black boy chapter 4

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Black Boy Chapter 4

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Page 1: Black Boy Chapter 4

Black BoyChapter 4

Page 2: Black Boy Chapter 4

•Richard again faces hunger when he moves back to Jackson.

•His main meals are flour and lard mush for breakfast, followed by a plate of greens cooked in lard for dinner.

Page 3: Black Boy Chapter 4

• He learns to temper his hunger, if only briefly, by drinking so much water that his stomach feels tight and full.

Page 4: Black Boy Chapter 4

• Aunt Addie joins Granny in the fight to save Richard’s soul, and tempers again flare.

• Richard unwillingly enters the religious school where Addie teaches.

Page 5: Black Boy Chapter 4

• The tension between Richard and Addie escalates when she wrongly accuses Richard of eating walnuts in class.

• The guilty student was actually the one sitting directly in front of Richard, but Richard does not want to rat on his classmate.

Page 6: Black Boy Chapter 4

• While trying to defend himself, Richard accidentally calls her “Aunt Addie” rather than “Miss Wilson,” making her more furious.

• Addie beats Richard in front of the class, and he becomes furious that the guilty student has not come forward.

Page 7: Black Boy Chapter 4

• Addie tells Richard that she is not yet through with him, but he resolves that she will not beat him again.

• At home that evening, Richard tells Addie who the real culprit was, but she then decides to beat him again because he did not tell her this truth earlier in class.

Page 8: Black Boy Chapter 4

• When she tries to do so, Richard grows frenzied and fends her off with a knife.

• He successfully defends himself, but Granny, Grandpa, and Ella all take Addie’s side.

Page 9: Black Boy Chapter 4

• They are more convinced than ever that something is seriously wrong with Richard.

• He then recalls that the only time he ever saw Addie laugh at school was when he was injured in a game of pop-the-whip that Addie had suggested the children play.

Page 10: Black Boy Chapter 4

• Religion attracts Richard emotionally, but on an intellectual level he is unable to believe in God.

• Granny forces Richard to attend certain all-night prayer meetings, but the twelve-year-old Richard’s hormones make him more interested in the church elder’s wife than in the elder’s words.

Page 11: Black Boy Chapter 4

• A religious revival is coming through town, and Richard’s family kindly urges him to attend, deciding that this is their last chance to reform him.

• Richard knows their true motives, however, and is unmoved.

Page 12: Black Boy Chapter 4

• Granny recruits the neighborhood boys to try to convince Richard to go to God, but he knows she is behind it.

• Richard is unable to explain to his peers his inability to believe in God.

• He has faith in the “common realities of life,” not in any concept of cosmic order.

Page 13: Black Boy Chapter 4

• During a sermon one day at church, Richard whispers to Granny that he would believe in God if he saw an angel.

• Granny hears him incorrectly and thinks that he has said that he has seen an angel.

Page 14: Black Boy Chapter 4

• She elatedly informs the church elder and the rest of the congregation.

• Richard, already mortified at Granny’s misunderstanding, makes things worse by embarrassing her, correcting her error in front of everyone present at the church.

Page 15: Black Boy Chapter 4

• Granny is furious.

Page 16: Black Boy Chapter 4

• To appease Granny’s anger, Richard promises to pray every day, but he is unable to do so.

• The act of prayer even makes him laugh.

Page 17: Black Boy Chapter 4

• To kill time during his daily prayer hour, he decides to write a story about an Indian maiden who drowns herself.

Page 18: Black Boy Chapter 4

• In his excitement to share the story with someone, Richard reads it aloud to the young woman who lives next door.

Page 19: Black Boy Chapter 4

• She seems astonished that anyone would write a story simply out of the desire to write, but Richard takes satisfaction from her puzzled bewilderment.