Washington Black

Washington Black

by

Esi Edugyan

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Christopher “Titch” Wilde Character Analysis

Titch is Erasmus’s younger brother who becomes a father figure for Wash. Titch is a tall scientist with a long face and a scar cutting up from the sides of his mouth to his ears. Titch’s goal at the beginning of the novel is to launch his Cloud-cutter, an air-balloon-like vessel he wants to sail across the Atlantic. He wants to do this primarily to make his scientist father, James Wilde, proud, as his father was never able to get the Cloud-cutter to launch properly. While visiting Erasmus’s plantation, Titch enlists Wash, whom he believes is the perfect weight to balance out the Cloud-cutter. Over time, as he teaches Wash reading, writing, and scientific concepts, Titch sees Wash’s brilliance and talent for sketching. Titch is also an abolitionist, and he documents the cruelties at Faith Plantation and sends reports back to the Abolitionist Society. After Titch receives word that his father has died, Titch is devastated, and when his cousin Philip commits suicide soon after, he escapes with Wash in the Cloud-cutter in part to avoid having to stay and take over Faith Plantation. Titch then goes to the Arctic in search of his father, hoping to discover what happened to him. There, he discovers that his father is alive—but his father doesn’t want people to know he’s alive (preferring to continue his research undisturbed) and is dismissive of Titch’s accomplishments. Titch then abandons Wash in the Arctic by faking his own death, ultimately winding up in Morocco to continue his work on the Cloud-cutter. Titch reveals at the end of the book that he didn’t intend to mistreat Wash by leaving him—he thought he was protecting Wash by separating because of the bounty hunter that Erasmus sent after them. Titch also reveals that he and Erasmus mercilessly bullied Philip as children. Because of this, he worries that he had something to do with Philip’s moroseness and subsequent suicide, and so he, like Wash, is haunted by his past.

Christopher “Titch” Wilde Quotes in Washington Black

The Washington Black quotes below are all either spoken by Christopher “Titch” Wilde or refer to Christopher “Titch” Wilde. 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:
Freedom vs. Captivity Theme Icon
).
Part 1, Chapter 2 Quotes

I could feel the day’s exhaustion descending on me. “What it like, Kit? Free?”

I felt her shift in the dirt, and then she was gathering me in close, her hot breath at my ear. “Oh, child, it like nothing in this world. When you free, you can do anything.”

“You go wherever it is you wanting?”

“You go wherever it is you wanting. You wake up any time you wanting. When you free,” she whispered, “someone ask you a question, you ain’t got to answer. You ain’t got to finish no job you don’t want to finish. You just leave it.”

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Big Kit (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Philip
Page Number: 9
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 7 Quotes

And as I began to draw what I saw with a clean accuracy, I realized I was troubled by the enormous beauty of that place, of the jewel-like fields below us, littered as I knew them to be with broken teeth. The hot wind snapped at my papers, and in a kind of ghostly sound beneath this I thought I heard the cry of a baby. For the few women who gave birth here were turned immediately back into the fields, and they would set their tender-skinned newborns down in the furrows to wail against the hot sun. I craned out at the fields; I could see nothing. Far out at sea, a great flock of seagulls rose and turned, the late afternoon light flaring on the undersides of their wings.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde
Page Number: 54
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 9 Quotes

Three cracked ribs. Her kick had been that harsh, that swift. I refused to tell the overseers who had done it, and in this way Kit was spared. But the pain was immense and suffocating, and I was several nights in the hothouse before returning again to our huts.

She avoided my eye as I was led in, my chest still in bandages.

That evening, as I drifted into sleep, there came a touch at my face. I heard soft weeping, and realized with alarm it was Big Kit. She was running a cold palm across my forehead, whispering.

“Oh my son,” I heard her say, over and over again. “My son.”

I understood then that she had not meant to strike me so hard, and that my days away had pained her greatly. I closed my eyes, feeling the coolness of her skin on my brow.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Big Kit
Page Number: 81
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 10 Quotes

She was much changed, it was true, maimed terribly, grown thinner, the hair at her temples silver as flies' wings. Aged, now, as though decades had separated us. But I was the more changed; that was the uglier truth.

