Table of Contents
- 1 What was the gift that the wife wants to receive from Wang?
- 2 How many slaves did Wang Lung purchase?
- 3 Does Wang Lung buy the house of Hwang?
- 4 Why does Wang Lang’s father specifically request an unattractive girl for his son to marry?
- 5 Who is Lotus in the good earth?
- 6 How does Wang Lung become rich?
- 7 What does Wang Lung manage to steal from the houses of the rich in the city?
- 8 Why is the good earth banned?
- 9 How did Wang Lung receive O-Lan as his?
- 10 Who is Wang Lung in the Good Earth?
What was the gift that the wife wants to receive from Wang?
Wang Lung purchases a pound of red sugar for his wife and new son.
How many slaves did Wang Lung purchase?
As summer approaches, people return from the south and come to borrow money from Wang Lung to reestablish their farms. He also buys land from them. Others sell their daughters instead, and he buys five slaves to wait on the family.
Why did Wang Lung give money to his uncle?
Why did Wang Lung give money to his uncle? His uncle threatened to tell the town that he did not respect his elders. O-lan was pregnant and Wang Lung couldn’t support another child so he would have to kill it.
Does Wang Lung buy the house of Hwang?
Wang Lung’s uncle and his uncle’s wife eagerly accept the opium Wang Lung buys for them. Wang Lung’s oldest son comes up with the suggestion that Wang Lung rent the old great house of the Hwang family and allow the family of Wang Lung’s uncle to stay in the present house.
Why does Wang Lang’s father specifically request an unattractive girl for his son to marry?
Wang Lung’s father insists that the woman be unattractive. He worries that a pretty girl would have attracted the young lords of the house and would therefore have lost her virginity.
What was over the wall in the good earth?
What was “over the wall”? It is a wealthy household.
Who is Lotus in the good earth?
Cast
Paul Muni as Wang | Tilly Losch as Lotus |
---|---|
Luise Rainer as O-Lan | Charley Grapewin as Old Father |
Walter Connolly as Uncle | Jessie Ralph as Cuckoo |
How does Wang Lung become rich?
Wang Lung’s accumulation of wealth begins when he and Olan travel to the city to escape the famine sweeping across the land. In the city, both Wang Lung and Olan get caught up in a mob that loots and pillages a rich man’s house.
Why did Wang Lung leave O-lan alone?
Why did Wang Lung leave O-lan alone? He left her alone because he was ashamed to be around her. Wang lung was cured by his fields.
What does Wang Lung manage to steal from the houses of the rich in the city?
Wang Lung participates in the looting and comes away with a stash of gold coins. He is thrilled, because the gold will provide him with the means to return home.
Why is the good earth banned?
The Good Earth was banned by Mao Zedong for presenting an “unromantic” agrarian viewpoint, which is interesting considering his failed land policies led to one of the worst famines of all time.
How did Wang Lung prepare for his wedding?
When Wang Lung takes a wife, he treats the occasion with great seriousness and respect. Before he goes to the great House of Hwang to meet O-lan and bring her home, he cares for his old father, prepares his own humble home for the occasion, puts on his best clothing, and walks into town where he shops for food for their wedding dinner.
How did Wang Lung receive O-Lan as his?
After leaving the House of Hwang, he visits a temple with O-lan to observe the religious marriage custom before leaving the city. Once home, Wang Lung, his father, and his guests eat the wedding supper that has been prepared by O-lan in her new home.
Who is Wang Lung in the Good Earth?
Additionally, he cares deeply about what other people think of him, and he strives to act in whatever way is most fitting to his station. The The Good Earth quotes below are all either spoken by Wang Lung or refer to Wang Lung.
What did Wang Lung do with the silver?
Wang Lung sat smoking, thinking of the silver as it had lain upon the table. It had come out of the earth, this silver, out of his earth that he ploughed and turned and spent himself upon. He took his life from this earth; drop by drop by his sweat he wrung food from it and from the food, silver.