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Grapes Of Wrath Quotes

Decent Essays

Grandpa Joad, an irrepressible symbol, in The Grapes of Wrath is a very emotionally connected character through his resilience with the land. While the family truck is returning to Sallisaw, a quote describing the family and the grandpa’s bitterness, “And now they were weary and frightened because they had gone against a system they did not understand and it had beaten them” (Steinbeck 97). As the family attempts to follow in the path that all migrants must take to make their lives in California, the effort comes with extreme ramifications. The Grandpa however stays to his old nature and begins to die as he is taken away from the land that was keeping his spirit alive. Grandpa is stuck in the idea that the way that life was is now the way life …show more content…

As the wages are cut from the immoral treatment of the migrants, the family is bickering about the large businessmen, ““Learnin' it all a time, ever' day. If you're in trouble or hurt or need—go to poor people. They're the only ones that'll help—the only ones” (Steinbeck 376). The interests of Ma rests in the trust and reliance that the people around you will always help the other hurting people; however, in this statement Ma is showing a clear anger and aggression towards the large businessmen as she is indirectly mentioning that they are untrustworthy people. In Lange’s quote she mentions not relying on past, with almost no experience being the backbone keeping the family together and the shifting of family roles, this seems to be a quite fitting description. As the mother attempts to hold the family together, she is met with the own struggle of the law enforcement, a situation to the reader that has never happened. This lack of past and cloudy future is what Lange was trying to portray about the Dust Bowl. There was nothing similar to this situation in American history to say the least, and the people were forced to innovate and move west following only rumors they assumed to be true. The mother character in the novel serves a very serious role in the scheme of the characters as the beliefs and wants almost directly contradict the wants of members of the family at times. Without this figure, the mother doesn’t gain …show more content…

As Tom begins to ponder Casy’s definition of the soul he says, “Says a wilderness ain't no good, 'cause his little piece of a soul wasn't no good 'less it was with the rest, an' was whole” (Steinbeck 418). Despite Casy seeming to have a small impact on Tom, Casy strongly influences and influenced Tom’s choices. The messages he received from the once preacher shows the how time does not affect how Tom views his issues and religious dilemmas. The quote from Lange does not apply to Tom as his own influences from Casy show Tom still takes a specific stance based on the past. In times where the past was needed to be disregarded, Tom still showed resilience through the unions and defiance of officers; however, Tom isn’t afraid to ditch all of his past ideology when absolutely necessary as his own personal nature doesn’t allow his person to be pushed around. He doesn’t find comfort in the past, he finds comfort in the next family meal and safety of the people around him being pushed down by the big businessmen. As a result of this behavior, he is seen as more of an unchanging figure when it comes to the new California jobs. The labor strikes and unions allow the defiance to show through Tom, without these vital examples, Tom may be seen as a man free of his past and looking only to the

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