Marco Polo's Caravan *During* the Sandstorm
Detailed Involvements
Events with rich location context
Marco Polo’s caravan is invoked as a distant symbol of safety that Susan clings to, but its physical absence in the scene underscores the girls’ isolation. The caravan’s tents and fires, flickering against the storm’s onslaught, are imagined as a fragile beacon of hope—one that Ping-Cho dismisses as unreachable. Its role in the event is purely symbolic, representing the structure and protection that the desert strips away. The caravan’s ‘voice’ is heard only in Susan’s desperate pleas, a haunting reminder of what they’ve left behind and may never reach again.
Fragile and ephemeral (a contrast to the desert’s brutality), evoking longing and despair
Symbolic refuge (a mental anchor for Susan, but physically unattainable in the storm)
Embodies the contrast between human-made order (the caravan’s rules and hierarchy) and the chaos of nature (the desert’s storm). It also represents the tension between trust in the group (Susan’s stance) and self-reliance (Ping-Cho’s stance).
Perceived as inaccessible due to the storm’s violence and distance
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