Другое : The Grapes of Wrath
The Grapes of Wrath
The Grapes of Wrath
Full Summary
Chapter One:
Steinbeck begins the novel with a description of the dust bowl climate of
Oklahoma. The dust was so thick that men and women had to remain in their
houses, and when they had to leave they tied handkerchiefs over their faces and
wore goggles to protect their eyes. After the wind had stopped, an even blanket
of dust covered the earth. The corn crop was ruined. Everybody wondered what
they would do. The women and children knew that no misfortune was too great to
bear if their men were whole, but the men had not yet figured out what to do.
Chapter Two: A man
approaches a small diner where a large red transport truck is parked. The man
is under thirty, with dark brown eyes and high cheekbones. He wore new clothes
that don't quite fit. The truck driver exits from the diner and the man asks
him for a ride, despite the "No Riders" sticker on the truck. The man
claims that sometimes a guy will do a good thing even when a rich bastard makes
him carry a sticker, and the driver, feeling trapped by the statement, lets the
man have a ride. While driving, the truck driver asks questions, and the man
finally gives his name, Tom Joad. The truck driver claims that guys do strange
things when they drive trucks, such as make up poetry, because of the
loneliness of the job. The truck driver claims that his experience driving has
trained his memory and that he can remember everything about a person he
passes. Realizing that the truck driver is pressing for information, Tom
finally admits that he had just been released from McAlester prison for
homicide. He had been sentenced to seven years and was released after only four,
for good behavior.
Chapter Three: At
the side of the roadside, a turtle crawled, dragging his shell over the grass.
He came to the embankment at the road and, with great effort, climbed onto the
road. As the turtle attempts to cross the road, it is nearby hit by a sedan. A
truck swerves to hit the turtle, but its wheel only strikes the edge of its
shell and spins it back off the highway. The turtle lays on its back, but
finally pulls itself over.
Chapter Four: After
getting out of the truck, Tom Joad begins walking home. He sees the turtle of
the previous chapter and picks it up. He stops in the shade of a tree to rest
and meets a man who sits there, singing "Jesus is My Savior." The
man, Jim Casy, had a long, bony frame and sharp features. A former minister, he
recognizes Tom immediately. He was a "Burning Busher" who used to
"howl out the name of Jesus to glory," but he lost the calling
because he has too many sinful ideas that seem sensible. Tom tells Casy that he
took the turtle for his little brother, and he replies that nobody can keep a
turtle, for they eventually just go off on their own. Casy claims that he
doesn't know where he's going now, and Tom tells him to lead people, even if he
doesn't know where to lead them. Casy tells Tom that part of the reason he quit
preaching was that he too often succumbed to temptation, having sex with many
of the girls he Њsaved.' Finally he realized
that perhaps what he was doing wasn't a sin, and there isn't really sin or
virtue there are simply things people
do.
He realized he didn't Њknow Jesus,' he merely knew the stories of the Bible.
Tom tells Casy why he was in jail: he was at a dance drunk, and got in a fight
with a man. The man cut Tom with a knife, so he hit him over the head with a
shovel. Tom tells him that he was treated relatively well in McAlester. He ate
regularly, got clean clothes and bathed. He even tells about how someone broke
his parole to go back. Tom tells how his father Њstole' their house. There was a family living there that moved away, so
his father, uncle and grandfather cut the house in two and dragged part of it
first, only to find that Wink Manley took the other half. They get to the
boundary fence of their property, and Tom tells him that they didn't need a
fence, but it gave Pa a feeling that their forty acres was forty acres. Tom and
Casy get to the house: something has happened
nobody is there.
Chapter Five: This
chapter describes the coming of the bank representatives to evict the farmers.
Some of the men were kind because they knew how cruel their job was, while some
were angry because they hated to be cruel, and others were merely cold and
hardened by their job. They are mostly pawns of a system that they can merely
obey. The tenant system has become untenable for the banks, for one man on a
tractor can take the place of a dozen families. The farmers raise the
possibility of armed insurrection, but what would they fight against? They will
be murderers if they stay, fighting against the wrong targets.