I gripped anxiously at my hands, staring at Kit's tall figure. How solicitous she was with the boy. I saw now how she kept a careful eye on his posture, his manners. I knew instinctively what this meant, the great angry love she held that boy inside, like a fist. I tried to imagine what he might be like. He could not have been older than six or seven years, I thought. I wondered at the sudden pain coming up in me.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Big Kit, Erasmus Wilde, Philip
Page Number: 90
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 11 Quotes

“Perhaps it is easier for you,” he said again. “Everything is taken care of for you. You needn’t worry about what the coming days will hold, as every day is the same. Your only expectations are the expectations your master lays out for you. It is a simple-enough life, what.”

It was as though he had spoken the words to determine their truth. He shook his head irritably.

I stilled my face. I said nothing.

He exhaled harshly, dragging the gun up his thighs. I looked at his hands, the pallor of them on the dark metal.

“I am sorry.” His voice was so soft I barely heard him. He gestured with his chin. “Your face.”

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Philip (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde
Page Number: 108-109
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 12 Quotes

What did I feel? What would anyone feel, in such a place? My chest ached with anguish and wonder, an astonishment that went on and on, and I could not catch my breath. The Cloud-cutter spun, turned gradually faster, rising ever higher. I began to cry—deep, silent, racking sobs, my face turned away from Titch, staring out onto the boundlessness of the world. The air grew colder, crept in webs across my skin. All was shadow, red light, storm-fire and frenzy. And up we went into the eye of it, untouched, miraculous.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Erasmus Wilde
Related Symbols: The Cloud-cutter
Page Number: 119
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 2 Quotes

Titch explained we would be entering Chesapeake Bay, and would therefore soon be leaving the ship. We would also, however, find ourselves subject to the laws of American freedom. “Freedom, Wash, is a word with different meanings to different people,” he said, as though I did not know the truth of this better than he.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde (speaker)
Page Number: 141
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 3 Quotes

It had happened so gradually, but these months with Titch had schooled me to believe I could leave all misery behind, I could cast off all violence, outrun a vicious death. I had even begun thinking I’d been born for a higher purpose, to draw the earth’s bounty, and to invent; I had imagined my existence a true and rightful part of the natural order. How wrong-headed it had all been. I was a black boy, only—I had no future before me, and little grace or mercy behind me. I was nothing, I would die nothing, hunted hastily down and slaughtered.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Erasmus Wilde, John Willard
Page Number: 151
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 4 Quotes

I suppose I believed there to be some bravery in this choice. I suppose it struck my boyhood self as an act of fidelity, gratitude, a return of the kindness I had been shown and never grown used to. Perhaps I felt Titch to be the only sort of family I had left. Perhaps, perhaps; even now I cannot speak with any certainty. I know only that in that moment I was terrified to my very core, and that the idea of embarking on a perilous journey without Titch filled me with a panic so savage it felt as if I were being asked to perform some brutal act upon myself to sever my own throat.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Edgar Farrow
Page Number: 167
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 5 Quotes

The air clenched to ice, stinging our cheeks. It began to pinch. Sailing, we glimpsed in the passing black waters eerie, exquisite cathedrals of ice. I had not ever seen ice before, not in its immensities: I stared into the refracted light like a creature entranced. How beautiful it was, how sad, how sacred! I attempted to express the awe of it in my drawings. For it felt very much as though we were leaving the world of the living and entering a world of spirits and the dead. I felt free, invincible, beyond Mister Willard’s reach.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, John Willard
Page Number: 174
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 7 Quotes

But my true study remained, I understand now, the curious person of Titch. He was, I feared, becoming increasingly lost within himself. I suppose there must have been a deep love between him and his father, a love I could get no sense for because of its reticence. But as with most loves, it was shadowy, and painful, and confusing, and Titch seemed to me overly eager and too often hurt.

I could see a sadness coming over him, a kind of slow despair. I understood he was anguished over his father—over his failure to ever impress the man, over how to explain that Philip had killed himself and that we were now in hiding.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Erasmus Wilde, Philip, Mr. James Wilde (Titch’s Father)
Page Number: 193-194
Explanation and Analysis:

A haze of pale light was furred around Kit's head, like a halo, and I could not make out her face. She reached forward and held my hand, and her touch was terribly cold. I gave her a pair of thick fur-lined mittens. Then somehow we were standing in the snow, the world so white around us. Kit’s face looked wondrous to me, dark, sombre, beautiful. I studied it.

“You be my eyes, Wash,” she said to me.

And reaching up and with her fingers, she forcibly pressed her own eyes in. A wide blue light shone out from the sockets.

I felt—and this is the peculiar truth—a sense of peace and well-being come over me. I understood a great gift of trust was being extended to me.

