The chuckling television
As the television continues chuckling, the narrator brings to the reader’s attention how it ignores their intrusion as if it were a brave comic shunning hecklers. The narrator notes: “A television chuckled in a brassy nook ignoring our incursion like a brave comic shunning hecklers.” The simile enhances imagery by creating familiarity.
The irreversibility of a bomb
The narrator emphasizes the irreversibility of a bomb by using a simile in which the same is compared to dropped plates, kicked cats, or hasty words. Once a bomb goes off, the action can't be reversed regardless of one's wishes that it be so. The narrator notes: “They were fairly irreversible too. Bombs were like dropped plates, kicked cats or hasty words. They were error. They were disarrangement and mess.”
The bombed
The image of the bombed spilled on the street is enhanced through the use of a simile. The disregard for these people is conceptualized through their comparison to cheap fruit. The narrator notes: “The bombed dead were spilled on the street like cheap fruit.”
The fury of the rainfall
The falling rainfall is perceived as vengeful through the narrator’s employment of a simile to present how it fell. The narrator notes: “The weather broke, and a light rain fell like retribution.” The simile enables a profound understanding of the intensity with which the rain fell as if it had been seeking some form of revenge.
The imagery of Chuckle’s mother on the bed
The narrator uses a simile to enhance the image of Chuckle’s mother on her bed. In particular, her warped and wrapped appearance is conceivable through the comparison to a slug. The narrator notes: “… he could see the massive form of his chubby mother, wrapped and warped like a slug in her bedding.”