The Tiger Rising

by Kate DiCamillo

Freedom and Consequences Theme Analysis

Themes and Colors
Freedom and Consequences Theme Icon
Emotion, Repression, and Healing Theme Icon
Friendship and Support Theme Icon
Good, Evil, and Balance Theme Icon
Religion, Beauty, and Wonder Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in The Tiger Rising, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Freedom and Consequences Theme Icon
Freedom and Consequences Theme Icon

As The Tiger Rising follows its preteen protagonist, Rob, it questions what freedom truly means. On the whole, the novel suggests that total freedom might be nice in theory—but that freedom inevitably comes with consequences. Initially, when Rob discovers a caged tiger in the woods behind the Kentucky Star Motel where he’s living with his father, the tiger offers him a sort of emotional freedom. Overwhelmed with grief after his mother’s death from cancer, Rob fixates on the beautiful tiger, which distracts him from his difficult thoughts. However, when he befriends Sistine and shows her the tiger, Sistine immediately complicates Rob’s simplistic view of the tiger as his own personal escape. In Sistine’s view, it’s abhorrent and immoral that the tiger is caged rather than roaming free. Rob’s emotional freedom, Sistine’s logic implies, should not require another being’s entrapment.

However much the novel seems to support Sistine’s read of the situation—it isn’t okay for someone like the smarmy and greedy motel owner, Beauchamp, to keep an animal like a tiger in a tiny cage—it nevertheless highlights that the situation isn’t simple. It’s not just a matter of believing that the tiger should be free and freeing him. Rather, it’s essential to consider what might happen when the tiger is free, to the tiger himself and to people in the vicinity. Ultimately, when Rob does free the tiger, his father promptly shoots it, bringing the consequences of freeing such a wild and dangerous animal to the forefront. The tiger, in a way, never really gets to see freedom in the way Sistine hoped he would. That said, Rob finds a sort of emotional freedom by feeling certain that his choice to free the tiger was the right one, no matter the consequences (to the tiger or to himself—it’s implied that Rob and his father will face serious consequences from Beauchamp when Beauchamp discovers what happened). Through Rob’s evolving thoughts on the question of the tiger’s freedom, the novel highlights that achieving physical freedom can come with certain unexpected consequences, but that the emotional freedom a person achieves by doing the right thing is, perhaps, worth the moral ambiguity.

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Freedom and Consequences Quotes in The Tiger Rising

Below you will find the important quotes in The Tiger Rising related to the theme of Freedom and Consequences.

Chapter 1  Quotes

Rob had a way of not-thinking about things. He imagined himself as a suitcase that was too full, like the one that he had packed when they left Jacksonville after the funeral. He made all his feelings go inside the suitcase; he stuffed them in tight and then sat on the suitcase and locked it shut. That was the way he not-thought about things. Sometimes it was hard to keep the suitcase shut. But now he had something to put on top of it. The tiger.

So as he waited for the bus under the Kentucky Star sign, and as the first drops of rain fell from the sullen sky, Rob imagined the tiger on top of his suitcase, blinking his golden eyes, sitting proud and strong, unaffected by all the not-thoughts inside straining to come out.

Related Characters: Rob Horton , Rob’s Mother (Caroline) , Rob’s Father
Related Symbols: Animals, The Kentucky Star Sign
Page Number and Citation: 3-4
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 8 Quotes

He stayed up late working on the carving, and when he finally fell asleep, he dreamed about the tiger, only it wasn’t in a cage. It was free and running through the woods, and there was something on its back, but Rob couldn’t tell what it was. As the tiger got closer and closer, Rob saw that the thing was Sistine in her pink party dress. She was riding the tiger. In his dream, Rob waved to her and she waved back at him. But she didn’t stop. She and the tiger kept going, past Rob, deeper and deeper into the woods.

Related Characters: Sistine’s Father , Sistine Bailey , Rob Horton , Sistine’s Mother/Mrs. Bailey
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number and Citation: 30
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 14 Quotes

“It’s just like the poem says,” Sistine breathed.

“What?” said Rob.

“That poem. The one that goes, ‘Tiger, tiger, burning bright, in the forests of the night.’ That poem. It’s just like that. He burns bright.”

“Oh,” said Rob. He nodded. He liked the fierce and beautiful way the words sounded. Just as he was getting ready to ask Sistine to say them again, she whirled around and faced him.

