John’s Son (The Boy) Character Analysis

John and Lila’s son is the recipient of the letters that make up Gilead. He is about seven years old when the novel begins, and his name is never revealed, since John always refers to him in the second person. He looks a lot like Lila, especially with his serious, proud facial expressions. He is a loner who mostly watches other kids from a distance, although he befriends Tobias and becomes fond of Jack Boughton. Otherwise, the boy seems to be a fairly typical child; John says that although his son is handsome and polite, it’s his simple existence that he cherishes most. John tells his son that he is an expression of God’s grace to him and a miracle, as he’d never expected to become a father again near the end of his life.

John’s Son (The Boy) Quotes in Gilead

The Gilead quotes below are all either spoken by John’s Son (The Boy) or refer to John’s Son (The Boy). 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:
Life, Death, and Beauty Theme Icon
).

Pages 3-4 Quotes

I told you last night that I might be gone sometime, and you said, Where, and I said, To be with the Good Lord, and you said, Why, and I said, Because I’m old, and you said, I don’t think you’re old. And you put your hand in my hand and you said, You aren’t very old, as if that settled it. I told you you might have a very different life from mine, and from the life you’ve had with me, and that would be a wonderful thing, there are many ways to live a good life.

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), John’s Son (The Boy)
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number and Citation: 3
Explanation and Analysis:

Pages 8-9 Quotes

You two were too intent on the cat to see the celestial consequences of your worldly endeavors. They were very lovely. Your mother is wearing her blue dress and you are wearing your red shirt and you were kneeling on the ground together with Soapy between and that effulgence of bubbles rising, and so much laughter. Ah, this life, this world.

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), Lila (John’s Wife), John’s Son (The Boy)
Page Number and Citation: 9
Explanation and Analysis:

Pages 17-21 Quotes

I write in a small hand, too, as you know by now. Say three hundred pages make a volume. Then I’ve written two hundred twenty-five books, which puts me up there with Augustine and Calvin for quantity. That’s amazing. I wrote almost all of it in the deepest hope and conviction. Sifting my thoughts and choosing my words. Trying to say what was true. And I’ll tell you frankly, that was wonderful.

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), John’s Son (The Boy), Lila (John’s Wife)
Page Number and Citation: 19
Explanation and Analysis:

Pages 31-37 Quotes

He could make me feel as though he had poked me with a stick, just by looking at me. Not that he meant any harm to speak of. He was just afire with old certainties, and he couldn’t bear all the patience that was required of him by the peace and by the aging of his body and by the forgetfulness that had settled over everything. He thought we should all be living at a dead run.

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), John’s Son (The Boy), John’s Grandfather
Related Symbols: Fire and Light
Page Number and Citation: 31-32
Explanation and Analysis:

He told me once that being blessed meant being bloodied, and that is true etymologically, in English—but not in Greek or Hebrew. So whatever understanding might be based on that derivation has no scriptural authority behind it. It was unlike him to strain interpretation that way. He did it in order to make an account of himself, I suppose, as most of us do.

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), John’s Son (The Boy), John’s Grandfather
Page Number and Citation: 36
Explanation and Analysis:

Pages 44-46 Quotes

When people come to speak to me, whatever they say, I am struck by a kind of incandescence in them, the “I” whose predicate can be “love” or “fear” or “want,” and whose object can be “someone” or “nothing” and it won’t really matter, because the loveliness is just in that presence, shaped around “I” like a flame on a wick, emanating itself in grief and guilt and joy and whatever else. But quick, and avid, and resourceful. To see this aspect of life is a privilege of the ministry which is seldom mentioned.

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), John’s Son (The Boy)
Related Symbols: Fire and Light
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number and Citation: 44
Explanation and Analysis:

Pages 46-50 Quotes

To be useful was the best thing the old men ever hoped for themselves, and to be aimless was their worst fear. I have a lot of respect for that view. When I spoke to my father about the vision he had described to me, my father just nodded and said, “It was the times.” He himself never claimed any such experience, and he seemed to want to assure me I need not fear that the Lord would come to me with His sorrows. And I took comfort in the assurance. That is a remarkable thing to consider.

