Cosmic Continuity
Sadie references the Big Dipper as "the tinker’s cart, a cart he fills with wares to be sold and pushes across the sky." The image of the tinker’s cart is a humble one as it is associated with an itinerant lifestyle. By placing it in the sky, the novel juxtaposes the every day with the cosmic, suggesting that even mundane earthly lives are part of a larger narrative. This imagery reflects one of the novel’s central themes, which is the intersection of the ancient and the modern. Just as the Neanderthals' way of life lingers in Bruno’s teachings, so too do elements of primal existence persist in Sadie’s thoughts. The tinker’s cart, a relic of a past way of living, pushes across the sky carrying the weight of history along with it.
The Polluted Night Sky
When Sadie observes the satellites in the night sky, she describes them as "little electric lice" crawling across the cosmos. This grotesque image represents the intrusion of technology into the natural world that tarnishes what should be an untouched sight. The lice are pests, symbols of discomfort and contamination, echoing Bruno's critique of modern civilization's overreliance on technology and its alienation from nature. By comparing satellites to lice, Kushner reinforces the novel's recurring theme of mankind’s corruption of the earth that extends to the heavens. This imagery underscores the novel's environmental concerns and its indictment of modern life as disruptive to the harmony between humanity and nature.
Solitary Companionship
Throughout Sadie's mornings, she swims alone in a cove accompanied only by a cormorant perched on a rock. The cormorant represents Sadie’s solitude and her bond with nature, as both she and the bird adhere to their daily routines in the serene dawn light. This image of the cormorant, a bird that dives deep into the water to catch fish, parallels Sadie’s introspective journey. She dives into her memories, reflecting on her choices, and coming up for air only when necessary. The bird’s constant presence also serves as a counterpoint to the human characters who come and go in Sadie's life. It reinforces the novel’s exploration of isolation and the search for meaning in a chaotic world.
The Weight of Consequences
Sadie recalls hearing Paul Platon’s final scream as logs crush him. This vivid and brutal imagery of crushing conveys both literal and symbolic weight. The logs represent the destructive power of nature and human exploitation. Paul’s death is a consequence of the environmental conflict central to the novel, where the activists’ attempts to sabotage industrial projects lead to unintended fatalities. The crushing imagery parallels the novel’s themes of pressure, destruction, and the unintended consequences of human actions. It symbolizes the weight of Sadie’s past decisions and the forces (industrial, political, and natural) that crush individuals caught in larger systemic struggles.