I’m The King of the Castle’ sample answer

How does the author use the section in Hang Wood to deepen the tension in the relationship between the two boys, Kingshaw and Hooper?

Firstly the author creates the right atmosphere to build upon the tension in the boy’s relationship. She uses a dramatic contrast between two different atmospheres in order to emphasis the tension. Initially Hang Wood is portrayed as a nice, safe haven for Kingshaw far from Hooper and Warings. Soothing ‘s’ sounds are used in alliteration to make the wood seem a pleasant place to be. For example the opening sentences of chapter six make use of the technique of sibilance:

“Kingshaw held his breath. There was a continual soughing movement inside the wood and the leaves rustled together like silk…”

There is also a sense of security created by the idea we are given of being completely hidden and the relaxed image of Kingshaw that comes across when he is free of Hooper. Things like the birds singing, the rabbit and the ‘shaft of sunlight’ help with this image.

    The dramatic contrast and beginning of the build-up of tension comes with the line:

    “And there was Hooper.”

At this point the sentences become shorter, jerkier and the images created become suddenly a lot more negative, for example the sentences:

“He was not much afraid, not angry even. His luck had not held, had probably never been in.”

are a perfect display of short and jerky sentences mingled with Kingshaw’s change of mood, from a brief optimistic interlude back to his standard pessimistic self.

    There is also the continual bickering that ensues between the boys, childish yet vicious and also quite threatening in some cases. The way they almost bounce off each other, each trying to outdo the other:

    “What?”

    “I don’t know.”

    “Go and look.”

    Silence.

    “You’re scared.”

    “So are you then.”

    “Don’t be stupid.”

Each boy rises to the taunt of the other by trying to be the stronger, braver. Although as is becoming both inevitable and predictable from what we have read so far, Kingshaw is generally the first to back down or fail to fight back.

    Another element which adds to the tension is the constant switching back and forth of the leadership between the two boys. Upon his arrival, another factor we have become accustomed to, Hooper takes the role of leader and Kingshaw follows without question. However, Kingshaw is furious with himself for accepting this. But the leadership does take turns with Hooper generally taking charge at times of ‘fun’ such as the deer chase and the pool and Kingshaw taking control in serious events or when problems arise such as the storm. The difference between the two in this is that when Hooper takes control he does so by choice and force and when Kingshaw has control it is generally because Hooper can’t or won’t and demands that Kingshaw look after him.

    Each boy reacts differently to the various problems which arise, such as the deer chase which Hooper immediately takes seriously as a ‘hunt’ whereas Kingshaw sees it as a good chance to learn and observe. Hooper shows the violent aspects of his personality, his desire to track the deer and kill it, whereas Kingshaw shows a sensitivity and willingness to learn about the deer and how it lives (and not for any nasty purpose either!)

    Also in the storm, Hooper’s reaction is a shock after the impression we are given of him originally because for the first time we see that he is truly human. Because he reacts in such a way that we would not expect it to be just the storm that affected him. Things such as this show the sudden change in Hooper:

    ” ‘Oh God, Oh God.’ ”

“Hooper was completely beside himself, wrapped up in his fear, oblivious of everything except the storm…”

Kingshaw’s reaction however is the complete opposite and shows a new, suddenly more mature character who takes the lead and helps Hooper through his problems. He shows that he is infinitely more practical than Hooper, for example:

“Kingshaw draped his anorak carefully over the top of the bushes, spreading it as much as possible.”

A similar thing happens when the two boys discover that they are lost and possibly have strayed into Barnard’s Forest. Hooper becomes suddenly terrified again and starts to panic, to the point that he makes himself ill. Kingshaw however takes the initiative and decides to use a piece of string to go and find a way out of the forest.

    The two boys are very different ton each other in how they handle situations, Kingshaw seems a lot more mature whereas to Hooper it is all a game, unless he is actually frightened, indicating that he is really quite a baby.

    Another factor that shows the different attitudes of each boy and their reactions to certain things is the way each handles their fears. Hooper is realistically afraid of some things and generally over confident most of the time, yet Kingshaw is terrified literally of everything which makes him a slightly unrealistic character. The other thing about Kingshaw’s fears that makes them different is that even after he has confronted them, they will come back, stronger. For example when he is about to jump into the pool to join Hooper, he remembers a previous fear and a similar event:

“Kingshaw still did not move. He remembered the bright artificial blue of the swimming pool into which the boy called Turville had made him dive.”

These facts all contribute to the build-up of tension in the boy’s relationship and how their relationship alters throughout this section and how although the balance and leadership between the boys is constantly changing, yet Hooper comes out on top and can always beat Kingshaw down.

 

 

 

Other points which could have been included:

  • Kingshaw’s discovery of his capacity for violence and his own shame at that discovery, so different from Hooper’s excitement when he first thought of the crow.
  • Also how at the end he hands back the power to Hooper having threatened to hit him, saying: ‘I wouldn’t have hit you.’ He knows what he is doing, yet his sense of morality, his conscience insists that he tell the truth.