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), John’s Son (The Boy), John’s Father, John’s Grandfather
Page Number and Citation: 49
Explanation and Analysis:

Pages 50-53 Quotes

While you read this, I am imperishable, somehow more alive than I have ever been, in the strength of my youth, with dear ones beside me. You read the dreams of an anxious, fuddled old man, and I live in a light better than any dream of mine—not waiting for you, though, because I want your dear perishable self to live long and to love this poor perishable world, which I somehow cannot imagine not missing bitterly, even while I do long to see what it will mean to have wife and child restored to me, I mean Louisa and Rebecca. I have wondered about that for many years. Well, this old seed is about to drop into the ground. Then I’ll know.

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), Rebecca (Angeline), John’s Son (The Boy), Louisa
Related Symbols: Fire and Light
Page Number and Citation: 53
Explanation and Analysis:

Pages 86-94 Quotes

I believe that the old man did indeed have far too narrow an idea of what a vision might be. He may, so to speak, have been too dazzled by the great light of his experience to realize that an impressive sun shines on us all. Perhaps that is the one thing I wish to tell you. Sometimes the visionary aspect of any particular day comes to you in the memory of it, or it opens to you over time. For example, whenever I take a child into my arms to be baptized, I am, so to speak, comprehended in the experience more fully, having seen more of life, knowing better what it means to affirm the sacredness of the human creature. I believe there are visions that come to us only in memory, in retrospect. That’s the pulpit speaking, but it’s telling the truth.

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), John’s Son (The Boy), John’s Grandfather, John’s Father
Related Symbols: Water, Fire and Light
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number and Citation: 91
Explanation and Analysis:

Pages 94-99 Quotes

My point here is that you never do know the actual nature even of your own experience. Or perhaps it has no fixed and certain nature. I remember my father down on his heels in the rain, water dripping from his hat, feeding me biscuit from his scorched hand, with that old blackened wreck of a church behind him and steam rising where the rain fell on embers, the rain falling in gusts and the women singing “The Old Rugged Cross” while they saw to things, moving so gently, as if they were dancing to the hymn, almost. […] I mention it again because it seems to me much of my life was comprehended in that moment. Grief itself has often returned me to that morning, when I took communion from my father’s hand. I remember it as communion, and I believe that’s what it was.

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), John’s Son (The Boy), John’s Father
Related Symbols: Water, Fire and Light
Page Number and Citation: 95-96
Explanation and Analysis:

Pages 110-115 Quotes

And I know, too, that my own experience of the church has been, in many senses, sheltered and parochial. In every sense, unless it really is a universal and transcendent life, unless the bread is the bread and the cup is the cup everywhere, in all circumstances, […] It all means more than I can tell you. So you must not judge what I know by what I find words for. If I could only give you what my father gave me. No, what the Lord has given me and must also give you. But I hope you will put yourself in the way of the gift.

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), John’s Son (The Boy), John’s Father
Page Number and Citation: 114
Explanation and Analysis:

Pages 132-139 Quotes

I believe there is a dignity in sorrow simply because it is God’s good pleasure that there should be. He is forever raising up those who are brought low. This does not mean that it is ever right to cause suffering or to seek it out when it can be avoided, and serves no good, practical purpose. To value suffering in itself can be dangerous and strange, so I want to be very clear about this. It means simply that God takes the side of sufferers against those who afflict them. (I hope you are familiar with the prophets, particularly Isaiah.)

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), John’s Son (The Boy), Lila (John’s Wife)
Page Number and Citation: 137
Explanation and Analysis:

Pages 173-179 Quotes

I would call that experience a vision. We had visions in those days, a number of us did. Your young men will have visions and your old men will dream dreams. And now all those young men are old men, if they’re alive at all, and their visions are no more than dreams, and the old days are forgotten. […]

The President, General Grant, once called Iowa the shining star of radicalism. But what is left here in Iowa? What is left here in Gilead? Dust. Dust and ashes. Scripture says the people perish, and they certainly do. It is remarkable. For all this His anger is not turned away, but His Hand is stretched out still.

Related Characters: John’s Grandfather (speaker), Rev. John Ames, John’s Son (The Boy)
Page Number and Citation: 175-176
Explanation and Analysis:

So my advice is this—don’t look for proofs. Don’t bother with them at all. They are never sufficient to the question, and they’re always a little impertinent, I think, because they claim for God a place within our conceptual grasp. And they will likely sound wrong to you even if you convince someone else with them. That is very unsettling over the long term. […]

I’m not saying never doubt or question. The Lord gave you a mind so that you would make honest use of it. I’m saying you must be sure that the doubts and questions are your own, not, so to speak, the mustache and walking stick that happen to be the fashion of any particular moment.

