Wild Peaches by Elinor Wylie
The line “We’ll swim in milk and
honey till we drown” depicts an abundance of supply of food or about prosperity
in general. On the other hand, the line “The spring begins before the winter’s
over” suggests an ideal weather where winter is short-lived and fair weather is
always enjoyed. Finally, the line “We shall live well — we shall live very well”
promises a good and comfortable life. Thus, readers expect that life at the
Eastern Shore is everybody’s dream life: complete, perfect and ideal.
Syme and Winston have a discussion about what Syne is really going after. Syme is very amped up for the possibility of the English dialect being abbreviated into a sincerely void arrangement of word-phrases. Basically there will be no chance to get of communicating the individual self. Everything will be desensitized to its most base vacuous frame. Syme, obviously, is much excessively amped up for this. At the point when Winston takes a gander at Syme he sees a "dead man"
Answer:
<em>'He is the same colour </em><em>as </em><em>the earth, and a great deal less interesting to look at.'</em>
Explanation:
George Orwell uses Simile, a figurative language device that compares two things using the adverbs like or as.
When describing the people working on the land he refers to them as the unvisible part of a (beautiful) visible landscape. This is a very subtle way of critisizing the British Empire that ignores (they don´t see them) the working people who, seen by Orwell, are doing important work.
Answer:
sure what do u want to talk about?
Explanation: