Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

The Divine Wind Chapter Summary (Short)

Good Essays
532 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Divine Wind Chapter Summary (Short)
Chapter information: A very brief outline.
Prologue 1946
Introduction to the Penrose family – Michael, Ida, Hart (Hartley) and Alice. Story is told from Hartley’s point of view. Michael is a pearling master. Sets up the tension between Michael and Ida.

Trade Winds
Introduction to the Sennosuke family – Zeke (Imazaki), Sadako and Mitsy (Mitsu). Zeke is a diver on one of Michael’s boats. Friendship between Hart, Alice and Mitsy is established.

Fine and Flashing
Introduction to the Penrose’s servants. Saltwater Jack and Bernadette, and Bernadette’s brother Derby. Comment on lives of Aborigines. Conflict between Ida Penrose and Derby.

Quest for Paradise
Introduction to Jamie Kilian and his father, the local magistrate. Mr Kilian has strong views about the Japanese and the ‘real Australians’. Jamie and Hart become friends.

The Phoney War
Ida leaves for England. The war in Europe begins. Mitsy begins to act differently. Thoughts of Japan joining in the war and implications for the friendship.

Storm Warning
Ida is killed during the Battle of Britain. Hart’s leg is badly injured on board his father’s lugger when it is caught in a cyclone.

Chambers of the Deep
Mitsy nurses Hart back to health. Zeke is still missing at see.

Coastwatch
Mitsy quits nursing to comfort her mother in their time of grief. Hart loses himself in books.

Nerve Ghosts
Alice looks after Hart and drags him out of his misery. Michael sells his boats. Jamie leaves for Canada to train for the Air Force.

Burn Across the Sky
Alice falls in love with Carl Venning, a wealthy pastoralist and Derby’s boss. Alice and Hart go flying in Carl’s plane and he takes them to his property, Harthog Downs. Hart senses a change in Derby.

The Desired Earth
An insight into the treatment of Aborigines on cattle stations. Conflict between Alice and Carl over his views on the Japanese and the role of women. Alice leaves Carl.

Hard Liberty
The Japanese Festival of the Lanterns is celebrated to put Zeke’s soul to rest. Alice joins the Army as a nurse. The friendship with Misty is partly restored.

Come to Grief
Derby is arrested for rape and murder. Hart and Michael attend the trial and realize that Derby’s confession has been coerced.

Hugging the Ground
Derby is found innocent and decides to return to his tribal people.

Dim the Moon
Japan enters the war. Some Japanese in Broome are interned. Tension between Hart and Jamie. Mitsy and Sadako move into the Penrose House.

Angles and Hollows
Mitsy and Hart become lovers. They visit the internees.

Rule of Darkness
Tension is felt as the threat from Japan worsens. Hart and Mitsy’s relationship alters. Mitsy begins seeing Jamie.

Sounds and Sightings
Alice is reported missing in Malaya. Michael has a stroke. The relationship between Hart and Mitsy deteriorates.

The Divine Wind
Jamie is about to take Sadako and Mitsy to be interned. Japanese planes attack the harbor at Broome. Hart rescues Jamie.

Sunshine and Shadow 1946
Hart reflects on the remaining war years. Alice is found alive. Jamie’s plane is shot down/. Mitsy keeps in touch with Hart. He reflects on what the future may hold.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Better Essays

    Gary Disher’s Book the Divine wind portrays the clash of Broome’s unconventional attitudes with that of the attitudes of that era. An important character entangled in this conflict is Derby Boxer. He is an Aborigine and thus is subjected to the notorious racism of that time. Disher constructs him so these opposing views have a focal point so they are vocalised and expressed.…

    • 1116 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the first chapter of “Encountering God” the author Diana Eck starts by explaining that the book is her experiences in encountering different religions. “All of us have rivers deep within us, bearing the waters of joining streams.” I loved this starting quote it feels like she is open to any view. She knows that different beliefs are a good thing, and that we all have to experience different people because we need to be mixed together for us to grow and form our own views. Throughout the rest of the chapter she is telling us all about Bozeman, Montana. The memories she had from the town and the descriptions she made where vivid. What was a small frontier like town when she was a girl is now a busy city.…

    • 1211 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    We are also introduced to the main character's family, such as his wife Elaine, and his son Jamie. We also see what each person's role is within the family.…

    • 903 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Phillip Gwynne’s novel ‘Deadly Unna’ is set in Australia in the 1960s in the small coastal town of ‘The Port’, where indigenous Australians and Caucasians did not associate, a father was ashamed of his son and siblings supported one another. Gwynne effectively addresses the wider social issues of racism, psychological abuse and the importance of family in the novel.…

    • 863 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Ruby Moon Play Analysis

    • 2237 Words
    • 9 Pages

    * Retelling of the immeasurable injustice done to the Indigenous Australians and stereotyping them to beings that result to acts as an after effect of the policy…

