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Compare And Contrast Sandra Birdsell And Alistair Macleod
There are numerous differences between the two short stories, and although they're both in a
different setting and have a different theme, they also connect and have many similarities. Sandra
Birdsell and Alistair Macleod uses literary devices such as imagery, metaphors and similes in their
short stories "Stones' and "To Every thing There Is a Season" respectively to portray a thematic
connection of lost of innocence and coming of age stories.
It is very clear in these two short stories that the narrator's use imagery as a way to visually create a
descriptive image in the reader's mind. In the short story "Stones" imagery is shown when the
narrator describes Mrs.Hallman in detail using our five senses for us to get an image of her in our
mind. "Mrs.Hallman stood tall and slim, her red toenails sticking the end of her white sandals and
she smelled like sweet william that grew in a patch beside the back patch". The narrator basically
show that Mrs.Hallman is very fashionable and cares a lot about her appearance and she is well
dressed as well as smells very good and that her status is higher than the mother. In the short story
"To Every Thing There Is a Reason" imagery sets the mood of the story. It is shown when they
explain where they lived, "I was eleven and lived with my family on our small farm on the west of
Cape Breton.... Yet I speak on this Christmas in 1977". Another example is when the narrator
describes the church, "the church is very beautiful at night with its
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How Does Suzanne Collins Use Similes In Purple Hibiscus
portrays well known political figures at the time of the Russian Revolution as farm animals. 81.
simile– a metaphor in which too things are directly compared; uses like or as. For example, in her
novel Purple Hibiscus Adichi writes, "Jaja's defiance seemed to me like Aunty Ifeoma's
experimental purple hibiscus: rare, fragrant with the undertones of freedom..." (Adichie 16).
Utilizing similes adds depth to the text, but can also create ease in 82. stock character– a generic
character that is repeatedly used in literature. For example, "star– crossed lovers" and "a damsel in
distress." 83. stream of consciousness– a method of narration that describes in words the flow of
thoughts in the mind of characters. Suzanne Collins uses stream of consciousness narration
throughout The Hunger Games Trilogy. Here's a quote from Catching Fire: "We barely scraped by,
but I knew where I fit in, I knew what my place was in the tightly interwoven fabric that was our
life. I wish I could go back because, in retrospect, it seems so secure compared with now, when I am
so rich and famous and so hated by the authorities in the Capital. ... Show more content on
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syllepsis/zeugma– when an adjective or a verb is written to describe two nouns. For example, "My
grandma lost her keys and her mind." In this case "lost" applies to both "keys" and "mind." 85.
syllogism– a rhetorical device that starts an argument with a reference to something general and then
draws a conclusion about something specific. For example, "Horses have four legs. Chelsea has four
legs. Therefore, Chelsea is a
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Metaphors And Similes In Fireflies By Owl City
"Fireflies" by Owl City
Have you ever had any troubles sleeping at night? Some people might have an inability to sleep, a
sleeping disorder called insomnia. But, for Adam Young, he had trouble sleeping at night, and yet,
still have a very colorful vivid dreams. In "Fireflies", by Owl City, Adam Young is trying to show
his vivid dreams when he was young by using many figurative languages such as simile, metaphor,
hyperbole, personification, and repetition.
In the famous single,"Fireflies", there were many uses of similes and metaphors to show his vivid
dreams when he was young. In stanza 6, Adam Young sang "Cause I feel like such an insomniac".
This is an example of simile, Adam Young is comparing himself to a person who is regularly unable
to sleep. In the last stanza, Adam Young sang "Because my dreams are bursting at the seams". This
shows an example of metaphor, because he is comparing two thoughts without using like or as. In
stanza 7, Adam Young sang "I got misty eyes as they said farewell". This is another example of
metaphor, Adam Young is trying to convey the idea that he is going to cry as the fireflies said a
farewell. By using many ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In stanza 6, Adam Young said "I'm far too tired to fall asleep". This is an example of a paradox,
because the word "far too tired" seeming contradiction may reveal an unexpected truth. In another
stanza, Adam Young sang "awake when I'm asleep". This is an example of an oxymoron, because
oxymoron is a combination of two words that appear to contradict each other, and by staying awake
when asleep is a contradictory between the two terms. The use of oxymoron and paradox is shown
throughout the lyric. The purpose is to show that he is awake when asleep at the same time, this will
give a clearer idea of him having a vivid dream when trying to
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The Embodiment Of Tenderness In The Scarlet Letter By...
"The letter was the symbol of her calling. Such helpfulness found in her...people refused to interpret
the scarlet A by its original signification...it meant able." (Hawthorne 127)
Here Hester finds some happiness in her punishment and Hawthorne rededicates the symbol of her
letter. This is a turning point in the novel where Hester can be happy and proud again.
"[Tenderness had been] crushed so deeply into her heart that it can never show itself more."
(Hawthorne 128)
Hawthorne's embodiment of tenderness emphasises that Hester is no longer the same person. She
does not look as soft and loving. Hawthorne states that she has the capacity to return to her prior
state, one that is locked deep in her heart.
"there came a glare of red light out ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The variation of sentence structure with one long sentence describing the one quality she expects
from her child puts emphasis on the quality. She does not expect to be able to confide in Pearl her
dark secrets. Hester uses this reasoning to justify not telling Pearl about the letter.
"the sunshine does not love you. It runs away and hides itself, because it is afraid of something on
your bosom...It will not flee from me; for I wear nothing on my bosom yet!" (Hawthorne 144)
Hawthorne personifies sunshine here to show Pearl pressuring Hester to tell her about the letter.
Pearl seems to either believe that the letter is a rite of passage as the she later asks if she will get one
when she grows up or an ungodly object as the sun usually symbolizes God's love and acceptance.
"the streamlet kept up a babble, kind, quiet, soothing, but melancholy, like the voice of a young
child that was spending its infancy without playfulness" (Hawthorne 146)
Here there is both an implied metaphor and a simile. Hawthorne describes the streamlet as a
unsocialized child, implying this sad streamlet is just like Pearl. This also builds on Pearl playing
with her
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Analysis Of A Separate Peace By John Knowles
"The classic insight into fiction is that you show your story. You don't explain your story to a reader.
You make it happen in the reader's mind" (Mabe 1). Those words were said by the late John
Knowles in 1987, when he began to teach creative writing in South Florida. He lived up to his words
by making sure that his reader was thoroughly entertained as they examined his best known novel, A
Separate Peace, a coming of age story which follows two teenage boys and their friendship during
World War II. As the plot begins to firmly establish itself and the conflict continues to develop
during the fourth, fifth, and sixth chapters of the book, the reader is drawn further into the piece and
their suspense and anticipation are built. They continue to learn about the author's artistic writing
style, see how Knowles integrated different literary devices into his work, discovers new traits and
qualities of his characters, and develop feelings about the story.
Knowles riddled his novel, A Separate Peace, with various unique literary devices which include
allusions, similes and metaphors, hyperboles, anaphoras, idioms, and metonymies. A great number
of the expressions he used involved multiple devices within one sentence. Yet, their placement is not
overwhelming. Instead, their arrangement make the story more captivating. As Gene lay awake on
the New Hampshire beach witnessing the inspiring sunrise, he describes the transformation this
way: "The beachhead its deafness and
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Figurative Language And Similes In Fireflies, By Adam Young
Have you ever had any troubles sleeping at night? Some people might have an ibility to sleep, a
sleeping disorder called insomnia. But, for Adam Young, he had trouble sleeping at night, and yet,
still have a very colorful vivid dreams. In "Fireflies", by Owl City, Adam Young is trying to show
his vivid dreams when he was young by using many figurative languages such as simile, metaphor,
hyperbole, personification, and repetition.
In the famous single,"Fireflies", there are many uses of similes and metaphors to show his vivid
dreams when he was young. In stanza 6, Adam Young sang "Cause I feel like such an insomniac".
This is an example of simile, Adam Young is comparing himself to a person who is regularly unable
to sleep. In the last stanza, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In stanza 6, Adam Young said "I'm far too tired to fall asleep". This is an example of a paradox,
because the word "far too tired" seeming contradiction may reveal an unexpected truth. In another
stanza, Adam Young sang "awake when I'm asleep". This is an example of an oxymoron, because
oxymoron is a combination of two words that appear to contradict each other, and by staying awake
when asleep is a contradictory between the two terms. The use of oxymoron and paradox is shown
throughout the lyric. The purpose is to show that he is awake when asleep at the same time, this will
give a clearer idea of him having a vivid dream when trying to
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Figurative Language In Mirrors By Justin Timberlake
The song Mirrors by Justin Timberlake has a lot of figurative language I will prove a couple cases
where that is true.
Mirrors by Justin Timberlake has a lot of simile. A simile is a figure of speech involving the
comparison of one thing with another thing of a different kind. It is used to make a description more
empathic or vivid. The quote " it's like you're my mirror" from the song is a simile you know for a
fact that it is a simile because a person cannot be a mirror. So Justin Timberlake is comparing a
mirror to a person. A mirror and a person are nothing alike so you can automatically see that it is a
direct comparison.
This song also has a lot of symbolism. Symbolism is an artistic and poetic movement or style using
symbolic ages and
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The Nature Of Love In Shakespeare's Sonnet 130 By William...
William Shakespeare is recognized for being one of greatest poets of all time. His works are still
popular to this day. Many of his works included extended metaphors and similes with rhetorical
language and were rooted in the nature of love. Two of his poems that are rather alike, but also very
contrastive are "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?" and "My mistresses' eyes are nothing like
the sun." They both contain a core theme of love or anti–love in some aspects. While these two
poems are built around the same type of subject, their interpretations come across in separate ways.
In contrast to Shakespeare's "Sonnet 18" which is a serious love poem that contains imagery and
metaphors, Shakespeare's "Sonnet 130" is more negative and humorous but contains imagery and
similes. Overall, both of these poems fulfill the same motive. They were written to praise women,
but the two use different methods for doing so. In "Sonnet 18", Shakespeare compares his lover with
the negative aspects of summer stating "/Thou art more lovely and more temperate/" (2). On the
other hand in "Sonnet 130", Shakespeare compares his mistress to the good qualities of acquisitive
things to show how even though she is not perfect, she is still important to him. He vows "by
heaven" (13) that the feelings he has for his mistress are as rare "/As any she belied with false
compare/" (14). The messages delivered by the two poems are very unique. In "Sonnet 18", the
woman being described is perfect and does
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The Use Of Similes InAll Summer In A Day?
Imagine a world with not one bit of sunlight – a dark world full perpetual rain that beats on the
world like a drum. Vines cover this planet's land like giant snakes. It's a place full of nothing, except
the little amount of human's that roam it; however, how could you imagine such a place in the
literature without such expressive language? Without the clarification that brings it life? In the short
story, "All Summer in a Day" the author Ray Bradbury incorporates a variety of craft moves such as
similes, metaphors, hyperboles, and onomatopoeia's in order to clarify meaningful descriptions to
give the story life. One of the first and important craft moves seen in Bradbury's work are similes
and or metaphors. In stories we need one essential step to highlight the sight and atmosphere of a
story. In fact, the most vital and influential form of peer description in literature is metaphors and
similes. To prove how they give a story life, author Ray Bradbury used this in his own story – "The
children pressed to each other like so many roses, so many weeds (Bradbury)." He used this to
express how overcrowded it was in a style that involves nature. It brings a whole new light in the
story by giving it an atmosphere, it also get's the job done by illustrating the actions between the
students. It highlights aspects of the story in a more ingenious way that brings a story life. It's can be
quite creative, because it does not just depict the children it depicts plants as well. It can
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Analysis Of Beach In Hawaii
"Beach in Hawaii"; An analysis Ziggy Marley is the son of the late Reggae great Bob Marley, in
2012 he wrote a song called, "Beach in Hawaii." Though the title is upbeat, Ziggy talks about
loneliness and how he wants to be with a certain person on the beach in Hawaii. Throughout the
song, Ziggy uses repetition, imagery, metaphors and similes to drive the point that he is lonely in
paradise. In the song "Beach in Hawaii," Ziggy Marley uses repetition. To drive the meaning of the
song Ziggy repeats the line, "I wish you were here with me," ten times throughout the song. By
using repetition of this line, Ziggy is driving the point that he is longing for someone to be with him.
Ziggy could be longing for a few people; one notable person ... Show more content on
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The song has a very sad tone, consequently people are more likely to imagine someone walking on
the beach looking at the ground and skipping rocks on the water. When people have their head down
they are likely to think of someone being sad, that is where the phrase keep your head up comes
from. Another way which Ziggy Marley uses imagery is when he says, "I'm on a rocky cliff," (13). A
rocky cliff conjures up images of someone looking down and there is a sheer drop–off into the
ocean. This part is where it is shown that Ziggy is near the point of no return. When someone jumps
off a cliff, there is no direct way back, they would be forced swim to closest beach. Without that
person, Ziggy is near the point of no return. Another way which Ziggy uses to drive the meaning of
his song is through metaphors and similes. Throughout the song, Ziggy uses metaphors and similes
to drive the meaning behind his it. Ziggy uses Hawaii as a metaphor for happiness. Hawaii is a
metaphor for happiness because of the imagery that is conjured, which is people smiling, and
relaxing on the beach. For Ziggy, being in Hawaii means that he is at least somewhat satisfied, but
he is not completely satisfied. The reason why Ziggy is not completely happy is because that one
person that Ziggy wants to be with him is not there with him, therefore Ziggy could never be
completely satisfied even if he is happy.
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Essay on Legend by Judith Wright
What features or characteristics of the human condition can you identify in Judith Wright's Legend?
How has the poet used specific language techniques to emphasise these attributes of life.
Judith Wright's 'Legend' responds to various aspects of the human condition present in our society
today. The poem is focused primarily on the actions of a Blacksmith's boy, a vassal for humanity's
growth in response to age and change.
In stanza one, Judith Wright utilizes personification "rivers hindered him" and "thorn branches
caught at his eyes to make him blind" coupled with metaphor "the sky turned into an unlucky opal"
to emphasise nature's hindrance of the blacksmith boy, if the poem is to be deemed as a
metaphorical representation of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The repetition of 'his' used in the following line "His rifle broke, his hat blew away and his dog was
gone." emphasise this emotional and physical loss.
