Avarice
The Good Life
Money
Alliteration/Consonance
Vocabulary
100

The narrator of "Avarice" mentions many things. What do these things have in common?

They do not belong to her; they were stolen.

100

The narrator of "The Good Life" describes their memory of the past. What comparison do they make to express their hardship?

Compares herself to a woman traveling far for water.

100
"Money" takes place in a time when door-to-door sales were more commonplace. Describe two of the three visitors that are mentioned in the first three paragraphs of the text.

1.Man seeking yard work

2.Boy with a tattered booklet

3.Girl with handtowels.

100

Define Alliteration

The repetition of vowel sounds/letters at the beginning of several words in a close proximity.

100
What is the definition of Avarice?

Extreme greed

200

Which two lines from "Avarice" best illustrate the point-of-view of this text?

(Answers Will Vary)

"She" is a key-word in any answer

200

What point-of-view is best illustrated by the provided quote from "The Good Life"? Which word(s) best support this answer?

"it makes me nostalgic
For the years I lived on coffee and bread,
Hungry all the time, walking to work on payday
Like a woman journeying for water"

First person. "me" "I"

200
The family is quite frugal in this text. What is one action that suggests this characteristic?

Saving money; having children save money; buying sewing machine to make clothing.

200

Define Consonance

The repetition of consonant sounds/letters at the end of several words in a close proximity

200

What is the definition of Desperate?

A situation that is without clear/immediate solution; difficulty of circumstances.

300

"She gazed at her little brother’s
Junebugs pinned to a sheet of cork,
Assaying their glimmer, till she
Buried them beneath a fig tree’s wide,"

Why does the character of "Avarice" care about her brother's junebug collection?                      

She is drawn to it's shine/glimmer

300

"...it makes me nostalgic
For the years I lived on coffee and bread,
Hungry all the time, walking to work on payday"

Using the quote above, how did the speaker live and how do they feel about that lifestyle?

Feels fond of the times when they were poor

300

At the end of the text, the children dream of their future. What do they see themselves doing in this future?

Carrying on the principles that their parents taught them: continuing to give no money to strangers.

300

Identify an example of Alliteration in the provided quote: 

"“For the years I lived on coffee and bread,
Hungry all the time, walking to work on payday"

Went & Work

300

What is the definition of Needy?

Having need; lacking necessary resources.

400

What lesson can be learned from "Avarice"? Explain your choice of lesson, and how it connects to the poem.

Answers will vary.

400

What lesson can be learned from "The Good Life"? Explain your choice of lesson, and how it connects to the poem.

To appreciate what you have / the speaker expresses nostalgia for their own poverty and simple living

400

The parents in "Money" are often described as frugal, or being conscious of their spending habits. What detail helps the reader to see that they are frugal and not cheapskates/uncaring?

The family donates tithes at their local church.

400

Identify an example of Alliteration in the provided quote: 

"A glassy-eyed heavy girl who almost seems asleep as she stands outside their door..."

S as seen in "seems" "she" "stands"


500

Compare this text to "Money". How does the character of this text differ from the characters of "Money"? What is the likely reason for the textbook to include this text alongside "Money"?

The character of this text is greedy, but able to give some money to others/ this could be a good comparison of what greed vs. thriftiness looks like.

500

Reread the poem “The Good Life.” This poem is a single stanza made up of one long sentence, but it makes a shift in line 4 that creates two distinct parts to the poem. How does the poet transition from the first part to the second, and what purpose does the transition serve?

The speaker describes money as being easily lost, and then transitions to an example of how they lose their money quickly. This creates a more clear image of how money can be lost (even if the person is not sad to lose it).
500

The setting of "Money" is in the suburban comfort of 1950s America. Taking into account the inclusion of needy door-to-door salespeople, what is the likely purpose for adding these two elements?

To contrast the relative comfort/frugality of the family to the discomfort/lack of the salespeople.

500

Identify an example of Consonance in the provided quote:

"she pays the two boys for mowing the yard together and weeding her flower bed. She gets a new sewing machine for her birthday from the children’s father"

Mowing, weeding, sewing