The Raven Boys Jealousy Quotes

How we cite our quotes: (Chapter.Paragraph)

Quote #4

The mere mention of Ronan Lynch's name had scraped something raw inside Whelk. Because it was never Ronan by himself, it was Ronan as part of the inseparable threesome: Ronan Lynch, Richard Gansey, and Adam Parrish. All of the boys in his class were affluent, confident, arrogant, but the three of them, more than anyone else, reminded him of what he'd lost. (5.8)

Doesn't Whelk feel like a bit of a loser feeling jealous of all his much younger students? It's obviously hard for him to give up his former glory—even if his former glory just involved living off of his dad's wealth.

Quote #5

He cast a quick, uneasy glance from the secretary to Whelk, and Whelk knew he was thinking about how much Whelk's father had been worth, once upon a time, and how little he was worth now, long after the trials had left the front pages of the newspapers. All the junior faculty and the admin staff hated the Aglionby boys, hated them for what they had and what they stood for, and Whelk knew they were all secretly pleased that he had fallen down among their ranks. (5.28)

Everyone in Henrietta hates the Aglionby boys for being so rich… everyone. Even the teachers talk about them behind their backs and get excited when someone loses all their wealth. Talk about a serious case of schadenfreude.

Quote #6

While he fumbled there, a shaved-head boy at the next register moved swiftly through, swiping a credit card and collecting his things in only a few seconds.

Even the way the other boy had moved, Adam recalled, had struck him: confident and careless, shoulders rolled back, chin tilted, an emperor's son. As the cashier swiped Adam's card again, both of them pretending the machine might have misread the magnetic stripe, Adam watched the other boy go out to the curb to where a shiny black car waited. (20.28-29)

It's the simple things that Adam longs for, like the ability to pay for his groceries without even having to worry. All the other Aglionby boys take this for granted, but to Adam it speaks of unfathomable financial freedom.