When Dave is confronted by his mother de gentle whileding to know where the gun he purchased is, he breaks down(a) and confesses the truth. This makes the others laugh at him and ridicule him. His father becomes irate and demands the gun. His old geezer Hawkins tells him he is now responsible for salarying him $50 to take back the co
t of the dead mule. Dave makes up a story about retrieving the gun in the morning, but he is inconsolable over his public humiliation. He sneaks dark to fire the gun again, draining his anger and the gun of all its bullets.
He hears a train coming and realizes he would preferably abandon his life and everyone in it than work for years to pay for a dead mule. Dave mistakenly thinks he can be a man by running away from his mistakes to someplace new, "Ahead the long rails were glinting in the moonlight, stretchiness away, away to somewhere, somewhere where he could be a man" (Wright 110). He leaves town and his innocence behind, now a man but not the kind he envisioned having a gun would make him.
In conclusion, Dave's adolescent notions of what makes an individual a man encourages him to prove his manhood by getting a gun. Instead, Dave's in
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