How have the composers of the texts you have studied convey these differences in response to change? In your answer, you must refer to Heart of Darkness, either in the park poem or Onegin the film and one of your own choice.
For one person a change represents progress; whereas, for another, catastrophe.
Heart of Darkness is the ideal book in terms of telling a story that confirms change can mean either progress or catastrophe for any one person. An example of the fact that change can mean a catastrophe for one person lies on page 111 of Heart of Darkness where, as Kurtz (his change is catastrophic) dies, utters his final words: “The horror! The horror!” In my opinion, These …show more content…
After she and her ex-lover talk “from his neat head…rises a small balloon- but for the grace of god.” Here is the main point the writer makes. In this line, the writer illustrates and image of her previous life, enabling us to conjure and guess at her life before and wonder how wonderful it was then; because, why else would the man be so curious of her diminished state if she hadn’t changed so drastically? The composer of this poem further emphasizes her lethargic, depressed and aimless life by using coloured words such as “whine, bicker,tug,aimless.”
As opposed to her life befor marriage and children, she must have been blithe, full-of-life, worn extravagant clothes as we can infer from the line “But for the grace of god,” where the man wonders what would’ve happened to him if he had married this wreck, who used to be blithe, full-of-life, worn extravagant clothes, as this man had a “neat” head and therefore wa probably caring of life, as he is bothered to be