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Summary for chapter 1 Fever 1793

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Answered by areejmuskan
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Explanation:

Matilda “Mattie” Cook wakes to the sound of a mosquito whining in one ear and her mother, Lucille Cook, “screeching” in the other: “Rouse yourself this instant!” Her mother opens the shutters in Mattie’s small room above the family coffeehouse. She continues shaking Mattie out of bed, saying that Polly, their servant, is late, and there is much work to do

Already sweating, Mattie observes that it’s going to be another hot August day. As her mother goes down the stairs, Mattie hears her muttering about how much harder she worked when she was Mattie’s age. Mattie is used to hearing that her mother was “a perfect girl,” “utterly unlike me.”

Mattie snuggles into her pillow again, hoping to “float back to sleep, drifting like Blanchard’s giant yellow balloon.” However, when a mosquito bites her on the forehead, she leaps out of bed and cracks her head on the low, sloped ceiling. Grudgingly, she starts getting ready for work.

Mattie picks up a dead mouse that her cat, Silas, has just attacked. When she goes to the window, she brightens at the sights and sounds of Philadelphia’s early morning bustle. She can see the roof of the State House, where Congress meets. On a clear day, she can see the Delaware River waterfront, her favorite place in the city

Answered by shishirchaurasia2008
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Fever 1793 by Laurie Halse Anderson

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Chapters 1-2 Summary

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Chapter 1

Fourteen-year-old Mattie Cook is roused abruptly by her mother on the morning of August 16, 1793. The weather is stifling and a mosquito buzzes annoyingly around her head as she sluggishly responds to her parent's nagging. Polly, the serving girl who helps at the coffeehouse downstairs, is late and there is work to be done. As Mattie dresses, Silas, the family cat, pounces on a mouse and the girl, shooing the angry feline away, retrieves the rodent, now deceased. As she leans out the window which overlooks the teeming Philadelphia street below to dispose of the dead rodent, Mattie hears the sound of the blacksmith's hammer on his anvil and conjectures that Polly is probably late because she has stopped to visit with Matthew, the blacksmith's son.

Mattie herself does not like the blacksmith's shop, with its "roaring furnace [and] sparks crackling in the air." She prefers the waterfront which lies to the east; on a clear day, she can see the masts of the ships tied up at the wharves on the Delaware River from her window. A few blocks south of that lies the Walnut Street Prison; it was there where the French aeronaut Jean Pierre Blanchard had recently launched the first hot-air balloon flown in the United States. Mattie yearns to one day break free of the ties that bind her to her tawdry life, just like that "remarkable balloon" that had risen from the prison courtyard, escaping the confines of earth.

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