The poem begins with the narrator telling herself, “A few more steps, old feet.” (line 1). The old feet she refers to are the ancestor’s feet, that appear to be old and worn out from the rigorous journey they take. The speaker then goes on to say, “In pale tea I’ll see / me with her, tasting wild grapes” (lines 4-5). This shows her reminder of her ancestors in nature. The pale tea is the symbol of the clean, clear simplicity of nature and when the speaker simplifies herself, to the bare nothingness of nature it reveals to her, her ancestors. Then in the following lines, “at dawn, tasting dew / on tender leaves, another year.” (lines 6-7). The dawn represents a new day, a new start where she can again acknowledge her heritage. After, the speaker says, “her hands still guiding me, / at sunset grinding seeds” (lines 11-12). These hands guiding the speaker, are her ancestors leading her through their stories and nature around…
Becoming weaker and weaker by the second from malnutrition and lack of proper sleep, it begins to slowly eat away at you mentally. Papa kept having these flashbacks of his wife, and woke up in a fright on the side of his road only to find that it was all a dream. It began to effect him mentally and made him realize he needs to prioritize his and the boys actions along their journey to the south. Food and shelter was always the most important, but as Papa began to dwindle away physically, he had a fatherly-feeling that he must teach his young child to defend himself on the road without him. Focus on the more important things in life, necessities, and do everything in your power to survive on through the rain and the snow, to be able to perform the next…
The narrator has a swirl of emotions and leaves the house, building on her jealousy for hope. She has no clue where she is going or what she is doing and then an idea hits her, she feels the urge to destroy the marigolds, to take away the hope they seems impossible and misplaced. One day the narrator stomps and smashes the marigolds the reality hits her, this had helped no one, destroying the hope of others, all that ruining the marigolds did was to bring the narrator to a realization ofher childish actions,that she was an adult, and should act like one. That she should create hope for herself and her family by being mature, sophisticated, and helping her parents, not destroy the hope that others had so dearly cared for. She realizes that the old lady had worked hard to nurture and grow her hope, her joy, her marigolds, that destroying them was wrong, and it brought no one else any hope, it just took someone's away. Her childish actions of rebellion had left her. The lines “ and they was the moment that childhood faded and womanhood began. The violent, crazy act was the last act of childhood. For as I gazed at the immobile face with sat and weary eyes, I gazed upon a kind of reality that is hidden to childhood. The witch was no longer a witch but only a lonely old woman who dared to create beauty in the midst so of ugliness and sterility. She had been born in squalor and lived in it all her life ow at the end of tent life she nothing but a falling down hut” communicate these…
Again, in the scene described in the last paragraph, when the girl stands up, she walks into the sunlight to look at the prolific section of the valley. The sunlight represents her hope of a happy future with her child. Furthermore, when the man calls her back he asks her specifically to come back into the shade. The shade which represents the concealment of their affair and the sorrow of losing her baby. This element of the sunlight versus the shade reveals more of the girl’s emotions to the reader.…
But that it reminded her of the thousand years spent on a barren moon with not a single soul to comfort her. She felt a kindred spirit. One that she felt obligated to reach out to. Deep within EverFree, a blackened plume of smoke rose past the treetops. Glowing heat and cinder danced freely, lighting dimly the crater and the foliage that jutted from the scorched earth in an orange light.…
I am writing in regards to the wireless network project. It is important that we do a site survey before we attempt to install any wireless network.…
In the beginning of the story, the narrator is nothing more than a curious child on vacation. As time goes on he is soon to find the realization that life is no longer the same. No longer is the narrator a child but is now and adult and gains the responsibility of being a father. In shock and curiosity of where the time has gone, he soon finds himself back at the scene he remembered as a child. His curiosity is evident in the quote "I wondered how time would have marred this unique, this holy spot". Shortly after arrival however, he finds that time has not changed the setting as much as he would have thought. This is evident in his quote "when I got back there with my boy, and we settled into a camp... I could tell it was pretty much going to be the same thing as before". The narrator notices some slight changes on the way such as technological advances and changes in the soda that goes around but not anything significant. The real change is encompassed in the fact that he is no longer playing the role of the child, but is now playing the role of the father. It is an eye opening event when he realizes that he is almost reliving his experiences through his son's.…
Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor (2012). How to become a medical or health services manager. Occupational Outlook Handbook, (13).…
The poem is a self reflection of the narrator, as he walks through the city streets between the hours of midnight and four. In the opening stanza, the time is established as midnight; a time associated with beauty, spirituality and mystery. The moon is personified as being in control of the streets, and “whispering lunar incantations”. The effect Elliot creates with this is that the moon’s supernatural powers come into effect, helping the narrator collect his thoughts. The mechanical nature of his walk (“Every street lamp that I pass/ Beats like a fatalistic drum”) hints at the narrators thoughts being jumbled and rearranged as he walks. Finally, the last section of the first stanza (“Midnight shakes the memory/ Like a madman shakes a dead Geranium”) implies that the narrators journey is somewhat nightmarish and irrational, with a disturbing image of a “madman shaking a flower”. The repeated personification of the street lamps, (The street-lamp sputtered/ The street-lamp muttered) additionally adds another layer of nightmarish depth to the narrators walk.…
At the beginning of the story it is made very clear to the reader that Mrs. Mallard is afflicted with heart trouble and is upset with the death of her husband after she weeps in her sister, Josephine’s arms after the news has been delivered to her. However, later it is stated that “the tops of the trees were all aquiver with the new spring life”. The imagery does not evoke feelings of sadness or upset but rather what seems to be new ideas and a new beginning. The feelings Mrs. Mallard had been trying to fight back were the feelings of freedom and independence as the reader can conclude after she states several times “free!”. From that moment she realized there would be no one to control her she would be able to live a life of her own. As she descended down the stares like a “goddess of victory”, Brently Mallard, Mrs. Mallards husband shows up and “she had died of heart disease --of joy that kills”. The ending can be seen as very ironic because Josephine, Mr. Mallard, and Richard were all convinced that she died from the shock of overwhelming happiness that her husband was still alive when in actuality the reader can interpret it as her dieing from the shock of overwhelming upset that she wouldn’t be able to live her new free life.…
Once the boys arrive at the storyteller the narrator finds comfort in the boundless experiences of someone far beyond his years. Many times in life we are pressed with a choice and we make the wrong one. People cannot allow themselves to be consumed with the guilt of a wrong choice because there will be many. Instead, they must deal with the consequences of their actions and move on. The old women’s voice is reassuring and hypnotic. Both boys are greatly…
Just as the dawn must give to the night each birth must yield to an eventual death. The night, like death, holds a sense mystery and tranquility…
This is similar with ‘Praise song for my mother’. There is a lot of love and happiness revealed, the mother was everything towards the daughter, and this has definitely been conveyed “You were moon’s eye to me”. This is linked with the poem ‘Nettles’ as the relationship in both poems are between a mother/father and a daughter/son. In other words, both poems have that special bond and nothing can get between it.…
Kate Chopin’s short story “The Story of an Hour” is a story about a woman, Mrs. Louise Mallard, who has just learned the news that her husband has died in a tragic train wreck. The most significant line of the story is the very last line that hints at the theme of the story as well as the overall irony of it. Kate Chopin’s story talks about approximately “an hour” of time where Louise learns that her husband has died to the time she sees him walking through their front door alive after all. Louise has significant heart troubles so when her sister tells her of the news, she attempts to take extreme caution in doing so as to protect her health. At first when hearing the news she weeps once in front of her sister, Josephine, then retreats to her room for some alone time. She notices all the living things that reside outside her window. All of a sudden she gets excited at the thought of her husband being dead and blurts out how free she is, “Free! Body and soul free!” Her sister instantly worries when she is shouting in the room, asking her to get out of the room concerning for health once again. Louise walks down the stairs to someone opening the front door of the house, it turns out to be her husband who is perfectly fine. Her sister cries out, his best friend named Richards tries to block him from her view, and Louise Mallard ends up dying.…
In the poem the speaker’s relationship with the woman has two sides. One emotion that the speaker reveals is that of undying love. He speaks of a time when the woman is “old and grew” (Line 1) and how his love will still be felt in the book she will read. The diction and imagery in the poem reveal much of how the speaker views the woman and his feelings for her. Using imagery like “shadows deep” (Line 4) the speaker expresses his admiration for her beauty. The speaker also uses diction such as “pilgrim soul” (Line 7) to describe the woman’s inner beauty that he also admired so much. The tone in these sections of the poem reflects the…