The imagery of radiant nights
The author uses the radiant nights to depict the sense of sight to the reader. He describes the last days of Malone using the imagery of sight when he says, “The winter of his fortieth year was an unusually cold one for the Southern town with ice, pastel days, and radiant nights.” The imaginative picture of the Southern town is painted in the brain of the reader as he reads Malone’s story. For instance, the radiant nights are a reflection of Malone’s dark days. Malone’s dark days comprise of suffering because of his ailing. In addition to undergoing radiant nights, the Southern town is icy because it is winter.
The imagery of sight
Malone is becoming weary of his health during his last years. His failing body is depicted to the reader through the imagery of sight. For instance, the author states that Malone is not able to eat because his veins are pulsed. The author writes, “His temples were shrunken so that the veins pulsed visibly when he chewed or swallowed and his Adam’s apple struggled in his thin neck.” Out of this imagery, the reader can see how Malone is ailing and struggling with his health. His situation is becoming worse because if he develops difficulties in eating, obviously his health is deteriorating farther.
The Imagery of Smell
Malone and the Doctor’s floor are on the same building. One day, Malone feels that his health is becoming worse, he decides to go to the doctor in the upper floor to see the doctor for a medical checkup. Immediately after the check-up, Malone suspects that something is wrong because the doctor is avoiding direct eye contact with him. However, there is a smell in the and a fly puzzles in the sterile an indication that something is not right. The author says, “A fly puzzled in the sterile, dreary room and there was the lingering smell of either.” The persistent odor suggests that all is not well with Malone’s healthiness. Malone realizes the earlier he starts monitoring his health the better because something worse might be on the way.