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), John’s Son (The Boy), John’s Father, Edward Ames, John’s Grandfather
Page Number and Citation: 179
Explanation and Analysis:

Pages 185-191 Quotes

Having looked over these thoughts I set down last night, I realize I have evaded what is for me the central question. That is: How should I deal with these fears I have, that Jack Boughton will do you and your mother harm, just because he can, just for the sly, unanswerable meanness of it? You have already asked after him twice this morning.

Harm to you is not harm to me in the strict sense, and that is a great part of the problem. He could knock me down the stairs and I would have worked out the theology for forgiving him before I reached the bottom. But if he harmed you in the slightest way, I’m afraid theology would fail me. That may be one great part of what I fear, now that I think of it.

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), John’s Son (The Boy), Lila (John’s Wife), Jack (John Ames) Boughton
Page Number and Citation: 190
Explanation and Analysis:

Pages 191-200 Quotes

I have wandered to the limits of my understanding any number of times, out into that desolation, that Horeb, that Kansas, and I’ve scared myself, too, a good many times, leaving all landmarks behind me, or so it seemed. And it has been among the true pleasures of my life. Night and light, silence and difficulty, it seemed to me always rigorous and good. I believe it was recommended to me by Edward, and also by my reverend grandfather when he made his last flight into the wilderness. I may once have fancied myself such another tough old man, ready to dive into the ground and smolder away the time till Judgment. Well, I am distracted from that project now. My present bewilderments are a new territory that make me doubt I have ever really been lost before.

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), John’s Son (The Boy), Edward Ames, John’s Grandfather, Jack (John Ames) Boughton
Page Number and Citation: 191
Explanation and Analysis:

Pages 200-209 Quotes

I mention this because it seems to me transformations just that abrupt do occur in this life, and they occur unsought and unawaited, and they beggar your hopes and your deserving. This came to my mind as I was reflecting on the day I first saw your mother, that blessed, rainy Pentecost.

That morning something began that felt to me as if my soul were being teased out of my body, and that’s a fact. I have never told you how all that came about, how we came to be married. And I learned a great deal from the experience, believe me. It enlarged my understanding of hope, just to know that such a transformation can occur. And it has greatly sweetened my imagination of death, odd as that may sound.

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), Lila (John’s Wife), John’s Son (The Boy), John’s Grandfather
Related Symbols: Water
Page Number and Citation: 203
Explanation and Analysis:

Pages 209-215 Quotes

Why do I love the thought of you old? That first twinge of arthritis in your knee is a thing I imagine with all the tenderness I felt when you showed me your loose tooth. Be diligent in your prayers, old man. I hope you will have seen more of the world than I ever got around to seeing—only myself to blame. And I hope you will have read some of my books. And God bless your eyes, and your hearing also, and of course your heart. I wish I could help you carry the weight of many years. But the Lord will have that fatherly satisfaction.

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), John’s Son (The Boy), Jack (John Ames) Boughton
Page Number and Citation: 210
Explanation and Analysis:

Pages 232-237 Quotes

A stranger might ask why there is a town here at all. Our own children might ask. And who could answer them? It was just a dogged little outpost in the sand hills, within striking distance of Kansas. That’s really all it was meant to be. It was a place John Brown and Jim Lane could fall back on when they needed to heal and rest. There must have been a hundred little towns like it, set up in the heat of an old urgency that is all forgotten now, and their littleness and their shabbiness, which was the measure of the courage and passion that went into the making of them, now just look awkward and provincial and ridiculous, even to the people who have lived here long enough to know better. It looks ridiculous to me. I truly suspect I never left because I was afraid I would not come back.

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), John’s Son (The Boy), John’s Grandfather
Page Number and Citation: 234
Explanation and Analysis:

Pages 237-244 Quotes

And old Boughton, if he could stand up out of his chair, out of his decrepitude and crankiness and sorrow and limitation, would abandon all those handsome children of his, mild and confident as they are, and follow after that one son whom he has never known, whom he has favored as one does a wound, and he would protect him as a father cannot, defend him with a strength he does not have, sustain him with a bounty beyond any resource he could ever dream of having. If Boughton could be himself, he would utterly pardon every transgression, past, present, and to come, whether or not it was a transgression in fact or his to pardon. He would be that extravagant. That is a thing I would love to see.

