I am reading “The Bass, the River, and Sheila Mant” by W. D. Wetherell. This story is about a fourteen-year-old boy crushing over a seventeen-year-old girl, he has to choose over her or a bass. In this journal I will be questioning who he picks.…
The narrators from "The Bass the River, Sheila Mant" and "American History" have much in common with some distinctions throughout the stories. The narrator (TBRSM) and Elena (AH) both start by watching their neighbors from either through a window or from across the water, as they began to gain confidence to confront them. Both narrators fall in love, in TBRSM the narrator mentions how he finds Sheila Mant the only thing lovelier than a bass and in AH Elena's mother says, "'Elena, you are acting... Enamorada,'". Although, the narrators share these similarities their stories take different turns. Elena was not in love with Eugene when they first met, unlike the narrator who was with Sheila Mant. Also, in "The Bass the River, Sheila Mant,"…
I am reading “The Bass, the River, and Sheila Mant” by W.D Wetherell. This is a story about a 14 year old boy who has a crush on a girl named Sheila. He asks her out and there going on a date in a boat and he figures out she doesn’t like fishing and he loves it so does he pick the bass or the girl. In this journal I will be questioning if he picks the girl or the bass.…
In “ The Bass, The River, and Sheila Mant” the author, W.D Wetherell, states “ When I wasn't swimming laps to impress Sheila, I was back in our driveway practicing casts, and when I wasn't practicing casts, I was trying to line the Tosca, our springer spaniel, to test the reel’s drag, and when I wasn't doing any of those things, I was fishing the river for bass” (Wetherell 43). The main character has found his passion, fishing. He spends…
In “The Bass, The River, and Sheila Mant” the main character acts on impulse, because he loves fishing, and when he caught the bass he was overwhelmed with happiness, but he knows that Sheila dislikes fishing, and doesn’t think much…
I am reading “The Bass, the River, and Shelia Mant” by W.D. Wetherell. This story is about the narrator who likes a older girl and asks her on a date. When she accepts they go in a canoe to the dance and he hooks a Bass and has to choose. In this journal I will be questioning and connecting. I am wondering weather or not the narrator will choose Shelia or the Bass. I will also be connecting a decision where it ended up in regret.…
The theme of “The Bass, The River, and Sheila Mant” is that it’s hard to truly love to different things with all your heart equally. You see this even in the first statement to a point, “There was a summer in my life when the only creature that seemed lovelier than a largemouth bass was Sheila Mant.” Also we see this when Sheila says “I think fishing is dumb…” when the main character clearly loves fishing more than anything except maybe Sheila herself. Right after that he decides that ,for at least the time being, Sheila is more important than fishing and so he starts to put his rod away when the biggest bass he’s ever seen gets snagged. This is the main conflict and where I believe we see the theme clearest as our main character struggling…
I am reading”The Bass, the River and Sheila Mant” by WD Wetherell and I am on page five. This book is about a 14 year old boy having a crush on a girl named Sheila Mant. Throughout the story he does many things to get her attention. As the story goes on he is stuck between two choices. Which one will he choose? In this paper I will be questioning and connecting.…
He makes no attempts at humor in his essay like Roberts does, but he instead paints pictures of scenery with words in exuberant detail. The depth and detail with which he writes stirs the readers’ emotions and memories in the way he tells of his own memories. He takes the mind of the reader on a journey with him as he recounts memories of his childhood. The tone he uses is one that is somber and serious, but also quite casual. “Summertime, oh summertime, pattern of life indelible, the fade proof lake, the woods unshatterable, the pasture with the sweet fern and the juniper forever and ever, summer without end; this was the background, and the life along the shore was the design, the cottages with their innocent and tranquil design, their tiny docks with the flagpole and the American flag floating against the white clouds in the blue sky, the little paths over the roots of the trees leading from camp to camp and the paths leading back to the outhouses and the can of lime for sprinkling, and at the souvenir counters at the store the miniature birch-bark canoes and the post cards that showed things looking a little better than they looked.” (E.B. White) It is with the use of this kind of language that White fills the writing canvas, as well as the reader’s thoughts, with the detailed images of the surroundings of the…
