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Sunday, July 6, 2014

"He gonna walk..."

Upon leaving Pichot's house after discussing Jefferson's impending execution, Grant says to Reverend Ambrose, "I'm going for a walk, a long walk in the opposite direction" [p.159]. Where does this walk take him, literally and symbolically? ( The deadline to post a response to this question is midnight, July 10, 2014.)

3 comments:

Unknown said...

Literally he had visited a river that was near his house. It was still running high from the recent rain that had fallen and was still murky. Symbolically the river represents his own emotion and judgement. The river and his emotions swelling from the current rain and events that happened to then.
Travis Stennett

Unknown said...

Grant's walk takes him to the river on the other side of the highway. Symbolically this walk takes him away from that place and all of it's problems. He pictures himself on an island with just Vivian and no one else. He wants to get away and walk allowed him to pretend for a little while. He comes back to realization it's the same old muddy river next to town, and he's still stuck there in that place he hates so much.
Holly McKenzie

Unknown said...

Grants walk after leaving Pichots house takes him to the same old muddy river near his neighborhood. Symbolically the river is like his emotions and thoughts at that point. Crazy and running rapidly. He thinks about what his life should be and what it would be like if he never became a teacher. He also thinks about what him and Vivian somewhere else away from all the chaos, and what it would be like I his Aunt and Ms. Emma would not have put him in that situation.
Jenna Anderson