“Widow. The word consumes itself โ-“: The poem begins with the word “widow” and suggests that it holds within itself a sense of emptiness or self-destruction.
“Body, a sheet of newsprint on the fire”: The widow’s body is compared to a sheet of newsprint burning in a fire, indicating intense pain or destruction.
“Levitating a numb minute in the updraft”: This line suggests a sense of detachment or disorientation, as if the widow is floating in a moment of numbness.
“Over the scalding, red topography”: The imagery of a scalding, red landscape conveys the intense emotional turmoil experienced by the widow.
“That will put her heart out like an only eye”: This line suggests that the emotional pain of widowhood is akin to losing one’s only source of vision or insight.
“Widow. The dead syllable, with its shadow”: The word “widow” is described as lifeless or devoid of meaning, casting a shadow over the speaker’s existence.
“Of an echo, exposes the panel in the wall”: The echo of the word “widow” reveals hidden passages or memories within the speaker’s mind.
“Behind which the secret passages liesโstale air,”: These passages contain stale air or stagnant memories, suggesting a sense of emptiness or decay.
“Fusty remembrances, the coiled-spring stair”: The memories contained within the passages are described as musty or stale, leading to a coiled-spring stair that symbolizes a journey to nowhere.
“That opens at the top onto nothing at allโฆ”: The stairway leads to emptiness or nothingness, reinforcing the speaker’s sense of futility or despair.
“Widow. The bitter spider sits”: The widow is compared to a bitter spider, suggesting a sense of entrapment or isolation.
“And sits in the center of her loveless spokes.”: This line reinforces the image of the widow as a lonely figure trapped in her own web of sorrow.
“Death is the dress she wears, her hat and collar.”: Death becomes a pervasive presence in the widow’s life, shaping her identity and attire.
“The moth-face of her husband, moonwhite and ill,”: The image of the husband’s face as a moth suggests a haunting or ethereal presence.
“Circles her like a prey she’d love to kill”: The widow longs to be reunited with her husband, even if it means causing harm to him.
“A second time, to have him near again โ-“: The desire to be reunited with her husband is so strong that the widow would do anything to bring him back.
“A paper image to lay against her heart”: The image of her husband becomes like a paper cutout that she holds close to her heart.
“The way she laid his letters, till they grew warm”: This line suggests that the widow finds solace in the warmth of her husband’s letters.
“And seemed to give her warmth, like a live skin.”: The letters become a source of comfort and intimacy, providing warmth to the widow’s lonely heart.
“But it is she who is paper now, warmed by no one.”: Despite her longing for closeness, the widow remains isolated and alone.
“Widow: that great, vacant estate!”: The widow’s existence is compared to a vast, empty estate, echoing her sense of loneliness and emptiness.
“The voice of God is full of draftiness,”: God’s voice offers no comfort or solace, only emptiness or draftiness.
“Promising simply the hard stars, the space”: The promise of God offers only the vast emptiness of space and stars, reinforcing the widow’s sense of isolation.
“Of immortal blankness between stars”: The emptiness between the stars symbolizes the vastness of the widow’s grief and loneliness.
“And no bodies, singing like arrows up to heaven.”: There is no comfort or companionship in the heavens, only the distant sound of bodies ascending.
“Widow, the compassionate trees bend in,”: The trees offer a sense of empathy or compassion for the widow’s plight.
“The trees of loneliness, the trees of mourning.”: The trees symbolize the widow’s profound sense of loneliness and mourning.
“They stand like shadows about the green landscape โ-“: The trees cast shadows over the landscape, echoing the widow’s sense of darkness or despair.
“Or even like black holes cut out of it.”: The trees resemble black holes, suggesting a sense of emptiness or void.
“A widow resembles them, a shadow-thing,”: The widow is likened to the trees, suggesting a sense of emptiness or darkness within her.
“Hand folding hand, and nothing in between.”: This line suggests a sense of emptiness or void between the widow’s hands, reinforcing her sense of isolation.
“A bodiless soul could pass another soul”: The image of bodiless souls passing each other suggests a sense of spiritual emptiness or disconnection.
“In this clear air and never notice it โ-“: Despite their proximity, the souls remain unaware of each other’s presence, emphasizing their sense of isolation.
“One soul pass through the other, frail as smoke”: The souls pass through each other like smoke, suggesting a sense of ephemerality or transience.
“And utterly ignorant of the way it took.”: The souls remain ignorant of their journey or path, reinforcing their sense of aimlessness or despair.
“That is the fear she hasโthe fear”: The widow’s fear is characterized by a sense of existential dread or uncertainty.
“His soul may beat and be beating at her dull sense”: The fear that her husband’s soul may haunt her, further exacerbating her sense of loneliness or despair.
“Like Blue Mary’s angel, dovelike against a pane”: The image of Blue Mary’s angel suggests a haunting or ethereal presence, reinforcing the widow’s sense of spiritual emptiness.
“Blinded to all but the grey, spiritless room”: The angel is blind to everything except the widow’s sense of emptiness or despair.
“It looks in on, and must go on looking in on.”: The angel is trapped in the widow’s room of despair, echoing her sense of entrapment or isolation.
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The Setting: A Mission Built on Sand The story is set in the 1930s in colonial Cameroon. Our “eyes and ears” for the story is Denis, a young boy who is incredibly devoutโalmost to a fault. He works for Father Drumont, the powerful, stern, and legendary founder of the Bomba mission. To Denis, Drumont is…
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Act & Scene Quote Meaning 1.3 “What, can the devil speak true?” Banquo is shocked that the Witches’ prophecy about the Thane of Cawdor came true, showing his immediate suspicion. 1.3 “The instruments of darkness tell us truths… to betray ‘s in deepest consequence.” He warns Macbeth that evil forces use small truths to trick…

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