Wednesday, August 20, 2008
The Cathedral Blog
4. The ending to this story is almost all but perfect in my view. The narrator always sees himself as a greater person because he has the ability to see and do things that involve seeing. He sees the blind man as a person who really needs help doing everything like he has to help him to do simple things. He also makes an effort to make the blind feel like a somewhat normal person. When the narrator is explaining the cathedral he makes an effort to relate to things and keeps going off on the wrong thing when the blind man tells him to get a paper and pen and the narrator thinks he is going to make a horrible drawing and when he actually draws a cathedral he is speechless like all dialogue stops and that is how the story ends. Since the narrator is telling the story he is talking all the time but when he sees the blind mans drawing he just stops all together.
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1) Writing is relatively free from grammatical, usage and spelling errors.
2) Writing that has enough detail to illustrate that you’ve read the homework
3) Depth of thought, either in asking insightful questions(not rhetorical ones) or insightful comments that illustrate complexity of the text
4) Evidence from the text that supports your insights and not plot summary
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