Out along the dim six-o'clock street, I saw leafless trees standing, striking the sidewalk there like wooden lightning, concrete split apart where they hit, all in a fenced-in ring. An iron line of pickets stuck out of the ground along the front of a tangleweed yard, and on back was a big frame house with a porch, leaning a rickety shoulder hard into the wind so's not to be sent tumbling away a couple of blocks like an empty cardboard grocery box.
by Ken Kesey
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The passage describes a dreary evening scene characterized by barren trees resembling lightning striking the ground. The concrete is cracked where the trees have made contact, creating a stark image of nature's power against human structures. Surrounded by a fence, this landscape features an unruly yard dominated by an old frame house that appears to be struggling against the wind. Its precarious stance conveys a sense of vulnerability and instability, likening it to a discarded cardboard box ready for displacement.

This imagery paints a vivid picture of a harsh environment, reflecting themes of isolation and decay. The leafless trees and the rickety house suggest a stagnant, lifeless presence, evoking emotions of desolation and imbalance. The writer captures the tension between nature and mankind's constructions, emphasizing the fragility of human efforts in the face of elemental forces. This scene serves as a metaphor for the struggles within the narrative of "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," highlighting vulnerability and the challenges of existence.

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