 

Ultimately the author’s purpose in taking the action of the story into neutral territory is to explore new aspects of the boys’ characters, to allow Kingshaw to discover both a new resourcefulness he hadn’t suspected before and a capacity for violence that alarms him and for the reader to see more completely, how evil Hooper is. He has no redeeming characteristics, not even his tendency to regress to babyhood under severe pressure. He recovers from each bout of hysteria no less powerful and no more humane. He has learned more about Kingshaw’s fears and his morality which he is able to exploit and Kingshaw who has also learned about Hooper’s weaknesses discovers himself to be unable, morally to exploit them. The reader who has at first been lulled into a false sense of security, been led to believe, along with Kingshaw, that perhaps things will be alright after all, has had their sympathies for Kingshaw fully developed, suddenly realises that in fact Kingshaw has been set up; his weaknesses and his strength laid bare, and that because his strength lies in his moral fibre he can in fact never win! Because he will never descend to Hooper’s level, can not bring himself to play the game by the same rules as Hooper.

    His ultimate fall will, therefore, be that much harder for the reader to take.

Hooper’s evil in ITKOTC: Notes about!

  • Kingshaw realises that Hooper is just learning to be a bully – so why does Hooper have such power over him?
  • How precisely does Hooper victimise or intimidate (alternative words to bully and persecute) Kingshaw?
  • How does H come to realise what K’s weak spots are?
  • What precisely are K’s reactions?
  • Why doesn’t K ever press home his advantages?
  • Hooper’s methods are always offensive even if sometimes they are quite subtle.
  • K is always ashamed of using violence which in this case would be his only sure method of getting the edge over Hooper.
  • K is morally superior, but Hooper is morally bankrupt because there is not any depth to which he will not stoop.
  • Hooper’s thoughts are solely concerned with how can he make K’s life worse; with driving him and his mother away. Whereas K’s are how can he just hang in there until he goes back to school.
  • Kingshaw cannot say ‘no’ to his mother but he also cannot communicate with her at all – this breakdown probably occurred when his father died and she made Kingshaw be grown up and independent so that in fact she could depend on him. As a result she doesn’t understand the real situation but K does not help himself by not trying. However, inevitably when he does she is no longer able to take notice of his complaint because she has too much emotionally invested in maintaining the status quo and in not jeopardising her situation here.
  • Kingshaw refused to use violence even when he has the opportunity.
  • He refuses to speak up in his own defence; his pessimism or cynicism allows the situation to be perpetuated.
  • He sees himself like the moths, pinned down helplessly.
  • In fact how like the moth he is, drawn in some kind of fascination of horror towards the very thing which will kill him – unable to help himself.
  • With the advent of Fielding he gets only a temporary reprieve, even when H falls off the castle walls he is sick with certainty that things can only get worse never better. He is on a down ward spiral and there is only one way out.
  • There is ominous significance in the moth – Death’s Head Hawk Moth; and also in the wood – Hang Wood; even in the description of the house – dark, hot, stuffy, lifeless, colourless, oppressive with long narrow rooms – Edward’s in particular is coffin like and in some ways we see him as Vampire-like, doesn’t like the sun, preys on the weak, sucks the lifeblood out of those who live with him, deprives all those around him of normal and natural emotions. Even the crushing heat of the summer is oppressive, the occasional storms adding to the heavy, ominous, intimidating atmosphere.
  • Hooper never sees the cost of battles in terms of real flesh and blood, emotion, tears, death and misery; he is a meticulous experimenter – curious and clinical but sterile; a general who never gets out on the front line to experience the full horrors of his men. So he doesn’t regard Kingshaw as a real flesh and blood victim, this is an exercise in torture such as he might subject a moth to, and cleaner because it is mostly psychological cruelty where the scars will never show visibly. Words not blows undermine Kingshaw’s confidence.
  • Even when he is temporarily brought low by his own reactions to the storm, he counts on K not taking advantage of his weakness and as soon as his moment of weakness is over he takes up again where he left off.
  • The two boys are never able to meet on equal ground even though the wood is neutral territory because Hooper always has the mental edge over Kingshaw.
  • It is a mark of Hooper’s evil character that he deliberately chooses to play Charles like a fish on a line.
  • If he starts off by unsubtly taunting K about his father, his poverty and his school, he grows in determination and viciousness with the crow on the bed just marking the start of his campaign.
  • He goes out of his way to exploit every weakness in K’s armour.
  • It is of course essential to the plot that Kingshaw has several opportunities to kill or at least severely frighten Hooper and yet never allows himself to sink to that level.
  • With his rejection of temptations to kill Hooper, his heartfelt prayer that things will get better he is rather like Christ even down to his tormentors at his trial and subsequent crucifixion, and hence Kingshaw’s sacrifice of himself for his mother’s greater good becomes the ultimate example of self-sacrifice.