In life you will always get knocked down, but if you keep going, success is bound to happen. In “The Sacred Acre” by Mark Tabb, Parkersburg, Iowa was struck by a tornado in 2008. The tornado destroyed the small town as well as the prized football field. Ed Thomas, the head football coach, and his family brought the community together to lift spirits and rebuild the football field. The Thomas family gave the community perseverance, but right when things were looking better they were faced with the most unbelievable event that would affect everyone's lives forever. In “The Sacred Acre”, Tabb uses dialogue to show perseverance is the key to success. Tabb incorporates dialogue throughout, “The Sacred Acre'' to show perseverance. Chris, Ed's former player, comes to talk to Ed about what they are going to do and how he is feeling. Chris helps lift Ed up to build the football field on time to play, “Coach, I meant what I said. We can rebuild this town… you said adversity shapes character… we will play our first home game right here on our field.” (51-52) This dialogue shows how Ed did not realize what to do, but got talked to and decided to preserve and play their first home game …show more content…
Ed decides to get the team together to let them recognize that they will be playing on time, but it will be a lot of work. Even though some of his players had lost their homes, they still managed to show up. “I wanted to tell you myself that we will be playing our first home game… when we work together, we will be successful.” (76-77) This scene shows how Ed had the courage to get his players together and tell them that they will rebuild the field in time to play. The player also had perseverance to show up even though they had lost their
Unbroken, written by Laura Hillenbrand, is a nonfiction novel that recounts the life of Louis Zamperini, who was a former Olympic athlete and World War II veteran, who survived being out at sea for 47 days and imprisoned in multiple Japanese war camps. Through his story of immense torture on his body and mind, Louis’ experience is an inspiring story of resilience, perseverance, and survival against tremendous odds. The author's main claim in Unbroken is that the human spirit can overcome the most unimaginable circumstances, and that a strong will to persevere and survive, can triumph over many hardships. Throughout the book, the author provides several examples of perseverance and will to survive.
Tebow also writes about his successes on and off the field, winning two National Championships with the Florida Gators, winning a Heisman Trophy in 2007, being a first round NFL draft pick, beating the Steelers in the 2011 playoffs with an overtime win, as well as becoming a missionary, making recurring trips to his birthplace. Tim Tebow’s book had many great insights about his life, but there are three events that are above the rest. In chapter four, Tim talks about his life on their Jacksonville farm, his little league baseball career, and an insight to his upbringing. “Uncle Dick was our next door neighbor and an important part of our lives. Known to the rest of the world as Richard Fowler, I really thought he was my uncle”(pg 7.).
They had won. James did it, he had done what he’d promised, to win it for Wesley, not for himself, not for his team, but for Wesley. He was crying tears of triumph, James had gone through so much, outlasting an injury, having his best friend die, no one would step in the way of James, no one. James didn’t party after the game, he didn’t do anything except go to the cemetery, where his friend was buried. He set the number 17 jersey on the gravestone, and wrote on the back right under the number 17 “We did it Wesley, we won the state title again, I wish you could’ve been here to share the moment with us.
The overall message of this book is that hard work leads to success and that is a very important life lesson. These creators worked through many obstacles, persevered and succeeded in their goal. There were many emotions during the end of the game for the fans and owners. “A man was crying tears of joy” (Eisenberg 326), and that man was one of the NFL creators, Bert Bell. He showed real emotion that day because this meant a lot to him and he was so happy with the outcome.
Starkey flatters the game, bringing together the analysis of the beginning and seeing events through to the end of the greatly idolized 1982 football game. He portrays, and praises, the players very vividly. In a realistic and literate way, he draws you in and makes you feel like you 're sitting in the outbox watching the game play out
The hillside popped out of nowhere and there was no time to change their path. The tragic accident that happened killed lots of people. The whole football team died on the plane crash when they hit the hillside. Marshall University plane crash was a tragedy that changed the way the university recruited player. The whole town mourn their loss and worked together to move on.
They sat together in his room and talked to each other about what Winchell needed to do (Friday Night Lights). It was one of the most influential scenes in the whole movie. It was the turning point and after that, the team started to gel and play well together. The film did a great job of showing both the good and bad, effective and ineffective ways the team set goals and what they did to achieve those goals. That is one of the main reasons why people love Friday Night Lights.
Carter said to me on the way back into the dugout, “I’m as nervous as a fireman on his first call.” I said, “Don’t be. We are going to win, then advance, and the win state.” The game finally started. We were the home team, so we started in the field first.
In the story, “Civil Peace”, Jonathan possesses a positive outlook on an arguably bleak life. He always had positive thinking going on, trying to make a new life after the war-torn world that he is living in. There were many scares and horror with the Civil War going on at this time period but that did not stop him from being constructive and still have a hopeful approach to life. Jonathan considered himself to be very lucky. For everything he does, he sees opportunity and fortune, he was never the one to complain.
When darkness consumes you and the pain becomes unbearable, you look to the light, to perseverance to guide you through the nightmare you face. In Ruta Sepetys’ Salt to the Sea, one of the protagonists, Emilia, faces a myriad of emotional and physical hardships throughout the novel. With calamitous tragedies and bone-chilling circumstances, what does Emilia do? Bruised and battered, she perseveres through her hardships, showing how much a person can endure when they persist. Sepetys takes the consequences of Emilia’s pain and emotional damage to new heights with her war-themed novel; as a result of this, perseverance is articulated amongst many other traits that this character possesses, showing how imperative of a quality it is.
By spending his entire career with the New York Yankees, growing and playing in the same stadium for seventeen years, it makes it more impactful that he is leaving in the same place he started. By delivering the address at the home plate of his team’s stadium, he is more effectively evoking emotion into the crowd, his teammates, and residents of the stadium. The home plate has more meaning to it and more history behind it than a table at a press conference would, conveying how much Gehrig’s baseball career means to him. The setting of Yankee Stadium represents how he will never truly leave the stadium as he leaves his legacy there for decades to come. Gehrig also delivers the speech on July 4th, which tends to be an upbeat holiday celebrating freedom.
The speaker discloses that his children have been “gathered like a small cloud [and have become] . . . steam weeping on the window” (ll. 32-35). The speaker uses this final comparison of his children to weeping clouds to convince his grandpa that his life is not irredeemable and his presence is still needed in this world. In conclusion, through Gary Soto’s usage of powerful imagery, precise descriptions, and an absence of rhythm, he evokes a sense of sympathy for the community where he grew up while telling a beautiful story.
"The Luck of Roaring Camp" is a poignant short story written by Bret Harte, nineteenth-century master of the genre. In this realism tale set during the Californian gold rush era, the author successfully depicts how humanity can be concealed within a squalid and crude world. In it, a new-born child has a civilizing influence on men in more than one way: the tragedy of his birth brings the men together; he has the power to assemble them as a society, a culture. Secondly, the men become more polite, cordial towards one another. Thirdly, they have rites like all societies, giving a meaning to all lives in the camp.
The short story entitled “The Outcasts of Poker Flat” written by Bret Harte is a story that doesn’t have a very happy ending, but can give some elements of real life to interested readers. The story’s basic plot is that a group of individuals, Mother Shipton, Duchess, and Uncle Billy, are driven from their original group or area. They stumble upon the main character, Mr. Oakhurst, and Piney and Tom “The Innocent” Simson and attempt to travel to the town of Poker Flat, just as the nascent storm originates. Unfortunately, they become snowed-in in the mountain passes of the Sierras and it appears that all of them die except for the fatuous and drunk Uncle Billy and Tom Simson, who may have survived. The reading of this story can be mentally moving
They were able to relate to the one inch at a time proposition of pulling together to come out of the disarray the team was in. They were touched by his honesty and openness in the beginning of his speech, which was an attention getter, then intrigued by the challenge to sacrifice for the team and fight for the inches need to win and survive. The coach ended the speech with a summation of the team fighting for that inch together and then concluded with the question, “…now, what are you gonna do”. The inspired team then went on, played with their heart, and won the football game.