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Friday, March 8, 2019

Justice Served?

In Sherman Alexies poem, Capital penalisation, a part that was very interesting, yet confusing was when the narrator was be sympathetic. The narrator was very considerate of the prisoners. In the poem, Alexie makes the narrator be a cook at a jail that had the death row. Perhaps Alexie make the narrator be a cook instead of someone else comparable a guard or a warden because the cook would not incorporate the law the cook respectable works for the jail. Readers of the poem, Capital Punishment, talent at irst be puzzled by the sympathy of the cook towards the minorities that vex the death sentence, but a close reading of the poem helps us see that the cook is against capital punishment.Throughout the poem the narrator shows us the disputable commentary about how the cook is for capital punishment. When the cook mentions, Those Indians are of all time gambling, it makes it seem like it is an everyday thing. (14). Then the cook states, What did they ask? All of the stories shou ld have been simple. (9697). he/she is implying that it is not important that a soul just died.It is a normal thing for people to died, so we should not care. A reader of this poem might assume that cook is just doing his job, but in reality, he/she does care for what they are serving to the Indian man. In the poem there are sections where the cook says, (I am not a witness) (5,22,41,64,79) though it is clear the cook is because he/she is the one corpulent the poem. The narrator periodically repeats that staza five times. The first time it is mention is subsequently the cook mentions that he/she is to prepare the last meal for the a prisoner that is g

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