Steinbeck describes
the arrival of the tractors. They crawled over the ground, cutting the earth
like surgery and violating it like rape. The tractor driver does his job simply
out of necessity: he has to feed his kids, even if it comes at the expense of
dozens of families. Steinbeck dramatizes a conversation between a truck driver
and an evicted tenant farmer. The farmer threatens to kill the driver, but even
if he does so, he will not stop the bank. Another driver will come. Even if the
farmer murders the president of the bank and board of directors, the bank is
controlled by the East. There is no effective target which could prevent the
evictions.
Chapter Six: Casy
and Tom approached the Joad home. The house was mashed at one corner and
appeared deserted. Casy says that it looks like the arm of the Lord had struck.
Tom can tell that Ma isn't there, for she would have never left the gate
unhooked. They only see one resident (the cat), but Tom wonders why the cat
didn't go to find another family if his family had moved, or why the neighbors
hadn't taken the rest of the belongings in the house. Muley Graves approaches,
a short, lean old man with the truculent look of an ornery child. Muley tells
Tom that his mother was worrying about him. His family was evicted, and had to
move in with his Uncle John. They were forced to chop cotton to make enough
money to go west. Casy suggests going west to pick grapes in California. Muley
tells Tom and Casy that the loss of the farm broke up his family his wife and kids went off to California,
while Muley chose to stay. He has been forced to eat wild game. He muses about
how angry he was when he was told he had to get off the land. First he wanted
to kill people, but then his family left and Muley was left alone and
wandering. He realized that he is used to the place, even if he has to wander
the land like a ghost. Tom tells them that he can't go to California, for it
would mean breaking parole. According to Tom, prison has not changed him
significantly. He thinks that if he saw Herb Turnbull, the man he killed,
coming after him with a knife again, he would still hit him with the shovel.
Tom tells them that there was a man in McAlester that read a great deal about
prisons and told him that they started a long time ago and now cannot be
stopped, despite the fact that they do not actually rehabilitate people. Muley
tells them that they have to hide, for they are trespassing on the land. They
have to hide in a cave for the night.
Chapter Seven: The
car dealership owners look at their customers. They watch for weaknesses, such
as a woman who wants an expensive car and can push her husband into buying one.
They attempt to make the customers feel obliged. The proffts come from selling
jalopies, not from new and dependable cars. There are no guarantees, hidden
costs and obvious flaws.
Chapter Eight: Tom
and Casy reach Uncle John's farm. They remark that Muley's lonely and covert
lifestyle has obviously driven him insane. According to Tom, his Uncle John is
equally crazy, and wasn't expected to live long, yet is older than his father.
Still, he is tougher and meaner than even Grampa, hardened by losing his young
wife years ago. They see Pa Joad fixing the truck. When he sees Tom, he assumes
that he broke out of jail. They go in the house and see Ma Joad, a heavy woman
thick with child-bearing and work. Her face was controlled and kindly. She
worries that Tom went mad in prison. This chapter also introduces Grampa and
Granma Joad. She is as tough as he is, once shooting her husband while she was
speaking in tongues. Noah Joad, Tom's older brother, is a strange man, slow and
withdrawn, with little pride and few urges. He may have been brain damaged at
childbirth. The family has dinner, and Casy says grace. He talks about how
Jesus went off into the wilderness alone, and how he did the same. Yet what
Casy concluded was that mankind was holy. Pa tells Tom about Al, his
sixteen-year old brother, who is concerned with little more than girls and
cars. He hasn't been at home at night for a week. His sister Rosasharn has
married Connie Rivers, and is several months pregnant. They have two hundred
dollars for their journey.
Chapter Nine: This
chapter describes the process of selling belongings. The items pile up in the
yard, selling for ridiculously low prices. Whatever is not sold must be burned,
even items of sentimental value that simply cannot be taken on the journey for
lack of space.
Chapter Ten: Ma
Joad tells Tom that she is concerned about going to California, worried that it
won't turn out well, for the only information they have is from flyers they
read. Casy asks to accompany them to California. He wants to work in the
fields, where he can listen to people rather than preach to them. Tom says that
preaching is a tone of voice and a style, being good to people when they don't
respond to it. Pa and Uncle John return with the truck, and prepare to leave.
