Eudora Welty, born in 1909, grew up in a lively house with two younger brothers at Miss Jackson. Her parents married an insurance man who was born in Ohio State and was a West Virginia teacher in a narrow sense who settled in Jackson in 1904. Eudora's school life began to attend white school. Born and raised under the influence which was severely supervised at the age of 16, she persuaded her parents to go to college from home to Columbus, Mississippi, Madison, Wisconsin in some way.
She was identified by Jackson and Mississippi, where he spent most of her life. Eudora Welty has a bachelor's degree at the University of Wisconsin and an advertisement at the Columbia University in New York. In an interview with public radio, she allowed all her stories, including only those related to Jackson: "The Way to Devastation". She remembered that I saw an old lady walk slowly in Jackson's landscape and she wrote a story in her heart about an old lady tied somewhere . That woman was wearing a red cloth on her head.
Eudora Welty's role in Phoenix Jackson's "Worn Road" is a story about grandmother's unstoppable love and consideration to her grandson. Phoenix Jackson is the protagonist and hero of Eudora Welty of A Worn Path. Phoenix is an elderly, weak woman trying a long and dangerous journey through the forest to Natchez. - Eudora Welty's "Wear of the Road" As time passed, people passed through a trampy life course, overcome the obstacles in the process and seized the hope of strengthening their pace. In her short story "A Worn Path", Eudora Welty told this eternal theme through Phoenix, the leading character Phoenix traveled. Through the use of dialogue and symbolism, Welti shows a persistent notion that people overcome their predicament of life and ultimately gain the dominance.
In the struggle of Eudora Welty's life, Eudora Welty's "Wear of the Road" is a tragic story about a heroic journey of African-American women in Phoenix. The reader will not soon discover the plot of this story, or why Phoenix is going through her exhausted streets - the confrontation of this story - especially on very cold days will not give up. - Using symbolism allows us to take your story to a whole new level by showing the feelings of each character. And it can make people or even objects stand out. Eudora Welty uses symbols in various ways, but you can even notice it soon. Eudora Welty's "Wears of Wear" is a short story, and you can see the symbol everywhere in many places you read.