![]() | |||
Copy and insert the following code on your webpage. |
| -Smaller Font- ![]()
| |
|
Free Study Guide for The Catcher in the Rye by J. D. Salinger Downloadable / Printable Version CHAPTER SUMMARY WITH NOTES | |||
![]() |
Holden goes to Grand Central Station, the main
transportation center in New York. Most people pass through Grand Central Station
on their way to some other place, but Holden selects it as his destination. Since
he does not seem to belong anywhere, it seems like the perfect place to go; no
one else belongs there either.
Holden goes to the cafeteria at the station to have breakfast. When two nuns come in and sit by him, he strikes up a conversation with them. When he learns one is an English teacher, he discusses Romeo and Juliet with her. While they are eating, Holden notices their cheap suitcases and decides to give them ten dollars, even though he has little money left. He also offers to pay for their food, but the nuns will not let him. After they leave, Holden wishes he had given them more money.
The entire incident with the nuns brings out a new characteristic in Holden. He openly identifies with an underdog. The people on the margins, like himself, are a source of concern and sympathy for him. He is touched by the poverty of the nuns and their cheap suitcases and gives them ten dollars, even though he is not a religious boy. When he discusses Romeo and Juliet with the nun, Holden’s sympathy is for Mercutio, a minor character and underdog in the play. Holden also remembers Dick Slagle, his Elton Hills roommate who had shabby suitcases. In order not to embarrass him with his expensive suitcases, Holden generously hides his own under his bed. Everything about Holden seem to cry out against inequality, injustice, and hypocrisy, even when he is just having a polite conversation in a train station with a nun.
It is important to notice that Holden’s cowardice is again depicted in this chapter. He will not call for room service because he is afraid that Maurice might bring him the food. He wants to call Jane, but does not have enough courage to dial her number. His generosity is also shown. Although he cannot afford it, he gives the nuns ten dollars; after they leave, he wished he had given more.
Previous
Page | Table of Contents | Next Page
Downloadable / Printable Version
Visit our partner PinkMonkey.com
for more online Study Guides
Privacy Policy
All Content Copyright©TheBestNotes. All Rights Reserved.
No further distribution
without written consent.
51
Users Online | This page has been viewed 1100 times
This page was
last updated on 5/11/2008 12:31:20 AM
|
Cite this page:
TheBestNotes.com Staff. "TheBestNotes on The Catcher in the Rye".
TheBestNotes.com.
. 11 May 2008 |