Across Five Aprils

by

Irene Hunt

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on Across Five Aprils makes teaching easy.
Eb Carron is Matthew Creighton’s nephew, although he grows up alongside the rest of the Creighton children—John, Bill, Tom, Mary, Jenny, and Jethro—after his parents die when he is a child. Eighteen years old when the Civil War breaks out, Eb expresses faith in the Northern cause and volunteers to join the Union army as soon as he can. The realities of war begin to dawn on him as early as the campaign on Forts Henry and Donelson, where he and Tom witness soldiers dying of exposure after they foolishly leave blankets and coats behind to lighten their loads. Unlike Tom, he survives the Battle of Shiloh. Sometime after Shiloh, however, Eb deserts the ranks due to illness, trauma, and overwhelming homesickness. Despite his momentary weakness, Eb has a strong conscience and doesn’t want to bear the humiliation of desertion or the responsibility of abandoning his comrades, so when President Abraham Lincoln declares a temporary amnesty for all deserters who are willing to rejoin the ranks, Eb jumps at the opportunity. He survives the war.

Eb Carron Quotes in Across Five Aprils

The Across Five Aprils quotes below are all either spoken by Eb Carron or refer to Eb Carron. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Coming of Age Theme Icon
).
Chapter 1  Quotes

War meant loud brass music and shining horses ridden by men wearing uniforms finer than any suit in the stores at Newton; it meant men riding like kings, looking neither to the right nor the left, while lesser men in perfect lines strode along with guns across their shoulders, their head held high like horses with short reigns. When the battle thundered and exploded on all sides—well, some men were killed, of course, but the stories of war that Jethro remembered were about the men who had managed to live through the thunder and explosion […]. Jethro […] never doubted that if Tom or Eb got their chance to go to war, they’d be back home when it was over, and that it would be shadowy men from distant parts who would die for the pages of future history books.

Related Characters: Jethro Creighton, Eb Carron, Ellen Creighton, Tom Creighton
Page Number: 10
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

If someone had asked Jethro to name a time when he left childhood behind him, he might have named that last week of March in 1862. He had learned a great deal about men and their unpredictable behavior the day he drove alone to Newton; now he was to learn what it meant to be the man of a family at ten. He had worked since he could remember, but his work had been done at the side of some older members of the family; when he had grown tired, he was encouraged to rest or sometimes he was dismissed from the task altogether. Now he was to know labor from dawn till sunset; he was to learn what it meant to scan the skies for rain while corn burned in the fields, or to see a heavy rainstorm lash grain from full, strong wheat stalks, or to know that hay, desperately needed for winter feeding, lay rotting in a wet quagmire of a field.

Related Characters: Jethro Creighton, Shadrach Yale , Jenny Creighton, Bill Creighton, Matthew Creighton, Eb Carron, Ellen Creighton, John Creighton, Tom Creighton, Guy Wortman
Page Number: 97
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

Has justice been done, gentlemen? Has an ailing man who commands the respect of those in this county who recognize integrity—has this man suffered enough to satisfy your patriotic zeal?

May I remind you that Tom Creighton died for the Union cause, that he died in battle, where a man fights his opponent face to face rather than striking and scuttling off into the darkness?

And just in passing, Gentlemen, what have you done lately for the Union cause? Of course you have burned a man’s property—barn, farm implements, hay, and grain; you have polluted his well with coal oil and terrified his family. Furthermore, you have done it quietly, under cover of darkness, never once asking to be recognized in order to receive the plaudits of the county at large. But, has any one of you faced a Confederate bullet? Well, Matt Creighton’s boy has.

Related Characters: Ross Milton (speaker), Bill Creighton, Matthew Creighton, Eb Carron, John Creighton, Tom Creighton, Guy Wortman
Page Number: 118-119
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

The authority of the law loomed big in his mind; he remembered, “You and your family will be in serious trouble.” Loyalty to his brother Tom and the many thousands who had fought to the last ditch at Pittsburgh Landing, at Antietam, Fredericksburg, and all the other places that were adding length to the long list—how could loyalty to these men be true if one were going to harbor and give comfort to a man who simply said, “I quit.”

But on the other hand, how did one feel at night if he awoke and remembered, “I’m the one that sent my cousin to his death.” Eb was not a hero, certainly—not now, anyway. People scorned the likes of Eb; sure, so did Jethro, and yet—

“How do I know what I’d be like if I was sick and scared and hopeless; how does […] any man know that ain’t been there?”

Related Characters: Jethro Creighton (speaker), Matthew Creighton, Eb Carron, Abraham Lincoln, Tom Creighton, Travis Burdow
Page Number: 153-154
Explanation and Analysis:

“Looks like purty important mail you’re gettin’, Jethro,” Ed said quietly. His eyes were full of puzzled concern.