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), Rev. Robert Boughton, Jack (John Ames) Boughton, John’s Son (The Boy)
Page Number and Citation: 238
Explanation and Analysis:

As I have told you, I myself was the good son, so to speak, the one who never left his father’s house—even when his father did, a fact which surely puts my credentials beyond all challenge. I am one of those righteous for whom the rejoicing in heaven will be comparatively restrained. And that’s all right. There is no justice in love, no proportion in it, and there need not be, because in any specific instance it is only a glimpse or parable of an embracing, incomprehensible reality.

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), John’s Son (The Boy), John’s Father, Rev. Robert Boughton, Jack (John Ames) Boughton
Page Number and Citation: 238
Explanation and Analysis:

Pages 245-247 Quotes

It has seemed to me sometimes as though the Lord breathes on this poor gray ember of Creation and it turns to radiance—for a moment or a year or the span of a life. And then it sinks back into itself again, and to look at it no one would know it had anything to do with fire, or light. That is what I said in the Pentecost sermon. I have reflected on that sermon, and there is some truth in it. But the Lord is more constant and far more extravagant than it seems to imply. Wherever you turn your eyes the world can shine like transfiguration. You don’t have to bring a thing to it except a little willingness to see. Only, who could have the courage to see it?

Related Characters: Rev. John Ames (speaker), John’s Son (The Boy)
Related Symbols: Fire and Light
Page Number and Citation: 245
Explanation and Analysis:
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John’s Son (The Boy) Character Timeline in Gilead

