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How The Children Became Stars (The King's Search) - Coggle Diagram
How The Children Became Stars (The King's Search)
Structures
Theme: Truly bad and good person
Character
Protagonist: Lord Krishna and Dhammaraja
Antagonist: Duryodana
Point of view: 3rd person omniscient
Setting
Place: Lord Krishna's land in India.
Conflict (internal): Duryodana can't find a truly good person in the world, and Dhammaraja can't find a truly bad person in the world.
Plot
Introduction
Lord Krishna wanted to see if the king in his land were wise.
Rising action
Lord Krishna told Duryodana as the cruel person, to search for a truly good person through the world.
Climax
Duryodana can't find that truly good person, everyone around him is naive.
Falling action
Lord Krishna asked Dhammaraja as the wise person to find the truly bad person through the world.
Resolution
Dhammaraja finds out that there is no truly bad person, that everyone arounds him is too good as a person.
Main Idea
There is no one that is truly good or bad.
Meaning
"I found that people make mistakes; I found that they are fooled by others; I found that they act as if they are blind. But I could not find even one truly evil person. Everywhere in the world, the people all are good in their hearts!"
It means that people are to good and innocent making it easier to be fooled by others.
"Lord, I have done what you commanded me and looked the whole world over for one truly good soul. I did not discover such a person."
It means that through all the people they have looked, no truly good people were found. There was only naive and selfishness.
Reading Strategies: Rereading the story.