Genre
Short Story
Setting and Context
Australian bush, late 19th century
Narrator and Point of View
Third person omniscient
Tone and Mood
determined, contemplative, threatening, lonely, barren, melancholic, suspenseful
Protagonist and Antagonist
Protagonist: the drover's wife Antagonist: the snake
Major Conflict
If the drover's wife will be able to kill the snake that is threatening her family.
Climax
When the drover's wife and Alligator kill the snake.
Foreshadowing
n/a
Understatement
-"He may forget sometimes that he is married" is an understatement, for what is really meant is that the husband is sleeping with other women and violating the bonds of their marriage.
Allusions
-According to Queens University Library, "The Young Ladies’ Journal (1864-1920) is an illustrated periodical that was marketed specifically to a young, female, middle-class audience. Each month, the YLJ published several fashion supplements that were distributed with its regular magazine issues. These supplements feature illustrated fashion spreads, needlework design and crafting templates, and dress patterns that could be cut out and traced onto fabric."
Imagery
see other entry
Paradox
n/a
Parallelism
n/a
Metonymy and Synecdoche
n/a
Personification
n/a