The title of Saturday climbing is very important. Just by reading the title, you will be able to identify many content about plots and themes. You can automatically assume that climbing is included. This means that the character needs to overcome obstacles and therefore means the difficulty of plotting. In addition, the title indicates that there is an upward progress between letters. This can be associated with rising words in the title. I believe it reacts well to this short story, so I chose "Never Letting Go" by Cbabi Bayoc. It shows the proximity of Barry and Moira in the past, and how they want them to play. It also represents trust. It is one of the main themes of the story. My daughter in the picture clung to her father. This is related to the story as all Moira wants her father to believe that she can make the right decision on its own.
First, after reading Saturday's rise, I found it to be a simple story. A story that Barry climbed the cliff and came back to her daughter. But when I reviewed this story over and over, I noticed that the cliff actually represented a relationship between Barry and his daughter Moira. This is a story showing the father's opinion to his daughter. W. D. Valgardson used many symbolic meanings in his story "Saturday Climb" to help the reader better understand his message. He uses symbolism in two important areas. It is the environment related to the object with symbolic value and the relationship between father and daughter. Many things of Saturday climbing have important symbolic values. For example, "bearing nut, coil, shackle, rope" represents the relationship between Barry and Moira. "They look like Kfragile, he weighs ten times his weight." Like a rope, those relationships seem to be fragile, but it looks more powerful.