate and physical burdens. while they all carry substantial physical burdens, they likewise all carry overwhelming passionate burdens, made out of grief,terror,love, and aching. Every soldier’s physical burden underscores their passionate burden. Henry Dobbins, for example, carries his girlfriend’s pantyhose and, with them, the longing for love and comfort.
I believe that Jimmy and Crake are obvious products of their society because of how desensitized they are to violence and suffering. They are aware of all the terrible things that happen around the world but they are not moved by it because of how common it has
When she came aware of the obsession Jimmy Cross had for her eventually it turned her off . In The things they Carried Martha and Jimmy Cross situation is a symbol of love that Jimmy cross have
In the novel A Place to Stand, Jimmy Santiago Baca goes through many difficult hardships in his life that land him in prison for many years, but in the end, it ultimately worked out in his favor because he is now well-known for his poetry and screenplays and have won many prestigious awards on top of that. Throughout the novel, he deals with many issues that include his family and how he learns to forgive not only himself but his family as well and the unconditional love that he has for them that has made him the man he is today. His family played a huge role in why the way he was. His family never gave him the time of day and made it seem like he never existed to them. Jimmy wanted to feel wanted from his family, especially his mother
Tess is stoned to death because she draws out the slip of paper with “a black spot on it” (Jackson 9). She did not commit any crimes nor did she do anything unacceptable, instead it is luck that determines her fate. Tess is murdered by the people because it is part of their tradition as they believe that her death will allow corn to yield. In comparison, Danny is a lovely young man who offers to teach on a small island. Even though the citizen treat him exceptionally well, Danny finds out that he is the “king” who will be killed at the end of the year.
“On the morning after Ted Lavender died, First Lieutenant Jimmy Cross crouched at the bottom of his foxhole and burned Martha’s Letters. Then he burned the two photographs… He realized it was only a gesture. Stupid, he thought. Sentimental, too but mostly just stupid.
“My grandpap say he a great big old windbag.” (1.1) Seth Holly’s main focus was to have a stable life. He worked nights and during the day from time to time to make sure he had enough to get by. His dreams were to open his own business making pots and pans rather than just doing it on the side for Mr. Selig. Since Selig provides the materials and sells the items, he collects a bigger profit than Seth does.
Oryx and Crake moves back and forth between Snowman trying to survive in his future that has no future, and his past where his only enjoyment of life was his friendship with Crake and his love for Oryx. Jimmy is not a particularly likable character and his actions, especially his obsession with Oryx 's past, makes you want to shake some sense into him at times. Yet we all can empathize with his longing for love, whether the maternal love his mother couldn 't offer or the love for Oryx that he could never fully have to himself. It 's a testament to Margaret Atwood 's literary skills that we 're always interested in Jimmy and want him to find happiness. In lesser hands, Jimmy could be a disenfranchised protagonist, both from the story and from
Jimmy Cross is the first lieutenant who carries pictures and letters from Martha, the woman he loves who—sadly—does not love him back. The pictures and letters from Martha symbolize Jimmy’s longing to be loved and comforted. It is ironic that although he is the first lieutenant who is expected to take charge and lead others, yet he never took charge of his own love life. This is a regret and burden Cross carries to the end of the story. “It was very sad, he thought.
Cross blames himself, knowing “He had loved Martha more than his men, and as a consequence Lavender was now dead…” (p. 121). First Lieutenant Jimmy Cross is distracted by his infatuation for Martha, which ultimately results in Ted Lavender’s death, forcing Cross to realize his fantasies for Martha are wrong and that he is not fulfilling his duties as a lieutenant. Lieutenant Cross is inattentive to the war and his responsibilities because he is unable and unwilling to stop thinking about his adoration for Martha.
He couldn’t help it (432).” This tells you that he is still just a boy at this point, but he knows that he should not be thinking of Martha he should be worrying about the lives of his men. Even so, Lavender is now dead and Jimmy holds himself responsible: “He would dispose of his good luck pebble. Swallow it, maybe… (437).” Mainly he is trying to get rid of all feelings for Martha, he cared more for her and himself, but he does care also about his
Tim O’Brien states, “Lavender was now dead, and this was something he would have to carry like a stone in his stomach for the rest of the war” (O’Brien 16). In this quote, Tim O’Brien explains that since Jimmy Cross blames himself about Ted Lavender’s death, he will always be in lieutenant’s head. Thus, the lieutenant will always feel the guilt. With this, Tim O’Brien makes the reader think that Jimmy Cross is the person to blame since he is the head of the group and he has to pay more attention to his plans. Having questions about his love, Martha, in his mind instead of being careful about his men is the reason of him feeling guilty that “the lieutenant’s in some deep hurt” (17).
Jimmy Cross felt, even during war. She was his hope, his love, the normality of home. Martha was safe in his mind, where no one could hurt her, where the war couldn’t affect her. Lt. Cross took pictures of her with him into war, as well as a necklace and the letters she would send him. Martha was always on his mind, and she was always at home, waiting for him.