Mikkel
"draw a wash"? From John Steinbeck’s The Pearl: “The stars still shone and the day had drawn only a pale wash of light in the lower sky to the east.” Does “drawn” here mean drawn as if with a pencil/pen and does “wash”=a thin layer of paint? I think the main reason why I feel unsure is because you don’t normally draw a layer of paint. Thanks for your help!
Jul 16, 2016 1:47 PM
Answers · 4
1
It's poetic language and it's not easy to be certain. "To draw" can mean "to pull." A horse draws a wagon. We often use the word "draw" with curtains and shades. "The sun was shining directly through the window, so I drew the shades to keep the room cool." I think Steinbeck was "mixing his metaphors" here. When he says the day had "drawn" a pale wash of light, he means that it appeared to be moving or progressing, covering more and more of the sky, like a curtain or shade. By calling it a "wash" of light, he means that, like a thin layer of water paint, the appearance was that the sky was being changed and lightened, but that nothing was being hidden.
July 16, 2016
1
Another common (but less obvious) use of "draw" is "to pull". This is the meaning in your example. Your understanding of "wash" is correct.
July 16, 2016
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