subject
English, 08.10.2019 00:30 india73

What is the claim to this story?

my brother and i

─shopping for mother—

decided to get the “good food”

over on the other side

of the tracks.

we dared each other.

laughed a little.

thought about it.

said, what’s the big deal.

thought about that.

decided we were men,

not boys.

decided we should go wherever

we dang wanted to.

oh, my brother—now he was bad.

tough dude. afraid of nothing.

i was afraid of him.

so there we go,

climbing over

the iron and wood ties,

over discarded sofas

and bent-up market carts,

over a weed-and-dirt road,

into a place called south gate

─all white. all-american.

we entered the forbidden

narrow line of hate,

imposed,

transposed,

supposed,

a line of power/powerlessness

full of meaning,

meaning nothing—

those lines that crisscross
the abdomen of this land,

that strangle you

in your days, in your nights.

when you dream.

there we were, two mexicans,

six and nine—from watts, no less.

oh, this was plenty reason

to hate us.

plenty reason to run up behind us.

five teenagers on bikes.

plenty reason to knock

the groceries out from our arms—

a splattering heap of soup

cans, bread and candy.

plenty reason to hold me down

on the hot asphalt; melted gum

and chips of broken

beer bottle on my lips and cheek.

plenty reason to get my brother

by the throat, taking turns

punching him in the face,

cutting his lip,

punching, him vomiting.

punching until swollen and dark blue

he slid from their grasp

like a rotten banana from its peeling.

when they had enough, they threw us back,

dirty and lacerated,

back to watts, its towers shiny

across the orange-red sky.

my brother then forced me

to promise not to tell anybody

how he cried.

he forced me to swear to god,

to jesus christ, to our long-dead
indian grandmother—

keepers of our meddling souls.


What is the claim to this story?  my brother and i ─shopping for mother—

ansver
Answers: 1

Another question on English

question
English, 22.06.2019 04:30
Which if the following can you infer about maggie?
Answers: 2
question
English, 22.06.2019 08:30
Freedoms" speech. i have called for personal sacrifice. i am assured of the willingness of almost all americans to respond to that call. a part of the sacrifice means the payment of more money in taxes. in my budget message i shall recommend that a greater portion of this great defense program be paid for from taxation than we are paying today. no person should try, or be allowed, to get rich out of this program; and the principle of tax payments in accordance with ability to pay should be constantly before our eyes to guide our legislation. what argument is roosevelt supporting with his appeal to logic in the underlined section of the excerpt? if americans are willing to trust roosevelt, it only makes sense that he will ensure that the tax money is well managed. if americans are willing to make a personal sacrifice, it only makes sense that they will be seen as both noble and patriotic. if americans feel it is right to enter the war, it only makes sense that they will have to pay more in taxes to cover the costs. if americans feel it is right to pay more taxes, it only makes sense that they should also agree it is right to enter the war.
Answers: 1
question
English, 22.06.2019 13:00
In chapter 34 of the awakening, how does the author reveal the contrast between arobin’s and robert’s characters? through the dialogue the two men have in the parlor by the different ways edna responds to them by describing them with contrasting language by placing them in opposite corners of the parlor
Answers: 2
question
English, 22.06.2019 14:00
We shall not always plant while others reap
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
What is the claim to this story?

my brother and i

─shopping for mother—
Questions
question
Social Studies, 02.11.2020 21:20
question
Business, 02.11.2020 21:20
question
English, 02.11.2020 21:20
Questions on the website: 13722359