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MBA.Graduate Psychology,PHD in HRM
Strayer,Phoniex,
Feb-1999 - Mar-2006
MBA.Graduate Psychology,PHD in HRM
Strayer,Phoniex,University of California
Feb-1999 - Mar-2006
PR Manager
LSGH LLC
Apr-2003 - Apr-2007
Both Welty and White use the word "indelible" in their essays, which means that which cannot be changed, eliminated, or forgotten or a mark that cannot be erased.  Welty says, "Setting out on the world, a child feels so indelible. He only comes to find out later that it's all the others along the way who are making themselves indelible to him" (149). White writes, "Summertime, oh summertime, pattern of life indelible, the fade-proof lake, the woods unshatterable, the pasture with the sweetfern and the juniper forever and ever, summer without end." What do they mean by this and how does reveal a similarity or difference in their experiences or writing at this point? Or how does it impact Welty and/or White's epiphany (realization) at the end of the text?
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