logo

The Things We Cannot Say

Kelly Rimmer

The Things We Cannot Say

Kelly Rimmer

  • 54-page comprehensive Study Guide
  • Chapter-by-chapter summaries and multiple sections of expert analysis
  • The ultimate resource for assignments, engaging lessons, and lively book discussions

The Things We Cannot Say Symbols & Motifs

Alina’s Wedding Ring

The gold wedding ring, a family heirloom from Alina’s mother, begins as a conventional symbol of love and commitment but evolves into a symbol of Alina’s growth into an empowered and independent woman able to rise to the challenge of unthinkable suffering and the humiliation of powerlessness and emerge triumphant and in control.

Although the boy she loves comes from a prominent and successful family (Tomasz’s father is a respected doctor), Alina comes from a working-class background, her family maintaining a farm for generations. She has no fortune to bring to the wedding. When Tomasz prepares to leave for his medical studies in Warsaw, Alina fears the distance may be more than their tender love can withstand. Her mother, seeking to soothe her unhappy daughter, gives her the ring and assures her that “when the time is right” (27), Tomasz will slip the ring on her finger. The ring at that point represents Alina’s resolve to find fulfillment as the life partner of the boy she loves.

Then the war happens. Alina initially clings to the ring as a symbol of her love for the missing Tomasz, but it takes on new meaning when Alina arrives at the Soviet-held camp in Buzuluk, where the camp guard turns her away, saying the camp is already too full.

blurred text

Unlock this
Study Guide!

Join SuperSummary to gain instant access to all 54 pages of this Study Guide and thousands of other learning resources.
Get Started
blurred text