In Volume 2 of her 2-Volume novel Hope Leslie, Catherine Maria Sedgwick makes no attempts in hiding how much of a horrible person Sir Philip Gartner is. His infatuation and obsession with Hope Leslie and getting rid of Rosaline lead him to commit various actions such as springing up the trap that put both Magawisca and Faith in jail after Hope tells him she has no intentions of marrying him.…
It’s easy to see that she is mourning the death of her mother and holds her stepfather accountable for her mothers suffering. Through the uses a vivid imagery Trethewey is able to show that the true enemy of those few days spent inside was her stepfather and not the ice storm. She also uses tone shift to clearly show who was responsible for the pain that she saw so clearly in the photograph. This photograph to Trethewey was more of a reminder of what her stepfather put her family through rather than the wonders of a freak ice storm that blew into town and she resents him for…
In the essay “Variations on Grief”, author Meghan Daum losses a childhood friend unexpectedly. Brian Peterson’s passing had a seemingly small emotional effect on Daum. In fact, she doesn’t even feel the need to cry or be saddened by the sudden loss. Daum goes against the norm of how you’d think one would grieve a close friend. Instead of mourning she “decided to create an ironic occurrence rather than a tragedy” (Daum 157). She goes on with her life as if nothing happens. Daum even begins to lie about the events surrounding Brian’s death. She says that the lies are to help the Petersons cope. For instance, Daum was dishonest about Brian’s commitment to becoming a successful writer. In a way, she also lied about his death. She wouldn’t speak…
Alexie sets the mood of the excerpt through his use of tone. For instance, he wrote, “At the hospital, my mother wept and wailed.” Usage of the words “wept” and “wailed” establish a distressful tone. In addition, he included, “I think it hurts the same as if you were only five years old, you know?” Here, he makes a connection to the sensitivity of a five-year-old and pain by using a melancholy tone. Alexie’s overall grim tone effectively sets the mood of the passage, as it is meant to be perceived as depressive and heartbreaking.…
The word ‘looked down’ sound like negative tone and has symbolic meaning that pitiful, pathetic which are probably Alejandra’s feeling to john Grady. There are repetition of ‘tearstained face’ or ‘ her face all wet’. These words created vivid imagery thus reader can more understand character’s feeling, how much sorrowful matter to them moreover easily draw empathy. Also ‘A dry wind came up from the south and in the eucalyptus trees the grackles teetered and screamed.’ is a imagery sentence. Reader can imagine a desolate landscape…
Almost everyone goes through a sort of hardship at some point in their life. When in this period, people tend to look to their relationships for comfort and guidance. Relationships provide these individuals with a hand to hold onto when stumbling along a dark path of pain, confusion, and struggle. Ordinary People, by Judith Guest, showcases this very theme by utilizing specific relationships to help further the growth of her main character, Conrad Jarrett. Conrad’s relations with his girlfriend Jeannine and counselor Dr. Berger play an important part in his recovery and coping with his depression after a recent suicide attempt.Throughout Judith Guest’s Ordinary People , Jeannine and Dr. Berger are able to help Conrad become whole again by teaching…
Hurston chooses a selection of words that enable different connotations to be felt throughout the passage. These connotations are at first ones of confidence and exuberance, but then they become more apprehensive. The author speaks in an overall tone of distress and anxiousness. As Janie wakes up, Hurston describes Janie’s present frame of mind as one with “firm” determination.…
As opposed to blaming her for being incorrect in holding this feeling, Johnson defines the term as a "pleasures immoderately enjoyed" and as an "expectation improperly indulged". Through definition, Johnson has the capacity to couple these two aspects of hope to "disappointment" and name them as "dangerous." While clear in aim and meaning, the roundabout association of disappointment with hope permits Johnson to let the mother down more carefully than if he had straightforwardly expressed his rejection. Moreover, the use of definition permits the writer to make the association and acknowledge the conclusion (rejection) all alone as opposed to having the capacity to straightforwardly place fault on Johnson. The utilization of definition permits the essayist to distance himself from the activity of foreswearing. The author arranges the piece to teach the mother methods in life.The first paragraph, Johnson utilizes the chance to define "hope" and 'expectations improperly indulged' to make a reasonable indication that she had hoped for excessively. He expresses that expectations must take after a typical course, then clarifies how it has not, which simultaneously portrays why she shouldn't have been hopeful in the first place. The write outlines the point that a few hopes must be managed through torment by doing only that in the second paragraph. The first paragraph is used…
Fortunately for her, she has custody of her two young boys, so she is able to enjoy the constant fun of their presence. However, the time comes around every two weeks where she must release her children to spend two and a half days with their father. When this sobering time comes, she is forced to hide her feelings of helplessness, emptiness, and utter lack of control over the boy’s living situation as they spend time with him. “I know how I feel may never change, but I do know that the feelings WILL lessen eventually,” she said. That is the hope that she carries as a torch, burning like the feelings of faith that have grown so strongly inside of her since her divorce.…
