Monday, October 21, 2019

find the freedom essays

find the freedom essays But let us say he was not. What justice would there be to take this life? Justice, gentlemen? Why I would just as soon put a hog in the electric chair as this*. All eyes were pointed to a poor black innocent boy who was accused killing three people. In the other side of the court, an old black woman sits and watches her grand son sadly. She might be the only person knows that her grand son cannot be a murder. But what makes she worry and upset is not losing her son; it is the thought of Jefferson being labeled a hog. She wants Jefferson to know that he is a man not a hog because it is the only way that he can find his freedom even in the moment of his death. I want a man go to death, not a hog. Gentlemen of the jury, look at this- this- this boy. I almost said man, but I cant say man. Oh, sure, he has reached the age of twenty-one, when we civilized man, consider the male species has reached manhood, but would you call this this this a man? No, not I. I would call it a boy and a fool. Jefferson, a poor southern plantation boy who had no money, no real future; He was born on plantation and he would die without doing anything but working on the plantation. While he was on his way to the river for fishing, his friends picked him up and stopped by liquor store. Through a series of events three men were killed one of them was the white storeowner Mr. Grope. In the small community of Cajun, Louisiana no tolerance was given to the murder of a white man. Jefferson was sentenced to electrocution. But at the court, Jeffersons lawyer compared him to a hog, and this changed the whole story. You are a teacher? Miss Emma is saying to Grant Wiggins, a teacher in the plantation. Tante Lou, Grants aunt, is standing at the kitchen while Miss Emma is saying repeatedly to her he dont have to do it. Aunt Lou says to Grant, You go to that jail, and let him kno...

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