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What I Have Left Is Imagining By Heather Macleod

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What I Have Left Is Imagining By Heather Macleod
In the poem, "What I Have Left is Imagining", the narrator/author Heather MacLeod has 2 different attitudes towards the Arctic, which are represented with pride and nostalgia. Her pride towards the Arctic is so strong because her ancestors who once lived there aided her discovery in finding out what it means for her to be Metis, which is shown when she "found [her] ancestors' footsteps in the Northwest Passage trailing behind Franklin". One way her nostalgia towards the Arctic is brought to light is when she repeats how "[She] used to live in the arctic" at the beginning of each stanza, which, when used in the past tense, acknowledges a sense of sadness and longing to go back. Her nostalgia towards the arctic is suggested is when she relates

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