Definition of Paradox
Part 1 reaches for a simile as its characters try to make sense of life’s strange pace. Grasping for answers to the paradox of time, Bim likens their lives to water as she chats with her sister:
‘Isn’t it strange how life won’t flow, like a river, but moves in jumps, as if it were held back by locks that are opened now and then to let it jump forwards in a kind of flood? There are these long still stretches—nothing happens—each day is exactly like the other—plodding, uneventful—and then suddenly there is a crash—mighty deeds take place—momentous events—even if one doesn’t know it at the time—and then life subsides again into the backwaters till the next push, the next flood?
An instance of situational irony strikes Bim with all the force of a revelation in Part 4. Sleepless while grading papers one night, she works through the contradictions of their childhood home:
Unlock with LitCharts A+With her inner eye she saw how her own house and its particular history linked and contained her as well as her whole family with all their separate histories and experiences—not binding them within some dead and airless cell but giving them the soil in which to send down their roots, and food to make them grow and spread, reach out to new experiences and new lives, but always drawing from the same soil, the same secret darkness.