The rainbow, an extended metaphor, symbolises an epiphany, a sudden realisation that is imbued
with hope. The symbolism for the rainbow can also biblically allude to a more religious revelation,
where the blacksmith boy has embraced 'god' into his life. This symbolism along with the contrast
between the two images "But in front of the night the rainbow stood on the mountain", hints to
humanity's capability of change even in the direst of times. The following lines "He ran like a hare,
he climbed like a fox" are similes, to show the blacksmith boy's newfound affinity with nature, and
his rediscovered sense of self. The further similes used in the following lines, "Like a bar of ice, like
the column of a fountain, like a ring of gold." describe the rainbow, in increasing levels of brilliance,
from a bar of ice to a ring of gold, this depicts the blacksmith boy's gradual dawning on the
significance of his revelation, figuratively portraying the value of humanity's affliction with nature
or biblically, the importance of god in our lives.
The final stanza, the symbolism "The blacksmith's boy hung the rainbow on his shoulder, instead of
his broken gun" once again reflects on the human capability of change and adaptation as well as
marking independency. Hyperbole, "and the rainbow shone as brightly
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What Is The Similes In The Highwayman
The Highwayman by Alfred Noyes is a fantastic poem. It really gets you pulled in when you hear
about this forbidden love, that the highwayman and Bess have. The poem is about a highwayman
(robber) and Bess, which is the landlord's daughter and it's about their relationship. The story goes
on and there is a man named Tim and he likes Bess and he hears them talking. He turns the
highwayman into the king. They go to Bess's room and ties her up so when the highwayman comes
back they can catch him and kill him. She shoots herself a warning for him to know not to come.
But he comes back mad about her death and they kill him too. At the end it tells us we can still see
their love story because they are ghosts. I think this poem is fantastic because ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
Some parts of the poem isn't understandable, but with the similes and metaphors you can image
what it looks like if it gets compared to something you know well. Here are some examples of
similes and metaphors in the story. "The road was a ribbon of moonlight over the purple moor. " If
you don't understand they compare the road to ribbon, which means the road was like a ribbon
thin,little and has rolling hills with swamps. Here is another example of similes and metaphors in the
poem. "His eyes were hollows of madness, his hair like moldy hay." Most people know what moldy
and hay means which means you can picture his hair gross and nasty and his eyes frightening or
scary. It gives you better pictures of imagery too. If they wouldn't have put moldy or madness then it
would have been just hair and no emotion. Which is boring and that's no fun. One more example
"His rapier hilt a–twinkle, under the jeweled sky." You think of jewels as sparkling, shining objects,
and pretty. So you can think of that when you do imagery. So a very pretty, shining, and sparkling
sky shining above him and his sword. You can see there are millions of similes and metaphors and
they have lots of description in them. Its very easy to compare the words in the similes and
metaphors to words you know, so you can image what it looks like so you can understand
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##s By Theodore Roethke, My Papa's Hats, AndMy Father's Hats?
The poet can transform their thoughts metaphorically to create a beautiful composition. The author's
emotions can be hidden distinctively by expressing them with fascinating techniques. The writer
conveys the poem's overall feeling which can then be presented as playful, sad, joyful, lonely, or
angry. When analyzing a poem, the reader can encounter metaphor, simile, imagery, and mood
techniques that will impact their emotions and speculate. Metaphor is a figure of speech to describe
one thing from another, however simile is a figure of speech that compares two unlike things. The
mood is the overall feeling created by the poem. Imagery is visually descriptive that relates to the
perception. After analyzing three poems, which are, My Papa's Waltz by Theodore Roethke, My
Father's Hats by Mark Irwin, and Those Winter Sundays by Robert Hayden, the view of each poem
is that they have similar subject about a son's memories of his father in different styles with
somewhat ambiguous meaning.
Theodore Roethke wrote a poem called, My Papa's Waltz. This poem is regarding the son's memory
of his father which is a metaphor to describe that relationship to be rough. Roethke tells us, "such
waltzing was not easy / you beat time on my head" (4,13). Roethke uses simile to describe the son
dislike the father's smell of alcohol but had to endured it, "could make a small boy dizzy/ but I hung
on like death" (2–3). The poem's mood is sad and angry because he is describing the waltz was not
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Why Does Shakespeare Use Figurative Language
How might you engage your reader by incorporating more figurative language (anecdote, narrative,
simile, metaphor, dialogue, personification and such)? How might you offer more valid comparisons
using these techniques?
"All the world's a stage"–have you ever wondered why people remember and quote lines from
Shakespeare so much? One of the reasons is because he used figurative language very effectively in
his writings. You may have heard the term "figurative language" before, and perhaps when you
heard it you were in a class analyzing novels or poetry. But figurative language is not just used in
literature: you can employ it in your essay writing to great effect. Figurative language adds color to
your writing by taking your words and applying them to other, often unexpected, ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
Metaphors do not use "like" or "as" but equate the two terms you are comparing. Effective
metaphors capture your reader's attention, and by creating strong, clear, interesting images, help the
reader better understand and remember your point.
The financial crisis in America was a tsunami whose waves of destruction battered the economies of
countries all over the world.
Racial injustice is a disease that never seems to be cured.
A simile is a particular type of metaphor that compares two objects that are essentially not like one
another. A simile, unlike a metaphor, introduces this comparison with the words "like" or "as." My
essay's introduction is like the first sip of a fine wine–that is a simile; My essay's introduction is the
first sip of a fine wine–that is a metaphor. Used sparingly, similes can help your statements stand out
and evoke thought–provoking images for your reader:
The fast food industry's attempts to offer healthy menu options are like the 11th hour plea bargain of
a death row inmate.
"Writing a book is a horrible, exhausting struggle, like a long bout of some painful illness" (Orwell
316).
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It's Not Sweet and Right to Die for Your Country: "Dulce...
Dulce et Decorum Est by Wilfird Owen is written about the First World War. The title means its
sweet and right, but the story behind it is totally different to the title, which is ironic. The poet
clearly mentions the horrible and appalling conditions that happened to soldiers in the First World
War. The techniques that have been mentioned in the poem are imagery, language, and tone. The
poet changes his tone of voice to angry and bitter, as he explains and describes the horrifying image
that happened around him in the war. The poet describes the soldier in such a disturbing and painful
manner; Owen uses similes and metaphors to describe the condition. The poet opens stanza one with
a powerful and strong metaphor: "Bent double" It shows ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
Owen opens stanza two by a sudden gas attack, this stanza stands out from the other because of the
use of punctuation and the big bold writing: "Gas! Gas! Quick boys!" the poet catches our attention
when he changes his tone of voice. The poet used the colour green to clarify the gas is deadly, as the
colour green is associated to terrible sickness and disease. The soldiers manage to put their helmets
on yet one of them was still yelling and stumbling out. The poet uses ellipsis in stanza two: "like a
man in fire or lime ....." in order to stop and change his tone of voice to slow, soft and dream: "dim,
through the misty panes", the poet watches the unfortunate soldier struggling for breath, this follows
by: "I saw him drowning", this is a metaphor to reveal how the man is dying, the poet chooses to
describe in this manna because he gives us a very powerful image. Owen is showing us the cruel
and miserable reality of war by using strong and effective imagery and tone. Wilfred Owen
describes the death of the innocent soldier, he portrays how the man's body is treated in a horrifying,
repulsive and in an inhuman way. The soldier's death was agonising the way Owen described it to
us. The poet is sending a message about the young men who are sent out to the war, they are
threatened and forced to go even though they don't wish to. The poet is clearly explaining it to us
through the poem that the war is not a fun and a pleasant experience. Owen
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What is the importance of the description of Alison in...
In "The Miller's Tale", the poet Chaucer depicts the tale of a "hende" man and his attempt to tempt
the "primerole" Alisoun to commit adultery and therefore render her husband, John a "cokewold".
The Miller's Tale is just one story amongst a collection of greater works known collectively as "The
Canterbury Tales". The placing of this tale is significant becomes it comes directly after the Knight's
Tale revolving around nobility and chivalry and forms a direct contrast due to the fact it is bawdy,
lewd and highly inappropriate. The tale is a fabliau, a versified short story designed to make you
laugh; concerned usually with sexual or excretory functions. The plot often involves members of the
clergy, and is usually in the form of a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
We are also invited to think of Alison as a sexual being in the line "upon hir lendes (loins)" We can
also infer that Alison is somewhat promiscuous (and therefore John has a right to "[hold] hire narwe
in cage") because we are told that her shoes were laced on "hir legges hye" and we would only know
that if her skirt was hitched up. Short skirts in those days had connotations with prostitutes, the same
as they do today.
The appropriate attitude for a man to take to such a woman (the Miller thinks) is shown by such
terms as "popelote", "primerole" and "piggesnie", for which we
can readily find modern equivalents. Alison is suitable as a mistress for "any lord"; as a
wife, she can expect at best to marry a yeoman, "for any good yeman to wedde". Among the many
other physical details packed into the Miller's set–piece description we learn that Alison has
delicately–plucked sloe–black eyebrows; that she is tall and erect ("upright as a bolt") and that her
breath is sweet. Much of the account is taken up with an inventory of her clothes. These seem fairly
expensive, but John evidently wishes her to spend on her wardrobe. The clothes are stylish and
exaggerate her attractive features. We learn that many garments are of silk, that smock and collar are
embroidered, that her apron is
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
My Papa's Waltz Analysis
The poet can transform metaphorically their thoughts in a poem and create a beautiful meaningful
writing composition. The author's emotions can be hidden distinctively and express it with
fascinating techniques. The writer conveys the mood with a genre that can be presented as sad,
joyful, and angry. When analyzing a poem, the audience can read how the metaphor/simile, imagery,
and mood techniques will impact their emotions or leave an uncertainty. In some cases, these
writing techniques can leave the reader to continue analyzing the poem. The poems allow the writer
to persuade their audience by using different rhythmical and soothing techniques to express their
thoughts in their writing compositions. After, analyzing three different poems with a similar subject
regarding the topic about fathers, have concluded that these poems although have their own unique
styles the similar results are ambiguous.
Theodore Roethke wrote a poem called My Papa's Waltz regarding his father when he will come
home with whiskey on his breath. This poem's mood is a little playful but with sadness. The poet by
using the word "waltz" could be speaking about that he enjoyed playing with his father or he could
be speaking about how his father will be intoxicated and mistreated him. Roethke tells how he
dislike his father's breath of alcohol. According to Roethke, "The whiskey on your breath / Could
make a small boy dizzy; / But I hung on like death" (1–3). The impact in his poem is of fear and
possible mistreatment. The author simile/metaphor is using the word waltz as a means of saying his
father probably was unbalanced because he was intoxicated, but he also used the word beat perhaps
to indicate that he was mistreated. This poem has appeal because the author combined opposite
words, waltz and beat, to portrait a metaphor.
Mark Irwin wrote a poem called My Father's Hats regarding having an imaginary adventure with his
father along with his hats. It seems that his father passed away and the author is using imaginary
aspects of forest to embrace him. The mood of the poem is happy and playful. The metaphor/simile
are used from the beginning to the end with several ambiguous scenarios. The poem maintains the
same mood takes
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As I Lay Dying Character Analysis
"The eye is the lamp of the body. If your vision is clear, your whole body will be full of light" ().
Ever since the creation of mankind, the eyes exist as the window to the soul. Taking one look into a
person's eyes can leave you with more knowledge than ever thought imagined. Love, anger, lust,
hatred, sympathy and guilt can all express themselves in just one glance. William Faulkner knew of
this interesting trait and applied it to his 19___'s novel "As I Lay Dying". Each character possesses
their own unique traits and personalities which drive them to fulfill their end mission: burying their
mother in Jefferson. To express their personalities, Faulkner incorporates a variety of similes and
metaphors all relating to the eyes. This technique sheds light of their selfish ways. These selfish
qualities, not the love for their mother, cause the Bundren children to succeed in their mother's dying
wish.
Right ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
However, Jewel has a much different view of their journey. Jewel sees it as a way to make up to his
mother for not being there when she passed (Faulkner 48). Therefore, he does everything in his
power to get her there . . . including running into a burning barn and nearly drowning to save her
coffin (Faulkner 154 and 221). These acts, although seemingly heroic, arise as truly selfish and
shallow. These shallow acts can exist through Jewels "pale eyes" which look "like wood" (Faulkner
4). This simile compares Jewel to a simple substance which mirrors how his actions towards his
mother are self–absorbed. Wood is two dimensional and shallow. When Jewels refuses to let the past
go and continuously holds on to the idea of upsetting his mother, he in turn works for his own
benefit. Jewel seeks his mother's approval out of self absorption and not out of love; he acts shallow
and hollow like wood. In turn, Jewel ignores his siblings and continues to push towards
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Images And Symbols In A Long Way Gone By Ishmael Beah
Ishmael Beah's memoir "a Long Way Gone" is a true story about his early life and his experience in
the war in Sierra Leone as a child soldier. There are many symbols, figures of speech and images
used in Beah's memoir. Interchangeably, there are relationships between all three of these terms in
the book. In "a Long Way Gone" Symbolism, Images and figures of speech convey a very moody
message to the reader, based upon what they are reading. These literary building blocks helped
shape the memoir and keep the reader engaged throughout it.
Beah uses the moon in the memoir to display symbols. Before the war, he looked at the moon as an
imitation of superior performance. During wartime, Beah is forced to believe the moon hides itself
from witnessing the war. It's roll in the war eventually dies down. As an adult writing the book,
Beah notes he can still see the images of the moon in the sky. Following the topic of the moon
symbol in the book, Beah describes how war treats the moon, "Under those stars and sky I used to
hear stories, but now it seemed as if it was the sky that was telling us a story as its stars fell,
violently colliding with each other. The moon hid behind clouds to avoid seeing what was
happening" (Beah, CH10). The moon is like a gateway to his past, and his family, and that
influenced him to put the moon in his memoir.
Beah effectively uses imagery by the usage of similes. A simile is a comparison of two contradictory
terms using words "like" or "as." Imagery
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Literary Devices InThe Sound Of Thunder, By Ray Bradbury
Watch Out! As they fight for their survival. In the short story, "The Sound of Thunder," by Ray
Bradbury, is about a man going into a time machine to hunt a T–Rex. He was traveling along with
his other companions through the time machine to meet the T–Rex. They ended up encountering
many obstacles as they're on their journey. Although people don't pay attention to what they're doing
even if it's the smallest things, it can lead up to a consequence as shown in literary devices such as;
simile, metaphor, and repetition.
At first, Bradbury uses simile as a way to illustrate a comparison of unlike things reflecting to the
character's actions. Simile is an expression comparing one thing to another using the words, like, or
as. In the short story, Eckels and the company travelled back 60 millions years ago. Travis warned
everyone to not step off the path, and began to talk consistently about the consequences if you
would step off the path. As Travis was talking about the consequences, it was brought up that if you
"step on a mouse, and you leave your print, like a Grand Canyon, across Eternity" (Bradbury, 22).
This shows us that Travis said this, but meant that if you make any changes in the past, even the
smallest ones, it can result into something disastrous in the future. It compares the effects of
stepping on a mouse to that at the Grand Canyon, which shows the resemblance. This is one of the
many similes used, but another comparing literary device is used as well in the
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Similes And Metaphors In Hariharan's The Thousand Faces Of...
The one discuss about that how the time has been handled in the story. Whether it is in 'analeptic,'
means back–take or flashback or in 'proleptic' means foretake. No author can stick merely on
'analeptic'or merely on 'proleptic' technique of narration. Very often authors contain references
forward and then switches back to any particular detail to relate it with any present day happening.
The Thousand Faces of Night is no exception to it as the story goes on and on in the present of Devi
and very next moment it goes in flash–back but not to cut the readers off from the main story line
rather to make them aware with some very relevant past incident with the present one. The mythical
stories told by pati, the stories told by Baba and the saga ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
It seems that the 'Night' of the title symbolises the life of females because of their sufferings and
sacrifices, and 'Thousand Faces' symbolises that sufferings of women are not of one kind or type,
but are numerous. Hariharan has put off the disguise from these 'Thousand Faces' through the
description of different female characters (mythical also) with their different types of sufferings
(whether it be physical or emotional or psychological). So, this title perfectly and suitably fits to the
story–line of the novel. At every step, it is shown that the females take birth on this earth only to do
sacrifices for others–especially for their male
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Literary Devices in Updike's “The Great Scarf of Birds” Essay
In his poem "The Great Scarf of Birds", John Updike uses a flock of birds to show that man can be
uplifted by observing nature. Updike's conclusion is lead up to with the beauty of autumn and what
a binding spell it has on the two men playing golf. In Updike's conclusion and throughout the poem,
he uses metaphors, similes, and diction to show how nature mesmerizes humans. In John Updike's
poem "The Great Scarf of Birds", he uses diction and figurative speech to depict the beautiful
autumn season to show how inspiring and uplifting nature is to man. Updike chooses autumn as the
season to set his story in because generally, it is the season that has the most vivid vibrant colors in
nature such as the ripe apples which are described as "red ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
Man will be uplifted just like the geese flying south for the winter by observing the exquisiteness of
nature around him. Updike continues his portrayal of the vast splendor of nature through metaphors,
similes, and diction pertaining to a large flock of starlings that flew and over and lit on the gold
course where the two men in the poem are playing. The approaching flock of birds seem like a
"cloud of dots" (Line 16) on the horizon to observers. The author compares The image of the
steadily approaching flock of starlings to iron filings (the birds) stuck to a magnet through a piece of
paper (the horizon). The men stand in awe of the black, writhing, approaching mass, much like
children do when the magnet picks up the filings through the paper. By comparing the approaching
birds to the magnet and iron filing scenario in a simile, Updike subtly likens the men reaction to a
small child's reaction when he/she sees the "magic" of the magnet and the iron filings for the first
time. The simile purpose is to show how nature can make grown men feel like small, free little kids
when experiencing nature at its best. As the observers continue to watch the looming flock of birds,
the flock became one huge pulsating mass of birds that seemed as "much as one thing as a rock."
(Line 22) Updike once again eloquently portrays nature as absolutely stunning to show how nature
affects man. The birds descended in a huge "evenly tinted" (Line
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Examples Of Similes In Courage By Anne Sexton
While Anne Sexton´s poem, Courage, was published in 1975, the theme can be compared to
Brandon Mull´s book, The Candy Shop War, which was written 32 years later. Both Sexton and
Mull talk about having courage and taking risks for others, even if it means putting yourself in
danger. Although they both talk about similar themes, Sexton uses similes, metaphors, and
personification and Mull uses deep description and imagery. Sexton and Mull both address the
theme of having courage and taking risks for others. Sexton gives us similes and metaphors to
describe the theme to the reader. In the first stanza of Courage, Sexton writes, " The child's first
steps, as awesome as an earthquake." This shows a positive connotation and a pleasant situation ...
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Sexton uses similes,metaphors, and personification to address her theme while Mull uses deep
description and imagery to address his theme. In stanza one, Sexton gives us a metaphor. "When
they called you crybaby or poor or fatty or crazy and made you into an alien, you drank their acid
and concealed it." In stanza two, Sexton gives us a simile. "If your buddy saved you and died
himself in so doing, then his courage was not courage, it was love; love as simple as shaving soap."
Finally, in stanza four, Sexton gives us personification. "and at the last moment when death opens
the back door you'll put on your carpet slippers and stride out." On page 252, Mull gives us an
example of imagery and deep description. "A quick glance skyward revealed that the fireball was
falling back toward the roof of the barn. She had inadvertently shot it almost straight up. Eric and
Kyle dove through the hatch. Summer raced toward the edge of the roof, a Moon rock in her hand.
She slapped the candy into her mouth as she jumped. Out of the corner of her eye she saw Nate fling
himself off the roof and plummet to the ground
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Similes And Metaphors In Herman Melville
Due to his experiences a sailor, Melville commonly wrote his stories based on life at sea. His
common theme of the sea attracted many literate people of the Renaissance. However, Melville´s
common theme of life at sea is not the only factor which contributed to his style of writing. Herman
Melville used many different rhetorical strategies to emphasize significance in many of his pieces.
The use of similes, metaphors, and imagery supply Melville´s stories with various ways to describe
certain characters or things. Alliteration, repetition, and onomatopoeia all come together to create
specific effects on words and phrases in Melville´s works. The way Melville used parallel structure,
malapropisms, and long, drawn out sentences reveals the variety of ways he has structured certain
stories throughout his career. The rhetorical strategies used by Herman Melville are what made him
the great Renaissance writer he was.
The similes and metaphors Herman Melville used in his writings laid strong emphasis on certain
things. For example, Melville uses a simile in his book Cock–a–Doodle–Doo! to show the miserable
state of the calves in the pasture. ¨... sharp bones sticking out like elbows... ¨ (Melville, Cock–a–
Doodle–Doo 28). Melville´s simile about the calves also contains imagery. The statement creates an
image of sharp bones sticking out of cows in a pasture in the reader's mind. Herman Melville also
used many metaphors throughout his short stories. The metaphors can provide other
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Examples Of Similes In The Scarlet Letter
In this short excerpt from The Scarlet Letter describing the meeting of Hester Prynne and Arthur
Dimmesdale, the author–without the use of any dialogue–details their mental states and his attitudes
towards them. Mainly through the use of literary devices such as metaphor, simile, and antithesis,
the author successfully compares the mental states of the two characters and subtly includes his own
attitudes towards them. To begin with, the author first highlights the alien and wild mental state of
Hester through multiple similes. Lines 11 to 13 describe Hester in a metaphorical wilderness where
she "wandered, without rule or guidance, in a moral wilderness; as vast, as intricate and shadowy, as
the untamed forest. . ." This simile elaborates ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Hawthorne, in lines 63 to 66, compares Dimmesdale to a poor pilgrim, ready to faint anytime soon,
who sees a glimpse of "human affection and sympathy, a new life . . . in exchange for the heavy
doom which he was now expiating." The metaphor here perfectly summarizes what Dimmesdale felt
when he saw Hester Prynne. He, the tormented pilgrim, desperately longs for a new life upon seeing
Hester, the human affection and a true life. Another metaphor Hawthorne uses is seen in lines 67 to
77, associating Dimmesdale's soul to a citadel with a ruined wall because of a "breach which guilt
has once made into the human soul." This extended metaphor of the effects of sin and the
brokenness and vulnerability of Dimmesdale further expounds on how Dimmesdale's fragile mental
state could only further
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Analysis Of Beach In Hawaii
Ziggy Marley is the son of the late Reggae great Bob Marley, in 2012 he wrote a song called,
"Beach in Hawaii." Though the title is upbeat, Ziggy talks about loneliness and how he wants to be
with a certain person on the beach in Hawaii. Throughout the song, Ziggy uses repetition, imagery,
metaphors and similes to drive the point that he is lonely in paradise. In the song "Beach in Hawaii,"
Ziggy Marley uses repetition. To drive the meaning of the song Ziggy repeats the line, "I wish you
were here with me, " ten times throughout the song. By using repetition of this line, Ziggy is driving
the point that he is longing for someone to be with him. Ziggy could be longing for a few people;
one notable person could be his father or his significant other. Another line which Ziggy uses six
times throughout the song is, "On the beach in Hawaii." This could be repeated to show that
although he is in paradise, he is still lonely. The repetition could also be Ziggy trying to convince
himself he is in paradise when he is actually lonely without the other person he is singing about.
Hawaii is considered paradise by many people, but being in paradise is sometimes not what it is
cracked up to be. Paradise can be just as lonely with many people there because there is not that one
person that someone wants to be there. Support can mean so much to people, for instance if a
baseball player was looking for that one person that he wants to be in the stands and that person is
not there, it could
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Plot Similes In A Sunrise On The Veld
In life, death is inevitable. It is an ending point that every living thing has to encounter and
succumb. Though it may be an ending force, the experiences of life and knowledge that we gain and
understand in life are what count. Forces such as nature are more powerful than we are although we
do have the power to control our lives and take hold of its opportunities while it lasts. In "A Sunrise
on the Veld", a young 15 year old boy loves to hunt and looks forward to it so much that during the
night he has trouble sleeping. Every morning, he gets up early before the sun comes up, and travels
to the veld which is an open prairie or grassland. Traveling to the veld each day is what he looks
forward to and is what makes him happy. He believes he is invincible and has grasp of everything
around him. The boy witnesses something different this time around when he travels to the veld in
the morning. It teaches him that nature is more powerful than himself forcing him to further analyze
the meaning of life. Plot enrichment in "A Sunrise on the Veld" is created through the use of literary
elements such as similes, setting and character development. Similes and Metaphors were
mentioned frequently and gave a visual, picture and eyesight type of imagery. Near the beginning of
the story the boy is waking up and realizing that he could have been up and about rather than
sleeping. He was eager and ready to get moving. "With the arms and legs and fingers waiting like
soldiers for a word of
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Difference Between Orwell And The English Language
There are many opinions and thoughts when it comes to how individuals think the English language
should be used. This is because there is not a standard approach to teaching the concepts of the
English language. Many people base their style of writing off what they feel is important and what
their teachers taught them over the years. Orwell's thoughts on the English language are something
all teachers should consider talking about in their classrooms. This is because Orwell's thoughts
bring up different ideas about some of the ways the current English language is being used that are
not usually thought of. In my experience I was taught ways that were almost opposite of Orwell.
One difference in my experience and Orwell thoughts is the use of ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
As a result of using the simile or metaphor to often they are losing their true meaning and adding
unnecessary words to their writing. A second difference in Orwell's thoughts and the current English
language is the use of creative sentences and words. In the current English language writers try to
add creative words and sentences to their writing, but these words are just making their work vaguer.
If these words were used less sentences would be simpler to understand and have more meaning. We
also see some speakers add creative words and complex sentences to their speech if they don't want
to provide a clear response. The third difference between Orwell's thoughts and the way I was taught
is the use of familiar phrases. In the current English language we say phrases that we hear frequently
because we heard someone else use it which is similar to the way I was taught. Many times the
writer is using these phrases because it doesn't require a lot of thinking, but using them makes the
writer look lazy. These are some examples on how the current English language could change for
the better if Orwell's thoughts are taught in classrooms of all
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Langston Hughes Similes
The Wonderful Use of Similes
Read this: "The ground was hot." A more sophisticated poet would say, "The ground was as hot as
the sun." Which description sparked more imagery? In everyday life, people use comparisons to
convey their feelings or to express themselves vividly. From seeing a new mother hold her baby for
the first time, competing in the championship game, and getting a grade back from a difficult test,
we often compare ourselves and things around us to help others comprehend. One of the most
common forms of comparison is a simile. A simile is a figure of speech in which two unlike things
are compared by using "like" or "as," generally used to make descriptions more vivid and emphatic.
They are used in literary works frequently, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In everyday life, people use comparisons to convey their feelings or to express themselves vividly.
From seeing a new mother hold her baby for the first time, competing in the championship game,
and getting a grade back from a difficult test, we often compare ourselves and things around us to
help others comprehend. One of the most common forms of comparison is a simile. A simile is a
figure of speech in which two unlike things are compared by using "like" or "as," generally used to
make descriptions more vivid and emphatic. They are used in literary works frequently, especially in
the extraordinary works of Maya Angelou and Langston Hughes. Maya Angelou, an African
American poet, wrote about the struggles during the Civil Rights Movement and Langston Hughes
wrote about similar attitudes during the "Harlem Renaissance," a time when African American poets
emerged. In "Harlem" and "Still I Rise," these poets often use similes to engage the reader and
deepen the meaning of their poems. While "Harlem" is about what happens to dreams forgotten or
lost, "Still I Rise" is about not giving up when one is going through a difficult time. Writers and
poets throughout the world use similes in their work for several reasons; from helping the reader
understand the character(s), comparing objects the audience already understands to create
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The Theme is Developed in Poems, Forgetfulness, by Hart...
Forgetfulness can be seen in many different lights; it can be seen a bad thing, or a good thing. In the
poem "Forgetfulness" by Hart Crane, the speaker utilizes similes and metaphors to convey ideas
about forgetfulness in order to develop the theme; in the poem by Billy Collins with the same name,
the speaker utilizes personification and irony to convey ideas about forgetfulness to develop the
theme.
In the poem "Forgetfulness" by Hart Crane, the speaker uses similes and metaphors to convey ideas
about forgetfulness to develop the theme. The speaker uses these literary devices to convey his ideas
about the theme: Forgetfulness is being lost, and having no idea where to go. The author uses many
similes to get this idea across, such as, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Hart Crane utilizes similes in metaphors in "Forgetfulness" to convey the the theme that being
forgetful is to be lost.
In the poem "Forgetfulness" by Billy Collins, the speaker conveys ideas about theme with the use of
personification and irony. In doing so, the speaker conveys his ideas about the theme: Forgetfulness
is a part of life. In the poem, the speaker uses personification to poke fun at the fact that everyone
forgets, for example, "Long ago you kissed the names of the nine Muses goodbye / and watched the
quadratic equation pack its bag" (Collins 9–10). In this example, the speaker is using personification
to present the idea of forgetfulness; The speaker is saying that the reader is forgetting the quadratic
equation, which is something that most people learn during school. The author also uses irony in the
text to present the idea that everyone experiences forgetfulness. Collins uses situational irony in his
poem to convey his ideas, for example, "It has floated away down a dark mythological river whose
name begins with an L as far as you can recall" (Collins 17–18). This is an example of irony because
the mythological river the author is talking about is the River Lethe (Lethe). This river causes
forgetfulness, as explained by Princeton professors, "In Greek mythology, Lethe was one of the five
rivers of Hades. Also known as the Ameles potamos (river of unmindfulness), the Lethe flowed
around the cave of Hypnos
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Anne Sexton's "Cinderella"
"Cinderella" Analysis
Through literary devices such as simile, repetition and symbolism, Anne Sexton delivers the
message that there is no way to live "happily ever after." Using four short stories as a lead in, Sexton
makes powerful arguments about society by creating the symbol of the dove and alluding to the
story of Cinderella. For Sexton there is no Cinderella, there is no prince charming, and there is no
happy ending. However, through "Cinderella," she argues that the "happy ever after" ending remains
an illusion society chases.
Sexton initially presents examples of success stories in which people, with lives of hardship, receive
everlasting happiness due to superficial commodities. Sexton creates emphasis for the multiple
stories ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
With her magnificent gown and majestic shoes in hand, Cinderella proceeds to the ball where the
prince falls madly in love with her solely based on her appearance. However, the prince is unable to
recognize Cinderella after she changes back to her sooty face and ragged clothes. The shallow
relationship between Cinderella and the Prince reveals another fault of society: the pressure placed
on superficial characteristics and the emphasis placed upon beauty is a priority set too high. When
people must "gussy up" (30) to be noticed, the person within is unable to be seen.
The Prince searches for his beloved beauty using a golden shoe left by Cinderella at the ball. The
shoe signifies the "happy ever after" ending that so many people in society pursue. The step–sisters,
who are both "delighted because they [have] lovely feet," (80) represent many citizens in society.
Although their feet are beautiful, the step–sisters are willing to take their foot and "slice it off and
put on the slipper" (83) to live the blissful ending they were hoping for. As the image of self–
mutilation indicates, people across the world take extensive measures to try and obtain the happiness
that they have sought after for so long.
The same happiness the step–sisters are close to stealing is ruined by the dove. Cinderella's
protector, the dove, speaks to the prince and announces his obvious mistake in choosing
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Poetry Analysis Of Maya Angelou's Still I Rise
Poetry Analysis of Maya Angelou's "Still I Rise" Maya Angelou's poem "Still I Rise" was published
in 1978 at one of the most productive and successful periods of Angelou's career. "Still I Rise" tells
about bouncing back and rising up past oppression and hate. The speaker in Angelou's poem talks to
a direct audience, asking them questions, announcing to them that no matter what they do, she will
always rise back up. The poem is broken up into quatrains, although the last two stanzas use the
repetition of the phrase "I rise" between the complete lines. The author uses figurative language in
every stanza of her poem and uses similes and metaphors to create imagery and to get the tone and
the theme of the poem across to the reader. Angelou uses figurative language to convey the message
of resilience and succeeding even through hatred.
While many types of figurative language are used in "Still I Rise," similes are the most common and
they go a long way to help convey the theme of the poem by creating tone. In the second stanza,
after asking the audience if they are upset by her sassiness, Angelou writes, "'Cause I walk like I've
got oil wells/Pumping in my living room" (7–8). The simile "like I've got oil wells/Pumping in my
living room" is comparing the attitude of the speaker to to the attitude of someone who is rich with
personal oil wells. The speaker is saying that she walks as if she's rich, as if she could own the
whole world. This gives the speaker a confident and
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The Five People You Meet In Heaven Language Analysis
Similes. Metaphors. Alliteration. Figurative language. They are everywhere. In books, papers, signs,
clothes, everything. They roam our world just like us people. Are incorporated in our lives just like
other vitals in our life. Figurative language is the oxygen of literature, it is found in every part of the
world, and is a necessity in living. Authors especially love figurative language. There's not one book
that you will find that will not incorporate figurative language. Authors live off of figurative
language. In the course of the stupefying novel, The Five People You Meet in Heaven, the main
character Eddie's rollercoaster of life has finally been cut short, and the new journey of his life is
just about to begin. The place we call heaven ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Onomatopoeia can be used in many ways for many purposes. Typically to describe the sounds a
noun makes. But onomatopoeia can also be used as a symbol, a form of foreshadowing, or as a form
of suspense. "Whump. Too late. The carts were dropping– Jesus, he released the brake!– and for
Eddie, everything slipped into watery motion." The onomatopoeia in this scenario is used to
describe the sound the roller coaster makes as it is falling from the top of the ride. Also, the sound is
used as suspense because at that moment, Eddie must make a quick decision and try to save the girl
under the ride. Will he save her or not is what the suspense is drawn too. Also, this is used as
foreshadowing because it foreshadows events that happen in the conclusion of the story.
In conclusion, in the story, The Five People You Meet in Heaven, the author Mitch Albom uses
figurative to drive the tone, character development and setting of the story. Each type of figurative
language element bring a different type of factor to affect the story. Without all of these factors in
the story, the novel probably would not be as successful and as amazing as the book is it is. This just
goes to show that figurative language does have a huge affect on books, and literature in general.
Figurative language is the oxygen of
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Still I Rise by Maya Angelou Literary Analysis Essay
In the poem 'Still I Rise' by Maya Angelou, the poet uses repetition, metaphors and similes to
express to her audience about how she has overcome racism in her life through demonstrating a
strong, proud and defiant attitude to inspire others.
The poet uses repetition of the word 'rise' to show that she has overcome and risen above racism. In
the line, 'you may trod me in the very dirt but still, like dust ill rise' it expresses to the reader one of
the key ideas in her poem, that no matter how unjustly others may treat her because of her colour,
she will not be defeated and will stand up again. The main symbol in that line is the rising dust. For
dust to rise, it must be unsettled from the ground in order for it to leave and rise, ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
Another use of a metaphor in the last stanza relates back to the key idea of the poem. In the line, 'I
am the dream and the hope of the slave,' Maya Angelou is directly comparing herself to what a slave
dreams about, which is equality and freedom. She is calling herself the 'ambassador' of equal rights,
and therefore stating herself as a leader who will make the first step to rise up against racism and
fight for equal rights. This again shows her strong, powerful approach to overcoming racial
inequality.
Lastly, the use of similes in the poem effectively conveys the key idea further. In the simile, 'Just
like moons and like suns...still I'll rise', the poet is comparing herself to the moon and the sun, which
are two very powerful things. The common phrase, 'the sun will always rise tomorrow' directly
connects to this simile because by comparing herself to the sun, Angelou connotes to the reader she
is certain that she will always 'rise' again tomorrow just like the sun, no matter what happens to her.
By showing her determined and resilient attitude to not give in to oppressors through this simile, it
strengthens the key idea of this poem. Further use of similes also helps to reveal Maya Angelou's
bold and powerful attitude, for example, when she says, "'Cause I walk like I've got oil wells
pumping in my living room.' By using this
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Similes And Metaphors InWhere I? By Robinson Jeffer
"Where I?" is a sonnet written by Robinson Jeffers between 1924 and 1940. It's theme is centered
around mortality and how a dying woman is revitalized to accept the fact she is dying. In the sonnet,
Jeffers uses similes and metaphors to express how the woman is feeling at the beginning of her
death march through her final last breath. In "Where I?", the speaker learns how an individual may
view their own death, how their body will look in their final resting place, and how their attitude
towards death can revitalize them personally.
Jeffers begins his sonnet "Where I?" explaining about a woman only having a year left to live. A
person reading the opening sentence could infer the woman was stricken with some form of cancer
or other incurable disease. The speaker brings out the woman's emotionally feelings and views of
her death in lines two and three. In Line 2, he states " Her growing death is hidden in a hopeless
place" (Jeffers, 2). The use of the word hopeless infers the woman is in a state of despair and may
have lost hope in living. However, the speaker states in line three "Her death is like a child growing
in her" (Jeffers, 3), he is using a simile to show her march to death is getting closer and closer just
like a child gets bigger and bigger as the days and months come and go. The woman may have
despair dwelling inside of her but she understands death is coming for her and the reader can see her
understanding of her death when the speaker states "And she knows it, you see it shine in her face"
(Jeffers, 3).
People understand we are all going to die and with death, we must choose if we want to be buried or
cremated. The exact way we want our body to enter into its slumber is a personal choice. The choice
many times is based on fear, many people would rather be buried than cremated because of their fear
of fire. The woman knows she will be cremated instead of buried and the choice could be based on
the disease she is engulfed and during her time, people may have felt cremating those with incurable
diseases was better to keep the disease from spreading to others. The speaker alludes to the woman
being cremated when he uses the metaphor "like rags in the crematory" (Jeffers, 6). The speaker
uses this
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Concision and Repetition in Babel's Collected Stories
Concision and Repetition in Babel's Collected Stories
With laconic power, Isaac Babel tells short stories that are at once cold and full of exultation. This
effect arises as much from his prose style as from the wrenching content of his narratives.
In this paper, I will explore several techniques that compress his prose to the lapidary and one that is
more expansive and cuts against his impulse to concision.
One of Babel's most striking tools for reducing his text to essentials is the simile (and more rarely
the metaphor), a tactic that allows him to juxtapose images that complicate the text in a short space.
He also has a knack for rendering psychological states in terms so compressed that they seem
irreducible; for instance, at the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In "The Journey," with a few swift words, he paints a desolate landscape of dead horses in
eschatological terms: "[Nevsky Prospect] was marked off by the carcasses of horses as by so many
milestones. With their legs in the air the horses supported a sky that had fallen low." Babel has
lowered the sky to the hooves of the inverted horses, forcing the reader to crouch lower still.
§2 Psychological States
Babel frequently compresses his prose when rendering psychological states, lending them an
urgency and power. Rather than linger on these moments to which he could devote much more page
weight, he picks his words carefully, forcing the reader to slow and mull the emotions and thought
which are given such emphasis by his lapidary style.
Sometimes Babel engages purely with the emotion. For instance, the narrator of "Guy de
Maupassant" gives this account of his reaction to a book: "My heart was constricted. I was brushed
by a foreboding of truth." The constriction is not further elucidated, yet the moment is clearly a
queer mix of exaltation and fear that emerges not just from the book he has read, but also from his
thwarted sexual advance to Raisa and an implicit quickening of his writer's impulse.
More often, though, Babel tackles emotion indirectly, giving us a character's mental state through
the diction and syntax of a description or an action. In "The Sun of Italy," the narrator tells us: "The
naked brilliance of the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analysis Of To A Daughter Leaving Home By Linda Pastan
The author Linda Pastan, imagines a parent running breathlessly to regain her strength from the
ending connection she once shared with her daughter in her poem, "To a Daughter Leaving Home."
It's a mother's biggest fear when it comes to their child or children leaving home while going their
own ways when the time is right. This poem is based on childhood, fatherhood, and even
motherhood.
Linda Pastan made this poem include various forms of figurative language to hide the literal
message that it's trying to portray. Figurative language is using figures of speech to make the text be
more powerful, persuasive, and meaningful. Figures of speech such as, similes and metaphors, go
beyond the literal meanings to give the readers a new way of looking at the text. It can come in
multiple ways with different literacy and rhetorical devices such as: alliteration, imageries,
onomatopoeias, and etc. With the usage of the literary devices Pastan has used, it introduced the
relationship between the mother and the daughter. It shows the memories of how the mother helped
her daughter grow from a little girl to a young adult getting ready to go her own way in life.
Linda Pastan's poem, To a Daughter Leaving Home, is represented as a metaphor because it's
comparing the bike ride to the relationship between the mother and daughter. The author describes
the mother going along side her eight year old daughter as she rides her bicycle (Pastan 915). The
daughter "wobbled away" (Pastan 915). This happens to be an example of imagery because it gives
a visual description of how the daughter was riding her bike. As she rides the bike further along, the
mother gets surprised by the way the daughter seemed to be in control of the bike as she goes down
a "curved path of the park" (Pastan 915).
Besides giving a visual description Linda uses symbolism to symbolize life. The phrase a "curved
path" represents life by it being joyous, unpredictable, and dangerous. Life doesn't go in a straight
line, just a curved one. Pastan's use of onomatopoeias in the poem allows the reader to hear what is
going on in the poem. For example, she used the words "thud" and "crash" to make the reader
visualize the way the daughter rides the bike (Pastan
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Dorothy Parker The Road Not Taken
"It is in your moments of decision that your destiny is shaped." This quote originating from
American author Tony Robbins is the perfect interpretation of decision making. Each day, every
human is faced with an abundance of decisions. Whether they be trivial selections like choosing
which outfit to wear for the day, or critical accords such as deciding on a future career path,
decisions are a constant struggle. Both Robert Frost and Dorothy Parker recognize this conflict and
have implemented it into their writing. "The Road Less Traveled" and "The Choice" are poems that
highlight the struggles as well as the prosperity of making an important decision.
Upon detailed examination of the poems by Frost and Parker, a conclusion can be made that these
poems share the same theme regarding choices. Both poems implement the feeling of regret and the
burden it weighs on the mind. "Yet knowing how way leads on to way, I doubted if I should ever
come back" (Frost, 14–15). Frost writes about looking back on the path he did not choose and
wondering if he should return to the decision that led him to where he currently stands. The use of
the word ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Countless thoughts and ideas fly through the mind when one is faced with an important choice.
Perhaps the most difficult aspect of making a decision is the fear of the unknown and potential
consequences in the future. Robert Frost and Dorothy Parker both recognize the struggles associated
with choices and decisions and implemented these into their writings. The writers both adopted the
use of personification as a means of strengthening the understanding of their symbols and ideas, and
both poems engulf the theme of regret. However, attributing to their unique style, each poem takes
on a different approach when using literary devices to compare. All things considered, Robert Frost
and Dorothy Parker succeeded in capturing the art of decision making, both similarly and in contrast
to each
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Summary Of Similes By Armst Bryant
Bryant, an adolescence in the year 1811, wrote a poem that shows how he views the world, but was
he a protegee of philosophy or was he just following the "hip" new thing? Bryant uses figurative
language, a store of information and imagery that has only one purpose, to compare two things to
make a point. Similes and metaphors are most commonly used, although there are alternative types
of figurative language. Firstly, we will look at metaphors he uses in his poem, secondly, the similes
we are examined, and finally, I will explain how they further Bryant's purposes for the poem. Bryant
chisels figurative language into his poem, like a well–seasoned craftsman, chisels a long awaited for
work of art. But to what purpose does he use it; why do we have this poem? Bryant uses figurative
language to comfort his reader and bids them to accept the eventuality of their own death. Bryant
almost immediately starts Thanatopsis with a metaphor that introduces the reader to the themes of
this poem. Metaphors are relating to unrelated things to elaborate on a point. It takes an effort to find
metaphors in poems because they are often on abstract ideas. Bryant uses the metaphor, not to
abstract, but to express an idea. Bryant uses the image of a woman to symbolize "Mother Earth."
"She has a voice of gladness, and a smile/ and eloquence of beauty; and she glides/ into his darker
musings, with a mild/ and healing sympathy that steals away their sharpness ere he is aware..." This
metaphor
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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Comparing Birdsell and Macleod's Short Stories

  • 1. Compare And Contrast Sandra Birdsell And Alistair Macleod There are numerous differences between the two short stories, and although they're both in a different setting and have a different theme, they also connect and have many similarities. Sandra Birdsell and Alistair Macleod uses literary devices such as imagery, metaphors and similes in their short stories "Stones' and "To Every thing There Is a Season" respectively to portray a thematic connection of lost of innocence and coming of age stories. It is very clear in these two short stories that the narrator's use imagery as a way to visually create a descriptive image in the reader's mind. In the short story "Stones" imagery is shown when the narrator describes Mrs.Hallman in detail using our five senses for us to get an image of her in our mind. "Mrs.Hallman stood tall and slim, her red toenails sticking the end of her white sandals and she smelled like sweet william that grew in a patch beside the back patch". The narrator basically show that Mrs.Hallman is very fashionable and cares a lot about her appearance and she is well dressed as well as smells very good and that her status is higher than the mother. In the short story "To Every Thing There Is a Reason" imagery sets the mood of the story. It is shown when they explain where they lived, "I was eleven and lived with my family on our small farm on the west of Cape Breton.... Yet I speak on this Christmas in 1977". Another example is when the narrator describes the church, "the church is very beautiful at night with its ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2.
  • 3. How Does Suzanne Collins Use Similes In Purple Hibiscus portrays well known political figures at the time of the Russian Revolution as farm animals. 81. simile– a metaphor in which too things are directly compared; uses like or as. For example, in her novel Purple Hibiscus Adichi writes, "Jaja's defiance seemed to me like Aunty Ifeoma's experimental purple hibiscus: rare, fragrant with the undertones of freedom..." (Adichie 16). Utilizing similes adds depth to the text, but can also create ease in 82. stock character– a generic character that is repeatedly used in literature. For example, "star– crossed lovers" and "a damsel in distress." 83. stream of consciousness– a method of narration that describes in words the flow of thoughts in the mind of characters. Suzanne Collins uses stream of consciousness narration throughout The Hunger Games Trilogy. Here's a quote from Catching Fire: "We barely scraped by, but I knew where I fit in, I knew what my place was in the tightly interwoven fabric that was our life. I wish I could go back because, in retrospect, it seems so secure compared with now, when I am so rich and famous and so hated by the authorities in the Capital. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... syllepsis/zeugma– when an adjective or a verb is written to describe two nouns. For example, "My grandma lost her keys and her mind." In this case "lost" applies to both "keys" and "mind." 85. syllogism– a rhetorical device that starts an argument with a reference to something general and then draws a conclusion about something specific. For example, "Horses have four legs. Chelsea has four legs. Therefore, Chelsea is a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4.
  • 5. Metaphors And Similes In Fireflies By Owl City "Fireflies" by Owl City Have you ever had any troubles sleeping at night? Some people might have an inability to sleep, a sleeping disorder called insomnia. But, for Adam Young, he had trouble sleeping at night, and yet, still have a very colorful vivid dreams. In "Fireflies", by Owl City, Adam Young is trying to show his vivid dreams when he was young by using many figurative languages such as simile, metaphor, hyperbole, personification, and repetition. In the famous single,"Fireflies", there were many uses of similes and metaphors to show his vivid dreams when he was young. In stanza 6, Adam Young sang "Cause I feel like such an insomniac". This is an example of simile, Adam Young is comparing himself to a person who is regularly unable to sleep. In the last stanza, Adam Young sang "Because my dreams are bursting at the seams". This shows an example of metaphor, because he is comparing two thoughts without using like or as. In stanza 7, Adam Young sang "I got misty eyes as they said farewell". This is another example of metaphor, Adam Young is trying to convey the idea that he is going to cry as the fireflies said a farewell. By using many ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In stanza 6, Adam Young said "I'm far too tired to fall asleep". This is an example of a paradox, because the word "far too tired" seeming contradiction may reveal an unexpected truth. In another stanza, Adam Young sang "awake when I'm asleep". This is an example of an oxymoron, because oxymoron is a combination of two words that appear to contradict each other, and by staying awake when asleep is a contradictory between the two terms. The use of oxymoron and paradox is shown throughout the lyric. The purpose is to show that he is awake when asleep at the same time, this will give a clearer idea of him having a vivid dream when trying to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6.
  • 7. The Embodiment Of Tenderness In The Scarlet Letter By... "The letter was the symbol of her calling. Such helpfulness found in her...people refused to interpret the scarlet A by its original signification...it meant able." (Hawthorne 127) Here Hester finds some happiness in her punishment and Hawthorne rededicates the symbol of her letter. This is a turning point in the novel where Hester can be happy and proud again. "[Tenderness had been] crushed so deeply into her heart that it can never show itself more." (Hawthorne 128) Hawthorne's embodiment of tenderness emphasises that Hester is no longer the same person. She does not look as soft and loving. Hawthorne states that she has the capacity to return to her prior state, one that is locked deep in her heart. "there came a glare of red light out ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The variation of sentence structure with one long sentence describing the one quality she expects from her child puts emphasis on the quality. She does not expect to be able to confide in Pearl her dark secrets. Hester uses this reasoning to justify not telling Pearl about the letter. "the sunshine does not love you. It runs away and hides itself, because it is afraid of something on your bosom...It will not flee from me; for I wear nothing on my bosom yet!" (Hawthorne 144) Hawthorne personifies sunshine here to show Pearl pressuring Hester to tell her about the letter. Pearl seems to either believe that the letter is a rite of passage as the she later asks if she will get one when she grows up or an ungodly object as the sun usually symbolizes God's love and acceptance. "the streamlet kept up a babble, kind, quiet, soothing, but melancholy, like the voice of a young child that was spending its infancy without playfulness" (Hawthorne 146) Here there is both an implied metaphor and a simile. Hawthorne describes the streamlet as a unsocialized child, implying this sad streamlet is just like Pearl. This also builds on Pearl playing with her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8.
  • 9. Analysis Of A Separate Peace By John Knowles "The classic insight into fiction is that you show your story. You don't explain your story to a reader. You make it happen in the reader's mind" (Mabe 1). Those words were said by the late John Knowles in 1987, when he began to teach creative writing in South Florida. He lived up to his words by making sure that his reader was thoroughly entertained as they examined his best known novel, A Separate Peace, a coming of age story which follows two teenage boys and their friendship during World War II. As the plot begins to firmly establish itself and the conflict continues to develop during the fourth, fifth, and sixth chapters of the book, the reader is drawn further into the piece and their suspense and anticipation are built. They continue to learn about the author's artistic writing style, see how Knowles integrated different literary devices into his work, discovers new traits and qualities of his characters, and develop feelings about the story. Knowles riddled his novel, A Separate Peace, with various unique literary devices which include allusions, similes and metaphors, hyperboles, anaphoras, idioms, and metonymies. A great number of the expressions he used involved multiple devices within one sentence. Yet, their placement is not overwhelming. Instead, their arrangement make the story more captivating. As Gene lay awake on the New Hampshire beach witnessing the inspiring sunrise, he describes the transformation this way: "The beachhead its deafness and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10.
  • 11. Figurative Language And Similes In Fireflies, By Adam Young Have you ever had any troubles sleeping at night? Some people might have an ibility to sleep, a sleeping disorder called insomnia. But, for Adam Young, he had trouble sleeping at night, and yet, still have a very colorful vivid dreams. In "Fireflies", by Owl City, Adam Young is trying to show his vivid dreams when he was young by using many figurative languages such as simile, metaphor, hyperbole, personification, and repetition. In the famous single,"Fireflies", there are many uses of similes and metaphors to show his vivid dreams when he was young. In stanza 6, Adam Young sang "Cause I feel like such an insomniac". This is an example of simile, Adam Young is comparing himself to a person who is regularly unable to sleep. In the last stanza, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In stanza 6, Adam Young said "I'm far too tired to fall asleep". This is an example of a paradox, because the word "far too tired" seeming contradiction may reveal an unexpected truth. In another stanza, Adam Young sang "awake when I'm asleep". This is an example of an oxymoron, because oxymoron is a combination of two words that appear to contradict each other, and by staying awake when asleep is a contradictory between the two terms. The use of oxymoron and paradox is shown throughout the lyric. The purpose is to show that he is awake when asleep at the same time, this will give a clearer idea of him having a vivid dream when trying to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12.
  • 13. Figurative Language In Mirrors By Justin Timberlake The song Mirrors by Justin Timberlake has a lot of figurative language I will prove a couple cases where that is true. Mirrors by Justin Timberlake has a lot of simile. A simile is a figure of speech involving the comparison of one thing with another thing of a different kind. It is used to make a description more empathic or vivid. The quote " it's like you're my mirror" from the song is a simile you know for a fact that it is a simile because a person cannot be a mirror. So Justin Timberlake is comparing a mirror to a person. A mirror and a person are nothing alike so you can automatically see that it is a direct comparison. This song also has a lot of symbolism. Symbolism is an artistic and poetic movement or style using symbolic ages and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14.
  • 15. The Nature Of Love In Shakespeare's Sonnet 130 By William... William Shakespeare is recognized for being one of greatest poets of all time. His works are still popular to this day. Many of his works included extended metaphors and similes with rhetorical language and were rooted in the nature of love. Two of his poems that are rather alike, but also very contrastive are "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?" and "My mistresses' eyes are nothing like the sun." They both contain a core theme of love or anti–love in some aspects. While these two poems are built around the same type of subject, their interpretations come across in separate ways. In contrast to Shakespeare's "Sonnet 18" which is a serious love poem that contains imagery and metaphors, Shakespeare's "Sonnet 130" is more negative and humorous but contains imagery and similes. Overall, both of these poems fulfill the same motive. They were written to praise women, but the two use different methods for doing so. In "Sonnet 18", Shakespeare compares his lover with the negative aspects of summer stating "/Thou art more lovely and more temperate/" (2). On the other hand in "Sonnet 130", Shakespeare compares his mistress to the good qualities of acquisitive things to show how even though she is not perfect, she is still important to him. He vows "by heaven" (13) that the feelings he has for his mistress are as rare "/As any she belied with false compare/" (14). The messages delivered by the two poems are very unique. In "Sonnet 18", the woman being described is perfect and does ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16.
  • 17. The Use Of Similes InAll Summer In A Day? Imagine a world with not one bit of sunlight – a dark world full perpetual rain that beats on the world like a drum. Vines cover this planet's land like giant snakes. It's a place full of nothing, except the little amount of human's that roam it; however, how could you imagine such a place in the literature without such expressive language? Without the clarification that brings it life? In the short story, "All Summer in a Day" the author Ray Bradbury incorporates a variety of craft moves such as similes, metaphors, hyperboles, and onomatopoeia's in order to clarify meaningful descriptions to give the story life. One of the first and important craft moves seen in Bradbury's work are similes and or metaphors. In stories we need one essential step to highlight the sight and atmosphere of a story. In fact, the most vital and influential form of peer description in literature is metaphors and similes. To prove how they give a story life, author Ray Bradbury used this in his own story – "The children pressed to each other like so many roses, so many weeds (Bradbury)." He used this to express how overcrowded it was in a style that involves nature. It brings a whole new light in the story by giving it an atmosphere, it also get's the job done by illustrating the actions between the students. It highlights aspects of the story in a more ingenious way that brings a story life. It's can be quite creative, because it does not just depict the children it depicts plants as well. It can ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18.
  • 19. Analysis Of Beach In Hawaii "Beach in Hawaii"; An analysis Ziggy Marley is the son of the late Reggae great Bob Marley, in 2012 he wrote a song called, "Beach in Hawaii." Though the title is upbeat, Ziggy talks about loneliness and how he wants to be with a certain person on the beach in Hawaii. Throughout the song, Ziggy uses repetition, imagery, metaphors and similes to drive the point that he is lonely in paradise. In the song "Beach in Hawaii," Ziggy Marley uses repetition. To drive the meaning of the song Ziggy repeats the line, "I wish you were here with me," ten times throughout the song. By using repetition of this line, Ziggy is driving the point that he is longing for someone to be with him. Ziggy could be longing for a few people; one notable person ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The song has a very sad tone, consequently people are more likely to imagine someone walking on the beach looking at the ground and skipping rocks on the water. When people have their head down they are likely to think of someone being sad, that is where the phrase keep your head up comes from. Another way which Ziggy Marley uses imagery is when he says, "I'm on a rocky cliff," (13). A rocky cliff conjures up images of someone looking down and there is a sheer drop–off into the ocean. This part is where it is shown that Ziggy is near the point of no return. When someone jumps off a cliff, there is no direct way back, they would be forced swim to closest beach. Without that person, Ziggy is near the point of no return. Another way which Ziggy uses to drive the meaning of his song is through metaphors and similes. Throughout the song, Ziggy uses metaphors and similes to drive the meaning behind his it. Ziggy uses Hawaii as a metaphor for happiness. Hawaii is a metaphor for happiness because of the imagery that is conjured, which is people smiling, and relaxing on the beach. For Ziggy, being in Hawaii means that he is at least somewhat satisfied, but he is not completely satisfied. The reason why Ziggy is not completely happy is because that one person that Ziggy wants to be with him is not there with him, therefore Ziggy could never be completely satisfied even if he is happy. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20.
