Children of the City
Essay by review • January 11, 2011 • Essay • 575 Words (3 Pages) • 926 Views
Water Imagery in "Children of the City"
Rain has always been an important symbol in life. It is one of very few actions that can be both destructive and harsh, but at the same time constructive and life-giving. Throughout literature the visual image of rain is usually connected to feelings of sorrow, death, and despair. The most commonly known example of this would be in Hemingway's "Farewell to Arms". Hemingway uses the rain to tell of peoples negative emotions, so it is easy to take that idea into other readings. Outside of literature, however, rain is seen as being connected to positive thoughts of growth, prosperity and cleansing. In this story of adolescent love the author uses the presence of water to saturate the subjects with these positive feelings.
At the beginning the author introduces the rain as "urban" in contrast to "field or shore" rain. Immediately the image of urban rain is less threatening than that of a field or shore. It gives the reader a playful image of almost being teased by the rain. In the city one has to hide from it and jump from umbrellas to awnings, yet never has to worry about the danger of being caught in it for too long. These playful and teasing characteristics of the rain are the exact guidelines to the relationship between the two main characters. The rain represents the couple's emotion and they experiment with it just like in a real adolescent relationship. They see how long they can be drenched by its passion, nevertheless they return to the overhangs not knowing how much of it they can handle.
Looking at it in a biblical sense, the rain is both destructive to them and helping their relationship grow. God sent the flood down to man because of our sins causing much destruction, but at the same time giving us a rebirth and purification. Too much rain may flood their relationship with emotion; however this "urban" rain teases them and lets them feel free and pure. The idea of the rain giving growth to their relationship is seen in the lines ending "a scrawny tree," and "their forested way". Alone they are fruitless and scrawny, yet together they are given life by the rain to create an entire forest.
Conversely, after all that the rain has provided them with the author's last mention is that of a negative connotation. The rain has
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