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seductiveness. The use of imagery
serves to highlight the enchanting
youth and glamour of her mother.
2.
The thought of me
doesn’t occur
in the ballroom
with the thousand
eyes (lines 6-7)
Visual imagery
(sense of sight)
The thousand eyes in the ballroom
may be a metaphor of the mirror ball
casting glittering light across the
dance floor or a synecdoche/
metonymy of the potential suitors
whose eyes are watching the
charming dancer. The use of imagery
enhances the excitement of the
ballroom and creates the image of
the mother being as an enchanting
goddess and centre of attention in
the ballroom.
3.
I remember my
hands in those
high-heeled red
shoes, relics,
and now your ghost
clatters toward me
over George Square
till I see you, clear
as scent, under the
tree…
(lines 12-14)
Visual imagery
(sense of sight)
Audial imagery
(sense of hearing)
Olfactory imagery
(sense of smell)
The clattering sound symbolises the
mother’s younger days when she
moved on the dance floor in her
high-heeled shoes. In likening her
mother’s red high-heeled shoes to
“relics”, some historical old objects,
the speaker expresses mixed feelings
of sadness and reverence for her
mother’s bygone youth.
The mixing of senses (synaethesia) in
“I see you, clear as scent” shows the
speakers’ vivid recollection and
imagination of her mother dancing,
as if she could see the moving image
(“your ghost” in line 13) and smell
her perfume. The speaker then went
on to imagine the romantic
encounter her mother had with the
love bites on her neck.