Modern Prose And Poetry; For Secondary Schools eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 342 pages of information about Modern Prose And Poetry; For Secondary Schools.

Modern Prose And Poetry; For Secondary Schools eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 342 pages of information about Modern Prose And Poetry; For Secondary Schools.

=Xeres=:—­The Spanish town after which sherry wine is named.

SUGGESTIONS FOR STUDY

This selection is easily understood.  Ralph Percy, his wife, and several others (see notes) are cast on a desert shore after the sinking of their boat.  Percy leaves his companions for a time and falls among pirates; he pretends to be a “sea-rover” himself.  Why does he allude to the pirate ship as a “cockboat”?  Why are the pirates impressed by his remarks?  Why does Percy emphasize the riches of the sunken ship?  Is what he says true? (See chapter 19 of To Have and to Hold.) If not, is he justified in telling a falsehood?  Is he really Kirby?  Is he fortunate in his assertion that he is?  How does he explain his lack of resemblance to Kirby?  What kind of person is the hero?  Why does he wish to become the leader of the pirates?  Is it possible that the pirate crew should change their attitude so suddenly?  Is it a good plan in a story to make a hero tell of his own successes?  Characterize the man in black and silver.  How does the author make us feel the action and peril of the struggle?  How does she make us feel the long duration of the fight with Paradise?  Do you like the hero’s behavior with the defeated pirates?  Why is he so careful to repeat to the minister what he has told the pirates?  Why does the minister appear to change his character?

Can you make this piece into a little play?

THEME SUBJECTS

The Real Pirates
Spanish Gold
A Fight for Life
A Famous Duel
Buried Treasure
Playing Pirates
Sea Stories that I Like
Captain Kidd
Ponce de Leon
The Search for Gold
Story-book Heroes
Along the Sea Shore
A Barren Island
The Rivals
Land Pirates
The Pirates in Peter Pan
A Struggle for Leadership
Our High School Play

SUGGESTIONS FOR WRITING

Try to make a fragment of a play out of this selection.  In this process, all the class may work together under the direction of the teacher, or each pupil may make his own attempt to dramatize the piece.

In writing the drama, tell first what the setting is.  In doing so, you had better look up some modern play and see how the setting is explained to the reader or the actors.  Now show the pirates at work, and give a few lines of their conversation; then have the hero come upon the scene.  Indicate the speech of each person, and put in all necessary stage directions.  Perhaps you will want to add more dialogue than there is here.  Some of the onlookers may have something to say.  Perhaps you will wish to leave something out.  It might be well, while the fighting is going on, to bring in remarks from the combatants and the other pirates.  You might look up the duel scene in Hamlet for this point.  You can end your play with the departure of the group; or you can write a second scene, in which the hero’s companions appear, including the lady.  Considerable dialogue could be invented here, and a new episode added—­a quarrel, a plan for organization, or a merry-making.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Modern Prose And Poetry; For Secondary Schools from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.