Professor Dombroski 1 Lisa Dombroski Harrison English 101 The footsteps of E.B. White's article "One Time to the Lake" on 18th September 2000 shows the consistency of growth from adulthood to adulthood. White started at the beginning of the first paragraph. He and his father "got back to the lake from summer to summer, and lasted for 1 month on August 1st." I am anxious to return to the sacred place someday. I returned to the lake this time and regained a lot of memories.
In E.B. White's brilliant 1941 personal article "A Lake Again", the lake is a writer's past and present background. Throughout this article, White talks about the dual life experienced by him and his son when he spent in the lake. This article moves nonlinearly (as non-chronologically) as Caucasi flows through his psychological process, or both in the past and present, inside or outside the world, as we call the flow of consciousness. As the speaker is confronted with an internal conflict, White refused to accept that he is now a father, not a child. Internal conflict refers to an inner way of thinking about the hero, its troubles and neurotic pain. White also uses sensual details covering the senses and nostalgia, the past and covering a romantic and rosy way of talking about his story. Other topics in this article include people and technology, and parents and children.
The first article on E and B White's lake, published in 1941, is about his experience of revisiting the childhood in Maine state. This visit is a memory of White's memory related to the lake and childhood. In fact, his idea returned to his childhood. This shift is necessary for him to enjoy the trip. However, this shift also emphasizes the actual change to the lake. For example, instead of looking at the lake he uses the eyes of his childhood to perceive the lake. This situation creates an interesting reality from what he wants to see based on his childhood experience. In the other lake, E. B. White's experience of visiting the lake again is drawn.