When I awoke in the darkness, I was crying.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Big Kit (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde
Page Number: 194
Explanation and Analysis:

“You are like a ghost,” Titch hollered to me. “Go back.”

The roar of the wind and snow was increasing. It would be sometime past mid-afternoon by now, but the light had not dimmed, only shifted. We stood in that obliterating whiteness, as though the world had vanished.

“You will not leave me, Wash,” he shouted. “Even when I am gone. That is what breaks my heart.”

Related Characters: Christopher “Titch” Wilde (speaker), George Washington “Wash” Black
Page Number: 198
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 3, Chapter 2 Quotes

But I cooked always behind a curtain, unseen, my scarred face being, the owner feared, repugnant. The schedule was demanding, and after some months of this I gave up drawing altogether, finding no extra hours in my day. Though I did not know it then, I had begun the months of my long desolation. I became a boy without identity, a walking shadow, and with each new month I fell deeper into strangeness. For there could be no belonging for a creature such as myself, anywhere: a disfigured black boy with a scientific turn of mind and a talent on canvas, running, always running, from the dimmest of shadows.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, John Willard
Page Number: 211
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 3, Chapter 6 Quotes

“It was I who had failed in my understanding, you see. Life holds a sanctity for them we can scarcely begin to imagine; it therefore struck them as absurd that someone would choose to end it. A great ludicrous act. In any case, it was then I recognized that my own values—the tenets I hold dear as an Englishman—they are not the only, nor the best, values in existence. I understood there were many ways of being in the world, that to privilege one rigid set of beliefs over another was to lose something. Everything is bizarre, and everything has value. Or if not value, at least merits investigation.”

I thought it wonderful for a man of science to speak so. Staring at his bright chewing face, I realized how profoundly I liked him.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Mr. Goff (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Tanna Goff
Page Number: 239
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 3, Chapter 7 Quotes

The octopus arranged itself in a smatter of algae, its body hanging blackly before me. When I came forward to touch it, it sent out a surge of dark ink. We paused, watching each other, the grey rag of ink hanging between us. Then it shot off through the water, stopping short to radiate like a cloth set afire, its arms unfurling and vibrating. There was something playful in the pause, as if it expected me to ink it back. I held my hands out towards it, gently; the creature hovered in the dark waters, almost totally still. Then, shyly, it began to pulse towards me, stopping just inches away, its small, gelatinous eyes taking me in. Then it swam directly into my hands.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Tanna Goff, Mr. Goff
Related Symbols: The Octopus
Page Number: 251
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 4, Chapter 11 Quotes

How could he have treated me so, he who congratulated himself on his belief that I was his equal? I had never been his equal. To him, perhaps, any deep acceptance of equality was impossible. He saw only those who were there to be saved, and those who did the saving.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Tanna Goff, Mr. Goff
Page Number: 294-295
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 4, Chapter 15 Quotes

Even as I spoke these words, I could hear what a false picture they painted, and also how they were painfully true. […]

Again he shook his head. “I treated you as family.”

How strange, I thought, looking upon his sad, kind face, that this man had once been my entire world, and yet we could come to no final understanding of one another. He was a man who’d done far more than most to end the suffering of a people whose toil was the very source of his power; he had risked his own good comfort, the love of his family, his name. He had saved my very flesh, taken me away from certain death. His harm, I thought, was in not understanding that he still had the ability to cause it.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde (speaker)
Page Number: 374
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 4, Chapter 17 Quotes

I looked instead to my hands, thinking of the years spent running, after Philip’s death. And I thought of what it was I had been running from, my own certain death at the hands of Erasmus. I thought of my existence before Titch’s arrival, the brutal hours in the field under the crushing sun, the screams, the casual finality edging every slave’s life, as though each day could very easily be the last. And that, it seemed to me clearly, was the more obvious anguish—that life had never belonged to any of us, even when we’d sought to reclaim it by ending it. We had been estranged from the potential of our own bodies, from the revelation of everything our bodies and minds could accomplish.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Erasmus Wilde, Philip
Page Number: 382
Explanation and Analysis:

How astonishing to have discovered Titch here, among these meagre possessions, his only companion the boy. His guilt was nothing to do with me—all these years I had lain easy on his conscience. But what did it matter anymore. He had suffered other sorrows. And these wounds had arrested him in boyhood, in a single draining urge to re-create our years at Faith, despite their brutality. Someone else might have looked upon his life here and seen only how different it was from all that had come before. I saw only what remained the same: the scattered furniture, as if no real home could ever be made here; the mess of instruments that would only measure and never draw a single conclusion; the friendship with a boy who, in days, months, years, would find himself abandoned in a place so far from where he had begun that he’d hardly recognize himself, would struggle to build a second life. I imagined the boy nameless and afraid, clawing his way through a world of ice.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Tanna Goff
Related Symbols: The Cloud-cutter
Page Number: 383
Explanation and Analysis:

I stepped out onto the threshold, the sand stinging me, blinding my eyes. Behind me I thought I heard Tanna call my name, but I did not turn, could not take my gaze from the orange blur of the horizon. I gripped my arms about myself, went a few steps forward. The wind across my forehead was like a living thing.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Tanna Goff
Page Number: 384
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire Washington Black LitChart as a printable PDF.
Washington Black PDF

Christopher “Titch” Wilde Quotes in Washington Black

The Washington Black quotes below are all either spoken by Christopher “Titch” Wilde or refer to Christopher “Titch” Wilde. 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:
Freedom vs. Captivity Theme Icon
).
Part 1, Chapter 2 Quotes

I could feel the day’s exhaustion descending on me. “What it like, Kit? Free?”

I felt her shift in the dirt, and then she was gathering me in close, her hot breath at my ear. “Oh, child, it like nothing in this world. When you free, you can do anything.”

“You go wherever it is you wanting?”

“You go wherever it is you wanting. You wake up any time you wanting. When you free,” she whispered, “someone ask you a question, you ain’t got to answer. You ain’t got to finish no job you don’t want to finish. You just leave it.”

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Big Kit (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Philip
Page Number: 9
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 7 Quotes

And as I began to draw what I saw with a clean accuracy, I realized I was troubled by the enormous beauty of that place, of the jewel-like fields below us, littered as I knew them to be with broken teeth. The hot wind snapped at my papers, and in a kind of ghostly sound beneath this I thought I heard the cry of a baby. For the few women who gave birth here were turned immediately back into the fields, and they would set their tender-skinned newborns down in the furrows to wail against the hot sun. I craned out at the fields; I could see nothing. Far out at sea, a great flock of seagulls rose and turned, the late afternoon light flaring on the undersides of their wings.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde
Page Number: 54
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 9 Quotes

Three cracked ribs. Her kick had been that harsh, that swift. I refused to tell the overseers who had done it, and in this way Kit was spared. But the pain was immense and suffocating, and I was several nights in the hothouse before returning again to our huts.

She avoided my eye as I was led in, my chest still in bandages.

That evening, as I drifted into sleep, there came a touch at my face. I heard soft weeping, and realized with alarm it was Big Kit. She was running a cold palm across my forehead, whispering.

“Oh my son,” I heard her say, over and over again. “My son.”

I understood then that she had not meant to strike me so hard, and that my days away had pained her greatly. I closed my eyes, feeling the coolness of her skin on my brow.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Big Kit
Page Number: 81
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 10 Quotes

She was much changed, it was true, maimed terribly, grown thinner, the hair at her temples silver as flies' wings. Aged, now, as though decades had separated us. But I was the more changed; that was the uglier truth.

I gripped anxiously at my hands, staring at Kit's tall figure. How solicitous she was with the boy. I saw now how she kept a careful eye on his posture, his manners. I knew instinctively what this meant, the great angry love she held that boy inside, like a fist. I tried to imagine what he might be like. He could not have been older than six or seven years, I thought. I wondered at the sudden pain coming up in me.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Big Kit, Erasmus Wilde, Philip
Page Number: 90
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 11 Quotes

“Perhaps it is easier for you,” he said again. “Everything is taken care of for you. You needn’t worry about what the coming days will hold, as every day is the same. Your only expectations are the expectations your master lays out for you. It is a simple-enough life, what.”

It was as though he had spoken the words to determine their truth. He shook his head irritably.

I stilled my face. I said nothing.

He exhaled harshly, dragging the gun up his thighs. I looked at his hands, the pallor of them on the dark metal.

“I am sorry.” His voice was so soft I barely heard him. He gestured with his chin. “Your face.”

