Traveling Through the Dark darkly inspiring, lyrically lovely poem, William Stafford's "Traveling through the Dark" contains both literal and metaphoric imagery. The main thrust of the poem comes from the theme of death, although chance and choice also play important roles in the piece. The narrator finds a deer dead on the road and stops his car to avoid hitting it and to avoid swerving and hitting more of its kind. One of the only verbs repeated twice in the poem, "to swerve" evokes a sense of last-minute decision-making based on a combination of instinct, inbred ideas, and even logic. The narrator also notices that the deer is pregnant, its fawn "lay there waiting, / alive, never to be born." That one image and concept encompasses "Traveling through the Dark," as there is little the narrator can do to rescue the unborn yet alive organism inside the belly of the dead deer. Therefore, a sense of sorrow and helplessness...
While on the surface, "Traveling through the Dark" deals with the impact that mankind has on the natural world, the verses also imply underlying meanings and metaphors. These meanings and metaphors can be interpreted in a variety of means: the unborn fawn can indicate an unborn human fetus and its impending doom can suggest abortion, for instance. The fact that the narrator does have a choice of how to act in the situation also impels the reader to ponder his or her own choices, many of which involve last minute "swerves."
panther, by Reiner Maria Rilke and Travelling through the Dark, by William Stafford, are two poems about wild animals and the effects of human kind's interference into their existence. In the case of Rilke's poem, the interaction is intentional: the man has locked one of the most impressive creatures in the wild, a panther, behind bars. In the second poem, the interaction is unintentional: the narrator finds a road
successful Storytelling? There are so many things that make successful storytelling. One of the major components that stick out is the events in the story. Selecting and arranging the events is highly important in the process of composing the story passage. Without the events, there really is not kind of story. Brainstorming and writing down an important list of the things that have gone on is something that is very
In conclusion, it has been sufficiently demonstrated that Welty's recurring motif in "Death of a Traveling Salesman" and in "A Worn Path" is the treating of human relationships, which are inherently founded in human nature and which can be evinced from such human principles of love, devotion, and spirituality. The author has purposefully repeated this theme in many of her works to accurately portray real life, since it was the
UK Mental Health Policy Mental healthcare service delivery in the UK has been subjected to a series of significant imperative policy in the last few decades, and number of people suffering from mental illness is on the increase. Recent statistics reveal that one out of four people in the UK has been diagnosed of mental problem. (Mental Health Foundation, 2013, Singleton, Bumpstead, O'Brien et al. Meltzer 2001). Although, mental disorders are
A favorite target for conspiracists today as well as in the past, a group of European intellectuals created the Order of the Illuminati in May 1776, in Bavaria, Germany, under the leadership of Adam Weishaupt (Atkins, 2002). In this regard, Stewart (2002) reports that, "The 'great' conspiracy organized in the last half of the eighteenth century through the efforts of a number of secret societies that were striving for
She is ten and very tired."("Lolita," 87) Again in the hotel room, in the ecstasy of his dream, Humbert loses his 'word-control' in a dialogue with Lolita, building up the tension through a virtual linguistic explosion. Language breaks free, and Humbert lets himself be carried away into a maze of Latin and English and linguistic inversions: "What's the katter with misses?' I muttered (word-control gone) into her hair. 'If
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