The Golden Goblet By Eloise Jarvis Mcgraw

446 Words2 Pages

The book “The Golden Goblet” by Eloise Jarvis Mcgraw, tells us about a boy called Ranofer, Ranofer is the son of Thutra, but since his father died he has to live with his wicked half brother Gabu, his half brother makes him be a stone-cutter, but while Ranofer is working for Gabu he discovers something unexpected. The most important event of the golden goblet occurred when Ranofer trapped Gabu and Wenamon in the tomb, because of this Ranofer had enough time to tell the queen about Gabu and Wenamon, and also because when the queen was seeing if he was telling the truth, Ranofer answered correctly, because she believed Ranofer , Gabu and Wenamon got caught by the guards. One reason that is the most important event is because Ranofer had enough time to tell someone, this is because the story says “he put his shoulders to the boulder, dug his toes into the hot sands ,and shoved with all his strength…, if only the stone had rolled closer, there would be more time to plan”. But it was enough time.This helps us understand because we could see what he did to capture them. …show more content…

And at that moment she knew he was telling the truth. This helps us because we see that if he wouldn’t have trapped them, he would have not have time to tell the