Dybek quotes, “There were other places I discovered where Marcy’s playing carried.” The quote gives us a mental conception that the narrator prevails the music, Marcy playing shows physical features of the building where he once was. When Marcy played at night the narrator thought of his mother crying after his father has died. Marcy music was so irresistible to the family in the building it also broke out Dzia-Dzia silence. Dybek also notes, “That’s boogie woogie music.” Stating that the grandfather can tell that Marcy music is familiar to “colored man” music. Which during the war, The Harlem Renaissance was already in full act. In Stuart Dybek’s “Chopin In Winter” the author sets up the story in a very specific setting in an apartment building located on eighteenth street during the winter of world war 2. “The winter Dzia-Dzia came to …show more content…
The author uses allusion to show the resemblance of where they were staying in the events going on during the period. “They rang the bells all over Europe. It was winter. The Prussians heard them.” Dybek’s choices of words helps Dzia-Dzia explain who and what “Chopin” was and the effect he had in Europe during the war when he died. Dzia-Dzia explained the resemblance of what he though of Marcy music when it came about to the narrator. “Ahhh, he shook his head in disappointment. You think everything with a little spirit is the polonaise.” Clarifying to the narrator that having an age of factor will cause you to be more