The timeline below shows where the character John’s Son (The Boy) appears in Gilead. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Pages 3-4
Life, Death, and Beauty Theme Icon
Memory, Vision, and Conviction Theme Icon
...might be gone. He was talking to an unnamed “you,” who seems to be his child. In response to the child’s questions (“where” and “why”), John explains that he will go... (full context)
Life, Death, and Beauty Theme Icon
Christian Faith, Mystery, and Ministry Theme Icon
John reflects that it’s silly to think that the dead miss anything. If his son reads this letter after he’s grown up, as John intends, then John will already have... (full context)
Life, Death, and Beauty Theme Icon
Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
John asks his son if he remembers this house—he must, at least a little bit. John has lived in... (full context)
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Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
...He only regrets that he has so little to leave behind for his wife and son—just some old books, and no money to speak of. If he’d known he would become... (full context)
Pages 5-8
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Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
John hears his wife coaxing his son to sleep in the next room. He can’t make out the words but thinks his... (full context)
Christian Faith, Mystery, and Ministry Theme Icon
Memory, Vision, and Conviction Theme Icon
...regrets that he’s failed to learn from them to control his temper. He warns his son to watch for the same tendency in himself, because anger is terribly destructive. (full context)
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Christian Faith, Mystery, and Ministry Theme Icon
Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
...is a big part of whatever wisdom he has to offer. He notes that his son has blessed their home for almost seven years, late in John’s life. It happened too... (full context)
Pages 8-9
Life, Death, and Beauty Theme Icon
It’s a beautiful spring day. John notes that his son was almost late for school today because he’d procrastinated on his math homework. He observes... (full context)
Christian Faith, Mystery, and Ministry Theme Icon
Memory, Vision, and Conviction Theme Icon
...nature to him because he grew up with it; but he knows that for his son, that probably won’t be the case. (full context)
Life, Death, and Beauty Theme Icon
Christian Faith, Mystery, and Ministry Theme Icon
...notices a fat blue bubble drifting past his window and looks down to see the boy and Lila in the yard, blowing bubbles at the cat, Soapy, who leaps in the... (full context)
Pages 9-17
Life, Death, and Beauty Theme Icon
Memory, Vision, and Conviction Theme Icon
Lila has told their son that John is writing his “begats,” which pleased the boy, so John thinks about where... (full context)
Pages 17-21
Life, Death, and Beauty Theme Icon
Last Sunday during supper at Boughton’s, John noticed his son studying Boughton’s arthritic hands. While he looks older, Boughton is actually younger than John. His... (full context)
Christian Faith, Mystery, and Ministry Theme Icon
Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
...felt like being with someone, much as writing these letters feels like being with his son. (full context)
Pages 21-28
Life, Death, and Beauty Theme Icon
Christian Faith, Mystery, and Ministry Theme Icon
...the cats—there’s a power in acknowledging the sacredness of something. He doesn’t expect that his son will go into the ministry someday, but he’s simply pointing out that the vocation has... (full context)
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Christian Faith, Mystery, and Ministry Theme Icon
Memory, Vision, and Conviction Theme Icon
...will be sure to set aside the Feuerbach among the books he’s keeping for his son. When he was young, he read it in secret because it was associated with Edward’s... (full context)
Pages 29-31
Christian Faith, Mystery, and Ministry Theme Icon
Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
John is sorry that his son is alone. He’s serious and shy and mostly watches other children from a distance. He’s... (full context)
Life, Death, and Beauty Theme Icon
...the world more intimately than he does. He wishes he could spare her and his son from poverty, but when he said this out loud, his wife pointed out that she’s... (full context)
Pages 31-37
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Memory, Vision, and Conviction Theme Icon
John wishes that his son could have known his grandfather. His single eye used to stare straight through John. He... (full context)
Pages 37-39
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Christian Faith, Mystery, and Ministry Theme Icon
John notes that his son has started spending a lot of time with a “freckly little Lutheran” named Tobias. This... (full context)
Pages 39-43
Memory, Vision, and Conviction Theme Icon
Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
...understood more than he did. This became a useful skill throughout life. He’s telling his son this so that his son will know he isn’t a saint and that he’s gotten... (full context)
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Christian Faith, Mystery, and Ministry Theme Icon
John says it’s hard to understand another time. His son couldn’t imagine the nearly empty church, with the women wearing veils to conceal their masks,... (full context)
Pages 50-53
Life, Death, and Beauty Theme Icon
A few days ago, John saw his wife and son come in with flowers, and he knew at once where they’d been. She takes their... (full context)
Life, Death, and Beauty Theme Icon
Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
...on everything. His wife brought the camera out and took pictures of the father and son sipping honeysuckle nectar. But, as usual, the film ran out before John could get a... (full context)
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Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
John would never have believed he’d get to see his wife doting on his child. If his son ever wonders what he’s done with his life, he should know that... (full context)
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Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
John reflects that his son is nice-looking and polite, but it’s his existence he loves him for—existence seems to him... (full context)
Pages 53-57
Memory, Vision, and Conviction Theme Icon
John says that his son and the cat, Soapy, have joined him in his study. His son is drawing airplanes... (full context)
Pages 63-66
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Christian Faith, Mystery, and Ministry Theme Icon
John watches his son and Tobias jumping around in the sprinkler. It makes him think of how he loves... (full context)
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Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
Though John believes his pious reputation is somewhat exaggerated, he doesn’t want his son to think that he doesn’t take his vocation very seriously. He and Boughton used to... (full context)