  • 21. Essay on Legend by Judith Wright What features or characteristics of the human condition can you identify in Judith Wright's Legend? How has the poet used specific language techniques to emphasise these attributes of life. Judith Wright's 'Legend' responds to various aspects of the human condition present in our society today. The poem is focused primarily on the actions of a Blacksmith's boy, a vassal for humanity's growth in response to age and change. In stanza one, Judith Wright utilizes personification "rivers hindered him" and "thorn branches caught at his eyes to make him blind" coupled with metaphor "the sky turned into an unlucky opal" to emphasise nature's hindrance of the blacksmith boy, if the poem is to be deemed as a metaphorical representation of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The repetition of 'his' used in the following line "His rifle broke, his hat blew away and his dog was gone." emphasise this emotional and physical loss. The rainbow, an extended metaphor, symbolises an epiphany, a sudden realisation that is imbued with hope. The symbolism for the rainbow can also biblically allude to a more religious revelation, where the blacksmith boy has embraced 'god' into his life. This symbolism along with the contrast between the two images "But in front of the night the rainbow stood on the mountain", hints to humanity's capability of change even in the direst of times. The following lines "He ran like a hare, he climbed like a fox" are similes, to show the blacksmith boy's newfound affinity with nature, and his rediscovered sense of self. The further similes used in the following lines, "Like a bar of ice, like the column of a fountain, like a ring of gold." describe the rainbow, in increasing levels of brilliance, from a bar of ice to a ring of gold, this depicts the blacksmith boy's gradual dawning on the significance of his revelation, figuratively portraying the value of humanity's affliction with nature or biblically, the importance of god in our lives. The final stanza, the symbolism "The blacksmith's boy hung the rainbow on his shoulder, instead of his broken gun" once again reflects on the human capability of change and adaptation as well as marking independency. Hyperbole, "and the rainbow shone as brightly ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22.
  • 23. What Is The Similes In The Highwayman The Highwayman by Alfred Noyes is a fantastic poem. It really gets you pulled in when you hear about this forbidden love, that the highwayman and Bess have. The poem is about a highwayman (robber) and Bess, which is the landlord's daughter and it's about their relationship. The story goes on and there is a man named Tim and he likes Bess and he hears them talking. He turns the highwayman into the king. They go to Bess's room and ties her up so when the highwayman comes back they can catch him and kill him. She shoots herself a warning for him to know not to come. But he comes back mad about her death and they kill him too. At the end it tells us we can still see their love story because they are ghosts. I think this poem is fantastic because ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Some parts of the poem isn't understandable, but with the similes and metaphors you can image what it looks like if it gets compared to something you know well. Here are some examples of similes and metaphors in the story. "The road was a ribbon of moonlight over the purple moor. " If you don't understand they compare the road to ribbon, which means the road was like a ribbon thin,little and has rolling hills with swamps. Here is another example of similes and metaphors in the poem. "His eyes were hollows of madness, his hair like moldy hay." Most people know what moldy and hay means which means you can picture his hair gross and nasty and his eyes frightening or scary. It gives you better pictures of imagery too. If they wouldn't have put moldy or madness then it would have been just hair and no emotion. Which is boring and that's no fun. One more example "His rapier hilt a–twinkle, under the jeweled sky." You think of jewels as sparkling, shining objects, and pretty. So you can think of that when you do imagery. So a very pretty, shining, and sparkling sky shining above him and his sword. You can see there are millions of similes and metaphors and they have lots of description in them. Its very easy to compare the words in the similes and metaphors to words you know, so you can image what it looks like so you can understand ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24.
  • 25. ##s By Theodore Roethke, My Papa's Hats, AndMy Father's Hats? The poet can transform their thoughts metaphorically to create a beautiful composition. The author's emotions can be hidden distinctively by expressing them with fascinating techniques. The writer conveys the poem's overall feeling which can then be presented as playful, sad, joyful, lonely, or angry. When analyzing a poem, the reader can encounter metaphor, simile, imagery, and mood techniques that will impact their emotions and speculate. Metaphor is a figure of speech to describe one thing from another, however simile is a figure of speech that compares two unlike things. The mood is the overall feeling created by the poem. Imagery is visually descriptive that relates to the perception. After analyzing three poems, which are, My Papa's Waltz by Theodore Roethke, My Father's Hats by Mark Irwin, and Those Winter Sundays by Robert Hayden, the view of each poem is that they have similar subject about a son's memories of his father in different styles with somewhat ambiguous meaning. Theodore Roethke wrote a poem called, My Papa's Waltz. This poem is regarding the son's memory of his father which is a metaphor to describe that relationship to be rough. Roethke tells us, "such waltzing was not easy / you beat time on my head" (4,13). Roethke uses simile to describe the son dislike the father's smell of alcohol but had to endured it, "could make a small boy dizzy/ but I hung on like death" (2–3). The poem's mood is sad and angry because he is describing the waltz was not ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26.
  • 27. Why Does Shakespeare Use Figurative Language How might you engage your reader by incorporating more figurative language (anecdote, narrative, simile, metaphor, dialogue, personification and such)? How might you offer more valid comparisons using these techniques? "All the world's a stage"–have you ever wondered why people remember and quote lines from Shakespeare so much? One of the reasons is because he used figurative language very effectively in his writings. You may have heard the term "figurative language" before, and perhaps when you heard it you were in a class analyzing novels or poetry. But figurative language is not just used in literature: you can employ it in your essay writing to great effect. Figurative language adds color to your writing by taking your words and applying them to other, often unexpected, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Metaphors do not use "like" or "as" but equate the two terms you are comparing. Effective metaphors capture your reader's attention, and by creating strong, clear, interesting images, help the reader better understand and remember your point. The financial crisis in America was a tsunami whose waves of destruction battered the economies of countries all over the world. Racial injustice is a disease that never seems to be cured. A simile is a particular type of metaphor that compares two objects that are essentially not like one another. A simile, unlike a metaphor, introduces this comparison with the words "like" or "as." My essay's introduction is like the first sip of a fine wine–that is a simile; My essay's introduction is the first sip of a fine wine–that is a metaphor. Used sparingly, similes can help your statements stand out and evoke thought–provoking images for your reader: The fast food industry's attempts to offer healthy menu options are like the 11th hour plea bargain of a death row inmate. "Writing a book is a horrible, exhausting struggle, like a long bout of some painful illness" (Orwell 316). ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28.
  • 29. It's Not Sweet and Right to Die for Your Country: "Dulce... Dulce et Decorum Est by Wilfird Owen is written about the First World War. The title means its sweet and right, but the story behind it is totally different to the title, which is ironic. The poet clearly mentions the horrible and appalling conditions that happened to soldiers in the First World War. The techniques that have been mentioned in the poem are imagery, language, and tone. The poet changes his tone of voice to angry and bitter, as he explains and describes the horrifying image that happened around him in the war. The poet describes the soldier in such a disturbing and painful manner; Owen uses similes and metaphors to describe the condition. The poet opens stanza one with a powerful and strong metaphor: "Bent double" It shows ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Owen opens stanza two by a sudden gas attack, this stanza stands out from the other because of the use of punctuation and the big bold writing: "Gas! Gas! Quick boys!" the poet catches our attention when he changes his tone of voice. The poet used the colour green to clarify the gas is deadly, as the colour green is associated to terrible sickness and disease. The soldiers manage to put their helmets on yet one of them was still yelling and stumbling out. The poet uses ellipsis in stanza two: "like a man in fire or lime ....." in order to stop and change his tone of voice to slow, soft and dream: "dim, through the misty panes", the poet watches the unfortunate soldier struggling for breath, this follows by: "I saw him drowning", this is a metaphor to reveal how the man is dying, the poet chooses to describe in this manna because he gives us a very powerful image. Owen is showing us the cruel and miserable reality of war by using strong and effective imagery and tone. Wilfred Owen describes the death of the innocent soldier, he portrays how the man's body is treated in a horrifying, repulsive and in an inhuman way. The soldier's death was agonising the way Owen described it to us. The poet is sending a message about the young men who are sent out to the war, they are threatened and forced to go even though they don't wish to. The poet is clearly explaining it to us through the poem that the war is not a fun and a pleasant experience. Owen ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30.
  • 31. What is the importance of the description of Alison in... In "The Miller's Tale", the poet Chaucer depicts the tale of a "hende" man and his attempt to tempt the "primerole" Alisoun to commit adultery and therefore render her husband, John a "cokewold". The Miller's Tale is just one story amongst a collection of greater works known collectively as "The Canterbury Tales". The placing of this tale is significant becomes it comes directly after the Knight's Tale revolving around nobility and chivalry and forms a direct contrast due to the fact it is bawdy, lewd and highly inappropriate. The tale is a fabliau, a versified short story designed to make you laugh; concerned usually with sexual or excretory functions. The plot often involves members of the clergy, and is usually in the form of a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... We are also invited to think of Alison as a sexual being in the line "upon hir lendes (loins)" We can also infer that Alison is somewhat promiscuous (and therefore John has a right to "[hold] hire narwe in cage") because we are told that her shoes were laced on "hir legges hye" and we would only know that if her skirt was hitched up. Short skirts in those days had connotations with prostitutes, the same as they do today. The appropriate attitude for a man to take to such a woman (the Miller thinks) is shown by such terms as "popelote", "primerole" and "piggesnie", for which we can readily find modern equivalents. Alison is suitable as a mistress for "any lord"; as a wife, she can expect at best to marry a yeoman, "for any good yeman to wedde". Among the many other physical details packed into the Miller's set–piece description we learn that Alison has delicately–plucked sloe–black eyebrows; that she is tall and erect ("upright as a bolt") and that her breath is sweet. Much of the account is taken up with an inventory of her clothes. These seem fairly expensive, but John evidently wishes her to spend on her wardrobe. The clothes are stylish and exaggerate her attractive features. We learn that many garments are of silk, that smock and collar are embroidered, that her apron is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32.
  • 33. My Papa's Waltz Analysis The poet can transform metaphorically their thoughts in a poem and create a beautiful meaningful writing composition. The author's emotions can be hidden distinctively and express it with fascinating techniques. The writer conveys the mood with a genre that can be presented as sad, joyful, and angry. When analyzing a poem, the audience can read how the metaphor/simile, imagery, and mood techniques will impact their emotions or leave an uncertainty. In some cases, these writing techniques can leave the reader to continue analyzing the poem. The poems allow the writer to persuade their audience by using different rhythmical and soothing techniques to express their thoughts in their writing compositions. After, analyzing three different poems with a similar subject regarding the topic about fathers, have concluded that these poems although have their own unique styles the similar results are ambiguous. Theodore Roethke wrote a poem called My Papa's Waltz regarding his father when he will come home with whiskey on his breath. This poem's mood is a little playful but with sadness. The poet by using the word "waltz" could be speaking about that he enjoyed playing with his father or he could be speaking about how his father will be intoxicated and mistreated him. Roethke tells how he dislike his father's breath of alcohol. According to Roethke, "The whiskey on your breath / Could make a small boy dizzy; / But I hung on like death" (1–3). The impact in his poem is of fear and possible mistreatment. The author simile/metaphor is using the word waltz as a means of saying his father probably was unbalanced because he was intoxicated, but he also used the word beat perhaps to indicate that he was mistreated. This poem has appeal because the author combined opposite words, waltz and beat, to portrait a metaphor. Mark Irwin wrote a poem called My Father's Hats regarding having an imaginary adventure with his father along with his hats. It seems that his father passed away and the author is using imaginary aspects of forest to embrace him. The mood of the poem is happy and playful. The metaphor/simile are used from the beginning to the end with several ambiguous scenarios. The poem maintains the same mood takes ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34.
  • 35. As I Lay Dying Character Analysis "The eye is the lamp of the body. If your vision is clear, your whole body will be full of light" (). Ever since the creation of mankind, the eyes exist as the window to the soul. Taking one look into a person's eyes can leave you with more knowledge than ever thought imagined. Love, anger, lust, hatred, sympathy and guilt can all express themselves in just one glance. William Faulkner knew of this interesting trait and applied it to his 19___'s novel "As I Lay Dying". Each character possesses their own unique traits and personalities which drive them to fulfill their end mission: burying their mother in Jefferson. To express their personalities, Faulkner incorporates a variety of similes and metaphors all relating to the eyes. This technique sheds light of their selfish ways. These selfish qualities, not the love for their mother, cause the Bundren children to succeed in their mother's dying wish. Right ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... However, Jewel has a much different view of their journey. Jewel sees it as a way to make up to his mother for not being there when she passed (Faulkner 48). Therefore, he does everything in his power to get her there . . . including running into a burning barn and nearly drowning to save her coffin (Faulkner 154 and 221). These acts, although seemingly heroic, arise as truly selfish and shallow. These shallow acts can exist through Jewels "pale eyes" which look "like wood" (Faulkner 4). This simile compares Jewel to a simple substance which mirrors how his actions towards his mother are self–absorbed. Wood is two dimensional and shallow. When Jewels refuses to let the past go and continuously holds on to the idea of upsetting his mother, he in turn works for his own benefit. Jewel seeks his mother's approval out of self absorption and not out of love; he acts shallow and hollow like wood. In turn, Jewel ignores his siblings and continues to push towards ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36.
  • 37. Images And Symbols In A Long Way Gone By Ishmael Beah Ishmael Beah's memoir "a Long Way Gone" is a true story about his early life and his experience in the war in Sierra Leone as a child soldier. There are many symbols, figures of speech and images used in Beah's memoir. Interchangeably, there are relationships between all three of these terms in the book. In "a Long Way Gone" Symbolism, Images and figures of speech convey a very moody message to the reader, based upon what they are reading. These literary building blocks helped shape the memoir and keep the reader engaged throughout it. Beah uses the moon in the memoir to display symbols. Before the war, he looked at the moon as an imitation of superior performance. During wartime, Beah is forced to believe the moon hides itself from witnessing the war. It's roll in the war eventually dies down. As an adult writing the book, Beah notes he can still see the images of the moon in the sky. Following the topic of the moon symbol in the book, Beah describes how war treats the moon, "Under those stars and sky I used to hear stories, but now it seemed as if it was the sky that was telling us a story as its stars fell, violently colliding with each other. The moon hid behind clouds to avoid seeing what was happening" (Beah, CH10). The moon is like a gateway to his past, and his family, and that influenced him to put the moon in his memoir. Beah effectively uses imagery by the usage of similes. A simile is a comparison of two contradictory terms using words "like" or "as." Imagery ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38.
  • 39. Literary Devices InThe Sound Of Thunder, By Ray Bradbury Watch Out! As they fight for their survival. In the short story, "The Sound of Thunder," by Ray Bradbury, is about a man going into a time machine to hunt a T–Rex. He was traveling along with his other companions through the time machine to meet the T–Rex. They ended up encountering many obstacles as they're on their journey. Although people don't pay attention to what they're doing even if it's the smallest things, it can lead up to a consequence as shown in literary devices such as; simile, metaphor, and repetition. At first, Bradbury uses simile as a way to illustrate a comparison of unlike things reflecting to the character's actions. Simile is an expression comparing one thing to another using the words, like, or as. In the short story, Eckels and the company travelled back 60 millions years ago. Travis warned everyone to not step off the path, and began to talk consistently about the consequences if you would step off the path. As Travis was talking about the consequences, it was brought up that if you "step on a mouse, and you leave your print, like a Grand Canyon, across Eternity" (Bradbury, 22). This shows us that Travis said this, but meant that if you make any changes in the past, even the smallest ones, it can result into something disastrous in the future. It compares the effects of stepping on a mouse to that at the Grand Canyon, which shows the resemblance. This is one of the many similes used, but another comparing literary device is used as well in the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40.
