In The Box Man, by Barbara Lazear Ascher, the protagonist reveals that a life of solitude need not always be lonely. Though the Box Man lives a life of solitude as a homeless wanderer, Ascher describes his “grand design” and “grandmotherly finger licking” to convince readers that their assumptions about homeless people are unfounded – and that they can live a dignified life. By describing the Box Man as “dignified” and “at ease”, Ascher paints a vivid picture of a man who chose a life a comfort and solitude and defeated loneliness by becoming his own…
In the year 1892 in Massachusetts, a young woman was convicted of brutally murdering her parents. Although everyone in the town said she was guilty, at the end of the trial she was dropped of all charges and given the verdict of not guilty. Despite all the evidence against her, she was set free. In the state of Massachusetts, justice wasn 't served in the murders of Andrew and Abby Borden.…
In the short story, Edna’s Ruthie, used good diction to explain Ruthie’s strange behaviors in an understandable way. The author explained she acted more like a child than an adult, without just outright saying that. The reader is capable of making conclusions about Ruthie, and the way she acts, without it being said word for word because the author used good diction.…
The Giver by Lois Lowry includes a major concept of Freedom. Freedom may come easily to some people but in The Giver people don´t have the freedom of choice or even the freedom to express feelings , they get to make no choice such as what they would like to do as a career, who they would like to marry additionally their not even allowed to love someone let alone expressing it. The Giver reveals the horrible outcomes of a community which has relinquished their freedom to secure its safety. In this essay the points which will be stated include…
“Any fool can know; the point is to understand” (Albert Einstein). This wise saying is from Albert Einstein, who believed understanding a concept is the most crucial part of knowledge. Elizabeth Kolbert displayed a similar philosophy in writing her passage “Terrible Teens”. Kolbert’s objective was to make her readers truly comprehend her thesis. Making use of personal encounters, Kolbert was able to make her thesis clear throughout her passage. Furthermore, Kolbert uses a comparison to a well-known musical to make her theory straightforward. Last of all, Kolbert uses a professional’s opinion to further propel her proposition as unambiguous. Kolbert not only uses methods of development throughout her passage…
An author always, or should always, have a purpose in that and how they describe a situation. In this excerpt from The Long Way Gone we meet a truly horrific scene, bullet wounds, bleeding and dying people, not exactly a pretty picture. But the Authors purpose is to show how gruesome it was, just as the people in the story are seeing it the person reading the story is seeing it. IF the author had not brought an image to mind in the reader by these vivid descriptions then It is safe to say the writing is no good. These descriptions are in no way over the top, for an older reader, they show the pain and hurt that took place without a filter.…
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde uses imagery to help portray eerie scenes in the book and the reader's mind. “ The door was blistered and stained…”(49). The words “blistered and stained”gives off a negative mood that suggests the door is unattractive and uncanny. “The early part of the night was cloudless and the lane,which the maid’s window overlooked,was brilliantly lit by the full moon.”(68).The author uses adjectives with an eerie connotation to describe the suspense of the scene. “The rosy man had grown pale, his flesh had fallen away: he was visibly balder and older.This quote describes the oddly quick and drastic change on the man’s appearance. Stevenson uses the five senses to show eeriness throughout the story.…
Tim O’Brien’s use of diction, imagery, and selection of detail helps create a portrait of innocence.…
The desire to belong is a basic human emotional need. As humans, we crave love and acceptance by family and friends. Often, our greatest fear is losing these people from our lives. Children raised in a secure and loving home in a community where they feel like they fit in, will often thrive emotionally. Children who are abandoned or abused by those responsible for caring for them, will likely feel estranged from their communities and may rebel against their communities or become overly withdrawn. For alienated individuals, coming to terms with their childhood traumas and bonding with others who similarly suffered, could create a community where they can learn to trust others and develop the type of secure relationships that we all need…
A superfluous use of description emphasizes Dillard’s unique and meticulous style. The use of long sentences allows for abundant amounts of description, coupled with figurative language, and imagery. Dillard uses graphic verbs to describe the death of a moth. For example, in the midst of the death, Dillard describes it by saying, “...Her head jerked in spasms, making a spattering noise; her antennae crisped and burnt away...” (“Death of a Moth”.) However, she still manages to make the moth seem beautiful by calling its body, “a spectacular skeleton,” and comparing the moth’s wings to angels’ wings. Dillard’s use of description allows readers to visualize the moth and its death. Dillard is relatively emotionally unaffected by the moth’s death, as opposed to Woolf, as seen in sentence structure. Dillard’s skillful description mixes brutality with beauty in order to describe death.…
A creepy and disturbed tone is created in this excerpt, using words like “writhing,” “horror,” “twisted, and “darkened.” It also creates imagery and gives insight on how…
An example of how important these descriptions are, would be Arnold Friend, when Connie is observing his awkward features. Without this descriptive language we would not know that “[Connie] could see that he wasn’t a kid, he was much older- thirty, maybe more”, which adds a new level of complexity to Arnold’s character. The descriptive language is essential to the story’s meaning without it the story would be boring and stagnant.…
To trace dark emotions upon readers most authors will use the concept of negative diction. For instance, “Harried by day and haunted by night”(Paragraph 11, Letter from a Birmingham Jail). The words “harried” and “hunted” make you feel scared, sick to the stomach. A spine-chilling pity will roam through your body. Allowing no positive emotion to be sense.Negative diction stained murky words into the Clergyman’s mind, making it almost impossible to ignore the action that is required for a resolution The word “devious” in paragraph 14 stained a picture into the reader's mind of something dark, something with no positive side towards it. Negative diction allowed for a reader to feel sad. Never will they feel a beatific sense coming upon them. For an example, “stinging darts” (Paragraph 11) illustrated an image of darts impaled into someone’s skin. Blood dripped down staining the floor old wooden floor red. Tears ran off your check. Pain quenched into your bones. Martin Luther King Jr. demeanor allowed for readers to feel connected with the cruelty towards blacks.. In another case, Martin Luther King Jr utilized polyptoton to stain the paragraphs of Letter from a Birmingham Jail with the same root word, allowing readers to understand what blacks went…
She uses words that will tell you exactly the type of mood her characters are in and how they feel about the current situation they are in. Our author comes out and tells us exactly how her character feels “I was a poor, helpless, miserable wretch; I knew, and could distinguish, nothing; but feeling pain invades me on all sides, I sat down and wept.” (91). Ms.Shelley is describing how the character feels terrible and miserable, he can barely function and can’t feel anything but pain. The tone of her writing is so obvious in what she is trying to depict, yet so vivid in her word combination. Wording like “pain invades me on all sides” (91). helps me as the reader realize exactly what she is trying to…
When you think of leaders what do you think of? The president? A king? Well, sometimes when we follow leaders you might be doing so blindly which is a bad thing. The novel Divergent by Veronica Roth is about a girl named Tris who found she was divergent and has to hide it from everyone else. The novel The Compound by S.A. Bodeen is about a boy named Eli who had to evacuate to a compound during a nuclear war and has been there ever since. Both of these stories use dystopian control and mood to suggest the theme that we should not just follow leaders blindly without knowing what is actually going on.…