“What’s he doing way out here?” she demanded.

Rob shrugged. “I don’t know,” he said. “He’s Beauchamp’s, I guess.”

“Beauchamp’s what?” said Sistine. “His pet?”

“I don’t know,” said Rob. “I just like looking at him. Maybe Beauchamp does, too. Maybe he just likes to come out here and look at him.”

“That’s selfish,” said Sistine.

Rob shrugged.

“This isn’t right, for this tiger to be in a cage. It’s not right.”

Related Characters: Sistine Bailey (speaker), Rob Horton (speaker), Beauchamp
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number and Citation: 50-51
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 17 Quotes

“What happened to [Cricket]?” Rob asked.

Willie May bent and took a pillowcase out of the dryer.

“Let him go,” she said.

“You let him go?” Rob repeated, his heart sinking inside him like a stone.

“Couldn’t stand seeing him locked up, so I let him go.” She folded the pillowcase carefully.

“And then what happened?”

“I got beat by my daddy. He said I didn’t do that bird no favor. Said all I did was give some snake its supper.”

Related Characters: Rob Horton (speaker), Willie May (speaker), Beauchamp , Sistine Bailey
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number and Citation: 64-65
Explanation and Analysis:

“I know something that’s in a cage,” said Rob, pushing the words past the tightness in his throat.

Willie May nodded her head, but she wasn’t listening. She was looking past Rob, past the white sheet, past the laundry room, past the Kentucky Star.

“Who don’t?” she said finally. “Who don’t know something in a cage?”

Related Characters: Willie May (speaker), Rob Horton (speaker), Sistine’s Father , Norton and Billy Threemonger , Sistine Bailey , Rob’s Father , Sistine’s Mother/Mrs. Bailey
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number and Citation: 66
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 25 Quotes

“You’re not talking like a prophetess.”

“That’s ’cause I ain’t no prophetess,” said Willie May. All I am is somebody speaking the truth. And the truth is: there ain’t nothing you can do for this tiger except to let it be.”

“It’s not right,” said Sistine.

“Right ain’t got nothing to do with it,” muttered Willie May. “Sometimes right don’t count.”

Related Characters: Sistine Bailey (speaker), Willie May (speaker), Rob Horton , Beauchamp
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number and Citation: 99
Explanation and Analysis:

As they walked back to the Kentucky Star, Rob thought about what Willie May had said about the tiger rising on up. It reminded him of what she had said about his sadness needing to rise up. And when he thought about the two things together, the tiger and his sadness, the truth circled over and above him and then came and landed lightly on his shoulder. He knew what he had to do.

Related Characters: Willie May , Rob Horton , Beauchamp , Sistine Bailey
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number and Citation: 101
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 28 Quotes

“Oh,” said Sistine, in that voice that Rob loved. “See,” she said, “that was the right thing. That was the right thing to do.”

Rob nodded. But in his mind, he saw a flash of green. He remembered what happened to Cricket.

Related Characters: Sistine Bailey (speaker), Willie May , Rob Horton , Rob’s Father
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number and Citation: 109
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 29 Quotes

The whole way back to the Kentucky Star, Rob held on to Sistine’s hand. He marveled at what a small hand it was and how much comfort there was in holding on to it.

And he marveled, too, at how different he felt inside, how much lighter, as he had set something heavy down and walked away from it, without bothering to look back.

Related Characters: Rob’s Mother (Caroline) , Rob’s Father , Willie May , Rob Horton , Sistine Bailey
Related Symbols: Animals
Page Number and Citation: 117
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 30 Quotes

“And on Monday,” his father continued, “I aim to call that principal and tell him you’re going back to school. I ain’t messing around with taking you to more doctors. You’re going back and that’s that.”

“Yes, sir,” said Rob. He didn’t mind the thought of going back to school. School was where Sistine would be.

His father cleared his throat. “It’s hard for me to talk about your mama. I wouldn’t never have believed that I could miss somebody the way I miss her. Saying her name pains me.” He bent his head and concentrated on putting the cap on the tube of medicine. “But I’ll say it for you,” he said. “I’ll try on account of you.”

Related Characters: Rob Horton (speaker), Rob’s Father (speaker), Mr. Phelmer , Sistine Bailey
Related Symbols: Rob’s Rash
Page Number and Citation: 119
Explanation and Analysis: