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  1. Roderick Character Analysis. Roderick. Roderick is a former boarding school classmate of Thomas and LaBatte who appears in the form of a ghost to both men throughout the novel. He died of tuberculosis, which he contracted after he was locked in a cellar multiple times as punishment at the boarding school. Thomas feels guilty for not doing more ...

  2. Thomas sees Roderick, a ghost of an old boarding school friend who had died as a boy. He asks Roderick why he is haunting the factory, and Roderick replies that he is not here for Thomas, but for LaBatte, who called him here to save his life. They talk about the first time Roderick saved LaBatte’s life by taking on his jail time, which made ...

  3. Instead, they want to kick them off most of their land. At the same time, Thomas also thinks about and sees the ghost of his friend Roderick, who died after getting sick locked in a basement cellar as a result of needlessly brutal punishment meted out by a schoolteacher at their government-run boarding school.

  4. Thomas Wazhashk. Thomas Wazhashk is the night watchman of the novel’s title (and is based on Erdrich’s grandfather). Thomas is also the chair of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa’s tribal committee. His introspection and actions while off, reveal that this role is of primary importance to him. Thomas is the character who suggests ...

  5. Edit. 45 seconds. 1 pt. While at the House of Usher, the narrator spends his days…. trying to heal his friend from what ails him. attempting to escape from the house. enjoying his friend’s company. participating in activities to try to lift his friend’s spirits. 5.

  6. Although he is Roderick’s most intimate boyhood friend, the narrator apparently does not know much about him—like the basic fact that Roderick has a twin sister. Poe asks us to question the reasons both for Roderick’s decision to contact the narrator in this time of need and the bizarre tenacity of the narrator’s response.

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  8. The House of Usher becomes a living, feeling character in Poe’s story, and one that, Roderick suggests, may be urging the two remaining Ushers to commit incest; although the narrator attempts to ...

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