This was one of my favorite books so far. Sterling and his best friend went fishing one day on the stream that was near their house. As they were walking through the woods, Sterling's dog, Wowser, smelled something that he liked. He went straight to a stump and pointed as some dogs do. Sterling told him to get it, and the dog started digging at the stump. The two boys also helped dig at the stump. As they were nearing the center a raccoon leaped out at the dog and went up a tree right next to the stump. Then the boys noticed the baby raccoons. They tried to catch the mother so that they could keep the baby ones too, since they were too little to protect themselves and live. They failed at catching the mother, but they did catch one baby. Sterling took it because his friend's parents would not let him keep it. Sterling had many pets, including a dog, many cats, a crow, fish, and some skunks. He named this raccoon Rascal. Sterling's mother had died a few years earlier and he and his dad lived alone. His father was very lenient and allowed Sterling to do almost anything he wanted. He was building a canoe in his living room, and had many cages in the back yard where his pets lived. Sterling made a home in a tree that was next to his house. There was a hole in it where he let the raccoon live. He was taught how to feed a young raccoon by his best friend's mother. He was taught to take a bowl of milk and dip a straw in it, then stick the hay straw in your mouth and give the other end to the raccoon. Sterling got him off of this process quickly since it was so difficult for him. He took the raccoon everywhere and watched him as he grew older and learned things. As Rascal grew older he found things that he liked more than others, like sweet corn. He would raid the neighbors" crops at night. The neighbors threatened to kill him if they found him in their crops. So Sterling built a cage for his raccoon.
When looking at the character the Skipper, or the Shipman, one has to understand whom Geoffrey Chaucer writing about in the fourteenth century. The Shipman was introduced into the Canterbury Tales mainly because of the influence that the sea had on England, and specifically Edward the III's r...
William Shakespeare wrote many great short stories and plays. He was born on April 23rd 1564 and died April 23rd 1616. He was educated in Latin grammar and literature as a young child. In 1582 he married his wife, Anne Hathaway. In 1583, they had their first child, Susanna and then in 1585 they ...
In the days of Hal Roach's "Our Gang" shorts ("The Little Rascals" for the TV generation), Spanky and his pals used their own ingenuity to build things they couldn't buy. For Homer H. Hickam Jr., growing up in a small West Virginia coal town, the early days of the space race inspired him and his fri...
Hamlet is a tragedy about a man that can't make up his mind. Discuss. "Hamlet, Prince of Denmark" edited by Alfred Harbage is truly one of the classic examples of a tragedy. Throughout the play, we notice that Hamlet procrastinate about avenging for his father's death. Whenever he gains opportuni...
Have you ever discovered an interesting character in a play or story that you thought didn't know what they were doing? Some would be baffled by discovering that concept within the pages of a Neo-Classical play, Phaedra, by Racine. This work of literature would be considered by many to be nothing bu...
He stated, Naturally, since the smallest amount of intemperance and injustice, together with the highest scrupulousness in the pursuit of excellence, is to be found in the ranks of the better class, while within the ranks of the People will be found the greatest amount of ignorance, disorderliness, rascality- (The "Old Oligarch", p. 105) Such a statements clearly identified the popular thoughts of the people of the times, and whether it was a strong argument then or not, in reality, it showed only that the democratic form of government was very new and faced serious skepticism. ...