The use of Biblical allusions supports Forster’s point, and reveals his attitude on owning land. “They point out what is perfectly obvious, yet is seldom realized: that if you have a lot of things you cannot move about a lot, that furniture requires dusting, dusters require servants, servants require insurance stamps, and the whole tangle makes you think twice before you accept an invitation to dinner or go for a bathe in the Jordan.” Forster is indicating that while initially something may seem simple, a person should ‘think twice’ before they engage in anything that doesn’t seem right or strange. His attitude is rather obvious; Forster is pondering whether the purchasing of the wood will result in disastrous consequences. The reference to the Jordan River is regarding to the river where John the Baptist baptized Jesus. Forster is concluding that a person should think before they obligate themselves to something. His conscious is forcing him to realize the negative effects the wood has on him
Owning property is not always a good thing, and Forster clarifies this through the manipulation of sentences. Forster gives indirect meaning to several of his sentences, such as; “My wood makes me feel heavy.” He gives the sentence a subliminal meaning, and the reader must find out what Forster is implying. He continues to elaborate on why his wood makes him feel heavy, and ends his paragraph again stating that his wood makes him feel heavy. The manipulation of sentences alluded to