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The Metaphors of the Blackfoot
During a lifetime, a person usually finds a place to call his or her own. ... In Norman Maclean’s, A River Runs Through It, the Maclean family adopts the great Blackfoot River as their special place to fish, think and bring anyone they felt needed it; the words of the river. ...
Going fly-fishing in the Blackfoot River can satisfy individual curiosities. ... The reader was shown that Neal misused the satisfying power of fishing the Blackfoot River when, “The bait-fishing bastard who had violated everything that out father had taught us about fishing by bringing a whore and a coffee can of worms but not a rod,”(72). ... Fly-fishing in the Blackfoot River was another way to satisfy curiosity about religion, which Neal did not care about.
Approximate Word count = 913 Approximate Pages = 3.7 (250 words per page double spaced)
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