12/3/2022 0 Comments Way to the woods switch![]() ![]() Players progress through a series of puzzle islands. The Gardens Between on the surface is a simple but intuitive puzzle game. This game doesn’t have branching dialogue trees and the level design is more abstract, but it’s got a heavy theme and a lot to unpack. The Garden Between is a little different from other games in this list as it does have quite a hands-on style of play. This is one of the best games like Night in the Woods both in terms of story content and getting to play as an animal, and it’s one of the best story-rich games on PS5 too. It has an engaging plot and being a cat is a fun twist. Stray isn’t the longest game, but it leaves a mark. It’s a bigger story than the initial pitch of ‘you’re a cat’ would suggest. Across Stray, you’ll discover more about what happened and what the future could hold. With no human life there, it’s inhabited by their left-behind robotic servants. You’ll use all the talents of a cat to progress through the world. There’s also some puzzles to solve too, where you’ll need to use tools like the cat’s claws to get the attention of NPCs and operate machines. The main gameplay is platforming, taking advantage of a cat’s natural athletic abilities. You get to play as a cat! Unlike Night in the Woods, this isn’t an anthropomorphized cat either, it’s a normal walk-on-all-fours cat. Stray is a title with a unique selling point. Often I have been reading a poem, then after reading the comments I realise others have looked at the poem in a different light, this then gives the piece a whole new diamentionĪnd yes, Kipling did indeed write Jungle Book.Įdit | Reply aquestion, who reads these comments when the poet himself is dead? :SĪnyway i liked this.1. and possibly created images of them far, far from where they were known so well!ĮVen so, I think this is about faries travelling a road and then taking it away to remain mystical and hidden from the increasing presence of man.Įdit | Reply Many people who come to read the poems also read the comments, this often leads to a conversation on some poems. ![]() I loved this very much.Įdit | Reply Though faries seem to be a European thing (England, Wales, Ireland, Scotland.) This poem makes me wonder what Kipling might have imagined in his days in India! I wonder if he was told of fairies and such as a young boy. Its almost as if you could see that old road, overgrown with shrubs and grass. I enjoyed reading this piece!Įdit | Reply Very beautiful, its calming and charming. Could the road through the woods have been axed by a Dr Beeching figure, chair of a British Roads Board, as a cost-cutting measure on half the country's minor roads?Įdit | Reply Entering into the woods at your own risk is risky business to say the least but in this poem it seems to be a must-do to find that old road and be at ease with the all the nature it holds. ![]() This poem is a personal favourite of mine, I am intrigued by the idea of an abandoned road as one who has been used to the presence of disused railways across the countryside. it rhymes and all but i still dont get it. This is quite a nice poem but i dont quite get it. My mother used to read it when I was a little girl, just before I went to bed. Though there is no longer a 'road' there the spirit of those who earlier travelled here can still be experienced. The road is a metaphor for the poet's mindħ0 years ago - perhaps before the invention of the car when people travelled by horseback/coach the sound of horse's hoofbeats would have been heard on this road that is now reclaimed by Mother Nature, My slant on this poem is that the writer is looking into the past and once again hearing those same hoofbeats and the swish of ladies long gowns. at first knowing so clear what it is he wants from life but soon life cluttered it with all sorts of brush and change. Forset now belongs to the animals.Įdit | Reply the woods seem almost to me an old mans memory. I'm doing this poem for my AS English Exam tommorow morning, its a beautiful poem, so mysterious. There in the roots is a neatly laid brick path, which must have been used and then abandoned before the tree grew.Įdit | Reply Reminicent of bygone days before overgrowth hide the pathway.This poet tells a wonderful tale through his verse with many examples to guide the way so expertly poetic.~Suseann In Warnham Nature Reserve in West Sussex there's a huge beech tree, probably well over a hundred years old, which has blown over, lifting its roots out of the ground as beeches do. Does that grow in woods? Is there anyone out there who can tell me? Kipling lived in East Sussex - anyone know the woods there? The thin anemones are windflowers, which are flowering in the woods now - but heath should be heather. Edit | Reply Don't you love the complex rhyme-scheme, including rhymes in the middle of lines 3 and 7 of each verse? ![]()
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