Analysis Of The Swimmer

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If you’re one of the many people who has a family member who simply can’t live without alcohol, then John Cheever’s “The Swimmer” is a story that you would like to read. The story is about a guy named Neddy Merrill who is simply in love with alcohol. Throughout the story, Neddy goes from someone's swimming pool to the next because he wants to make his way home by ‘water.’ This is not normal for an ordinary dude to do. Throughout the story, Cheever hides in plain sight symbolic clues that foreshadow a conclusion that Neddy has a serious issue.
Early in …show more content…

However, the word “swimming” has a deeper meaning than simply just enjoying the water. Have you ever heard the saying “[I’m] going to drown myself in alcohol?” That’s exactly what Neddy was doing. He was ‘swimming’ in gin and tonic. The next part where Cheever describes that Neddy was “breathing heavily and stertorously” builds on the idea that Neddy had too much alcohol and that he was struggling to stay conscious...just like when one is drunk in real life. The next part of the sentence “the heat of the sun, the intenseness of his pleasure” can also be applied to the act of being drunk. One’s body temperature rises when they have had a certain amount of alcohol. The literal meaning of this sentences is that it was just straight up hot, but the symbolism behind it is that he had too much to drink. The claim is further supported by what Cheever says right after that. The phrase “the intenseness of his pleasure” seems to support the claim that he’s had a little too much to drink and that he has reached a point in which the alcohol has made the pleasure so

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