  • 41. Similes And Metaphors In Hariharan's The Thousand Faces Of... The one discuss about that how the time has been handled in the story. Whether it is in 'analeptic,' means back–take or flashback or in 'proleptic' means foretake. No author can stick merely on 'analeptic'or merely on 'proleptic' technique of narration. Very often authors contain references forward and then switches back to any particular detail to relate it with any present day happening. The Thousand Faces of Night is no exception to it as the story goes on and on in the present of Devi and very next moment it goes in flash–back but not to cut the readers off from the main story line rather to make them aware with some very relevant past incident with the present one. The mythical stories told by pati, the stories told by Baba and the saga ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It seems that the 'Night' of the title symbolises the life of females because of their sufferings and sacrifices, and 'Thousand Faces' symbolises that sufferings of women are not of one kind or type, but are numerous. Hariharan has put off the disguise from these 'Thousand Faces' through the description of different female characters (mythical also) with their different types of sufferings (whether it be physical or emotional or psychological). So, this title perfectly and suitably fits to the story–line of the novel. At every step, it is shown that the females take birth on this earth only to do sacrifices for others–especially for their male ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 42.
  • 43. Literary Devices in Updike's “The Great Scarf of Birds” Essay In his poem "The Great Scarf of Birds", John Updike uses a flock of birds to show that man can be uplifted by observing nature. Updike's conclusion is lead up to with the beauty of autumn and what a binding spell it has on the two men playing golf. In Updike's conclusion and throughout the poem, he uses metaphors, similes, and diction to show how nature mesmerizes humans. In John Updike's poem "The Great Scarf of Birds", he uses diction and figurative speech to depict the beautiful autumn season to show how inspiring and uplifting nature is to man. Updike chooses autumn as the season to set his story in because generally, it is the season that has the most vivid vibrant colors in nature such as the ripe apples which are described as "red ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Man will be uplifted just like the geese flying south for the winter by observing the exquisiteness of nature around him. Updike continues his portrayal of the vast splendor of nature through metaphors, similes, and diction pertaining to a large flock of starlings that flew and over and lit on the gold course where the two men in the poem are playing. The approaching flock of birds seem like a "cloud of dots" (Line 16) on the horizon to observers. The author compares The image of the steadily approaching flock of starlings to iron filings (the birds) stuck to a magnet through a piece of paper (the horizon). The men stand in awe of the black, writhing, approaching mass, much like children do when the magnet picks up the filings through the paper. By comparing the approaching birds to the magnet and iron filing scenario in a simile, Updike subtly likens the men reaction to a small child's reaction when he/she sees the "magic" of the magnet and the iron filings for the first time. The simile purpose is to show how nature can make grown men feel like small, free little kids when experiencing nature at its best. As the observers continue to watch the looming flock of birds, the flock became one huge pulsating mass of birds that seemed as "much as one thing as a rock." (Line 22) Updike once again eloquently portrays nature as absolutely stunning to show how nature affects man. The birds descended in a huge "evenly tinted" (Line ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 44.
  • 45. Examples Of Similes In Courage By Anne Sexton While Anne Sexton´s poem, Courage, was published in 1975, the theme can be compared to Brandon Mull´s book, The Candy Shop War, which was written 32 years later. Both Sexton and Mull talk about having courage and taking risks for others, even if it means putting yourself in danger. Although they both talk about similar themes, Sexton uses similes, metaphors, and personification and Mull uses deep description and imagery. Sexton and Mull both address the theme of having courage and taking risks for others. Sexton gives us similes and metaphors to describe the theme to the reader. In the first stanza of Courage, Sexton writes, " The child's first steps, as awesome as an earthquake." This shows a positive connotation and a pleasant situation ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Sexton uses similes,metaphors, and personification to address her theme while Mull uses deep description and imagery to address his theme. In stanza one, Sexton gives us a metaphor. "When they called you crybaby or poor or fatty or crazy and made you into an alien, you drank their acid and concealed it." In stanza two, Sexton gives us a simile. "If your buddy saved you and died himself in so doing, then his courage was not courage, it was love; love as simple as shaving soap." Finally, in stanza four, Sexton gives us personification. "and at the last moment when death opens the back door you'll put on your carpet slippers and stride out." On page 252, Mull gives us an example of imagery and deep description. "A quick glance skyward revealed that the fireball was falling back toward the roof of the barn. She had inadvertently shot it almost straight up. Eric and Kyle dove through the hatch. Summer raced toward the edge of the roof, a Moon rock in her hand. She slapped the candy into her mouth as she jumped. Out of the corner of her eye she saw Nate fling himself off the roof and plummet to the ground ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 46.
  • 47. Similes And Metaphors In Herman Melville Due to his experiences a sailor, Melville commonly wrote his stories based on life at sea. His common theme of the sea attracted many literate people of the Renaissance. However, Melville´s common theme of life at sea is not the only factor which contributed to his style of writing. Herman Melville used many different rhetorical strategies to emphasize significance in many of his pieces. The use of similes, metaphors, and imagery supply Melville´s stories with various ways to describe certain characters or things. Alliteration, repetition, and onomatopoeia all come together to create specific effects on words and phrases in Melville´s works. The way Melville used parallel structure, malapropisms, and long, drawn out sentences reveals the variety of ways he has structured certain stories throughout his career. The rhetorical strategies used by Herman Melville are what made him the great Renaissance writer he was. The similes and metaphors Herman Melville used in his writings laid strong emphasis on certain things. For example, Melville uses a simile in his book Cock–a–Doodle–Doo! to show the miserable state of the calves in the pasture. ¨... sharp bones sticking out like elbows... ¨ (Melville, Cock–a– Doodle–Doo 28). Melville´s simile about the calves also contains imagery. The statement creates an image of sharp bones sticking out of cows in a pasture in the reader's mind. Herman Melville also used many metaphors throughout his short stories. The metaphors can provide other ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 48.
  • 49. Examples Of Similes In The Scarlet Letter In this short excerpt from The Scarlet Letter describing the meeting of Hester Prynne and Arthur Dimmesdale, the author–without the use of any dialogue–details their mental states and his attitudes towards them. Mainly through the use of literary devices such as metaphor, simile, and antithesis, the author successfully compares the mental states of the two characters and subtly includes his own attitudes towards them. To begin with, the author first highlights the alien and wild mental state of Hester through multiple similes. Lines 11 to 13 describe Hester in a metaphorical wilderness where she "wandered, without rule or guidance, in a moral wilderness; as vast, as intricate and shadowy, as the untamed forest. . ." This simile elaborates ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Hawthorne, in lines 63 to 66, compares Dimmesdale to a poor pilgrim, ready to faint anytime soon, who sees a glimpse of "human affection and sympathy, a new life . . . in exchange for the heavy doom which he was now expiating." The metaphor here perfectly summarizes what Dimmesdale felt when he saw Hester Prynne. He, the tormented pilgrim, desperately longs for a new life upon seeing Hester, the human affection and a true life. Another metaphor Hawthorne uses is seen in lines 67 to 77, associating Dimmesdale's soul to a citadel with a ruined wall because of a "breach which guilt has once made into the human soul." This extended metaphor of the effects of sin and the brokenness and vulnerability of Dimmesdale further expounds on how Dimmesdale's fragile mental state could only further ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 50.
  • 51. Analysis Of Beach In Hawaii Ziggy Marley is the son of the late Reggae great Bob Marley, in 2012 he wrote a song called, "Beach in Hawaii." Though the title is upbeat, Ziggy talks about loneliness and how he wants to be with a certain person on the beach in Hawaii. Throughout the song, Ziggy uses repetition, imagery, metaphors and similes to drive the point that he is lonely in paradise. In the song "Beach in Hawaii," Ziggy Marley uses repetition. To drive the meaning of the song Ziggy repeats the line, "I wish you were here with me, " ten times throughout the song. By using repetition of this line, Ziggy is driving the point that he is longing for someone to be with him. Ziggy could be longing for a few people; one notable person could be his father or his significant other. Another line which Ziggy uses six times throughout the song is, "On the beach in Hawaii." This could be repeated to show that although he is in paradise, he is still lonely. The repetition could also be Ziggy trying to convince himself he is in paradise when he is actually lonely without the other person he is singing about. Hawaii is considered paradise by many people, but being in paradise is sometimes not what it is cracked up to be. Paradise can be just as lonely with many people there because there is not that one person that someone wants to be there. Support can mean so much to people, for instance if a baseball player was looking for that one person that he wants to be in the stands and that person is not there, it could ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 52.
  • 53. Plot Similes In A Sunrise On The Veld In life, death is inevitable. It is an ending point that every living thing has to encounter and succumb. Though it may be an ending force, the experiences of life and knowledge that we gain and understand in life are what count. Forces such as nature are more powerful than we are although we do have the power to control our lives and take hold of its opportunities while it lasts. In "A Sunrise on the Veld", a young 15 year old boy loves to hunt and looks forward to it so much that during the night he has trouble sleeping. Every morning, he gets up early before the sun comes up, and travels to the veld which is an open prairie or grassland. Traveling to the veld each day is what he looks forward to and is what makes him happy. He believes he is invincible and has grasp of everything around him. The boy witnesses something different this time around when he travels to the veld in the morning. It teaches him that nature is more powerful than himself forcing him to further analyze the meaning of life. Plot enrichment in "A Sunrise on the Veld" is created through the use of literary elements such as similes, setting and character development. Similes and Metaphors were mentioned frequently and gave a visual, picture and eyesight type of imagery. Near the beginning of the story the boy is waking up and realizing that he could have been up and about rather than sleeping. He was eager and ready to get moving. "With the arms and legs and fingers waiting like soldiers for a word of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 54.
  • 55. Difference Between Orwell And The English Language There are many opinions and thoughts when it comes to how individuals think the English language should be used. This is because there is not a standard approach to teaching the concepts of the English language. Many people base their style of writing off what they feel is important and what their teachers taught them over the years. Orwell's thoughts on the English language are something all teachers should consider talking about in their classrooms. This is because Orwell's thoughts bring up different ideas about some of the ways the current English language is being used that are not usually thought of. In my experience I was taught ways that were almost opposite of Orwell. One difference in my experience and Orwell thoughts is the use of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... As a result of using the simile or metaphor to often they are losing their true meaning and adding unnecessary words to their writing. A second difference in Orwell's thoughts and the current English language is the use of creative sentences and words. In the current English language writers try to add creative words and sentences to their writing, but these words are just making their work vaguer. If these words were used less sentences would be simpler to understand and have more meaning. We also see some speakers add creative words and complex sentences to their speech if they don't want to provide a clear response. The third difference between Orwell's thoughts and the way I was taught is the use of familiar phrases. In the current English language we say phrases that we hear frequently because we heard someone else use it which is similar to the way I was taught. Many times the writer is using these phrases because it doesn't require a lot of thinking, but using them makes the writer look lazy. These are some examples on how the current English language could change for the better if Orwell's thoughts are taught in classrooms of all ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 56.
  • 57. Langston Hughes Similes The Wonderful Use of Similes Read this: "The ground was hot." A more sophisticated poet would say, "The ground was as hot as the sun." Which description sparked more imagery? In everyday life, people use comparisons to convey their feelings or to express themselves vividly. From seeing a new mother hold her baby for the first time, competing in the championship game, and getting a grade back from a difficult test, we often compare ourselves and things around us to help others comprehend. One of the most common forms of comparison is a simile. A simile is a figure of speech in which two unlike things are compared by using "like" or "as," generally used to make descriptions more vivid and emphatic. They are used in literary works frequently, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In everyday life, people use comparisons to convey their feelings or to express themselves vividly. From seeing a new mother hold her baby for the first time, competing in the championship game, and getting a grade back from a difficult test, we often compare ourselves and things around us to help others comprehend. One of the most common forms of comparison is a simile. A simile is a figure of speech in which two unlike things are compared by using "like" or "as," generally used to make descriptions more vivid and emphatic. They are used in literary works frequently, especially in the extraordinary works of Maya Angelou and Langston Hughes. Maya Angelou, an African American poet, wrote about the struggles during the Civil Rights Movement and Langston Hughes wrote about similar attitudes during the "Harlem Renaissance," a time when African American poets emerged. In "Harlem" and "Still I Rise," these poets often use similes to engage the reader and deepen the meaning of their poems. While "Harlem" is about what happens to dreams forgotten or lost, "Still I Rise" is about not giving up when one is going through a difficult time. Writers and poets throughout the world use similes in their work for several reasons; from helping the reader understand the character(s), comparing objects the audience already understands to create ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 58.
  • 59. The Theme is Developed in Poems, Forgetfulness, by Hart... Forgetfulness can be seen in many different lights; it can be seen a bad thing, or a good thing. In the poem "Forgetfulness" by Hart Crane, the speaker utilizes similes and metaphors to convey ideas about forgetfulness in order to develop the theme; in the poem by Billy Collins with the same name, the speaker utilizes personification and irony to convey ideas about forgetfulness to develop the theme. In the poem "Forgetfulness" by Hart Crane, the speaker uses similes and metaphors to convey ideas about forgetfulness to develop the theme. The speaker uses these literary devices to convey his ideas about the theme: Forgetfulness is being lost, and having no idea where to go. The author uses many similes to get this idea across, such as, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Hart Crane utilizes similes in metaphors in "Forgetfulness" to convey the the theme that being forgetful is to be lost. In the poem "Forgetfulness" by Billy Collins, the speaker conveys ideas about theme with the use of personification and irony. In doing so, the speaker conveys his ideas about the theme: Forgetfulness is a part of life. In the poem, the speaker uses personification to poke fun at the fact that everyone forgets, for example, "Long ago you kissed the names of the nine Muses goodbye / and watched the quadratic equation pack its bag" (Collins 9–10). In this example, the speaker is using personification to present the idea of forgetfulness; The speaker is saying that the reader is forgetting the quadratic equation, which is something that most people learn during school. The author also uses irony in the text to present the idea that everyone experiences forgetfulness. Collins uses situational irony in his poem to convey his ideas, for example, "It has floated away down a dark mythological river whose name begins with an L as far as you can recall" (Collins 17–18). This is an example of irony because the mythological river the author is talking about is the River Lethe (Lethe). This river causes forgetfulness, as explained by Princeton professors, "In Greek mythology, Lethe was one of the five rivers of Hades. Also known as the Ameles potamos (river of unmindfulness), the Lethe flowed around the cave of Hypnos ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 60.