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Philip (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde
Page Number: 108-109
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 12 Quotes

What did I feel? What would anyone feel, in such a place? My chest ached with anguish and wonder, an astonishment that went on and on, and I could not catch my breath. The Cloud-cutter spun, turned gradually faster, rising ever higher. I began to cry—deep, silent, racking sobs, my face turned away from Titch, staring out onto the boundlessness of the world. The air grew colder, crept in webs across my skin. All was shadow, red light, storm-fire and frenzy. And up we went into the eye of it, untouched, miraculous.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Erasmus Wilde
Related Symbols: The Cloud-cutter
Page Number: 119
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 2 Quotes

Titch explained we would be entering Chesapeake Bay, and would therefore soon be leaving the ship. We would also, however, find ourselves subject to the laws of American freedom. “Freedom, Wash, is a word with different meanings to different people,” he said, as though I did not know the truth of this better than he.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde (speaker)
Page Number: 141
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 3 Quotes

It had happened so gradually, but these months with Titch had schooled me to believe I could leave all misery behind, I could cast off all violence, outrun a vicious death. I had even begun thinking I’d been born for a higher purpose, to draw the earth’s bounty, and to invent; I had imagined my existence a true and rightful part of the natural order. How wrong-headed it had all been. I was a black boy, only—I had no future before me, and little grace or mercy behind me. I was nothing, I would die nothing, hunted hastily down and slaughtered.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Erasmus Wilde, John Willard
Page Number: 151
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 4 Quotes

I suppose I believed there to be some bravery in this choice. I suppose it struck my boyhood self as an act of fidelity, gratitude, a return of the kindness I had been shown and never grown used to. Perhaps I felt Titch to be the only sort of family I had left. Perhaps, perhaps; even now I cannot speak with any certainty. I know only that in that moment I was terrified to my very core, and that the idea of embarking on a perilous journey without Titch filled me with a panic so savage it felt as if I were being asked to perform some brutal act upon myself to sever my own throat.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Edgar Farrow
Page Number: 167
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 5 Quotes

The air clenched to ice, stinging our cheeks. It began to pinch. Sailing, we glimpsed in the passing black waters eerie, exquisite cathedrals of ice. I had not ever seen ice before, not in its immensities: I stared into the refracted light like a creature entranced. How beautiful it was, how sad, how sacred! I attempted to express the awe of it in my drawings. For it felt very much as though we were leaving the world of the living and entering a world of spirits and the dead. I felt free, invincible, beyond Mister Willard’s reach.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, John Willard
Page Number: 174
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2, Chapter 7 Quotes

But my true study remained, I understand now, the curious person of Titch. He was, I feared, becoming increasingly lost within himself. I suppose there must have been a deep love between him and his father, a love I could get no sense for because of its reticence. But as with most loves, it was shadowy, and painful, and confusing, and Titch seemed to me overly eager and too often hurt.

I could see a sadness coming over him, a kind of slow despair. I understood he was anguished over his father—over his failure to ever impress the man, over how to explain that Philip had killed himself and that we were now in hiding.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Erasmus Wilde, Philip, Mr. James Wilde (Titch’s Father)
Page Number: 193-194
Explanation and Analysis:

A haze of pale light was furred around Kit's head, like a halo, and I could not make out her face. She reached forward and held my hand, and her touch was terribly cold. I gave her a pair of thick fur-lined mittens. Then somehow we were standing in the snow, the world so white around us. Kit’s face looked wondrous to me, dark, sombre, beautiful. I studied it.

“You be my eyes, Wash,” she said to me.

And reaching up and with her fingers, she forcibly pressed her own eyes in. A wide blue light shone out from the sockets.

I felt—and this is the peculiar truth—a sense of peace and well-being come over me. I understood a great gift of trust was being extended to me.

When I awoke in the darkness, I was crying.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Big Kit (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde
Page Number: 194
Explanation and Analysis:

“You are like a ghost,” Titch hollered to me. “Go back.”

The roar of the wind and snow was increasing. It would be sometime past mid-afternoon by now, but the light had not dimmed, only shifted. We stood in that obliterating whiteness, as though the world had vanished.

“You will not leave me, Wash,” he shouted. “Even when I am gone. That is what breaks my heart.”