The two children, twelve-year old Ruthie and ten-year old Winfield are there
with their older sister, Rose of Sharon (Rosasharn) and her husband. They
discuss how Tom can't leave the state because of his parole. They have a family
conference that night and discuss a number of issues: they decide to allow Casy
to go with them, since it's the only right thing for them to do. They continue
with preparations, killing the pigs to have food to take with them. While Casy
helps out Ma Joad with food preparation, he remarks to Tom that she looks
tired, as if she is sick. Ma Joad looks through her belongings, going through
old letters and clippings she had saved. She has to place them in the fire.
Before they leave, Muley Graves stops to say goodbye. Noah tells him that he's
going to die out in the field if he stays, but Muley accepts his fate. Grampa
refuses to leave, so they decide to give him medicine that will knock him out
and take him with them.
Chapter Eleven: The
houses were left vacant. Only the tractor sheds of gleaming iron and silver
were alive. Yet when the tractors are at rest the life goes out of them. The
work is easy and efficient, so easy that the wonder goes out of the work and so
efficient that the wonder goes out of the land and the working of it. In the
tractor man there grows the contempt that comes to a stranger who has little
understanding and no relation to the land. The abandoned houses slowly fall apart.
Chapter Twelve:
Highway 66 is the main migrant road stretching from the Mississippi to
Bakersfield, California. It is a road of flight for refugees from the dust and
shrinking land. The people streamed out on 66, possibly breaking down in their
undependable cars on the way. Yet the travelers face obstacles. California is a
big state, but not big enough to support all of the workers who are coming. The
border patrol can turn people back. The high wages that are promised may be
false.
Chapter Thirteen:
The Joads continue on their travels. Al remarks that they may have trouble
getting over mountains in their car, which can barely support its weight.
Grampa Joad wakes up and insists that he's not going with them. They stop at a
gas station where the owner automatically assumes they are broke, and tells
them that people often stop, begging for gas. The owner claims that fifty cars
per day go west, but wonders what they expect when they reach their
destination. He tells how one family traded their daughter's doll for some gas.
Casy wonders what the nation is coming to, since people seem unable to make a
decent living. Casy says that he used to use his energy to fight against the
devil, believing that the devil was the enemy. However, now he believes that there's
something worse. The Joad's dog wanders from the car and is run over in the
road. They continue on their journey and begin to worry when they reach the
state line. However, Tom reassures them that he is only in danger if he commits
a crime. Otherwise, nobody will know that he has broken his parole by leaving
the state. On their next stop for the night, the Joads meet the Wilsons, a
family from Kansas that is going to California. Grampa complains of illness,
and weeps. The family thinks that he may suffer a stroke. Granma tells Casy to
pray for Grampa, even if he is no longer a preacher. Suddenly Grampa starts
twitching and slumps. He dies. The Joads face a choice: they can pay fifty
dollars for a proper burial for him or have him buried a pauper. They decide to
bury Grampa themselves and leave a note so that people don't assume he was
murdered. The Wilsons help them bury Grampa. They write a verse from scripture
on the note on his grave. After burying Grampa, they have Casy say a few words.
The reactions to the death are varied. Rose of Sharon comforts Granma, while
Uncle John is curiously unmoved by the turn of events. Casy admits that he knew
Grampa was dying, but didn't say anything because he couldn't have helped. He
blames the separation from the land for Grampa's death. The Joads and the Sairy
Wilson decide to help each other on the journey by spreading out the load
between their two cars so that both families will make it to California.
Chapter Fourteen:
The Western States are nervous about the impending changes, including the
widening government, growing labor unity, and strikes. However, they do not
realize that these are results of change and not causes of it. The cause is the
hunger of the multitude. The danger that they face is that the people's
problems have moved from "I" to "we."
Chapter Fifteen:
This chapter begins with a description of the hamburger stands and diners on
Route 66. The typical diner is run by a usually irritated woman who
nevertheless becomes friendly when truck drivers consistent customers who can always pay enter. The more wealthy travelers drop names
and buy vanity products. The owners of the diners complain about the migrating
workers, who can't pay and often steal. A family comes in, wanting to buy a
loaf of bread. The one owner, Mae, tells them that they're not a grocery store,
but Al, the other, tells them to just sell the bread. Mae sells the family
candy for reduced prices. Mae and Al wonder what such families will do once
they reach California.
Chapter Sixteen: The
Joads and the Wilsons continue on their travels. Rose of Sharon discusses with
her mother what they will do when they reach California. She and Connie want to
live in a town, where he can get a job in a store or a factory. He wants to
study at home, possibly taking a radio correspondence course. There is a
rattling in the Wilson's car, so Al is forced to pull over. There are problems
with the motor. Sairy Wilson tells them that they should go on ahead without
them, but Ma Joad refuses, telling them that they are like family now and they
won't desert them. Tom says that he and Casy will stay with the truck if
everyone goes on ahead. They'll fix the car and then move on. Only Ma objects.
She refuses to go, for the only thing that they have left is each other and she
will not break up the family even momentarily. When everyone else objects to
her, she even picks up a jack handle and threatens them. Tom and Casy try to
fix the car, and Casy remarks about how he has seen so many cars moving west,
but no cars going east. Casy predicts that all of the movement and collection
of people in California will change the country. The two of them stay with the
car while the family goes ahead. Before they leave, Al tells Tom that Ma is
worried that he will do something that might break his parole. Granma has been
going crazy, yelling and talking to herself.
Al asks Tom about
what he felt when he killed a man. Tom admits that prison has a tendency to
drive a man insane. Tom and Al find a junkyard where they find a part to replace
the broken con-rod in the Wilson's car. The one-eyed man working at the
junkyard complains about his boss, and says that he might kill him. Tom tells
off the one-eyed man for blaming all of his problems on his eye, and then
criticizes Al for his constant worry that people will blame him for the car
breaking down. Tom, Casy and Al rejoin the rest of the family at a campground
not far away. To stay at the campground, the three would have to pay an
additional charge, for they would be charged with vagrancy if they slept out in
the open. Tom, Casy and Uncle John eventually decide to go on ahead and meet up
with everyone else in the morning. A ragged man at the camp, when he hears that
the Joads are going to pick oranges in California, laughs. The man, who is
returning from California, tells how the handbills are a fraud. They ask for
eight hundred people, but get several thousand people who want to work. This
drives down wages. The proprietor of the campground suspects that the ragged
man is trying to stir up trouble for labor.
Chapter Seventeen:
A strange thing happened for the migrant laborers. During the day, as they
traveled, the cars were separate and lonely, yet in the evening a strange thing
happened: at the campgrounds where they stayed the twenty or so families became
one. Their losses and their concerns became communal. The families were at
first timid, but they gradually built small societies within the campgrounds,
with codes of behavior and rights that must be observed. For transgressions,
there were only two punishments: violence or ostracism. Leaders emerged,
generally the wise elders. The various families found connections to one
another
Chapter Eighteen:
When the Joads reach Arizona, a border guard stops them and nearly turns them
back, but does let them continue. They eventually reach the desert of
California. The terrain is barren and desolate. While washing themselves during
a stop, the Joads encounter migrant workers who want to turn back. They tell
them that the Californians hate the migrant workers. A good deal of the land is
owned by the Land and Cattle Company that leaves the land largely untouched.
Sheriffs push around migrant workers, whom they derisively call
"Okies." Noah tells Tom that he is going to leave everyone, for they
don't care about him. Although Tom protests, Noah leaves them. Granma remains
ill, suffering from delusions. She believes that she sees Grampa. A Jehovite
woman visits their tent to help Granma, and tells Ma that she will die soon.
The woman wants to organize a prayer meeting, but Ma orders them not to do so.
