Surge

Quicksand

Passage: Helga again felt a surge of hot anger
and seething resentment. And again it subsided
in amazement at the memory of the consider-
able applause which had greeted the speaker
just before he had asked his God’s blessing
upon them.

Definition: to move very quickly and suddenly in a particular direction

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/surge

Understanding: I understand that Helga felt a sudden rush of anger and resentment towards her job at Naxous

New , exciting words

  1. Despatched
  2. suicide
  3. Valuation 
  4. pseudonym
  5. Trifle
  6. caricature
  7. Disprove
  8. Infinite
  9. gape
  10. incite
  11. bell jar
  12. accoutrement
  13. queer
  14. fictitious
  15. avaricious

 

I didn’t mind the glossary assignment r for this semester. I feel that I was enlightened by knowing the true definition of these words. Understanding what one specific word means can help to create a better understanding of the entire passage . though it takes a few minutes to loom up the definition of a specific word, when you are able to continue reading  the text is all of  a sudden that much more interesting.

Temerity

Temerity

Novel: Quicksand

Passage: Teachers as well as students
were subjected to the paring process, for it tolerated
no innovations,, no individualism. Ideas
it rejected, and looked with open hostility on one and all who had the temerity to offer a suggestion or ever so mildly express a disapproval.

Definition: The quality of being confident and unafraid of danger or punishment especially in a way that seems rude or foolish

Understanding: This passage is when Ester realizes that she is confident enough to leave Naxous and realizes that she is not afraid of punishment.

 

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/temerity

 

Despatched

“Her fictitious nature was of great assistance to her. It is far harder to kill a phantom than a reality. She was always creeping back when I thought I had despatched her. Though I flatter myself that I killed her in the end, the struggle was severe;”

http://i.word.com/idictionary/dispatch

Despatched (verb)

To kill with quick efficiency

 

 

that phantom in the room which was the angel had to go. It was very difficult for her to kill this phantom, because it wasn’t in the flesh, but yet in the mind. When she thought that she had killed this phantom with the quickness, and accuracy she turned out to be wrong.

 

Trifle

 

“It was, too, as she was uncomfortably aware even a trifle ridiculous, and mentally caricatured herself, moving shuttle like from continent to continent.

 

Trifle (noun)

Something of little or no importance

Moving back and forth from continent to continent made began to make her feel a little irrelevant. She had not planted her feet long enough in one place to be taken seriously. She may have been her own worst critic but, moving about the way she did made her feel unimportant.

http://i.word.com/idictionary/trifle

Disproving

“On the contrary, she was snubbed, slapped, lectured and exhorted. Her mind must have been strained and her vitality lowered by the need of opposing this, of disproving that”(246)

 

http://i.word.com/idictionary/disprove

disprove (Verb)

 

To prove to be false or wrong

Instead of being praised and adored she was abused. This woman was looked down upon and thought to be the lesser. No woman not even an artist or writer could prove a man wrong without being lowered. It was almost the culture in those times for a woman that has been seeking independence to be slapped, or lectured in the name of men’s superiority.

Infinite

 

“That’s one of the reasons I never wanted to get married. The last thing I wanted was infinite security and to be the place an arrow shoots off from. I want change and excitement and to shoot off from a Fourth of July rocket”.

http://i.word.com/idictionary/infinite

infinite (adjective)

immeasurably or inconceivably great or extensive

 

Helga feared the idea of being kept. Marriage would mean that it would last forever, and he would be there to secure her indefinitely. Helga was looking for excitement in her life. Whatever changes they were to be made were not to include a man that would stagnate her. Marriage to Helga would almost feel like she was being held hostage.

Suicide

 

“That morning , I had tried to hang myself. I had taken the silk cord of my mothers yellow bathrobe As soon as she left for work, and in the Amber shade of the bedroom, fashioned it into a knit that slipped up and down on itself. It took me a long time to do this, because I was poor at knits and had no idea how to make one”

http://i.word.com/idictionary/suicide

Suicide (noun)

 

The act or instance of taking one’s own life voluntarily and intentionally especially by a person of years of discretion and if sound mind

Though the specific word suicide was not in this passage I feel it is of great assistance in understanding the passage. This particular passage is an explanation of how Helga tried to take her own life. Her making knits and knits in the silk cord showed her volunteering to take her own life.

Gape

 

She was incited to inflame attention and admiration. She was dressed for it, subtly schooled for it. And after a while she gave herself up wholly to the fascinating business of being seen, gaped at, desired. “

Gape (Verb)

To gaze stupidly or in open mouthed surprise or wonder

http://i.word.com/idictionary/gape

Helga was excited about her new clothes. She was infatuated with the idea that men would now be paying her more attention. This was a change for her. Helga was sure that her new appearance would shock everyone.

Glossary Write-up

This glossary assignment was a great way for me to actually try to understand the text better. normally, I would just use context clues to try to figure out a word that I didn’t understand. By doing this assignment, I learned words that i didn’t know before,and discovered more definitions about words that I already had prior knowledge on. This effected the way I read the passage. I took time to appreciate the word play the authors used to send a message. For example, Woolf used the word ‘roused’ to describe the way the girl woke from her sleep in Professions For Women”. She could’ve just said the girl woke up, but Woolf wanted to relay the message that the girl’s ideas woke her from her sleep, and she was trying to avoid the subject of her thoughts by sleeping. Without using ‘roused’ the reader wouldn’t get a clear idea of what the author was saying.