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Christian Faith, Mystery, and Ministry Theme Icon
Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
When John’s son was very little, John was frightened of him. When his wife would place the baby... (full context)
Pages 66-69
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Christian Faith, Mystery, and Ministry Theme Icon
...would have to say the next, and they’d go on and on that way. His son knows some Psalms and the Lord’s Prayer. (full context)
Christian Faith, Mystery, and Ministry Theme Icon
His wife seems to want John to know that she’s going to raise their boy as a Christian. John says this is wonderful because, when he first met her, he’d... (full context)
Christian Faith, Mystery, and Ministry Theme Icon
Estrangement and Reconciliation Theme Icon
...his wife about the talk with Mr. Schmidt because she worries so much about their boy and always assumes things are her fault. She also said the other day that she... (full context)
Pages 69-71
Life, Death, and Beauty Theme Icon
Christian Faith, Mystery, and Ministry Theme Icon
...love of life a lot lately. When most people had left, his wife brought the boy to the front and said he ought to have some of the leftover elements. Even... (full context)
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Christian Faith, Mystery, and Ministry Theme Icon
Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
...welcoming sounds the old church building makes when he’s there alone, and he encourages his son to experience this for himself. Of course, he knows they’re planning to pull the building... (full context)
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Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
John hopes that if his son remembers him, this might explain him a little bit—his “crepuscular quality.” He hopes it will... (full context)
Pages 72-83
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Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
...wandered off to die alone. Sometimes he worries about his final hours and how his son will remember them. He sometimes forgets that he can’t depend on his body the way... (full context)
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Estrangement and Reconciliation Theme Icon
But John says he has strayed from his subject—his son’s “begats”—and there’s so much left to say. His grandfather was in the Union Army. He... (full context)
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...Nowadays she reads and studies on Sunday night, copying out facts and poems for her son’s sake. She is trying to like John Donne in particular. One day she went to... (full context)
Memory, Vision, and Conviction Theme Icon
After the murder took place in John’s neighborhood, children were scared to do the milking in the dark. Rumors flew for many years about... (full context)
Pages 86-94
Estrangement and Reconciliation Theme Icon
...came to visit today. He greeted John as “Papa,” a name he’s called John since childhood, though John doesn’t think Jack really likes him. When Jack introduced himself to John’s wife... (full context)
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Estrangement and Reconciliation Theme Icon
Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
...about a perfect morning until Jack appeared. He notices looks on both his wife’s and son’s faces as they recognize John’s age. The visit with Jack goes fine and doesn’t last... (full context)
Pages 99-104
Estrangement and Reconciliation Theme Icon
John came home for lunch today to find his son playing catch with Jack Boughton. He notes that he’s failed to get his son his... (full context)
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Memory, Vision, and Conviction Theme Icon
Estrangement and Reconciliation Theme Icon
John is trying to “make the best of our situation” by telling his son things he might not have told him if his upbringing had been more typical. He... (full context)
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Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
When John broke some communion bread and fed it to his son that recent morning, he knows he was trying to give his son something of his... (full context)
Pages 104-110
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Memory, Vision, and Conviction Theme Icon
Estrangement and Reconciliation Theme Icon
John tells his son more old stories. Most of these he learned from his father during their wanderings in... (full context)
Pages 110-115
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...Herbert on God’s preservation being like a new creation every moment; he hopes that his son has read Herbert. He watches his son playing on a swing beneath his window and... (full context)
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...he realized that not every church had his father in its pulpit. He wants his son to know that he understands the church’s complex history. These days, many people think that... (full context)
Pages 116-122
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Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
...in Genesis. He finds comfort in this story because it suggests that even when a child’s father or mother can’t provide, someone will. Every child is sent “into the wilderness” in... (full context)
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Estrangement and Reconciliation Theme Icon
Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
...talking and praying with Boughton about Jack. But what is the point in telling his son about all that? There’s nothing very unusual about Jack’s story. In fact, John sometimes wishes... (full context)
Estrangement and Reconciliation Theme Icon
John needs to figure out what to tell his wife about Jack. His son keeps looking at Jack like he’s Charles Lindbergh. John wonders if God is somehow specially... (full context)
Pages 123-127
Estrangement and Reconciliation Theme Icon
Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
John’s instinct is to warn his son and his wife against Jack Boughton. Though by now, his son must understand that John... (full context)
Life, Death, and Beauty Theme Icon
...in dwelling on problems that don’t have an earthly solution. His wife has sent the boy off to the neighbors, and he notices that she looks pale. She’s brought his writing... (full context)
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Loneliness and Love Theme Icon
...gathers that the congregation was alerted; you’d have thought he died, he notes wryly. His son samples the different casseroles from John’s tray, joking that he can’t make up his mind... (full context)
Pages 127-131
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Estrangement and Reconciliation Theme Icon
...of anxiety and woke exhausted. And then Jack Boughton showed up at church, and John’s son went to sit with him. But John notes that his wife didn’t give Jack a... (full context)
Pages 132-139
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Sometimes John forgets why he is writing this—to teach his son the things he believes a father should. In writing of the Ten Commandments, he comments... (full context)