Nevertheless, soon she can hear from a distance chanting and singing that
eventually descends into crying. Granma whines with the whining, then
eventually falls asleep. Rose of Sharon wonders where Connie is. Deputies come
to the tent and tell Ma that they cannot stay there and that they don't want
any Okies around. Tom returns to the tent after the policeman leaves, and is
glad that he wasn't there; he admits that he would have hit the cop. He tells
Ma about Noah. The Wilsons decide to remain even if they face arrest, since
Sairy is too sick to leave without any rest. Sairy asks Casy to say a prayer
for her. The Joads move on, and at a stop a boy remarks how hard-looking Okies
are and how they are less than human. Uncle John speaks with Casy, worried that
he brings bad luck to people. Connie and Rose of Sharon need privacy. Yet again
the Joads are pulled over for inspection, but Ma Joad insists that they must
continue because Granma needs medical attention. The next morning when they
reach the orange groves, Ma tells them that Granma is dead. She died before
they were pulled over for inspection.
Chapter Nineteen:
California once belonged to Mexico and its land to the Mexicans. But a horde of
tattered feverish American poured in, with such great hunger for the land that
they took it. Farming became an industry as the Americans took over. They
imported Chinese, Japanese, Mexican and Filipino workers who became essentially
slaves. The owners of the farms ceased to be farmers and became businessmen.
They hated the Okies who came because they could not profft from them. Other
laborers hated the Okies because they pushed down wages. While the Californians
had aspirations of social success and luxury, the barbarous Okies only wanted
land and food. Hoovervilles arose at the edge of every town. The Okies were
forced to secretly plant gardens in the evenings. The deputies overreacted to
the Okies, spurred by stories that an eleven year old Okie shot a deputy. The
great owners realized that when property accumulates in too few hands it is
taken away and that when a majority of the people are hungry and cold they will
take by force what they need.
Chapter Twenty: The
Joads take Granma to the Bakersfield coroner's office. They can't afford a
funeral for her. They go to a camp to stay and ask about work. They ask a
bearded man if he owns the camp and whether they can stay, and he replies with
the same question to them. A younger man tells them that the crazy old man is
called the Mayor. According to the man, the Mayor has likely been pushed by the
police around so much that he's been made bull-simple (crazy). The police don't
want them to settle down, for then they could draw relief, organize and vote.
The younger man tells them about the handbill fraud, and Tom suggests that
everybody organize so that they could guarantee higher wages. The man warns Tom
about the blacklist. If he is labeled an agitator he will be prevented from
getting from anybody. Tom talks to Casy, who has recently been relatively
quiet. Casy says that the people unorganized are like an army without a
harness. Casy says that he isn't helping out the family and should go off by
himself. Tom tries to convince him to stay at least until the next day, and he
relents. Connie regrets his decision to come with the Joads. He says that if he
had stayed in Oklahoma he could have worked as a tractor driver. When Ma is
fixing dinner, groups of small children approach, asking for food. The children
tell the Joads about Weedpatch, a government camp that is nearby where no cops
can push people around and there is good drinking water. Al goes around looking
for girls, and brags about how Tom killed a man. Al meets a man named Floyd
Knowles, who tells them that there was no steady work. A woman reprimands Ma
Joad for giving her children stew. Al brings Floyd back to the family, where he
says that there will be work up north around Santa Clara Valley. He tells them
to leave quietly, because everyone else will follow after the work. Al wants to
go with Floyd no matter what. A man arrives in a Chevrolet coupe, wearing a
business suit. He tells them about work picking fruit around Tulare County.
Floyd tells the man to show his license -this is one of the tricks that the
contractor uses. Floyd points out some of the dirty tactics that the contractor
is using, such as bringing along a cop. The cop forces Floyd into the car and
says that the Board of Health might want to shut down their camp. Floyd punched
the cop and ran off. As the deputy chased after him, Tom tripped him. The
deputy raised his gun to shoot Floyd and fires indiscriminately, shooting a
woman in the hand. Suddenly Casy kicked the deputy in the back of the neck,
knocking him unconscious. Casy tells Tom to hide, for the contractor saw him
trip the deputy. More officers come to the scene, and they take away Casy, who
has a faint smile and a look of pride. Rose of Sharon wonders where Connie has
gone. She has not seen him recently. Uncle John admits that he had five
dollars. He kept it to get drunk. Uncle John gives them the five in exchange
for two, which is enough for him. Al tells Rose of Sharon that he saw Connie,
who was leaving. Pa claims that Connie was too big for his overalls, but Ma
scolds him, telling him to act respectfully, as if Connie were dead. Because
the cops are going to burn the camp tonight, they have to leave. Tom goes to
find Uncle John, who has gone off to get drunk. Tom finds him by the river,
singing morosely. He claims that he wants to die. Tom has to hit him to make
him come. Rose of Sharon wants to wait for Connie to return. They leave the
camp, heading north toward the government camp.
