Notes on Milos Macourek's "Jacob's Chicken"



                             

Milos Macourek - Jacob's Chicken
                                                                                                                                

    


     
     A student called Jacob, drawing a chicken picture, but the picture was not accepted by his teacher. Upon learning this, the chicken, which drawn by Jacob, flies off to seek more suitable life that belonged to it and then cause everyone to look up to in the end.
     In "Jacob’s Chicken," there are some differences from other works since it applies comma continuously to form a paragraph and with the fluent narration. For me, I think it presents quite distinctively in reading this fiction because you can hardly stop reading until the end of the paragraph.
     
     Obviously, at the end of the first paragraph, we see Jacob’s chicken, which Jacob’s painting, flies off through the open window because Jacob’s creative thought on painting is not accepted by his teacher. In addition, it also shows human’s imagination can never be limited. However, the last paragraph somehow brings back the restraint for Jacob’s chicken.
   
     In the last paragraph, I am pretty curious that Jacob’s chicken is sent to the zoo. For people, watching different, various, or even peculiar animals in the zoo amazed them certainly. They see those animals for their beauty or peculiar part because they are different from others. Somehow we consider for sure that animals can be “displayed” in the zoo because of our great concern and respect. In this case, how do animals feel about being focused on with a great many people? Jacob’s chicken, probably, can barely suit the condition which everybody gaze at it very keenly. The problem is that we often applied human’s viewpoint to judge what animals may feel. We are not aware that, by passing a period of time, people may lose their passion gradually on seeing those animals in the zoo. Perhaps it is not the real care or respect but for the brief period of enthusiasm.


          


     Back to Jacob’s chicken, its appearance may be attracted by people in the zoo since the author describes the chicken in a delicate way. For this reason, it really is focused on by a great many people. Nonetheless, in the zoo here, is it really free from limitation, or does it actually earn its respect? Therefore, I consider the circumstance which Jacob’s chicken faces might turn out a big challenge after flying off through the window.









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