Everything becomes vague and untrustful since he tries to post a variety of links on his own. How many times I tried to defend myself in the past times. However, it seems that it can hardly be worked at present. The question is that, is she trustful? I doubt it. She at least can pay less attention to it and show her ignorance to it. And if necessarily, she would like to praise his dedication and contribution without any contemplation. To be nice and kind to everybody, there is really somebody over there, indeed, believe it or not. Brotherhood doesn't suit me, honestly. Because you try not to offend others, try not to displease your family members. Oh, gosh, most horrible behavior and flattered disposition ever! Sometimes I think that her uniqueness shall be, none of everything but endow something without any uniqueness. Pathetic, truly. This kind of person doesn't know how to reject, which means that she does not have any sense or consciousness of showing her rejection and her judgment toward others. There is no such freedom in her mind. The most honesty is to unconsciously submit to others' taste, opinion and "time." And furthermore, to be secretly, more or less, she sneaks the moment of being free from the conventionality, dressing up splendidly while going out in order to make up for the lack that cannot be barely conquered with your own personality. Poor little thing, I truly wish you could be bold and sensitive.
Notes on W. S. Merwin's "Tergvinder's Stone"
Take one of your favorite stories from our course text , Sudden Fiction Continued , and comment on its characterization, narrative techniques, or other psychological or circumstantial aspects that make your selected story an evocative one. 60% Tergvinder's Stone by W. S. Merwin In W. S. Merwin's "Tergvinder’s Stone," a man called Tergvinder carries a plain-looking stone from the bottom of his drive. He does not explain much about the stone to anyone. Troubled by the insomnia, Tergvinder thinks that his problem in life can never be solved if discovering that he was still alive. However, Tergvinder does not face the problem rightly in reality. Although people around him take the stone of no use, Tergvinder regards it as his spiritual comfort for he seems to find the fellow-feeling from the stone in some certain attitude. The protagonist, Tergvinder, perhaps he does not know the illness has been invading him step by step. Here the illness does not w
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