
|
Chapter One: Heaven and Earth in Jest
|
|
Early on in the book, Dillard locates herself at the creek...
This, you will find, dear reader, is an understatement! Throughout the book you will be privileged to share in Dillard's thoughts, meanderings, tangents, comments, and poetic responses to the natural world around her. Written response #1 -- Personal response to Dillard's writing (250-500+ words)
Written response #2 -- Personal response to related research Find a website on any aspect of nature. Scroll, meander, wander, saunter
through it. On pages 7-8 Dillard relates one of the most astounding descriptions in the book-- the incident of the "frog's fatal encounter with the giant water bug." She writes:
In this chapter, Dillard ponders the mysteries of pain, death and fear in nature. The title of the chapter is clarified as Dillard tells us, "In the Koran, Allah asks, "The heaven and earth and all in between, thinkest thou I made them in jest?" Written response # 3 Personal response to Dillard's writing (250 words) What do you make of this first chapter? How do you react to Dillard's first focus on nature. You might consider her phrasing as she describes on page 10 her sighting of the sharks'... "...power and beauty, grace tangled in a rapture with violence." |
Copyright
© 2001-2006 by the Network for Instructional TV, Inc.
All rights reserved.