Sinking and Swaddled

by Beth Gilstrap

She swore she felt the earth drop-like a hitch in an elevator- several miles from her mother's house. She thought of all those bedlinens agitated, curied, heaped on top of her mother, sunk along with everything else, beams, roof tiles, the acrylic nails her mom wore, the senselessness of waste. Her father had sunk, too. Years ago, in a prefab home out on the lake. One day the lake rose a mite and the ground dove a mite and from what her mother said, her father was better off down there, probably still passed out on his leather couch. Ona had been swaddled and maneuvered into the bow of a rowboat and, as legend tells, slept through the whole affair. Perhaps it was this swaddling she longed for more than anything with all this terrible sinking going on.

"Sinking and Swaddled" from Deadheading and Other Stories Beth Gilstrap. Published by Red Hen Press, 2021.

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Use the passage to answer the question.

Which best describes the mood that is created by the language in this passage?

(1 point)

desperate

optimistic

suspenseful

insecure

1 answer

The mood that is created by the language in this passage is best described as desperate. The imagery of sinking, loss, and the reflection on the mother's and father's situations conveys a sense of sorrow and a longing for comfort, which aligns with a desperate mood.