Stephen Crane Stephen Crane was born on November 1, 1871 in New Jersey. Crane became a writer at the age of twenty-one and died of tuberculosis at the age of twenty-eight. Crane’s sister, Agnes, raised him and tutored him. She eventually became a schoolteacher. His parents were very religious and his father had an essay published in an 1869 issue of Popular Amusements.
Crane “felt himself unworthy of his father because he fell short of his father’s moral principles and his nobility of spiritual outlook.” He studied poverty, war, and life and death struggle. “Crane united from the beginning an iron self-assurance with a deep shyness.” In “The Red Badge of Courage” Crane describes the characters in depth. He chose a significant event in Americas history and wrote about it. During the Civil War while a Union regiment is based along a river, a tall soldier named Jim Conklin spreads a rumor that the army will march within a day.
A new recruit, Henry Fleming, feels that if he were to see battle he would run like a coward. When the regiment marches they meet up with the enemy but Henry is unable to flee because he is surrounded. The Union regiment stops the charge of the Confederate. The next day the Confederates charge again and this time Henry is able to flee from the scene.
Later he meets up with a group of wounded soldiers walking down the road and he believes that a wound is like “a red badge of courage.” He meets a soldier with extremely deep wounds and then recognizes that it is Jim Conklin. While they are walking down the road Jim Conklin runs off behind the bushes and dies where the other soldiers can not see him. Henry wanders through the forest alone until he comes to a battlefield. He attempts to stop one of the soldiers to ask what is going on but he gets hit in the head with the soldier’s rifle. Another soldier takes Fleming back to his regiment’s camp. His friend Wilson cares for him because he thinks that Fleming has been shot in the head.
The Essay on Buffalo Soldiers Army Black Regiment
Buffalo Soldiers The Buffalo Soldiers Museum has been opened approximately for 4 years now. The purpose of the museum is to explain the history and outstanding contributions the buffalo soldiers have made for the United States of America. The Buffalo Soldiers represented the first black professional solders in a peacetime army. The recruits came from several backgrounds including former slaves and ...
The next day the regiment goes back to the battlefield and this time Henry stays and fights in Jim Conklin’s honor. Wilson and Henry overhear an officer making fun of their regiment’s style of fighting so they go out to prove him wrong. When their charge fails their style of fighting is further made fun of. A soldier tells Wilson and Henry that the colonel and lieutenant consider them the best fighters in the regiment. The regiment goes to battle again and Wilson captures the enemy flag along with four prisoners. This was the final battle of the Civil War and the regiment was victorious.
Henry is now able to look forward to peace. In “The Blue Hotel” the Swede accuses Johnnie of cheating in a card game. This offends Johnnie and his reaction is to challenge the Swede to a fight. The Swede beats Johnnie in the fight. The Swede feels as if he is no longer wanted at the hotel since Johnnie’s father is the owner of the hotel. The Swede goes into a bar and asks some gentlemen to drink with him to celebrate his victory over Johnnie.
When they refuse he becomes angry as if these men are betraying him because they will not let him buy them a drink. The Swede then threatens one of the gentlemen and the man retaliates and ends up killing the Swede. Without this betrayed feeling the Swede would have probably lived. The Easterner tells the Cowboy he saw Johnnie cheating but never spoke up. In “The Open Boat” Crane tells what happens when a captain is injured on a boat that is lost at sea. There are four men on the boat.
The four men are the captain, the cook, the oiler, and the correspondent. Their boat sinks and they are forced to abandon ship and get on their 10 foot dinge y in order to survive. The crew spends two days at sea oaring towards what they hope is land. Eventually the men spot land off in the distance and begin to head towards it. They believe that the land is Mosquito Inlet. The cook says that there is a refuge house that saves shipwrecked crews.
The Essay on The Open Boat Men Crane Sea
Story: "The Open Boat," 1897 Author: Stephen Crane (1871-1900) Central Character: There is no real central character in this story. All the men on the boat are spoken about more or less equally and no prominent character jumps out at the reader as being the central character. Although more emphasis is put onto the correspondent, and Billie the oiler. Other Character: The cook: bails water from ...
As they approach the land they don’t seem to see any signs of life on the land besides abandoned houses. They don’t make it to shore because the boat would fall apart if they went any further and they were too far out to swim to shore so the oiler rowed them back out to sea. The tide is pulling them northward while the wind and wave pushed them northward. They spot a series of little dots on the land and believe it’s a city. The cook spots a man walking on shore and the man waves at the crew on the dinge y. After a few hours an omnibus and a large crowd arrives on the shore.
A man on the omnibus waves his coat the entire afternoon until it becomes dark. During the night the oiler and the correspondent take turns rowing. While the correspondent is rowing a shark starts circling the boat and running into the boat. The correspondent isn’t terrified but wishes that one of the other crewmember’s would awaken from their deep sleep in order to keep him company. When the captain awakens he directs the correspondent and the cook to take the dinge y further out to sea.
As soon as the cook falls back asleep another shark comes to the dinge y and circles it. When the cook awakens again he informs the rest of the crew that the dinge y has drifted in towards shore. They spot a boat heading towards them and wave them over. The boat never shows up so they head for the shore again the next morning. They can’t make it back out to sea because the tide is pulling them in towards shore and they can’t row fast enough to get back out to sea. Their plan is to ride the boat in towards shore as far as they can and then abandon ship and swim towards the shore.
They abandoned ship and swim towards shore when the boat got caught by a huge wave and flipped upside down in the water. The man on the island went in the water and brought the cook, the correspondent, and the oiler onto the land. In the tale, Crane relates his experiences struggling to survive at sea after the ship goes down. In “The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky” Crane described the Wild West and why sheriffs shouldn’t have a family. Jack Potter, the sheriff of Yellow Sky, goes to San Antonio to find his bride. He brings her back on the train but while he is gone Scratchy Wilson, the town bandit, is drunk and is walking around the town shooting his pistol at everything.
The Term Paper on “The Open Boat” by Stephen Crane 2
... come back to the boat. All three, the captain, the correspondent, and the cook hold onto part of the boat, which, as Solomon states ... is heightened when the men in the boat are able to see a man on shore waving his jacket. They discuss the meaning ... correspondent’s life. In “The Open Boat” he does suffer a sea change that makes him at once a better and a ...
“He’s a terror when he’s drunk. When he’s sober he’s all right-kind of simple-wouldn’t hurt a fly-nicest fellow in town.” He’s looking for someone to fight but everyone is scared and is hiding because Jack isn’t there. Jack shows up just in time to fight Scratchy before he hurts or even kills someone. Potter tells Wilson that he doesn’t have a gun and he’s not gonna fight him because he just got back from San Antonio because he was getting married. Scratchy calms down and calls the fighting off and walks away..