Saturday, May 18, 2019
Shadows of Night: The Fear of a Child
In Annie Dillards book, An American Child chapter two describes the misgiving she had as a child, of the night shadows that would appear on her walls. Dillard was five years old and shared a bedroom with her little sister Amy, who was two at the time. When Dillard describes her little sister sleeping, I can telecasting her clearly in my mind. Dillard writes even at two she composed herself attractively with her sheet folded tidily, under her outstretched arm, her head laid lightly on an unwrinkled pillow, her thick curls spread evenly. (21) Another wonderful drill of her descriptive writing is when she is telling of the thing that she is so afraid of at night in her bedroom. Dillard states that, the anathemise thing entered the room by flattening itself against the open door and sliding in. It was transparent, luminous oblong I could teach the door whiten at its touch. (21) This thing that Dillard also refers to as it also had sounds of a rising yell (21) as it moved across he r walls.Dillard finally figured out that her thing was a passing railroad car whose windshield reflected the corner streetlight outside. (21) It wasnt until she was outside one day, that she heard the familiar sound that she hears at night when the thing appears on her walls. Dillards writing shows how the human mind and imagination can hyperbolise even the simplest things, until we can see in front of us what the true reality is.
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