In “The Bass, The River, and Sheila Mant”, the narrator faces the conflict of choosing Sheila Mant or a big bass. The action he made affects him afterwards making him feel guilty and discouraged. If he had caught the big bass, he would have a great story to tell on how he caught it but he did the exact opposite which is letting the bass go. When the concert was over at the end of the story, Sheila Mant really looked at the narrator letting him know that he is a funny kid. The narrator still has in mind the fact that he let the bass go and he was sad about it; “Before the month was over, the spell she cast over me was gone, but the memory of that lost bass haunted me all summer and haunts me still” (Wetherell 14). His summer was sad and depressing knowing that he let go of something that he is passionate about other than Sheila Mant; the bass. When he says “the spell she cast over me”, he refers to how he did all these things to impress her and all for nothing because he only danced with her once or twice at the concert. This feeling of guilt and the memory of letting the bass go will always be present in his…
4. “Under Water” has characters which are Anne Fadiman, Gary, the instructors, and the several other paddlers. The conflict is Gary drowning in the strong current. The motives of all the characters are to save Gary. The plot is Anne and the group going canoeing but a horrible mishap occurs, and they try their best fixing it but they fall short. The setting of this story is June of 1972 in western Wyoming on the Green River. This story is told in first person and there is no dialogue.…
As a typical Hemingway short story, T.E.O.S. also uses the Iceberg theory, which indicates that the first paragraph was more than a background; it was paralleling the village’s changes with Nick’s dominance degradation. The short story T.O.E .S. starts with an introduction of how the Hortons Bay went from a lumber town to mill ruins. Hemingway cleverly parallels the relationship between Nick and Marjorie with the original Hortons Bay with the place that the woods were shipped to (and the wood being all the fishing skills that Nick taught Marjorie). The decay of Hortons Bay was a symbol of Nick’s decline of dominance in this relationship with his girlfriend. The declination of superiority in the relationship made Nick uncomfortable and less masculine. “Its open hold covered with canvas and lashed tight, the sails of the schooner filled and it moved out into the open lake, carrying with it everything that had made the mill a mill and Hortons Bay a town.”(Hemingway, page 29) The last sentence in the first paragraph of the story indicates that Nick didn’t feel the same in the relationship with Marjorie as how he did before, with all the “wood” being shipped away and the contrast between how it is know and how it was before.…
The Bass, The River, and Sheila Mant is a short story about lost love, realization, moving on, but most of all, letting go of what you love. The readers follow along as our fourteen-year-old narrator falls for 17 year-old Sheila Mant during a Vermont summer. The author reveals the theme throughout the use of characterization, plot, irony, imagery, and many more. Throughout the story, the narrator is trying to woo Sheila and takes her on a boat ride up to a concert. But, just as things were going swimmingly, our narrator realizes he didn't pull up his line he has under the boat. This normally wouldn't have been a problem, as he would usually have been able to reel it in, but everything changed after Sheila said that she didn't like fishing.…
Have you ever had a nasty break up? Felt abandoned or threatened as you yourself have lost love? Within love, however you may define it, you devote actions and emotions to a sole person and for feelings to dissipate over a long period of time or for love to be cut off suddenly can hurt, and sometimes love itself can feel useless. The immediate aftershock of heartbreak, from family or otherwise, can either leave you bitter or wiser. The phrase “It is better to have loved and lost to have never loved at all” touches on this subject…
The structure of the poem helps us see the fade between the man's dreams and reality and the transition between the two. The poem also helps us understand where the man thinks he belongs and where he wants to be. In the first stanza of the poem we are introduced to the “Island Man” and how he is dreaming of the island that he calls home, “an island man wakes up to the sounds of blue surf” this is sensory imagery that Grace Nichols uses to help us understand the man's feeling towards the Caribbean island in comparison to his…