ENG2613/001/3/0/2025
ENG2613 Assignment 3 (COMPLETE
, ENG2613/001/3/0/2025
ANSWERS) 2025 (172594) - DUE 4 August
2025
ENG2613 2025: Assignment 03
Unique number: 172594
Due date: 4 August 2025 at 23:00
This assignment is based on Units 1-5 of Tutorial Letter 501
Question 1
Read the two short stories below, then answer the question that follows:
The Robin’s Lament
By Amy Gozelski
It was the spring that my husband was dying from cancer. His diagnosis was one of
the worst possible, and our peaceful lives, once filled with activities like playdates
and homework, had become a relentless chaos of doctor appointments,
chemotherapy treatments, and midnight trips to the ER. Our household had changed
so quickly I barely had time to process it, let alone prepare for all of the inevitabilities
careening toward us. How had we gone from suburban normalcy to all of…this…in
what seemed like one blurred instant?
I thought about all of this in a few, rare quiet moments alone in front of the kitchen
sink. I gratefully soaked in the calming warmth of the water and the satisfaction of a
basin full of simple problems. When I heard a commotion coming from the backyard,
I gave a grudging sigh and looked out the window. A female robin flew a frantic circuit
from the fence at the end of the garden to the roof of the shed and then back again,
2|Page
ENG2613 Assignment 3 (COMPLETE
, ENG2613/001/3/0/2025
ANSWERS) 2025 (172594) - DUE 4 August
2025
ENG2613 2025: Assignment 03
Unique number: 172594
Due date: 4 August 2025 at 23:00
This assignment is based on Units 1-5 of Tutorial Letter 501
Question 1
Read the two short stories below, then answer the question that follows:
The Robin’s Lament
By Amy Gozelski
It was the spring that my husband was dying from cancer. His diagnosis was one of
the worst possible, and our peaceful lives, once filled with activities like playdates
and homework, had become a relentless chaos of doctor appointments,
chemotherapy treatments, and midnight trips to the ER. Our household had changed
so quickly I barely had time to process it, let alone prepare for all of the inevitabilities
careening toward us. How had we gone from suburban normalcy to all of…this…in
what seemed like one blurred instant?
I thought about all of this in a few, rare quiet moments alone in front of the kitchen
sink. I gratefully soaked in the calming warmth of the water and the satisfaction of a
basin full of simple problems. When I heard a commotion coming from the backyard,
I gave a grudging sigh and looked out the window. A female robin flew a frantic circuit
from the fence at the end of the garden to the roof of the shed and then back again,
2|Page