O’Connor incorporated symbols, allusions, and similes to showcase the message on the formality of the church and making mistakes. First off, money relates to the formality of the church by being an exemplar of temptation. For instance, Ryan, the nun, would offer money to the child that placed their finger in a candle for five minutes. Jackie was a child who at the time was inquisitive, as any child would be. Why not place your finger in fire for money? Wouldn’t it be a funny story to disclose? Yes, these stories are comical and for that reason halt that formality that some yearn to create. These stories aren’t meant to distraught you, but are just things you do as a kid. Also, there’s this allusion to falling, which, when being told from a contemplative point of view can be funny. On the other hand, it shows how the readers acquire new perspectives while they fall. Before Jackie went to his confession, he stated “I saw in the gaps between the houses like Adam's last glimpse of Paradise.” Many see this “last glimpse” as a miserable moment, but it was more as a reflective and a shift in the individual’s life. Certain instances mark us, and for Jackie it was the last moment before his first confession. It goes against what individuals think of when it comes to the Adam and Eve incident, since it’s depicted as a despondent and awful moment, but the true essence of it is so much more. Jackie isn’t losing his abode and going to hell, he is shifting to a different chapter in his life. Mistakes aren’t meant to stop us, but as ways to have us grow as people, as the Adam and Eve story do. Overall figurative language augments to the idea of humor and satire. Certain situations that seems so solemn and formal, in reality are the
O’Connor incorporated symbols, allusions, and similes to showcase the message on the formality of the church and making mistakes. First off, money relates to the formality of the church by being an exemplar of temptation. For instance, Ryan, the nun, would offer money to the child that placed their finger in a candle for five minutes. Jackie was a child who at the time was inquisitive, as any child would be. Why not place your finger in fire for money? Wouldn’t it be a funny story to disclose? Yes, these stories are comical and for that reason halt that formality that some yearn to create. These stories aren’t meant to distraught you, but are just things you do as a kid. Also, there’s this allusion to falling, which, when being told from a contemplative point of view can be funny. On the other hand, it shows how the readers acquire new perspectives while they fall. Before Jackie went to his confession, he stated “I saw in the gaps between the houses like Adam's last glimpse of Paradise.” Many see this “last glimpse” as a miserable moment, but it was more as a reflective and a shift in the individual’s life. Certain instances mark us, and for Jackie it was the last moment before his first confession. It goes against what individuals think of when it comes to the Adam and Eve incident, since it’s depicted as a despondent and awful moment, but the true essence of it is so much more. Jackie isn’t losing his abode and going to hell, he is shifting to a different chapter in his life. Mistakes aren’t meant to stop us, but as ways to have us grow as people, as the Adam and Eve story do. Overall figurative language augments to the idea of humor and satire. Certain situations that seems so solemn and formal, in reality are the