https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B2uJMEM03R8XY25Ic3NnNGI3eTA/view?usp=sharing
Showing posts with label The Close. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Close. Show all posts
Wednesday, 18 May 2016
The Close
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B2uJMEM03R8XY25Ic3NnNGI3eTA/view?usp=sharing
Thursday, 7 April 2016
"Everything is as it was (...) and everything has changed" (Chapter 2)
The chapter opens with a paradox: "Everything is at it was, I discover when I reach my destination, and everything has changed". This paradox invites us to wonder what has remained the same and what
is different: the appearance of the place, the narrator´s feelings,
the people, the atmosphere? In the following paragraphs, the narrator
gives us many clues as to how to understand this initial paradox.
On
the one hand, the similarities the old narrator notices between the
Close of his childhood and the street he has in front of him are the
ordinariness of the place and the number of houses. The same 14
houses stand in exactly the same place where they stood 60 years before and the street still looks as ordinary and unremarkable as it
used to.
On
the other hand, there have been many changes. The houses don´t look
the same. Their appearance has changed and they have less vegetation
around them. The trees have grown: “The stringy prunus saplings”
that where along the verges of the avenue “are now wise and
dignified trees”. The main road has now less traffic and the shop
names have changed. Even the sky has changed from one full of war,
falling flares and searchlights at night to one that was “mild and
bland”.
In
conclusion, we can say that even though the town has physically
changed, the narrator finds it still familiar. In spite of the
changes, he is still able to recognise the houses and the dull
atmosphere that pervades the place.
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