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Journey to the Interior (1 Viewer)

Nick90210

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Hey does anyone know if I can use Margaret Atwood's "Journey to the Interior" as a text if it was in the stimulus booklet a few years ago?

And while I'm at it, does anyone have the full text of the poem. I've decided I can't link Ulysses with Cosi and Heart of Darkness well enough.

Thanks.
 

saram

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hey, well im using it as an additional material so i hope its ok to use. my teachers no im usin it and didnt tell me not to so ud think it was an ok text to use.
i am usin it for imaginative journeys though but im sure that wouldnt make a difference,
 

Navets

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when in doubt, GOOGLE! XD

I found this:

JOURNEY TO THE INTERIOR

There are similarities
I notice: that the hills
which the eyes make flat as a wall, welded
together, open as I move
to let me through; become
endless as prairies; that the trees
grow spindly, have their roots
often in swamps; that this is a poor country;
that a cliff is not known
as rough except by hand, and is
therefore inaccessible. Mostly
that travel is not the easy going

from point to point, a dotted
line on a map, location
plotted on a square surface
but that I move surrounded by a tangle
of branches, a net of air and alternate
light and dark, at all times;
that there are no destinations
apart from this.


There are differences
of course: the lack of reliable charts;
more important, the distraction of small details:
your shoe among the brambles under the chair
where it shouldn’t be; lucent
white mushrooms and a paring knife
on the kitchen table; a sentence
crossing my path, sodden as a fallen log
I’m sure I passed yesterday

(have l been
walking in circles again?)


but mostly the danger:
many have been here, but only
some have returned safely.


A compass is useless; also
trying to take directions
from the movements of the sun,
which are erratic;
and words here are as pointless
as calling in a vacant wilderness.

Whatever I do I must
keep my head. I know
it is easier for me to lose my way
forever here, than in other landscapes


from http://www.lorenwebster.net/In_a_Dark_Time/category/poets/margaret-atwood/


im fairly sure thats it, cause i was just reading an essay with some quotes from this poem, and it seems to match.
 

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