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65 pages 2 hours read

The Underneath

Fiction | Novel | Middle Grade | Published in 2008

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Symbols & Motifs

The Hummingbird

Because the hummingbird can travel between the world of the living and the world of the dead, it symbolizes the transition to death. At the story’s conclusion, the hummingbird who comes to help Grandmother Moccasin transition is her granddaughter, Night Song and Hawk Man’s daughter, who was called to take the form of a bird soon after Night Song’s death. Although an omen of death, the hummingbird is a kind and reassuring creature. It comes to the calico cat when she drowns in the creek and assures her that her baby is safe; this brings the cat immense comfort as she goes with the hummingbird to her death: “‘Sister,’ it whispered, ‘your baby is safe’” (80).

The hummingbird often serves as a warning to creatures of their own mortality; she indicates that they’ll die if they continue on a bad path. Puck tries to use the rolling log to cross the creek and almost drowns. He briefly sees the hummingbird before giving up on this inadvisable plan: “The hummingbird. Here. There. Gone” (205). She departs because he’s no longer risking death by trying to cross the creek. Similarly, the hummingbird whirls around Gar Face’s boat as he poles on the river and decides to try to kill blurred text
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