Chapter Twenty-One:
The hostility that the migrant workers faced changed them. They were united as
targets of hostility, and this unity made the little towns of Hoovervilles
defend themselves. There was panic when the migrants multiplied on the
highways. The California residents feared them, thinking them dirty, ignorant
degenerates and sexual maniacs. The number of migrant workers caused the wages
to go down. The owners invented a new method: the great owners bought
canneries, where they kept the price of fruit down to force smaller farmers
out. The owners did not know that the line between hunger and anger is a thin one.
Chapter Twenty-Two:
The Joads reach the government camp, where they are surprised to find that
there are toilets and showers and running water. The watchman at the camp
explains some of the other features of the camp: there is a central committee
elected by the camp residents that keeps order and makes rules, and the camp
even holds dance nights. The next morning, two camp residents (Timothy and
Wilkie Wallace) give Tom breakfast and tell him about work. When they reach the
fields where they are to work, Mr. Thomas, the contractor, tells them that he
is reducing wages from thirty to twenty-five cents per hour. It is not his
choice, but rather orders from the Farmers' Association, which is owned by the
Bank of the West. Thomas also shows them a newspaper, which has a story about a
band of citizens who burn a squatters' camp, infuriated by presumed communist
agitation, and warns them about the dance at the government camp on Saturday
night. There will be a fight in the camp so that the deputies can go in. The
Farmers' Association dislikes the government camps because the people in the
camps become used to being treated humanely and are thus harder to handle. Tom
and the Wallaces vow to make sure that there won't be a fight.
While they work, Wilkie tells Tom that the
complaints about agitators are false. According to the rich owners, any person
who wants thirty cents an hour instead of twenty-five is a red. Back at the
camp, Ruthie and Winfield explore the camp, and are fascinated by the toilets they are frightened by the flushing sound. Ma
Joad makes the rest of the family clean themselves up before the Ladies
Committee comes to visit her. Jim Rawley, the camp manager, introduces himself
to the Joads and tells them some of the features of the camp. Rose of Sharon
goes to take a bath, and learns that a nurse visits the camp every week and can
help her deliver the baby when it is time. Ma remarks that she no longer feels
ashamed, as she had when they were constantly harassed by the police. Lisbeth
Sandry, a religious zealot, speaks with Rose of Sharon about the alleged sin
that goes on during the dances, and complains about people putting on stage
plays, which she calls Њsin and delusion
and devil stuff.' The woman even blames playacting for a mother dropping her
child. Rose of Sharon becomes frightened upon hearing this, fearing that she
will drop her child. Jessie Bullitt, the head of the Ladies Committee, gives Ma
Joad a tour of the camp and explains some of the problems. Jessie bickers with
Ella Summers, the previous committee head. The children play and bicker. Pa
comforts Uncle John, who still wants to leave, thinking that he will bring the
family punishment. Ma Joad confronts Lisbeth Sandry for frightening Rose and
for preaching that every action is sinful. Ma becomes depressed about all of
the losses Granma and Grampa, John and
Connie because she now has leisure time
to think about such things.
Chapter
Twenty-Three: The migrant workers looked for amusement wherever they could find
it, whether in jokes or stories for amusement. They told stories of heroism in
taming the land against the Indians, or about a rich man who pretended to be
poor and fell in love with a rich woman who was also pretending to be poor. The
workers took small pleasures in playing the harmonica or a more precious guitar
or fiddle, or even in getting drunk.
