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In the following passage from Scene 1, Yank responds to Paddy's nostalgic monologue about not wanting to become part of the modern "machine." Believing Paddy's stance on the matter to be ridiculous, Yank writes him off as overly nostalgic, using metaphor to get his point across:
YANK: All dat crazy tripe about nights and days; all dat crazy tripe about stars and moons; all dat crazy tripe about suns and winds, fresh air and de rest of it—Aw hell, dat’s all a dope dream! Hittin’ de pipe of de past, dat’s what he’s doin’.
In the above passage, Yank compares Paddy's nostalgia for nature and the past to a "pipe" or a "dope dream." Nostalgia, according to Yank, is a heady drug that can cause keep some older people from recognizing what the present and future have to offer. Like a drug, nostalgia has the ability to alter a person's memory: through these rose-tinted glasses, people can imagine the past as whatever they most wish it to be. The future is unwritten, but the past is still there, able to be altered for a more favorable version of events. If Paddy sailed on a boat in 1720 instead of in 1920, his life would not be appreciably better than it is in the present moment—but nostalgia (like drug use) is surprisingly effective at altering reality.












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Common Core-aligned