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childhood-innocence-and-persecution

The narrator's innocent remark about needing another hand triggers severe punishment, illustrating the oppressive environment for children.

1 chapter across 1 book

The Chrysalids (1955)John Wyndham

Chapter 4

The narrator frequently visits Sophie and explores their surroundings together, including a steam-engine that symbolizes remnants of a lost technological past. A significant conflict arises when the narrator inadvertently expresses a wish for an extra hand, which his father interprets as blasphemy and a rejection of the 'Norm,' leading to a severe religious reprimand. The chapter ends with the narrator's haunting dream of Sophie being condemned for her physical difference, highlighting the brutal intolerance of their society towards deviations from the accepted norm.