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...most of us have someone in our lives to honor, whether a parent or a child. It is “godlike,” he says, to delight in someone else’s being, the way he and... (full context)
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...out suffering; he thinks it’s important to be clear about that. But he wants his son to remember that God is on the side of sufferers. (full context)
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...that his wife never talks about herself or admits to having suffered. He tells his son to be respectful of that pride, and also to be very gentle; if someone shows... (full context)
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...making up stories about anonymous donors. Assuming that he would never have a wife or child, he never gave it much thought. He’s also paid for upkeep at the church. He’s... (full context)
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...by keeping in mind their sacredness. In the case of John’s wife, he tells his son that if he keeps this in mind, he will see his mother as God sees... (full context)
Pages 140-149
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...“Moriturus” what he fears most, and he replies that he fears leaving his wife and child “in the sway of a man of extremely questionable character.” (full context)
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...that John doesn’t want to be old—“the tremulous coot you barely remember.” He wishes his son could have seen him when he was trim and fit, even into his sixties. He... (full context)
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...religion that have been so popular in recent centuries are actually meaningless. He wants his son to understand this, too. (full context)
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This afternoon John and his son walk to Boughton’s to return the magazine. Every once in a while, his son runs... (full context)
Pages 149-154
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...religious people speak in such a way that they invite contempt. But John advises his son to avoid defensiveness. It suggests a lack of faith. And sometimes in the act of... (full context)
Pages 155-160
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John is having trouble sleeping and praying, so he believes it’s time to tell his son what the issue is. If he later decides he’s said something untrue, then he can... (full context)
Pages 160-166
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...of light. He was 67 at the time. He wishes he could convey to his son how beautiful his mother was that day, hating to think that the memories will die... (full context)
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John is watching his son and Tobias playing in the yard. Eventually Jack Boughton appears with his baseball bat and... (full context)
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After this, John reflects that when he and his son are reunited in heaven someday, neither of them will be old; they’ll look like brothers.... (full context)
Pages 173-179
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Gilead doesn’t look like much, but John wants his son to know that heroes and saints have lived here. Over time, those saints came to... (full context)
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...the sermon his grandfather preached that day, and he copies it out here for his son. His grandfather wrote that the Lord came to him when he was a young man... (full context)
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...we have no experience, like “building a ladder to the moon.” So, John advises his son not to look for proofs of God. They’ll never be enough, and over time, they... (full context)
Pages 185-191
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...is John’s birthday. There’s a stack of pancakes waiting for him at breakfast, and his son recites the Beatitudes perfectly, beaming at the accomplishment. His son wears his red shirt, and... (full context)
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...question—how should he deal with his fear that Jack will somehow hurt his wife and son out of sheer meanness? Perhaps a big part of his fear is that if Jack... (full context)
Pages 191-200
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Right now, John’s son and Tobias are sitting on the porch, sorting through a colorful pile of gourds and... (full context)
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...up sleeping through supper. He came outside in the evening and found his wife and son wrapped in a quilt on the porch swing. He sat down with them in the... (full context)
Pages 200-209
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...realizes he’s mostly been worrying to himself, while his intention had been to address his son. He fears that when his son reads this, he will just see an old man’s... (full context)
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...It makes him think of meeting Lila on that rainy Pentecost. He’s never told his son how their marriage came about. It sounds strange, but the event “sweetened [his] imagination of... (full context)
Pages 209-215
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...great deal on account of his sadness. And by the time the women and John’s son come back, the mood in the house is a little lighter. It’s a relief to... (full context)
Pages 217-232
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...think he’s had another heart episode, and he lets her think it. He tells his son that it might seem indiscreet for him to have written down this whole conversation. But... (full context)
Pages 232-237
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...was thinking about life’s many frustrations and disappointments. He hasn’t been totally honest with his son about how many there are. (full context)
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...money to spare. John tried to give away what very little he has—his wife’s and son’s money, at that—and this is how it was received. (full context)
Pages 237-244
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If John had married some “rosy dame” who gave him 10 children, he would have left them all on the coldest night of the world and walked... (full context)
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Every night, Lila makes John one of his favorite meals. His son’s face always looks too beautiful for John’s eyes. He wishes Boughton could have seen the... (full context)
Pages 245-247
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...people to make themselves useful—that is, to be generous. John has nothing to leave his son but “the ruins of old courage.” He trusts that someday God will fan it into... (full context)
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...“Christlike” in the way it’s so unadorned and unregarded. He thinks it’s fine if his son leaves someday. After all, Gilead does look like “whatever hope becomes after it begins to... (full context)
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John will pray that his son will grow up a brave man in a brave country, and that he will find... (full context)