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    Bless Me, Ultima

    Rudolfo A. Anaya

    Study Guide
    • Study Guide
    • Summary
      • Summary & Analysis
      • Uno (1)
      • Dos (2)
      • Tres (3)
      • Cuatro (4)
      • Cinco–Nueve (5–9)
      • Diez–Once (10–11)
      • Doce–Trece (12–13)
      • Catorce (14)
      • Quince–Dieciocho (15–18)
      • Diecinueve–Ventiuno (19–21)
      • Veintidós (22)
      • Full Book
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    • Characters
      • Character List
      • Antonio
      • Ultima
      • Gabriel
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      • Uno (1)
      • Dos (2)
      • Tres (3)
      • Cuatro (4)
      • Cinco-Nueve (5-9)
      • Diez-Once (10-11)
      • Doce-Trece (12-13)
      • Catorce (14)
      • Quince-Dieciocho (15-18)
      • Diecinueve-Ventiuno (19-21)
      • Veintidós (22)
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        • Context
        • Plot Overview
        • Character List
        • Analysis of Major Characters
        • Themes, Motifs & Symbols
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          • Rudolfo A. Anaya and Bless Me, Ultima Background

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        Characters

        Character List

        Characters Character List
        • Antonio Márez

          The precocious protagonist of Bless Me, Ultima, Antonio is six years old at the beginning of the novel. Antonio is serious, thoughtful, and prone to moral questioning, and his experiences force him to confront difficult issues that blur the lines between right and wrong. He turns to both pagan and Christian ideologies for guidance, but he doubts both traditions. With Ultima’s help, Antonio makes the transition from childhood to adolescence and begins to make his own choices and to accept responsibility for their consequences.

        • Gabriel and María Márez

          Antonio’s parents, whose frequently conflicting views make it difficult for Antonio to accept either of their belief systems. María, the devoutly Catholic daughter of a farmer, wants Antonio to follow her Luna family tradition by becoming a priest. Gabriel is the son of vaqueros, or cowboys, and he prefers that Antonio follow the Márez tradition of restless wandering across the llano, or plains. Both parents love and revere Ultima.

        • Ultima

          An elderly curandera, a healer endowed with the spiritual power of her ancestors. Ultima is a wise, complex, mysterious character. Ultima’s power is often misunderstood and feared by the community. Many people refer to her as a bruja, or witch. Even Antonio is confused about the moral nature of Ultima’s power—no one knows if she is truly a witch. Ultima is a firm believer in tolerance and understanding, however, and she teaches Antonio that different belief systems can offer equally valid ways of understanding the world.

          Read an in-depth analysis of Ultima .

        • Narciso

          The town drunk. Narciso is good friends with Gabriel because they both share a deep and passionate love for the llano. Narciso demonstrates a strong appreciation for the richness of the earth—his garden is a lush masterpiece full of sweet vegetables and fruits. Narciso respects and loves Ultima deeply. Tenorio kills him because he supports Ultima.

        • Tenorio Trementina and his three daughters

          Tenorio is a malicious saloon-keeper and barber in El Puerto. His three daughters perform a black mass and place a curse on Lucas Luna. Tenorio detests Ultima because she lifts the curse on Lucas. Soon after she does so, one of Tenorio’s daughters dies. Hot-tempered and vengeful, Tenorio spends the rest of the novel plotting Ultima’s death, which he finally achieves by killing her owl familiar, her spiritual guardian.

        • Cico

          One of Antonio’s closer friends. Unlike most of Antonio’s friends, he is quiet and gentle. Cico exposes Antonio to yet another belief system when he takes Antonio to see the golden carp, a pagan god who lives in the river.

        • Florence

          One of Antonio’s friends. Although Florence does not believe in God, he attends catechism to be with his friends. Florence’s active, vocal questioning of Catholic orthodoxy is partly a result of his own difficult past; both of Florence’s parents are dead, and his sisters have become prostitutes. Florence shows Antonio that the Catholic Church is not perfect and that religion can fail.