Chapter
Twenty-Four: The rumors that the police were going to break up the dance
reached the camp. According to Ezra Huston, the chairman of the Central
Committee, this is a frequent tactic that the police use. Huston tells Willie
Eaton, the head of the entertainment committee, that if he must hit a deputy,
do so where they won't bleed. The camp members say that the Californians hate
them because the migrants might draw relief without paying income tax, but they
refute this, claiming that they pay sales tax and tobacco tax. At the dance,
Willie Eaton approaches Tom and tells him where to watch for intruders. Ma
comforts Rose of Sharon, who is depressed about Connie. Tom finds the intruders
at the dance, but the intruders begin a fight and immediately the police enter
the camp. Huston confronts the police about the intruders, asking who paid
them. They only admit that they have to make money somehow. Once the problem is
defused, the dance goes on without any problems.
Chapter
Twenty-Five: Spring is beautiful in California, for behind the fruitfulness of
the trees in the orchards are men of understanding who experiment with the
seeds and crops to defend them against insects and disease. Yet the fruits
become rotten and soft. The rotten grapes are still used for wine, even if
contaminated with mildew and formic acid. The rationale is that it is good
enough for the poor to get drunk. The decay of the fruit spreads over the
state. The men who have created the new fruits cannot create a system whereby
the fruits may be eaten. There is a crime here that goes beyond denunciation, a
sorrow that weeping cannot symbolize. Children must die from pellagra because
the profft cannot be taken from an orange.
Chapter Twenty-Six:
One evening, Ma Joad watches Winfield as he sleeps; he writhes as he sleeps,
and he seems discolored. In the month that the Joads have been in Weedpatch,
Tom has had only five days of work, and the rest of the men have had none. Ma
worries because Rose of Sharon is close to delivering her baby. Ma reprimands
them for becoming discouraged. She tells them that in such circumstances they
don't have the right. Pa fears that they will have to leave Weedpatch. When Tom
mentions work in Marysville, Ma decides that they will go there, for despite
the accommodations at Weedpatch, they have no opportunity to make money. They
plan to go north, where the cotton will soon be ready for harvest. Regarding Ma
Joad's forceful control of the family, Pa remarks that women seem to be in
control, and it may be time to get out a stick. Ma hears this, and tells him
that she is doing her job as wife, but he certainly isn't doing his job as
husband. Rose of Sharon complains that if Connie hadn't left they would have
had a house by now. Ma pierces Rose of Sharon's ears so that she can wear small
gold earrings. Al parts ways with a blonde girl that he has been seeing; she
rejects his promises that they will eventually get married. He promises her
that he'll return soon, but she does not believe him. Pa remarks that he only
notices that he stinks now that he takes regular baths. Before they leave,
Willie remarks that the deputies don't bother the residents of Weedpatch
because they are united, and that their solution may be a union.
The car starts to
break down as the Joads leave Al has let
the battery run down but he fixes the
problem and they continue on their way. Al is irritable as they leave. He says that
he's going out on his own soon to start a family. On the road, they get a flat
tire. While Tom fixes the tire, a businessman stops in his car and offers them
a job picking peaches forty miles north. They reach the ranch at Pixley where
they are to pick oranges for five cents a box. Even the women and children can
do the job. Ruthie and Winfield worry about settling down in the area and going
to school in California. They assume that everyone will call them Okies. At the
nearby grocery store owned by Hooper Ranch, Ma finds that the prices are much
higher than they would be at the store in town. The sales clerk lends Ma ten
cents for sugar. She tells him that it is only poor people who will help out.
That night, Tom goes for a walk, but a deputy tells him to walk back to the
cabin at the ranch. The deputy claims that if Tom is alone, the reds will get
to him.
While continuing on
his walk, Tom finds Casy, who has been released from jail. He is with a group
of men that are on strike. Casy claims that people who strive for justice
always face opposition, citing Lincoln and Washington, as well as the martyrs
of the French Revolution. Casy, Tom and the rest of the strikers are confronted
by the police. A short, heavy man with a white pick handle swings it at Casy,
hitting him in the head. Tom fights with the man, and eventually wrenches the
club from him and strikes him with it, killing him. Tom immediately fled the
scene, crawling through a stream to get back to the cabin. He cannot sleep that
night, and in the morning tells Ma that he has to hide. He tells her that he
was spotted, and warns his family that they are breaking the strike they are getting five cents a box only
because of this, and today may only get half that amount. When Tom tells Ma
that he is going to leave that night, she tells him that they aren't a family
anymore: Al cares about nothing more than girls, Uncle John is only dragging
along, Pa has lost his place as the head of the family, and the children are
becoming unruly. Rose of Sharon screams at Tom for murdering the man she thinks that his sin will doom her baby.