Related Characters: Christopher “Titch” Wilde (speaker), George Washington “Wash” Black
Page Number: 198
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 3, Chapter 2 Quotes

But I cooked always behind a curtain, unseen, my scarred face being, the owner feared, repugnant. The schedule was demanding, and after some months of this I gave up drawing altogether, finding no extra hours in my day. Though I did not know it then, I had begun the months of my long desolation. I became a boy without identity, a walking shadow, and with each new month I fell deeper into strangeness. For there could be no belonging for a creature such as myself, anywhere: a disfigured black boy with a scientific turn of mind and a talent on canvas, running, always running, from the dimmest of shadows.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, John Willard
Page Number: 211
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 3, Chapter 6 Quotes

“It was I who had failed in my understanding, you see. Life holds a sanctity for them we can scarcely begin to imagine; it therefore struck them as absurd that someone would choose to end it. A great ludicrous act. In any case, it was then I recognized that my own values—the tenets I hold dear as an Englishman—they are not the only, nor the best, values in existence. I understood there were many ways of being in the world, that to privilege one rigid set of beliefs over another was to lose something. Everything is bizarre, and everything has value. Or if not value, at least merits investigation.”

I thought it wonderful for a man of science to speak so. Staring at his bright chewing face, I realized how profoundly I liked him.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Mr. Goff (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Tanna Goff
Page Number: 239
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 3, Chapter 7 Quotes

The octopus arranged itself in a smatter of algae, its body hanging blackly before me. When I came forward to touch it, it sent out a surge of dark ink. We paused, watching each other, the grey rag of ink hanging between us. Then it shot off through the water, stopping short to radiate like a cloth set afire, its arms unfurling and vibrating. There was something playful in the pause, as if it expected me to ink it back. I held my hands out towards it, gently; the creature hovered in the dark waters, almost totally still. Then, shyly, it began to pulse towards me, stopping just inches away, its small, gelatinous eyes taking me in. Then it swam directly into my hands.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Tanna Goff, Mr. Goff
Related Symbols: The Octopus
Page Number: 251
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 4, Chapter 11 Quotes

How could he have treated me so, he who congratulated himself on his belief that I was his equal? I had never been his equal. To him, perhaps, any deep acceptance of equality was impossible. He saw only those who were there to be saved, and those who did the saving.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Tanna Goff, Mr. Goff
Page Number: 294-295
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 4, Chapter 15 Quotes

Even as I spoke these words, I could hear what a false picture they painted, and also how they were painfully true. […]

Again he shook his head. “I treated you as family.”

How strange, I thought, looking upon his sad, kind face, that this man had once been my entire world, and yet we could come to no final understanding of one another. He was a man who’d done far more than most to end the suffering of a people whose toil was the very source of his power; he had risked his own good comfort, the love of his family, his name. He had saved my very flesh, taken me away from certain death. His harm, I thought, was in not understanding that he still had the ability to cause it.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde (speaker)
Page Number: 374
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 4, Chapter 17 Quotes

I looked instead to my hands, thinking of the years spent running, after Philip’s death. And I thought of what it was I had been running from, my own certain death at the hands of Erasmus. I thought of my existence before Titch’s arrival, the brutal hours in the field under the crushing sun, the screams, the casual finality edging every slave’s life, as though each day could very easily be the last. And that, it seemed to me clearly, was the more obvious anguish—that life had never belonged to any of us, even when we’d sought to reclaim it by ending it. We had been estranged from the potential of our own bodies, from the revelation of everything our bodies and minds could accomplish.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Erasmus Wilde, Philip
Page Number: 382
Explanation and Analysis:

How astonishing to have discovered Titch here, among these meagre possessions, his only companion the boy. His guilt was nothing to do with me—all these years I had lain easy on his conscience. But what did it matter anymore. He had suffered other sorrows. And these wounds had arrested him in boyhood, in a single draining urge to re-create our years at Faith, despite their brutality. Someone else might have looked upon his life here and seen only how different it was from all that had come before. I saw only what remained the same: the scattered furniture, as if no real home could ever be made here; the mess of instruments that would only measure and never draw a single conclusion; the friendship with a boy who, in days, months, years, would find himself abandoned in a place so far from where he had begun that he’d hardly recognize himself, would struggle to build a second life. I imagined the boy nameless and afraid, clawing his way through a world of ice.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Tanna Goff
Related Symbols: The Cloud-cutter
Page Number: 383
Explanation and Analysis:

I stepped out onto the threshold, the sand stinging me, blinding my eyes. Behind me I thought I heard Tanna call my name, but I did not turn, could not take my gaze from the orange blur of the horizon. I gripped my arms about myself, went a few steps forward. The wind across my forehead was like a living thing.

Related Characters: George Washington “Wash” Black (speaker), Christopher “Titch” Wilde, Tanna Goff
Page Number: 384
Explanation and Analysis: