Sykes takes his evilness and spreads it throughout the house. Delia is a Christian woman who tries to keep all evil away from her. The snake that Zora Hurston talks about in “sweat” is like the snake in “The garden of Eden Satan”. The snake represents a fierce and scary creature.
The black cat seems to me to symbolize many different things. I feel that the everytime she sees that cat it’s a warning that something bad is soon to happen. I feel that the black cat also represents reincarnation and when Sophia is not there as a ghost or in spirit she is secretly a lonely, dark cat that tries to scare everyone around her. Another piece of symbolism that I noticed while reading the book is Sophia's doll and dress. When Florence where’s the dress and carries the doll around her room she seems to symbolize Sophia when she was alive.
The world will constantly feed us these ideas as we grow older that the world isn’t what it seems and that it’s a horrible place. In the book ‘The Little Prince’ we can see this event taking place once the little prince meets the snake and he tells him that “Whomever I touch, I send back to the earth from whence he came”. The snake is representing the idea of death, how he could easily kill him.
After reading “Sweat” by Zora Neale Hurston, you’ll never think of snakes the same way ever again. In “Sweat”, a snake ends the suffering of a woman who’s too afraid to stand up for herself. Snakes are a symbol of a penis and sexual power. In the story, Hurston describes the snake as “long, round, limp, and black”(1), which are adjectives similar to describing a penis and in this story the snake represents sexual power. For example Sykes says to Delia “‘Taint no use uh you puttin’ on airs makin’ out lak you skeered uh dat snake’”(6).
Although it is only another part of the desert, by the man using it to lay the snake’s body to rest, it becomes a symbol of his grave and also serves to hide the body discreetly in the once “pleasant” setting. To end the story, the author uses the setting again to close similarly to how it starts. What the narrator says to finish the passage is that he sees the snake’s body as “sinuous and self-respecting in departure over the twilit sands.” After reading this ending, the audience gets one final reminder that grisly incidents can happen even
She employs the use of imagery as she describes a metaphor she heard of as a spring going “through rich veins of minerals” (19) compared to a traveler such as her son. This exemplifies that she expects her son to pick up knowledge and experience while he is on the trip with his father, such as how the spring picked up the beneficial minerals. She uses this colorful description in order for her son to be able to clearly envision his own development and understand what is needed of him to accomplish this. As long as he can envision himself gaining momentum through experience then he can fulfill his mother’s wish of becoming a successful
Due to this dream, Laura begins to experience a decline in her physical and mental health. The dream describes a “sooty-black animal that resembled a monstrous cat. It appeared…about four or five feet long for it measured fully the length of the hearthrug…”
The snake seems to be put as the victim when Patric describes it as being calm while watching the man. The way Patric uses his words can be interpreted in many different attitudes to whoever is reading it.
The water snake is a representative of a dream because of its periscope head preparing for an opportunity to achieve its goal. The heron portrays fate because it takes the water snake by its head to kill it instantly and unexpectedly, like fate crushes dreams. The incident with the heron and the snake foreshadows Lennie’s fate, which is also instant and unexpected. Curley’s wife is like the periscope head, preparing for an opportunity to become an actress, until Lennie started petting her hair and killed her. Lennie’s actions were similar to the actions of the heron and the actions of fate.
I have a sense of right and wrong, what's more—heaven's proudest gift,” and scared what the gods may think if he accepts these actions his wife is doing to him. The larger work of this passage includes Clytemnestra murdering her husband and not denying her actions. That she takes responsibility for it and it
The Odyssey revolves around a household without its master, Odysseus, who has been lost for 10 years. Despite that, Agamemnons’ death by his faithless wife isn’t the main focus of the Odyssey, but it is still frequently mentioned. Aegisthus can be thought of as the suitors who are seen at the beginning of the Odyssey feasting and sipping wine all day. His affair with Clytemnestra, his murder of Agamemnon and then later on, his death by Agamemnons’ son Orestes, foreshadows the inevitable death waiting to consume the suitors’ lives for their efforts to destroy Odysseus household. The stories set up is similar in a way that there are two returning heroes, Agamemnon and Odysseus, their sons, Orestes and Telemachus, and their wives, Clytemnestra and Penelope respectively.
Most notably, the “glide of snake belly” is an allusion to a notorious green mamba biting and killing Ruth May (5). Her death provides Orleanna with the strength to leave the Congo and is of enough importance to be addressed in the first paragraph. Orleanna then references the destruction of Kilanga in Judges by a “single-file army of ants” (5). This was the climax of the novel and a major turning point for most characters.
In an attempt to win his daughter back, Chryses offers Agamemnon a ransom. Agamemnon, however, declines the ransom causing Chryses to seek help from Apollo. Apollo hears this cry for help and sends a plague to
It sheds its skin and appears as a new, youthful creature, thereby symbolizing the cycle of death and rebirth (XI. 310). The snake represents both the futility of endeavoring to avoid death and its inevitable conclusion, in this case, regardless of how strongly someone attempts to prevent death, it is impossible to stop the process of it being close to
Although this large, frightening snake is ultimately feared, and also causes the death of a young character in the novel, its is a symbol of the spirit of the jungle. After Ruth May’s sudden and tragic death, it suggests in the novel that she becomes the trees of the vast jungle watching over everyone. In the final chapter of the story it says “I forgive you, Mother. I shall turn the hearts of the fathers to the children and the hearts of the children to their fathers” (Kingsolver 543). This quotes gives us reason to believe that it is Ruth May that is narrating this final passage, and that she has become the trees and is now apart of