VIOLA'S HOME - CONTINUED ZANONI knocks at the door. Before VIOLA can speak ZANONI enters. He remains cold, aloof and unflattering. He hears the SOUND of the violin that still echoes in the walls and ceiling of the home. VIOLA PISANI I dreamt I saw you here last night. ZANONI I can hear the music from your father's endless playing. It touches every note as if he is standing here. VIOLA PISANI I hear it play in the night. Most of the time he communicated with me through his music... It was…
I ran and ran and ran as quick as my legs could feeling an aching pain but ignoring it for the sake of the doodle's life. I made it to my porch and as quick as I could rustled through my pockets noticing I lost my house's spare key. I banged and kicked and punched the door as hard as I could hoping to get attention from my parents and then, "creeaak." The door opened and I went as fast as…
was the person whose birthday was being celebrated. One of the guests said “Happy birthday Robin!” There were two hosts and myself in the house where the celebration was being held before the first two guests arrived. These guests entered through the back door. This lead them through the den into the family room and then to the dining room/kitchen. There were no doorways between any of these rooms, which allowed guests to move freely through the house while still being able to hear what was…
For example, Scout stated, “Jem and I hated her. If she was on the porch when we passed, we would be raked by her wrathful graze, subjected to ruthless interrogation regarding our behavior, and given a melancholy prediction on what we would amount to when we grew up, which was always nothing “(Lee 83). As they would pass…
Hoagland, uses imagery, diction, and allusion to convey his joyance in being young. By using these literary devices he is able to describe his craving for being young again. In Hoagland's first stanza it says “Sometimes i wish i were still out on the back porch, drinking jet fuel…” which automatically shows that he misses his youth. That also sets up a care free tone with a hint of regret. Hoagland also has a lot of parts in the poem where he was enjoying living in the moment. For example he…
Emilie Oesterle a.k.a. Half O and I all had one crazy night. It started out leaving SJA and heading to Emilie’s to get her some clothes then to Cass’s. We all changed out of our school uniforms and into casual clothes. After changing we went on Cass’s porch and started smoking weed. All three of us flirted with these senior guys, Thompson Hinman, Jimmy Partel, and Alex Sarrirs. These guys were always together, they were best friends. Each of us had “our” guy. Meaning we each prefered one guy…
never came back. Sal and her father moved to Euclid, Ohio after they heard…
As newly elected Circuit City CEO Alan McCollough sat on his back porch on a summer evening in early August 2000, drinking a fresh glass of iced tea and wearing his favorite Saluki tshirt, he pondered the tough decision ahead regarding his company’s involvement in the appliance business. He knew that Circuit City had been selling appliances nearly since its inception in 1959, but Lowe’s and The Home Depot were hot on the company’s trail, threatening to take its place in the appliance retail…
Yuri started working on the big door to the loading ramp and the others followed me back inside. The shopping crew grabbed carts and I started pointing. Somewhere along the line we quit looking at sizes and just started grabbing all the jeans, all the shirts and all the coats. In the back was more cold weather clothing still boxed up. Ronnie radioed contact and Yuri went out to deal with it. He was back shortly with gunk on his pipe. Stacking stuff in the truck was the bottleneck. My…
The only thing I heard as I walked out the door was the sound of my mother's voice ringing in my ears. "Ho Chi Kuei", cold, distant and scathing as usual. (204) "Ho Chi Kuei", a reminder of what I was, female, woman. "Ho Chi Kuei", the phrase that fuels my determinism. While walking down the dirt road to my friend's house, I made an oath to myself, "I will do whatever I want, no matter what stand in my way". No one is going to make me marry a man, I can go to college, become a lumberjack…