When Gregor Samsa woke up one morning from
unsettling dreams, he found himself changed in his bed into a monstrous
vermin. He was lying on his back as hard as armor plate, and when he lifted
hid head a little, he saw his vaulted brown belly, sectioned by arch-shaped ribs,
to whose dome the cover, about to slide off completely, could barley cling.
His many legs, pitifully thin compared with the size of the rest of him, were
weaving helplessly before his eyes.
“What’s happened to me?” he thought. It
was no dream. His room, a regular human room, only a little on the small
side, lay quiet between the four
familiar walls. Above the table on which a collection of cloth samples was
unpacked and spread out-Samsa was a commercial traveler-hung the picture
which he had recently cut out of an illustrated magazine and put into a
pretty gilt frame. It showed a lady, with a fur cap on and a fur stole,
sitting upright and holding out to the spectator a huge fur muff into which
the whole of her forearm had vanished! Gregor's eyes turned next to the
window, and the overcast sky-one could hear raindrops beating on the window
gutter-made him quite melancholy. What about sleeping a little longer and
forgetting all this nonsense, he thought, but it could not be done, for he
was accustomed to sleep on his right side and in his present condition he
could not turn himself over. However violently he forced himself towards his
right side he always rolled on to his back again. He tried it at least a
hundred times, shutting his eyes to keep from seeing his struggling legs, and
only desisted when he began to feel in his side a faint dull ache he had
never experienced before.
Oh God, he thought, what an exhausting job I've
picked on! Traveling about day in, day out. It's much more irritating work
than doing the actual business in the office, and on top of that there's the
trouble of constant traveling, of worrying about train connections, the bed
and irregular meals, casual acquaintances that are always new and never
become intimate friends. The devil take it all! He felt a slight itching up
on his belly; slowly pushed himself on his back nearer to the top of the bed
so that he could lift his head more easily; identified the itching place
which was surrounded by many small white spots the nature of which he could
not understand and made to touch it with a leg, but drew the leg back
immediately, for the contact made a cold shiver run through him.
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Thursday, January 23, 2014
Prose Passage Close Reading Essay #1
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