""
    is a short story with a twist ending by , in which a boy named Laurie creates an alter-ego named
    Charles to blame for his own bad behavior in kindergarten.
Wordplay,
    encompassing anything from puns to subtlein grammar and context, is here shown largely as
    contextual clues to Laurie's rebellion against authority. At home,
    where he is shown safely telling stories about a terrible boy,
    Laurie pushes against his parents with small verbal jibes. He calls his father "dumb"
    and an "old dust-mop," all innocuous enough and ignored in the face of
    the more interesting Charles. At school, where he is not so terrified of parental
    judgement, his actions are larger: using the playground toy "see-saw" to hit a girl,
    he is made to stay inside during recess; throwing chalk "deprive[s him] of black-board
    privileges. Each action relates directly to its
    consequence.
A good example of this contextual wordplay
    appears early in the story.
"The teacher spanked a
boy, though," Laurie said, addressing his bread and butter. "For being
fresh," he added, with his mouth full.
"What did he do?"
I asked. "Who was it?"
Laurie thought. "It was Charles," he
said.
(Jackson, "Charles," Google Docs)
This is both aand a clue as to the ending, as well as being the creation-moment of
    Charles himself. Laurie, trying to find a way to explain that he was "fresh" in class
    and was punished, attempts to simply slide it by his parents. His "addressing his bread and
    butter" is an attempt to minimalize the story by not engaging his parents
    directly. When Laurie speaks directly to his father, his tone is
    "cold," but the lie is built
    on the theme of "bread and butter," mentally associating with
    warmth. It is also a pun, as Laurie's "freshness" can be felt in the
    food itself; fresh food, fresh behavior. However, Laurie finds
    himself forced to further explain the lie, and Charles is born.
 
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