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The lake is first discussed in contrast to the tempestuous sea where White has vacationed during his adult life. In contrast to the sea, the lake is calm and everlasting. It is presented as the embodiment of White’s childhood memories themselves and, in returning to the lake, White feels that he is literally reliving his childhood memories. As such, when White describes the lake as a “constant and trustworthy body of water” (2), he is also speaking to qualities that he associates with childhood memories. For White, both the lake and his childhood memories seem magical because they manage to appear fixed even as the rest of the world changes.
In describing the lake, its surroundings, and its visitors, White makes repeated use of religious and spiritual language. The first examples occur in the essay’s second paragraph, when White describes the lake as both a “holy spot” and a “cathedral.” This sort of language is mainly used to express White’s reverence for the lake.
White’s use of spiritual and religious language underscores the personal importance of his return to the lake. Through describing the lake in these terms, the lake becomes a mystical site capable of achieving supernatural effects, such as the transposition of White and his son.
By E. B. White