Jethro’s head sawm. This was the showdown; now, all the family, Ed Turner, and soon the whole neighborhood would know everything. In the few seconds that passed before he opened the envelope, he wished with all his heart that he had not meddled in the affairs of a country at war, that he had let Eb work out his own problems, that he, Jethro, were still a sheltered young boy who did the tasks his father set for him and shunned the idea that he dare think for himself. He looked at the faces around him, and they spun in a strange mist of color—black eyes and blue eyes, gray hair and gold and black, pink cheeks and pale ones and weather-beaten brown ones.

Related Characters: Ed Turner (speaker), Jethro Creighton, Matthew Creighton, Eb Carron, Abraham Lincoln
Page Number: 160
Explanation and Analysis:
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Eb Carron Quotes in Across Five Aprils

The Across Five Aprils quotes below are all either spoken by Eb Carron or refer to Eb Carron. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Coming of Age Theme Icon
).
Chapter 1  Quotes

War meant loud brass music and shining horses ridden by men wearing uniforms finer than any suit in the stores at Newton; it meant men riding like kings, looking neither to the right nor the left, while lesser men in perfect lines strode along with guns across their shoulders, their head held high like horses with short reigns. When the battle thundered and exploded on all sides—well, some men were killed, of course, but the stories of war that Jethro remembered were about the men who had managed to live through the thunder and explosion […]. Jethro […] never doubted that if Tom or Eb got their chance to go to war, they’d be back home when it was over, and that it would be shadowy men from distant parts who would die for the pages of future history books.

Related Characters: Jethro Creighton, Eb Carron, Ellen Creighton, Tom Creighton
Page Number: 10
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

If someone had asked Jethro to name a time when he left childhood behind him, he might have named that last week of March in 1862. He had learned a great deal about men and their unpredictable behavior the day he drove alone to Newton; now he was to learn what it meant to be the man of a family at ten. He had worked since he could remember, but his work had been done at the side of some older members of the family; when he had grown tired, he was encouraged to rest or sometimes he was dismissed from the task altogether. Now he was to know labor from dawn till sunset; he was to learn what it meant to scan the skies for rain while corn burned in the fields, or to see a heavy rainstorm lash grain from full, strong wheat stalks, or to know that hay, desperately needed for winter feeding, lay rotting in a wet quagmire of a field.

Related Characters: Jethro Creighton, Shadrach Yale , Jenny Creighton, Bill Creighton, Matthew Creighton, Eb Carron, Ellen Creighton, John Creighton, Tom Creighton, Guy Wortman
Page Number: 97
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

Has justice been done, gentlemen? Has an ailing man who commands the respect of those in this county who recognize integrity—has this man suffered enough to satisfy your patriotic zeal?

May I remind you that Tom Creighton died for the Union cause, that he died in battle, where a man fights his opponent face to face rather than striking and scuttling off into the darkness?

And just in passing, Gentlemen, what have you done lately for the Union cause? Of course you have burned a man’s property—barn, farm implements, hay, and grain; you have polluted his well with coal oil and terrified his family. Furthermore, you have done it quietly, under cover of darkness, never once asking to be recognized in order to receive the plaudits of the county at large. But, has any one of you faced a Confederate bullet? Well, Matt Creighton’s boy has.

Related Characters: Ross Milton (speaker), Bill Creighton, Matthew Creighton, Eb Carron, John Creighton, Tom Creighton, Guy Wortman
Page Number: 118-119
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

The authority of the law loomed big in his mind; he remembered, “You and your family will be in serious trouble.” Loyalty to his brother Tom and the many thousands who had fought to the last ditch at Pittsburgh Landing, at Antietam, Fredericksburg, and all the other places that were adding length to the long list—how could loyalty to these men be true if one were going to harbor and give comfort to a man who simply said, “I quit.”

But on the other hand, how did one feel at night if he awoke and remembered, “I’m the one that sent my cousin to his death.” Eb was not a hero, certainly—not now, anyway. People scorned the likes of Eb; sure, so did Jethro, and yet—

“How do I know what I’d be like if I was sick and scared and hopeless; how does […] any man know that ain’t been there?”

Related Characters: Jethro Creighton (speaker), Matthew Creighton, Eb Carron, Abraham Lincoln, Tom Creighton, Travis Burdow
Page Number: 153-154
Explanation and Analysis:

“Looks like purty important mail you’re gettin’, Jethro,” Ed said quietly. His eyes were full of puzzled concern.

Jethro’s head sawm. This was the showdown; now, all the family, Ed Turner, and soon the whole neighborhood would know everything. In the few seconds that passed before he opened the envelope, he wished with all his heart that he had not meddled in the affairs of a country at war, that he had let Eb work out his own problems, that he, Jethro, were still a sheltered young boy who did the tasks his father set for him and shunned the idea that he dare think for himself. He looked at the faces around him, and they spun in a strange mist of color—black eyes and blue eyes, gray hair and gold and black, pink cheeks and pale ones and weather-beaten brown ones.

Related Characters: Ed Turner (speaker), Jethro Creighton, Matthew Creighton, Eb Carron, Abraham Lincoln
Page Number: 160
Explanation and Analysis: