Characters<span>Cassie Logan </span> - The narrator and protagonist. Cassie is the second-oldest Logan child. She has a fiery temper like her Uncle Hammer. Also, she is very naive concerning the facts of racism.<span>Little Man (Clayton Chester Logan) </span> - A meticulously neat first-grader, Little Man is the youngest of the Logan children.<span>Stacey Logan </span> - A thirteen-year-old boy, Stacey is the oldest of the Logan children. He is part-adult, part-child.Christopher-John - A cheerful seven-year-old, Christopher-John is the second youngest of the Logan children. He is timid.<span>Papa (David Logan) </span> - Cassie's father. He values his independence highly, leaving to work on the railroad in order not to lose ownership of Logan land.Mama (Mary Logan) - Cassie's mother, a schoolteacher.Uncle Hammer - Papa's brother, Hammer lives in Chicago. He has a short temper.
Answer:
It was in 5th grade P.E. class. I had to take the class with the same kid that bullied me every day. That day we were doing pacer tests, and I had to run beside him. Each lap he either slowed or sprinted when I id and always stayed beside me the entire time. After about 10 laps, he tripped me and ran laughing. Because of how fast I was running I fell hard and nearly broke my nose. The teacher blew it off as an accident because of how the bully pleaded that it wasn't him. And sure enough, I was sent to the nurse. Everyone called me accident prone because of the fall, and it only caused more names to pop up.
Later that day, during lunch, I had a seizure. He said something about possession, and I don't remember much that happened during the seizure but after that everyone called me "ghost kid" and "possessed" Which later on grew worse and worse over the years as kids moved on from ghosts to witch and they had a million reasons to taunt and hurt me just because of one little seizure in 5th grade. No pun intended but it still haunts me every day because kids still go on and on about it. and i'm in 10th now. But there was more to that day.
Recess that day the bully was constantly pushing me around, and physically attacking me, mentally as well. I couldn't help but cry. As a kid all i ever wanted was to be happy and for others to be happy. But it seemed the bully did not care about happiness, only hurt. I balled up on the ground and he started kicking me screaming at me to get up but I wouldn't budge so he started to scream horrible names at me. Then I heard another voice, one I had not heard in a long time. It was an old fiend, he stood up to the bully, more like he got in a fight with him, but he still stood up for me. Both the bully and the friend got referrals but the bully never physically attacked me again. only verbally, but i guess in a sense that's a win.
Explanation:
A. Because you are evaluating the novel.
<span>The term stanza means “stopping place” in Italian. A stanza is a set of lines in a poem, set apart from other sets of lines by space. Each stanza comprises its own unit. The break/space between stanzas generally indicates a pause between thoughts, concepts or actions. In standard practice, most poems end a sentence at the end of stanza. It is important to remember, however, that there is no definitive rule that says this must happen. Of all writing forms, poetry is the most experimental. Rules of form get broken all the time. Many poems are written without stanza breaks. These poems simply continue for however many lines the poem lasts. It is possible to call these poems single-stanza poems, but in practice few people worry about any rules or guidelines for stanzas in these cases. I hoped this helped.</span>