Explanation:
Mr. Bedford was living our dream and he went to the Moon. He was happy about it and also curious. When he arrived there he was something different and unexpected.
He saw the ground that was looking like the desert but there were many trees and fruits. We all know that dessert cannot have something like it and Mr. Bedfor saw this miracle. Although it was very od to see something like this, it was on the other side beautiful and calmly.
There was a lot of sand. There was also the water and many trees around it that were having many colors on them. Fruits were big and colorful and that was a real miracle.
It impacts the reader since they don't get to see, feel and think what the other characters are. It leaves the reader in a limited state.
<span>r. Her remarks in Act I—about the location of Grover's Corners in the universe—articulate an important theme in the play: if the town is a microcosm, representative of the broader human community and the shared human experience, then this human experience of Grover's Corners lies at the center of a grand structure and is therefore eternal.</span>