In "The Grape of Anger", Grandpa Jord was a very straightforward person, he did not see what he said, just said it. He is a very active old man, and everyone wants to leave their family farm and start over. When it comes to repaying or repaying debt, the Joaad family is in good realm and now they are delayed paying them to be forced to leave their family farm. Since Grandpa Jord had experienced violence several times in the past, they did not want to exacerbate his situation, but since they began to lead after they started leaving land they finally grandpa I let Jord do it.
"Steinbeck's speech was discovered in the novel's main character Tom Jodd." (McCarthy) Tom Jodh is the main character of the novel. Jord is the first time he returns home and returns to Oklahoma for a fight. To find some of the land overcome by local farms, killing the middle man was regained by the bank. Tom and his family began hiking through California at Route 66. "Tom code, Steinbeck's smoldering witness image, the passive observer is the number, what it means, what that means, or in recent years a violent activist who was basically captured And John Steinbeck (and others) who changed to conscience of communism deliberately invalidated his political meaning "(Simon and Deverell 181). Through Tom Jod, Steinbeck brings anger and injustice to the suffering of immigrants. (McCarthy)
Mully is a crazy old man who revealed the fate of the Joad family to Tom Jodie. After losing his hometown and farmland, Mully 's wife and children left California away from Oklahoma, but Mully decided to stay; he escaped the police (to escape him for arbitrary arrest You may arrest) I lived outside of the community. When Grampa Joad took a stroke, Sairy and her family helped Joads; then, as the two families were able to help each other on the road, Wilson decided to continue with California's Joads It was. Sairy could be arrested for an unauthorized intrusion as two families lived and were sick at the first camp where they were with other family members.
Grampa Joad: Tom's grandfather expressed a strong desire to stay in Oklahoma. His full name is William James Joad. Granpa gave his family a "soothin 'syrup" and let him go, but he died on the first night of the road. Casy said he attributed his death to a stroke, but he said that Grampa lives in "in" so he can not leave it. Many scholars noticed various uses of Christian images in Steinbeck's "The Grapes of Wrath". . The biggest impact is Tom Jodie and Jim Casey interpreted as Christian characters at regular intervals in the novel. Jim · Cassie represents Jesus Christ in his early ministry until his death, which is interpreted as representing the death of Christ. From that time, Tom took over when the appearance of Christ rose from the death and came to the position of Cassie.