  • 61. Anne Sexton's "Cinderella" "Cinderella" Analysis Through literary devices such as simile, repetition and symbolism, Anne Sexton delivers the message that there is no way to live "happily ever after." Using four short stories as a lead in, Sexton makes powerful arguments about society by creating the symbol of the dove and alluding to the story of Cinderella. For Sexton there is no Cinderella, there is no prince charming, and there is no happy ending. However, through "Cinderella," she argues that the "happy ever after" ending remains an illusion society chases. Sexton initially presents examples of success stories in which people, with lives of hardship, receive everlasting happiness due to superficial commodities. Sexton creates emphasis for the multiple stories ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... With her magnificent gown and majestic shoes in hand, Cinderella proceeds to the ball where the prince falls madly in love with her solely based on her appearance. However, the prince is unable to recognize Cinderella after she changes back to her sooty face and ragged clothes. The shallow relationship between Cinderella and the Prince reveals another fault of society: the pressure placed on superficial characteristics and the emphasis placed upon beauty is a priority set too high. When people must "gussy up" (30) to be noticed, the person within is unable to be seen. The Prince searches for his beloved beauty using a golden shoe left by Cinderella at the ball. The shoe signifies the "happy ever after" ending that so many people in society pursue. The step–sisters, who are both "delighted because they [have] lovely feet," (80) represent many citizens in society. Although their feet are beautiful, the step–sisters are willing to take their foot and "slice it off and put on the slipper" (83) to live the blissful ending they were hoping for. As the image of self– mutilation indicates, people across the world take extensive measures to try and obtain the happiness that they have sought after for so long. The same happiness the step–sisters are close to stealing is ruined by the dove. Cinderella's protector, the dove, speaks to the prince and announces his obvious mistake in choosing ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 62.
  • 63. Poetry Analysis Of Maya Angelou's Still I Rise Poetry Analysis of Maya Angelou's "Still I Rise" Maya Angelou's poem "Still I Rise" was published in 1978 at one of the most productive and successful periods of Angelou's career. "Still I Rise" tells about bouncing back and rising up past oppression and hate. The speaker in Angelou's poem talks to a direct audience, asking them questions, announcing to them that no matter what they do, she will always rise back up. The poem is broken up into quatrains, although the last two stanzas use the repetition of the phrase "I rise" between the complete lines. The author uses figurative language in every stanza of her poem and uses similes and metaphors to create imagery and to get the tone and the theme of the poem across to the reader. Angelou uses figurative language to convey the message of resilience and succeeding even through hatred. While many types of figurative language are used in "Still I Rise," similes are the most common and they go a long way to help convey the theme of the poem by creating tone. In the second stanza, after asking the audience if they are upset by her sassiness, Angelou writes, "'Cause I walk like I've got oil wells/Pumping in my living room" (7–8). The simile "like I've got oil wells/Pumping in my living room" is comparing the attitude of the speaker to to the attitude of someone who is rich with personal oil wells. The speaker is saying that she walks as if she's rich, as if she could own the whole world. This gives the speaker a confident and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 64.
  • 65. The Five People You Meet In Heaven Language Analysis Similes. Metaphors. Alliteration. Figurative language. They are everywhere. In books, papers, signs, clothes, everything. They roam our world just like us people. Are incorporated in our lives just like other vitals in our life. Figurative language is the oxygen of literature, it is found in every part of the world, and is a necessity in living. Authors especially love figurative language. There's not one book that you will find that will not incorporate figurative language. Authors live off of figurative language. In the course of the stupefying novel, The Five People You Meet in Heaven, the main character Eddie's rollercoaster of life has finally been cut short, and the new journey of his life is just about to begin. The place we call heaven ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Onomatopoeia can be used in many ways for many purposes. Typically to describe the sounds a noun makes. But onomatopoeia can also be used as a symbol, a form of foreshadowing, or as a form of suspense. "Whump. Too late. The carts were dropping– Jesus, he released the brake!– and for Eddie, everything slipped into watery motion." The onomatopoeia in this scenario is used to describe the sound the roller coaster makes as it is falling from the top of the ride. Also, the sound is used as suspense because at that moment, Eddie must make a quick decision and try to save the girl under the ride. Will he save her or not is what the suspense is drawn too. Also, this is used as foreshadowing because it foreshadows events that happen in the conclusion of the story. In conclusion, in the story, The Five People You Meet in Heaven, the author Mitch Albom uses figurative to drive the tone, character development and setting of the story. Each type of figurative language element bring a different type of factor to affect the story. Without all of these factors in the story, the novel probably would not be as successful and as amazing as the book is it is. This just goes to show that figurative language does have a huge affect on books, and literature in general. Figurative language is the oxygen of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 66.
  • 67. Still I Rise by Maya Angelou Literary Analysis Essay In the poem 'Still I Rise' by Maya Angelou, the poet uses repetition, metaphors and similes to express to her audience about how she has overcome racism in her life through demonstrating a strong, proud and defiant attitude to inspire others. The poet uses repetition of the word 'rise' to show that she has overcome and risen above racism. In the line, 'you may trod me in the very dirt but still, like dust ill rise' it expresses to the reader one of the key ideas in her poem, that no matter how unjustly others may treat her because of her colour, she will not be defeated and will stand up again. The main symbol in that line is the rising dust. For dust to rise, it must be unsettled from the ground in order for it to leave and rise, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Another use of a metaphor in the last stanza relates back to the key idea of the poem. In the line, 'I am the dream and the hope of the slave,' Maya Angelou is directly comparing herself to what a slave dreams about, which is equality and freedom. She is calling herself the 'ambassador' of equal rights, and therefore stating herself as a leader who will make the first step to rise up against racism and fight for equal rights. This again shows her strong, powerful approach to overcoming racial inequality. Lastly, the use of similes in the poem effectively conveys the key idea further. In the simile, 'Just like moons and like suns...still I'll rise', the poet is comparing herself to the moon and the sun, which are two very powerful things. The common phrase, 'the sun will always rise tomorrow' directly connects to this simile because by comparing herself to the sun, Angelou connotes to the reader she is certain that she will always 'rise' again tomorrow just like the sun, no matter what happens to her. By showing her determined and resilient attitude to not give in to oppressors through this simile, it strengthens the key idea of this poem. Further use of similes also helps to reveal Maya Angelou's bold and powerful attitude, for example, when she says, "'Cause I walk like I've got oil wells pumping in my living room.' By using this ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 68.
  • 69. Similes And Metaphors InWhere I? By Robinson Jeffer "Where I?" is a sonnet written by Robinson Jeffers between 1924 and 1940. It's theme is centered around mortality and how a dying woman is revitalized to accept the fact she is dying. In the sonnet, Jeffers uses similes and metaphors to express how the woman is feeling at the beginning of her death march through her final last breath. In "Where I?", the speaker learns how an individual may view their own death, how their body will look in their final resting place, and how their attitude towards death can revitalize them personally. Jeffers begins his sonnet "Where I?" explaining about a woman only having a year left to live. A person reading the opening sentence could infer the woman was stricken with some form of cancer or other incurable disease. The speaker brings out the woman's emotionally feelings and views of her death in lines two and three. In Line 2, he states " Her growing death is hidden in a hopeless place" (Jeffers, 2). The use of the word hopeless infers the woman is in a state of despair and may have lost hope in living. However, the speaker states in line three "Her death is like a child growing in her" (Jeffers, 3), he is using a simile to show her march to death is getting closer and closer just like a child gets bigger and bigger as the days and months come and go. The woman may have despair dwelling inside of her but she understands death is coming for her and the reader can see her understanding of her death when the speaker states "And she knows it, you see it shine in her face" (Jeffers, 3). People understand we are all going to die and with death, we must choose if we want to be buried or cremated. The exact way we want our body to enter into its slumber is a personal choice. The choice many times is based on fear, many people would rather be buried than cremated because of their fear of fire. The woman knows she will be cremated instead of buried and the choice could be based on the disease she is engulfed and during her time, people may have felt cremating those with incurable diseases was better to keep the disease from spreading to others. The speaker alludes to the woman being cremated when he uses the metaphor "like rags in the crematory" (Jeffers, 6). The speaker uses this ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 70.
  • 71. Concision and Repetition in Babel's Collected Stories Concision and Repetition in Babel's Collected Stories With laconic power, Isaac Babel tells short stories that are at once cold and full of exultation. This effect arises as much from his prose style as from the wrenching content of his narratives. In this paper, I will explore several techniques that compress his prose to the lapidary and one that is more expansive and cuts against his impulse to concision. One of Babel's most striking tools for reducing his text to essentials is the simile (and more rarely the metaphor), a tactic that allows him to juxtapose images that complicate the text in a short space. He also has a knack for rendering psychological states in terms so compressed that they seem irreducible; for instance, at the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In "The Journey," with a few swift words, he paints a desolate landscape of dead horses in eschatological terms: "[Nevsky Prospect] was marked off by the carcasses of horses as by so many milestones. With their legs in the air the horses supported a sky that had fallen low." Babel has lowered the sky to the hooves of the inverted horses, forcing the reader to crouch lower still. §2 Psychological States Babel frequently compresses his prose when rendering psychological states, lending them an urgency and power. Rather than linger on these moments to which he could devote much more page weight, he picks his words carefully, forcing the reader to slow and mull the emotions and thought which are given such emphasis by his lapidary style. Sometimes Babel engages purely with the emotion. For instance, the narrator of "Guy de Maupassant" gives this account of his reaction to a book: "My heart was constricted. I was brushed by a foreboding of truth." The constriction is not further elucidated, yet the moment is clearly a queer mix of exaltation and fear that emerges not just from the book he has read, but also from his thwarted sexual advance to Raisa and an implicit quickening of his writer's impulse. More often, though, Babel tackles emotion indirectly, giving us a character's mental state through the diction and syntax of a description or an action. In "The Sun of Italy," the narrator tells us: "The naked brilliance of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 72.
  • 73. Analysis Of To A Daughter Leaving Home By Linda Pastan The author Linda Pastan, imagines a parent running breathlessly to regain her strength from the ending connection she once shared with her daughter in her poem, "To a Daughter Leaving Home." It's a mother's biggest fear when it comes to their child or children leaving home while going their own ways when the time is right. This poem is based on childhood, fatherhood, and even motherhood. Linda Pastan made this poem include various forms of figurative language to hide the literal message that it's trying to portray. Figurative language is using figures of speech to make the text be more powerful, persuasive, and meaningful. Figures of speech such as, similes and metaphors, go beyond the literal meanings to give the readers a new way of looking at the text. It can come in multiple ways with different literacy and rhetorical devices such as: alliteration, imageries, onomatopoeias, and etc. With the usage of the literary devices Pastan has used, it introduced the relationship between the mother and the daughter. It shows the memories of how the mother helped her daughter grow from a little girl to a young adult getting ready to go her own way in life. Linda Pastan's poem, To a Daughter Leaving Home, is represented as a metaphor because it's comparing the bike ride to the relationship between the mother and daughter. The author describes the mother going along side her eight year old daughter as she rides her bicycle (Pastan 915). The daughter "wobbled away" (Pastan 915). This happens to be an example of imagery because it gives a visual description of how the daughter was riding her bike. As she rides the bike further along, the mother gets surprised by the way the daughter seemed to be in control of the bike as she goes down a "curved path of the park" (Pastan 915). Besides giving a visual description Linda uses symbolism to symbolize life. The phrase a "curved path" represents life by it being joyous, unpredictable, and dangerous. Life doesn't go in a straight line, just a curved one. Pastan's use of onomatopoeias in the poem allows the reader to hear what is going on in the poem. For example, she used the words "thud" and "crash" to make the reader visualize the way the daughter rides the bike (Pastan ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 74.
  • 75. Dorothy Parker The Road Not Taken "It is in your moments of decision that your destiny is shaped." This quote originating from American author Tony Robbins is the perfect interpretation of decision making. Each day, every human is faced with an abundance of decisions. Whether they be trivial selections like choosing which outfit to wear for the day, or critical accords such as deciding on a future career path, decisions are a constant struggle. Both Robert Frost and Dorothy Parker recognize this conflict and have implemented it into their writing. "The Road Less Traveled" and "The Choice" are poems that highlight the struggles as well as the prosperity of making an important decision. Upon detailed examination of the poems by Frost and Parker, a conclusion can be made that these poems share the same theme regarding choices. Both poems implement the feeling of regret and the burden it weighs on the mind. "Yet knowing how way leads on to way, I doubted if I should ever come back" (Frost, 14–15). Frost writes about looking back on the path he did not choose and wondering if he should return to the decision that led him to where he currently stands. The use of the word ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Countless thoughts and ideas fly through the mind when one is faced with an important choice. Perhaps the most difficult aspect of making a decision is the fear of the unknown and potential consequences in the future. Robert Frost and Dorothy Parker both recognize the struggles associated with choices and decisions and implemented these into their writings. The writers both adopted the use of personification as a means of strengthening the understanding of their symbols and ideas, and both poems engulf the theme of regret. However, attributing to their unique style, each poem takes on a different approach when using literary devices to compare. All things considered, Robert Frost and Dorothy Parker succeeded in capturing the art of decision making, both similarly and in contrast to each ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 76.
  • 77. Summary Of Similes By Armst Bryant Bryant, an adolescence in the year 1811, wrote a poem that shows how he views the world, but was he a protegee of philosophy or was he just following the "hip" new thing? Bryant uses figurative language, a store of information and imagery that has only one purpose, to compare two things to make a point. Similes and metaphors are most commonly used, although there are alternative types of figurative language. Firstly, we will look at metaphors he uses in his poem, secondly, the similes we are examined, and finally, I will explain how they further Bryant's purposes for the poem. Bryant chisels figurative language into his poem, like a well–seasoned craftsman, chisels a long awaited for work of art. But to what purpose does he use it; why do we have this poem? Bryant uses figurative language to comfort his reader and bids them to accept the eventuality of their own death. Bryant almost immediately starts Thanatopsis with a metaphor that introduces the reader to the themes of this poem. Metaphors are relating to unrelated things to elaborate on a point. It takes an effort to find metaphors in poems because they are often on abstract ideas. Bryant uses the metaphor, not to abstract, but to express an idea. Bryant uses the image of a woman to symbolize "Mother Earth." "She has a voice of gladness, and a smile/ and eloquence of beauty; and she glides/ into his darker musings, with a mild/ and healing sympathy that steals away their sharpness ere he is aware..." This metaphor ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...