Towards the end of Keesha’s House, Stephie reflected of her future and life but also have some doubt about the baby. Stephie was “half no, more half glad how it turn out”(103). Stephie feels glad and sad that she didn’t have the baby. She feels very sad because she feels like something tearable happen when she lost the baby and glad that it didn't happen because she can focus herself on her life and future. Stephie is with her friend she feel happy and joyful with them “ help me laught when I need laughter”(103). They make her happy and enjoy each other and made her feel less down then when she was down. Stephie want to feel better about her future and that she is doing it right and is fair that she feels that way? Stephie want to have freedom”we…
She talks about how being a young child with misfortunes that occur are routine. But once your mature they exist and we learn to accept them, live life fully, experience pain along with joy.…
McCandless’s childhood was very difficult due to his parents lack of emotional affection towards himself and Carine, his sister. Considering their loneliness Carine and McCandless grew very close to each other and looked up to one another. Even as McCandless grew older he prioritized his sister, “Even when Chris went on to junior high and I was still in grade school, he would get out earlier than I would but he’d hang around art his friend [...]and wait for me so we could walk home together”(123) said Carine. The thought of McCandless caring for his sister in this way was indeed not a selfish act if anything it was generous. Carines safety was McCandless biggest priority as a result of their parents inadequacy of sentimental feeling towards their children. Another contributing part of McCandless’s quest for “ultimate freedom” is this lack of his parents consense. Walt and Billie McCandless were always working “Ever since I could remember mom and dad were always working, when we got up in the morning to go to school they were in the office, when we got home they were in the office, when we went to bed they were in the office, they never really got out of the office [...] it was always just me and chris I think thats mainly the part we were so close to each other”(135) Carine told Krakauer. The thought of McCandless and Carine having…
Collective ‘we’ |Gran sums up the far-reaching effects of the accident through the collective nature of “we’re all” and the negative connotations of the word “hurting”. | |“That was the thing about my sisters, she’d become tough. It was like I hardly knew her anymore” (p29) |Characterisation of Kylie; simile; metaphor |Tom sums up Kylie’s negative transformation, a consequence of the accident with the metaphoric verb “tough” and the simile “like I hardly knew her anymore” which emphasises their changed relationship. | |“The clouds were out and a storm was threatening” (p 105) |Pathetic fallacy tone, foreshadowing |When Tom visits the police station, the negative description of the weather, with the aminous storm “threatening” reflects his own emotional turmoil through pathetic fallacy. | |“I’m not saying Daniel was innocent, what he did was wrong, very wrong, but he was no criminal” (p135) |Repetition, conditional conjunction (“but”), comparison --> innocent/criminal |When Tom first visits Daniel, he is confronted by the setting and guards and it causes him to reflect upon Daniel’s situation. The comparison of “innocent” and “criminal”, combined with the conditional conjunction “but” emphasises Daniel’s distinction as ‘not a criminal’; however, the repetition of the word “wrong” acknowledges the severity of his actions. | |“With each memory I touched, I felt it again - that pain, like a sledgehammer slicing through your heart” (p165) |Simile, negative tactile imagery, metaphor |As Tom looks through Gran’s scrapbook, he is confronted by the pain of the happy memories in the past and this is captured in the very negative tactile imagery associated with the simile: “like a sledgehammer slicing through your heart”. | |“We were all on our own journeys, and some days the traveling was worse than others” (p238)…
To begin, contrast demonstrates how the father loses hope in finding Christmas’s mother. He gets out of the fantasy world and sees reality of life. At first, he was cheerful and always had hope in finding Christmas’s mother. “… Indeed, he felt absolutely sure that he’d find my mother himself too. He really believed that he’d rescue her, and we’d all be reunited romantically, happily ever after. He knew it was just a matter of time.” (Goldberg 3) As wee se here, her father has hope of finding his…
There has been a war raging for thousands of years, a silent war, the war within ourselves. Depression is a serious issue, it has taken thousands of lives. Depression has caused men to soar to greatest heights just as it has crippled others. Some of the most famous people in history have secretly battled with depression, which has made them do extraordinary things. Two such people with amazing talents were Sylvia Plath and Kurt Cobain. Sylvia Plath was a great author who wrote various poems, while Kurt Cobain was a talented musician that wrote many songs in a poetic style. One of Sylvia Plath’s greatest works was a poem named “Daddy”, most scholars agree this poem was actually an autobiography of her own battle with depression. Kurt Cobain’s autobiographical song “Something In The Way” was also a reflection of his battle with depression. Both Cobain and Plath were prisoners of themselves, and their great works demonstrate how much depression had a grip on them and how their art indicates something was in the way of their becoming happy with themselves.…