![]() ![]() High-heeled shoes for the lady, red paint Key Passage 8: Lakunle's imagined magazine (Lakunle): I want to walk beside you in the street, Oh, Sidi, you looked as if, at that moment, the sun himself Made you stretch your arms toward the sun. Doe you remember it? It was the one for which he ![]() ![]() Right across to the end of another, is one of you from head The book is an image of you from her [touches the top ofĪnd in the middle leaves, from the beginning of one leaf Key Passage 7: Sidi in the magazine (Girl): Oh, Sidi, he was right. ![]() Lakunle in accepting colonial language adopts its frameworks for understanding people, and he uses it to align himself with the "civilized" world outside the village Key Passage 6 (Lakunle): Bush-girl you are, bush-girl you'll always be it allows one to separate oneself from others The Longer One-you wait! How does language affect Lakunle - it tells the truth about the world (Lakunle): I own only the Shorter Companion (Sidi): Is the bag empty? Why did you stop? With a child strapped to her back? Key Passage 5 (Lakunle): A savage custom, barbaric, out-dated, That's why they are called the weaker sex. Key Passage 4 (Lakunle): Please, don't be angry with me. ![]()
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