After a day of work, Winfield becomes extremely sick from eating peaches. Uncle
John tells Tom that when the police catch him, there will be a lynching. Tom
insists that he must leave, but Ma insists that they leave as a family. They
hide Tom as they leave, taking the back roads to avoid police.
Chapter
Twenty-Seven: Those who want to pick cotton must first purchase a bag before
they can make money. The men who weigh the cotton fix the scales to cheat the
workers. The introduction of a cotton-picking machine seems inevitable.
Chapter
Twenty-Eight: The Joads now stay in a boxcar that stood beside the stream, a
small home that proved better than anything except for the government camp.
They were now picking cotton. Winfield tells Ma that Ruthie told about Tom she got into an argument with some other
kids, and told them that her brother was on the run for committing murder.
Ruthie returns to Ma, crying that the kids stole her Cracker Jack the reason that she threatened them by
telling about Tom but Ma tells her that
it was her own fault for showing off her candy to others. That night, in the
pitch black, Ma Joad goes out into the woods and finds Tom, who has been hiding
out there. She crawls close to him and wants to touch him to remember what he
looked like. She wants to give him seven dollars to take the bus and get away.
He tells her that he has been thinking about Casy, and remembered how Casy said
that he went out into the woods searching for his soul, but only found that he
had no individual soul, but rather part of a larger one. Tom has been wondering
why people can't work together for their living, and vows to do what Casy had
done. He leaves, but promises to return to the family when everything has blown
over. As she left, Ma Joad did not cry, but rain began to fall. When she
returned to the boxcar, she meets Mr. and Mrs. Wainwright, who have come to
talk to the Joads about their daughter, Aggie, who has been spending time with
Al. They're worried that the two families will part and then find out that
Aggie is pregnant. Ma tells them that she found Tom and that he is gone. Pa
laments leaving Oklahoma, while Ma says that women can deal with change better
than a man, because women have their lives in their arms, and men have it in their
heads. For women, change is more acceptable because it seems inevitable. Al and
Aggie return to the boxcar, and they announce that they are getting married.
They go out before dawn to pick cotton before everyone else can get the rest,
and Rose of Sharon vows to go with them, even though she can barely move. When
they get to the place where the cotton is being picked, there are already a
number of families. While picking cotton, it suddenly starts to rain, causing
Rose of Sharon to fall ill. Everybody assumes that she is about to deliver, but
she instead suffers from a chill. They take her back to the boxcar and start a
fire to get her warm.
Chapter
Twenty-Nine: The migrant families wondered how long the rain would last. The
rain damaged cars and penetrated tents. During the rain storms some people went
to relief offices, but there were rules: one had to live in California a year
before he could collect relief. The greatest terror had arrived no work would be available for three months.
Hungry men crowded the alleys to beg for bread; a number of people died. Anger
festered, causing sheriffs to swear in new deputies. There would be no work and
no food.
Chapter Thirty:
After three days of rain, the Wainwrights decide that they have to keep on
going. They fear that the creek will flood. Rose of Sharon goes into labor, and
the Joads cannot leave. Pa Joad and the rest of the man at the camp build up
the embankment to prevent flooding, but the water breaks through. Pa, Al and
Uncle John rush toward the car, but it cannot start. They reach the boxcar and
find that Rose of Sharon delivered a stillborn baby. They realize that the car
will eventually flood, and Mr. Wainwright blames Pa Joad for asking them to
stay and help, but Mrs. Wainwright offers them help. She tells Ma Joad that it
once was the case that family came first. Now they have greater concerns. Uncle
John places the dead baby in an apple box and floats it down the flooded stream
as Al and build a platform on the top of the car. As the flood waters rise, the
family remains on the platform. The family finds a barn for refuge until the
rain stops. In the corner of the barn there are a starving man and a boy. Ma
and Rose of Sharon realize what she must do. Ma makes everybody leave the barn,
while Rose of Sharon gives the dying man her breast milk.
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