    • 2237 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    No Sugar

    • 504 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Throughout Australian history a racist attitude towards Aboriginals has been a significant issue. From the moment the early settlers arrived on our shores and colonised, the Aboriginals have been fighting for the survival of their culture. The Aboriginals haven been take in and dominated to bring them in line with an idealistic European society. These themes have been put forward by Jack Davis in his stage play, No Sugar, the story of an Aboriginal family's fight for survival during the Great Depression years. Admittedly Davis utilises his characters to confront the audience and take them out of their comfort zone, showing them the reality of Aboriginal treatment. This is an element of the marginalisation that Jack Davis uses through out the play this starts from the beginning where he discomforts the audience by using an open stage. One character that Davis uses through out the play is A.O. Neville, Davis uses him to portray the issue of power, this is a very important issue that is carried through out the play.…

    • 504 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Bye Beautiful

    • 1430 Words
    • 6 Pages

    | Highlights Sandy’s social awkwardness.Billy as a charismatic and popular person who arouses both Sandy’s and Marianne’s interest.…

    • 1430 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Racism In The Sapphires

    • 310 Words
    • 1 Page

    The strong presence of racism among Australian communities as depicted in the film caused such events, namely the Stolen Generation, to occur. This significant event was a period in late 1800s-1960s where children from both Indigenous, and non-Indigenous (i.e. ‘white’) origins were forcefully taken away from their families as a result of official Australian Government policy. In relation to the film, Gail’s recall of a bitter memory associated with Kay particularly sheds light upon this key historical event.…

    • 310 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Annalise and her protégé Wes (Alfred Enoch) have convinced each other that Sam killed Lila. Though viewers know that isn’t the case. Annalise’s ex-boyfriend was arrested and put on trial for the murder of Sam which Annalise and her law students plotted to led towards him. Connor is now dealing with the news of his boyfriend diagnosed with HIV which he too contracted. Michaela (Aja Naomi King) and Laurel (Karla Souza) both encountered relationship problems with their other half, and in the midst of all of that they both hate of their forced friendship. Asher (Matt McGorry) and Bonnie (Liza Weil) are now sleeping with each which I for one didn’t expect to happen at all. Then of course Rebecca’s body was found in the basement, and we now know what the continuing mystery of next season will be. Though there are so many questions left surrounding the deaths of Sam and Lila we can say that the only person who got that nirvana of getting away with murder is Frank. Everyone else still has to manage with the paranoia especially since there is another killer to…

    • 681 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Bailey also allows his wife and children to take advantage of him. The Mother, Bailey’s wife and the mother to John Wesley, June Star, and a baby, doesn’t speak much. John Wesley is a loud, rude eight-year-old little boy. June Star is a very unpleasant young girl who is very outspoken. The children show little respect for their elders. Their ill-mannered behavior comes from a lack of parental discipline. The family members contribute by showing a lack of respect for the Grandmother, thus leading her to act out.…

    • 492 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Social Determinants of Health

    • 10946 Words
    • 44 Pages

    Haebich, A. (1988). For their own good: Aborigines and government in the southwest of Western…

    • 10946 Words
    • 44 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Sgt John Wilson

    • 1563 Words
    • 7 Pages

    -Jack told Jessie that his brother Alex had been killed in action and that his sister Isa had mysteriously died…

    • 1563 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The plot is told by its main character, Second Lieutenant Frederic Henry. He is an American put in an Italian ambulance unit stationed near the battlefront with the Austrians. His friend Lieutenant Rinaldi, an Italian surgeon introduces Frederic to Catherine. She’s Rinaldi’s romantic interest, but she starts to focus more on Frederic. Frederic thinks Catherine is very and attractive and as they get closer he finds out that her fiancée died in the war. She and he go through this love game.…

    • 426 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Many reasons for the current appalling state of health and wellbeing of the Australian Aboriginal people can be explained by examining their recent history to the devastating impacts of colonisation, genocidal policy, loss of land and years of oppression. These several hundred years of cultural destruction, dispossession and social and political upheaval have resulted in generations of trauma and grief (Burke, 2006, para. 4). As reported by Forsyth (2007, p. 35-36), government policies enacted towards the indigenous population in the early 20th Century were concerned primarily with protection and segregation, as the prevailing attitude of the time was that the Indigenous people were largely inferior and were unable to care for themselves. Forsyth continues to explain of the injustice created by the New South Wales parliament with the Aborigines Protection Act of 1909, in which “every aspect of their lives was governed, regulated and controlled”…

    • 2117 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    performance playing Dhirrumbin, the Aboriginal narrator. Her description of the massacres that took place gave one goose bumps as her harrowing voice described the scene so well one felt as though they were there. Dhirrumbin, I felt, represented both sides of the cultures and sort of nudged our perspective away from Thornhill’s view and gave us a chance to see through Aboriginal eyes. This is one key topic that Andrew Bovell and Armfield excelled in, in that they broadened the perspectives of the book giving us two different views in the story, resulting in a much more sympathetic and sophisticated product.…

    • 939 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Powerful Essays

Related Topics