The Lame of O'Connor first enters "Lame will first" to focus on the relationship between Sheppard and his son Norton. Meanwhile, an improved boy, Johnson. Shepard's wife passed away and Norton misses her mother. Shepherd simply could not understand Norton and chose to do his utmost to help Johnson. Shepard certainly does not believe in Satan, trying to rationalize the whole situation. He took Johnson home, and Johnson interfered with Norton 's mother' s belongings, which of course had a major impact on Norton.
One of the problems dealt with by Flannery O'Connor in 1962 is her story "The Lame Shall Go First First". In the south, this is an atheistic middle class w who tried to transform Ruffy 14-year-old fundamentalist Rufus w. It is the story of Sheppard. In one year or so, their ideological opposition influences each other and their dialectic will only affect their father's 10-year old biological son. Never have my child recovered emotionally and intellectually from the death of my mother. Once, my father heard that two boys were talking about the afterlife by chance. According to Rufus' suggestion, the mother could actually be in hell, the father intercepted it.
Lame Shall Enter First starts with a simple breakfast scene. The heart of the first few pages was his judgment of his young son Norton. "His ideas about children are all his kindness and selflessness, which seems unlikely to be likely" (O'Connor 143). Shepherd tried to condemn Norton 's obvious self - indulgence, Shepard said that the plight of Ruffus who tried to help reform last year was recently released and Shepard saw him eating from the garbage.
"Lame Shall First First" is a story showing that the way to hell is the motto that was raised with good intentions. The hero 's Shepard is a person who participates in local governments and advises young people at a nearby detention facility. He really wanted to regain the young people he met, especially the boy with the problem named Rufus Johnson. Shepherd believes that this work is his special mission and confident in his own success. His wife died a year ago and his only son, Norton, was still angry. But Shepard refused to admit this and continued to criticize Norton about being foolish, selfish and overly dramatic in his sorrow. Rufus was released and lived with them and soon discovered that he was a challenge for everyone Sheppard believed. Shepherd persuaded Rufus to be impressed by his charity and was too defensive to show it, but the reader saw Rufus insulted by the insulting insults of Charity and Shepard.
"Jesus abandons all imbalances": Religious crisis and grace agent in short novel by Flannario Connor