In “The Outsiders” by H. P. Lovecraft, the author more than hinted at what is a horrifically set story. One element of his well put together setting was when he introduced the castle on pg. 21 “ I know not where I was born, save that the castle was infinitely old and infinitely horrible; full of dark passages and having high ceilings where the eye could find only cobwebs and shadows.” This is a great example because it was also on the first page, which was a clever move from the author. So once you start this story your initial mood about the entire story is “infinitely” gruesome. Another element of the setting the author showed great extent in thought too is that he makes the main character completely isolated most of the story; pg. 22 “ I must have lived years in this place, but I cannot measure the time. Beings must have cared for my needs, yet I cannot recall any person except myself…” This shows the creepy aspect of being completely alone in the woods or in a dark scary castle. Which is blatantly one of the basic scary dreams that most everyone can recall; so once this nightmare is brought back to all the readers a sense of fear of horror washes over all the readers.…
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.…
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is perhaps the purest example in English literature of the use of the double convention to represent the duality of human nature. That Dr. Jekyll represents the conventional and socially acceptable personality and Mr. Hyde the uninhibited and criminal self is the most obvious aspect of Stevenson’s story. The final chapter, which presents Jekyll’s full statement of the case, makes this theme explicit. In this chapter, Jekyll fully explains, though he does not use the Freudian terminology, that what he has achieved is a split between the id and the superego.…
Shelley’s novel Frankenstein is a story about a man named Frankenstein who makes a monster. After creating the monster Frankenstein neglects it. This makes the monster depressed and lonely. This causing the monster to seek revenge on his creator, he does this by murdering Frankenstein’s family one by one to bring Frankenstein to the level of despair at which the monster resided. Foreshadowing, diction and imagery create horror by creating suspense and repulsion in quotes.…
The overall atmosphere is gritty and realistic creating the sense that this is a lived-in world. The atmosphere of the planet they visit is creepy because the shapes of the set seems alive. The characters are all acting realistically,…
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson leaves the reader to ponder whether not Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde are the same person or two different people. The book describes several commonalities and differences between Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. The differences and commonalities are not just found in the physical description of the characters but also in their personalities and their actions. It is my opinion that Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde are in fact one person with two separate personalities.…
In the story The Call Of The Wild By Jack London, Buck, a dog from the South Santa Clara Valley who lives an easy trouble free life, is captured and sold off into the Alaskan Gold Rush Force as a sled dog. He passes through the hands of many owners, some of which he loves and some of which he hates, but they always pass out of his life good or bad. At the end of the story his favorite new owner John Thornton is killed by Indians along with Buck’s companions Skeet and Nig. This causes Buck to become more indigenous and eventually leave all his domestic traces behind. This novel contains an abundance of diction to help set the tone and mood.…
I will be discussing the comparisons between Frankenstein and Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde during this essay. The story of Frankenstein has many different aspects to it but the one in which I choose to examine was the idea of the double which is clearly shown in the story of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. In 1816 Mary Shelley travelled to Switzerland this trip inspired Mary Shelley to write the story of Frankenstein she used a lot of her experiences to affect the story one example of this is the influence that poetry and nature has on a lot of the characters in the novel was highly influenced by the fact that her husband was a poet.…
The dark and creepy tones in Frankenstein reflect the concurring, mysterious murders that occur throughout the plot. The author, Mary Shelley, adds a certain “wow factor” when revealing the atmosphere of terror and horror to the reader. Shelley also gives the reader a supernatural aura. The author’s diction reveals that the monster, that Frankenstein had created, is a romantic hero.…
Mary Shelly’s stylistic choices are very unique. She uses beautiful eloquent language and her creative narrative point of view is so concise that many readers forget that Robert Walton is the true singular narrator. Frankenstein is a story within a story and in this novel, it is shown through Walton’s telling of Victor’s telling of the monster’s story. Mary Shelly proves her place in the romantic science fiction. Every time she includes a simile or metaphor, it is poignant. Mary leaves enough to the imagination to allow the readers to scare themselves by their own mental images simulated through her appeal to our senses. Mary Shelly uses diction and imagery to revoke emotions out of the readers as they can feel the emotions that are being felt…
In all Shakespeare's tragedies, Imagery and diction have an appearance. In the play Macbeth, written by William Shakespeare, imagery and diction are two literary devices that are present and have a great significance to the play. Imagery is a form of a literary device to create a vivid image in the reader's mind. As for diction, it is the choice of appropriate words and phrases, that the writer uses to make the message clear that is being said. The use of animal imagery showcases the disturbance caused by the unnatural intervention of the hierarchy through Macbeth's actions and foreshadows events that will happen in the future. Weather imagery uses thunder, lightning, and rain to develop a setting of darkness…
Mary Shelley’s novel Frankenstein is a Gothic novel that contains two genres, science fiction and Gothicism. The novel is a first person narrative that uses a framing technique, where a story is told within a story. Shelley gives the book a distinctive gothic mood tone by the use of her chosen setting which is dark and gloomy, by doing this it reflects the hideousness of the creature; the point of views helps towards the realism of the novel; and characterization able the reader to interact with the characters and feel sympathy or hatred towards each one. To entice the readers into her suspenseful novel Shelley uses foreshadowing. The narrative structure shows a wide range of perspectives rather than just one, by doing this it provides the reader with greater insight of the characters personalities. Symbolism and imagery evokes the readers’ emotions where sympathy is concerned. Shelley has entwined these techniques to produce a novel where the readers’ sympathy jumps from character to character and moral judgements are made due to the characters actions.…
The novella does not go into much detail about this aspect but there is one instance this theory can be applied to. This is Poole's changing attitude in chapter The Last Night. Poole is significant as he is the one character in the novel that has seen Hyde the most as far as the reader knows. However, when he calls Utterson for help as his master has locked himself in his room, he is ambivalent about who he thinks is in the room.…
The atmosphere for the first scene is very eerie,…
Statistically, over 90 percent of Americans believe freedom is more important than equality or order. However, order is more important than freedom or equality because neither freedom, nor equality can protect people's rights. Without rights, many would say that you cannot have freedom or equality, because rights establish both of these ideas. Secondly, order establishes a government, which is the driving force of a nation. Lastly, order strikes a balance between freedom and equality.…