Audio Link:
https://sites.google.com/a/raha-international-school.org/audio-files/
IOC Passage:
https://sites.google.com/a/raha-international-school.org/audio-files/
IOC Passage:
Alive, the foxes inhabited a world my father made for them.
It was surrounded by a high guard fence, like a medieval town, with a gate that
was padlocked at night. Along the streets of this town were ranged large,
sturdy pens. Each of them had a real door that a man could go through, a wooden
ramp along the wire, for the foxes to run up and down on, and a kennel —
sometimes like a clothes chest with airholes — where they slept and stayed in
winter and had their young. There were feeding and watering dishes attached to
the wire in such a way that they could be emptied and cleaned from the outside.
The dishes were made of old tin cans, and the ramps and kennels of odds and
ends of old lumber. Everything was tidy and ingenious; my father was tirelessly
inventive and his favourite book in the world was Robinson Crusoe. He had
fitted a tin drum on a wheelbarrow, for bringing water down to the pens. This
was my job in the summer, when the foxes had to have water twice a day. Between
nine and ten o'clock in the morning, and again after supper, I filled the drum
at the pump and trundled it down through the barnyard to the pens, where I
parked it, and filled my watering can and went along the streets. Laird came
too, with his little cream and green gardening can, filled too full and
knocking against his legs and slopping water on his canvas shoes. I had the
real watering can, my father's, though I could only carry it three-quarters
full.
The foxes all had
names, which were printed on a tin plate and hung beside their doors. They were
not named when they were born, but when they survived the first year’s pelting
and were added to the breeding stock. Those my father had named were called
names like Prince, Bob, Wally, and Betty. Those I had named were called Star or
Turk, or Maureen or Diana. Laird named one Maude after a hired girl we had when
he was little, one Harold after a boy at school, and one Mexico, he did not say
why.
Naming them did
not make pets out of them, or anything like it. Nobody but my father ever went
into the pens, and he had twice had blood-poisoning from bites. When I was
bringing them their water they prowled up and down on the paths they had made
inside their pens, barking seldom — they saved that for nighttimes, when they
might get up a chorus of community frenzy--but always watching me, their eyes
burning, clear gold, in their pointed, malevolent faces. They were beautiful
for their delicate legs and heavy, aristocratic tails and the bright fur
sprinkled on dark down their back — which gave them their name — but especially
for their faces, drawn exquisitely sharp in pure hostility, and their golden
eyes.
Besides carrying
water I helped my father when he cut the long grass, and the lamb's quarter and
flowering money-musk, that grew between the pens. He cut with they scythe and I
raked into piles. Then he took a pitchfork and threw fresh-cut grass all over
the top of the pens to keep the foxes cooler and shade their coats, which were
browned by too much sun.
Guiding questions:
- 1. How is the description of
setting in this passage significant to the development of larger themes
- 2. How does the allusion
contribute to meaning in this message
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