Literary Devices
Annotate Language, emotion and character in the given
extract…
She was standing by the river looking at the stepping stones
and remembering each one. There was the round unsteady stone, the
pointed one, the flat one in the middle
��� the safe stone where you could stand and look around. The
next wasn���t so safe for when the river was full the water flowed
over it and even when in showed dry it was
slippery. But after that it was easy and soon she was
standing on the other side.
The road was much wider than it used to be but the work had
been done carelessly. The felled trees had not been cleared away
and the bushes looked trampled. Yet it was
the same road and she walked along feeling extraordinarily
happy.
It was a fine day, a blue day. The only thing was that the
sky had a glassy look that she didn���t remember. That was the only
word she could think of. Glassy. She
turned the corner, saw that what had been the old pavement
had been taken up, and there too the road was much wider, but it
had the same unfinished look.
She came to the worn stone steps that led up to the house and
her heart began to beat. The screw pine was gone, so was the mock
summer house called the ajoupa, but the
clove tree was still there and at the TOP of the steps the
rough lawn stretched away, just as she remembered it. She stopped
and looked towards the house that had been
added to and painted white. It was strange to see a car
standing in front of it.
There were two children under the big mango tree, a boy and a
little girl, and she waved to them and called ���Hello���, but they
didn���t answer her or turn their heads.
Very fair children, as Europeans born in the West Indies so
often are: as if the white blood is asserting itself against all
the odds.
The grass was yellow in the hot sunlight as she walked
towards them. When she was quite close, she called again, shyly:
���Hello���. Then, ���I used to live here once,��� she
said. Still they didn���t answer. When she had said for the
third time ���Hello��� she was quite near them. Her arms went out
instinctively with the longing to touch them.
It the boy who turned. His grey eyes looked straight into
hers. His expression didn���t change. He said, ���Hasn���t it gone
cold all of a sudden. D���you notice? Let���s go
in.���
���Yes, let���s,��� said the girl.
Her arms fell to her sides as she WATCHED them running across
the grass to the house. That was the first time she knew.
From ‘I used to Live Here Once’ in The Collected Short
Stories by Jean Rhys












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