        • Antonio’s friends: Abel, Bones, Ernie, Horse, Lloyd, Red, and the Vitamin Kid

          An exuberant group of boys who frequently curse and fight. Horse loves to wrestle, but everyone fears Bones more because he is reckless and perhaps even crazy. Ernie is a braggart who frequently teases Antonio. The Vitamin Kid is the fastest runner in Guadalupe. Red is a Protestant, so he is often teased by the other boys. Lloyd enjoys reminding everyone that they can be sued for even the most minor offenses. Abel, the smallest boy in the group, frequently urinates in inappropriate places.

        • Lupito

          A war veteran who has been deeply mentally affected by the war. After Lupito murders Chávez’s brother, the local sheriff, in one of his deranged moments, Lupito is killed by a mob in front of young Antonio. Lupito’s death provides the impetus for Antonio’s serious moral and religious questioning.

        • Andrew, Eugene, and León Márez

          Antonio’s older brothers. For most of Antonio’s childhood, his brothers are fighting in World War II. When they return home, they suffer post-traumatic stress as a result of the war. Restless and depressed, they all eventually leave home to pursue independent lives, crushing Gabriel’s dream of moving his family to California.

        • Deborah and Theresa Márez

          Antonio’s older sisters. Most of the time, they play with dolls and speak English, a language Antonio does not begin to learn until he attends school.

        • Antonio’s uncles: Juan, Lucas, Mateo, and Pedro Luna

          María’s brothers are farmers. They struggle with Gabriel to lay a claim to Antonio’s future. They want him to become a farmer or a priest, but Gabriel wants Antonio to be a vaquero in the Márez tradition. Antonio’s uncles are quiet and gentle, and they plant their crops by the cycle of the moon.

        • Father Byrnes

          A Catholic priest who gives catechism lessons to Antonio and his friends. He is a stern priest with hypocritical and unfair policies. He punishes Florence for the smallest offenses because Florence challenges the Catholic orthodoxy, but he fails to notice, and perhaps even ignores, the misbehavior of the other boys. Rather than teach the children to understand God, he prefers to teach them to fear God.

        • Chávez

          Chávez is the father of Antonio’s friend Jasón. He leads a mob to find Lupito after Lupito kills Chávez’s brother, the local sheriff. He forbids Jasón to visit an Indian who lives near the town, but Jasón disobeys him.

        • Jasón Chávez

          One of Antonio’s friends. He disobeys his father when he continues to visit an Indian who lives near the town, but Jasón disobeys him.

        • Jasón Chávez’s Indian

          A friend of Jasón’s who is disliked by Jasón’s father. Cico tells Antonio that the story of the golden carp originally comes from the Indian.

        • Prudencio Luna

          The father of María and her brothers. He is a quiet man who prefers not to become involved in other peoples’ conflicts. When Tenorio declares an all out war against Ultima, he does not want his sons to get involved, even though Ultima saved Lucas’s life.

        • Miss Maestas

          Antonio’s first-grade teacher. Although Antonio does not speak English well, Miss Maestas recognizes his bright spark of intelligence. Under her tutelage, Antonio unlocks the secrets of words. She promotes him to the third grade at the end of the year.

        • Rosie

          The woman who runs the local brothel. Antonio has a deep fear of the brothel because it represents sin. He is devastated when he finds out that his brother Andrew frequents it.

        • Samuel

          One of Antonio’s closer friends. He is also the Vitamin Kid’s brother. Unlike most of Antonio’s friends, Samuel is gentle and quiet. He tells Antonio about the golden carp.

        • Téllez

          One of Gabriel’s friends. He challenges Tenorio when Tenorio speaks badly of Ultima. Not long afterward, a curse is laid on his home. Ultima agrees to lift the curse, explaining that Téllez’s grandfather once hanged three Comanche Indians for raiding his flocks. Ultima performs a Comanche funeral ceremony on Téllez’s land, and ghosts cease to haunt his home.

        • Ultima’s teacher

          Ultima’s teacher was also known as el hombre volador, or “the flying man.” He gave her the owl that became her spirit familiar, her guardian. He told her to do good works with her powers but to avoid interfering with a person’s destiny. The invocation of his name inspires awe and respect among the people who have heard about his legendary powers.

        • Miss Violet

          Antonio’s third-grade teacher. She does not speak Spanish.

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        Popular pages: Bless Me, Ultima

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