Camping areas, walking tracks, picnicking areas, sightseeing spots, camp fire spots and toilets. There are many Transmission towers on the mountain.…
In this chapter we get introduced to Peter Jenkins and get know what he is doing. It takes place sometime during Peter’s journey. Tommy, Doc, and several other men in a country store in a giant blizzard first confront Peter. Tommy and the doc ask him what the devil he is doing hiking across America and Peter tells them that he is doing it to get to know the country. Tommy offers Peter to come to his house for some food, but Peter rejects. Peter calls for his dog Cooper. A thin farmer gives Peter five dollars in case he needed it. Peter and Cooper then leave the store and go into the giant blizzard. Peter then tells us how Cooper saved him one time before the walk. Peter and Cooper were hiking along an eleven-mile alternate training route when Cooper killed a snake that would probably have bitten Peter. We then get introduced to some of Peter’s background. This so-called “Walk Across America” was something that was brewing in Peter’s mind for a long time. Peter tells us that he grew up in Greenwich, Connecticut. This is a town of about 60,000 with manicured homes and country clubs. It’s high level of income and social status made Peter think that he had to attend Yale or Harvard. In Greenwich, you were considered a greaser if you drove a Corvette or had a Harley Davidson motorcycle. Most people drove Country Squire Wagons or BMW’s. Peter’s problem, according to him, was that he thought that all towns in America were like Greenwich. Peter tells us that he suffers from hollowness deep inside him that does not go away. It comes back after beer, booze, or drugs wear off from a party. It didn’t go away after he skied in a chalet in Stowe, Vermont. A revival of Woodstock, which took place during the summer of his senior year in high school didn’t bring any relief either. College and being by himself made the hollowness intensify. Peter himself began to wonder what he…
Bruce Dawe’s texts Drifters and Last Seen 12:10am, convey different journeys that offer challenges and insights. Journeys can be defined as an act of travelling from one place to another. The physical journey evident in Drifters places emphasis on the fact that journeys can be forced. The text Last Seen 12:10am depicts that journeys can be inner struggle and offer challenges that bring uncertainty and fear. Hence it is evident that these two texts by Dawe demonstrate challenges and insights that travellers can have on a journey.…
The imagery of “The street” is of a path, perhaps a street anywhere, devoid of light and humanity. Using descriptors such as “blackness”, “blind”, and “dark” gives the reader the feeling that he is walks, or “stumbles”…
Cheryl Strayed started the hike because she was in a all time low in her life. She needed to get away from everything to clear her mind because of the tragic passing of her mother four years prior to her hike. Strayed started consuming drugs and started sleeping with other men . She did not know how to cope with the loss because she was everywhere, “ If I had to draw a map of these four-plus years to illustrate the time between the day of my mother's death and the day I began my hike on the Pacific Crest Trail, the map would be a confusion of lines in all directions…” (Strayed 37). She was confused on where to go and what to do. She wanted to escape reality. The quote shows how she tries to cope with the tragedy, but fails until she decides…
Last summer, I had the opportunity to travel to Manhattan in New York. Manhattan is known as the premier destination for New York City tourists, and many people consider it as a “walking city”. A population with over 8.4 million living in NYC (New York City), I came to an understanding that most of my traveling was going to be done by foot. I traveled from Times Square to the Empire State Building and continued onto Central Park right after. And yes, I accomplished this by walking since waiting for the bus or taking a taxi was really an inconvenience. With restaurants, clothing stores, and other necessities at the tip of our fingers, I can see why the locals would travel by foot. The golden age for walking has indeed not expired; in fact, more people are on the streets than before.…
Ray Bradbury wrote 'The Pedestrian' in the 1950's set a century into the future. Mr Leonard Mead was a man of tendencies, he would walk alone at night on the same streets, never understanding the queer need for a television as everyone is hooked onto. 'It was not unequal to walking through a graveyard where only the faintest glimmers of firefly light appeared in flickers behind the windows'. By the use of representation of walking as an everyday activity and the ability to be stripped of this, he causes an arise out of the readers. Mr Leonard Mead seems to only reasonable and clear conscious of those around him. As predictable as Mr Mead entails we are, he stays unchanged as his value never differ throughout the story. In this day and age,…
Our surroundings impact on our sense of belonging. In the short story The Pedestrian, Mr Mead has “been walking for 10 years” which confirms the connection he feels with the nature because it offers him safety…
From your study of the prescribed text and related material, what were the most significant aspects of physical journeys that you noted?…
Mesa Verde houses nearly 600,000 visitors every year. Tourism for the park earns/creates $66.8 million in economic benefits. Most of the parks earnings come from lodging and food/beverages. Those accumulate over 51 percent. Other earnings are from gas and oil, souvenirs, admissions, and other…
2. Alvord organizes her essay in the form of a short story that is able to keep the reader…
As for the footpath, the ubiquity of the malodorous smell pervaded from all ends, disorientating all your sense of ability. The odour arisen from decomposing faeces and bodily fluids is apparent in all corners you turn to. Flies swirl around the corpses of malnutrition figures as they lay innominate and unflattering in a pile, body after body bonding with the dirt beneath. Behind each lacklustre visage holds a tragic story to be told, but subsequently withheld from our knowledge of understanding. The clothes that we have worn turned sickly as rain water drizzled to every corner.…
In the excerpt of Jane Jacob’s The Death and Life of Great American Cities, she implies the importance of city streets and sidewalks. Although it is believed that police officers enforce the peace in a city, but in reality it is the people’s actions that keep the peace.…
During Arnold and Rowdy’s conversation, Rowdy indicates that Indians are not “nomadic” anymore, implying that they are sedentary: “I don’t think Indians are nomadic anymore” (Alexie, 229). Rowdy’s insight is a euphemism conveying the idea that the lives of Native-Americans are barren of hope and opportunity. Throughout the novel, Alexie portrays the life of Native-Americans as grotesque and subordinate compared to the lives of white people, mostly due to harsh living conditions and discrimination. However, as Rowdy states that “I don’t think Indians are nomadic anymore”, the word “anymore” implies that traditional Native-Americans were in fact, nomadic. The idea of nomadism symbolizes hope, freedom, and opportunity, which demonstrates the…
spirit, and an ultimate fear of failure that seems to reflect something personal. Set in a…