How Does Holden Act Again in This Chapter 20
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The Catcher in the Rye Chapter xx
Chapter twenty
- Holden sits effectually and drinks and waits for the 2 French women to come out and sing. Instead, this new woman named Valencia comes out.
- Holden, getting "drunkard as hell," gives her the centre, which she ignores; later on she'south gone he asks the bartender to give her a message, which—what?
- By 1am, Holden is really drunk. So he starts pretending (again) that he'south got a bullet in his guts and is doing an amazing of chore concealing that fact from the residuum of the world.
- Blind boozer, he ends up in a telephone booth and gives Sally Hayes a call.
- Her grandma picks up. Oops.
- Somehow or another, Sally does end up the phone. Holden tells her he'll come over and trim her Christmas tree, rambles on almost how the mob got him, and hangs upward. Or rather, gets hung upward on.
- Ugh.
- Holden ends up in the men's room. He dunks his head and so simply sits shivering by the window.
- The piano thespian comes into the bath. Holden tries to become him to deliver a message to her, but once once again gets a "What are you, twelve?" sort of response.
- He's ane of those annoying, handsome guys like Stradlater, who combs his hair a bunch in the mirror and then just leaves you lot alone in the bathroom.
- Crying and depressed, Holden heads for the hat-cheque room to get his coat and Little Shirley Beans tape. He chats with the chapeau-bank check girl and tries to make a date with her even though she's old enough to exist his mother.
- He shows her his red hunting hat, and she makes him clothing it exterior (since he'south dripping common cold h2o and it's December).
- This is going downhill rapidly, y'all guys.
- Back outside, he decides to go check out the lagoon and encounter if the ducks are at that place.
- And and then—he drops the Lilliputian Shirley Beans tape. It breaks into "virtually fifty pieces." He picks them up and puts them dorsum into his pocket, almost crying.
- If Catcher in the Rye were an AA group, this would be Holden's stone-bottom.
- In the pitch black night of the late night/early on morning, Holden finds his mode through the park to the lagoon. No ducks.
- And then he sits downward on a demote and shivers. Possibly he'll get pneumonia and die, he thinks. (He's notwithstanding incredibly boozer, past the way.)
- Holden imagines his funeral and how all his aunts would come, similar they did for Allie's funeral.
- He wasn't allowed to go, since he was still in the infirmary for his manus, but D.B. told him ane aunt kept saying how peaceful Allie looked.
- Mostly, he'd feel sorry for his mother, who isn't even over Allie's death withal.
- If he does die, he hopes they just chuck him in a river. Who wants flowers on their grave when they're dead?
- Holden doesn't like visiting Allie's grave; he doesn't think his brother should be in that location surrounded by all those dead guys.
- The worst, he says, was when he was visiting the grave and it started to rain. They could all run for their cars or umbrellas, but Allie couldn't.
- To get his heed off the subject, Holden counts his money. It's a little more than than three bucks. He skips the change beyond the water where it isn't frozen. (Hey, maybe you should exist saving that money, hm?)
- Well, if he did get pneumonia and dice, Phoebe would miss him a lot. So he had better go visit her. Right now.
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Source: https://www.shmoop.com/study-guides/literature/catcher-in-the-rye/summary/chapter-20
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