The extract from Michael Frayn’s ‘spies’ hints at imprisonment, as though the character is trapped in his past. Frayn portrays this to the audience through the symbolism of a jug. Not only does the jug represent a memory for the character, but the lace, which is ‘weighted down with four blue beads’, is used as a metaphor for showing that the events of his past are, like the beads on the jug, weighing him down. The beads on the jug could however also be representing the darkness of his past, for the colour blue is seen as a cold colour, hinting to the audience that his past may very well not have been the brightest of all.…
2. Barbed wire around the Cocoa tree: Signifies how the majority of the farmers live in poor conditions without the hope of…
In the first place, the balloon has great resemblance. It is resembling love and childhood because Nia, the mother, is pregnant & had the pregnancy test in the balloon it relates to coming of age by these reasons. She was pregnant with Bobby's baby. In the story Bobby narrates, "then she handed me the balloon." This quote is explaining that Nia had handed Bobby the balloon.…
The author uses imagery in this scene to show the relationships between the…
In 1911, a deadliest fire occurred in the triangle waist company killing hundreds of people. The workers at the Triangle Waist Company went on strike in 1909 to bring awareness to people about the company .The Women’s Trade Union League played a big role before and during the strike. The strike made an impact but it wasn’t enough to open the eyes of the owners of the triangle factory. Later a fire arose changing labor and industry forever.…
On a calm afternoon last week, a peaceful town was set into panic. A small church in Windrixville caught fire in the early afternoon last week, but something else was wrong. 5 young children were stuck inside. In this article, we will address all about the start, the fire, and the aftermath.…
In the story, their lifestyle is described by using plastic buckets turned upside down to sit, and mats to sleep on. Every night Lili uses a lemon to moisturize her ashen legs. Little Guy, goes to school however it is inferred that Guy and Lili did not went to school, “If my father had worked there… I would be working” (235). In addition, in the story when there is not kerosene for the lamp, the son has to sit outside on the road to study under the street lamps by other neighbors.…
To explain the significance of the word fire that is portrayed repeatedly in section 2 of the Glass Castle, we first need examine why she uses the word fire. Can she relate the meaning of the word fire to her life? Well on page 15, paragraph one, lines 5 through 6; “You can’t live in the fear of something as basic as fire”, shows that fire is something that one shouldn’t be in fear of and should be least feared. That she should be in charged and not the other way around. The second time is on the same page, but on paragraph 3, line 3 to 4; “She already fought the fire once and won.” This phrase here seems that Jeanette is in battle with fire and she always tried defeat the fire no matter what the outcome. No matter what the incident was she’d…
As the two young men drive through the desert, Alexie applies significant imagery to show the isolation and importance of the situation. There is a certain tension in the air when the two old friends reconnect after their falling out. They are alone in the middle of nowhere: “Victor looked around the desert, sniffed the air, felt the emptiness and loneliness” (159). Alexie uses imagery to encapsulate the situation that the two young men are in. To help the reader feel the tension of the isolated experience, imagery is used to describe the spacious and lonely desert. As they trudged through Nevada they “had been amazed at the lack of animal life, at the absence of water, of movement” (149). Alexie’s imagery in this particular scene shows us the fog of tension between Victor and Thomas and gives the readers the feeling of tense isolation. As they travel the sixteen-hour-journey back home, they have hours and hours of desert to think about their shared past. The desert is vast and stripped, which forces them to either be deep in thought or forcibly converse with each other. All of this tension is shown through the description of the desert.…
The novel, A World Lit Only by Fire by William Manchester delves into the history of Europe’s dark ages through the early Renaissance. Three key figures constantly referred to within the novel include Erasmus, Martin Luther, and Ferdinand Magellan. All three men are responsible for Europe’s entrance into a modern era of reformation, knowledge, and discovery, and are widely considered to responsible for the development of the humanist philosophy. When Manchester begins weaving his historical tale of the middle ages, he details how the dark ages witnessed very few inventive ideas and was dominated by the Catholic Church and its papacy. As each of the three men are introduced and their accomplishments explained, the story takes a turn and leads towards a modernized era. Erasmus, Martin Luther, and Ferdinand Magellan all share a devotion to their religion which connects to their exploits, however, their overall contributions seem to somewhat differ.…
This story is told as a narration by a dying Xeones to the Persian king Xerxes. The loan surviving greek is kept alive after sustaining battle wounds by a surgeon to tell his account of the battle of Thermopylae and the events before it. His narration jumps back and forth between time to explain certain events. Xeones and his cousin, Diomache, are orphaned at a young age and hide in the hills with a slave. Diomache is taken as a maid after being gang raped as punishment for stealing and Xeones continues to Sparta where he becomes a battle squire under Dienekes. He explains in horrid detail the gruesome training of the Spartan children to become citizens or 'peers'. Xeones takes the married life and has a child. Persia threatens to invade Sparta and, under the leadership of King Leonitas, the Spartans go to fight the incomming forces. Defending the main passage of a narrow path through the mountains, the Spartans, accompanied by only a few thousand greeks, face the better part of 2 million Persian troops. As the first day of battle draws to an end, many Persians lie dead, yet only a few Spartans lay in their wake. Xerxes learns of a path leading behind the Spartans and sends a force to entrap them. After 7 days of gruesome battle, the Xerxes and his troups finally overpower the troups, and Leonitas is beheaded. After his story is finished, Xeones passes due to his wounds. The scribe writing his story accounts for the rest of the war after his passing including the Persians losing the war to the Greek army.…
In the story, “The Things They Carried” symbolism had a big role in how the write gave…
the books are burned, the offender is arrested and taken to prison. Although book burning…
Edwidge Danticat illustrated freedom throughout her short story, “A Wall of Fire Rising”. Freedom has a different meaning for everyone and can be attained many ways. Two ways were portrayed by the characters: Guy, Lili, and Lil Guy. They are a Haitian family in the 1990’s.…
The fire within is a non-fiction children’s book. Written by Chris d’Lacy this quirky book also includes a bit of fantasy and drama. It is set in present time with the main character being a young man about 20 who is a lodger with a small family that consists of Liz, the mother and Lucy, the hyperactive imaginative little seven year old girl. As soon as David (the lodger) enters the home he knows there is something a little weird about this family because no normal family he knows of has clay models of dragons sitting on every window sill and in every corner of their house. On top of that he is pretty sure that no clay model should hiss……