Bird image repeated in simile ‘birds of passage’: impermanence of existence, no settling down, unaware of what direction and time they will take…
A motif that is repeated throughout bares resemblance to a bird. A symbol freedom – a recurring theme in Ailey’s Revelations.…
Throughout John Gardner’s novel, Grendel, there are many literary tools and compositional risks used to support the overall meaning of the story and to show change in the main character, Grendel. One compositional risk that Gardner uses extremely effectively is motif. A motif is defined as recurring structures, contrasts, or literary devices that can help to develop and inform the piece’s major themes. The most effective motif Gardner uses over the course of the novel is the recurring references to the signs of the zodiac. Other important motifs referenced in Grendel are the seasons, machinery, and the number twelve.…
The sanderlings simile represents a time of disguise. As humans, we hide, run, and shield ourselves from pain, sorrow, truth, and sometimes, ourselves. The birds symbolize our desperation to not be found in our times of struggle; we blend in with the crowd making ourselves, as Carson said, of no color. Carson does a phenomenal job of illustrating emotion through her connections, imagery, and symbolism. This use of rhetorical devices makes her message understandable to, people of all ages who go through the roller-coaster of life, her audience. The essay flows beautifully as the author successfully makes her point, or purpose, clear to her audience members. Using strategies such as symbolism, comparisons, and imagery to set a serene mood makes…
In this book the symbolism of the Bird serves as a reminder to Edna’s entrapment of her victorian women in general, like the birds the women's movements are limited by their society and are unable to choose their own rights and communicate with the world around them. The novel winged only describes the women so they can use their wings to protect themselves and shield so they can never fly. Another symbol for the book is the Sea. The sea symbolizes freedom and escape, the sea also serves as a reminder to Edna of the fact of awakening in a rebirth, and the strength, glory, and lonely horror of the women's…
Martha Hale Shackford stated in an article on Jewett that “As a describer of the shore life of the state of Maine she is without an equal. The clear austerity of the air of northern New England is everywhere in these tales set among rocky shores and gray islands. The stimulating tang of salt breezes and the cool breath from the illimitable east meet here ; for those who know it she pictures the visionary beauty of the northland's clarity of light, its mysterious distances touched with receding shades of blue and dim green glimmering and fading into crystalline colorlessness” (Shackford). In “A White Heron”, Jewett is able to place the reader into the position of a poor young girl living in the countryside. She is able to give the reader the perspective of the world as seen through a child’s eyes. This perspective is arduous to replicate without having the experience of being a child in the countryside and experiencing the world as a young girl. Jewett’s rural childhood setting is apparent in multiple works including “The Country of the Pointed Firs”. The peculiar thing about this work is that it is said to “Have no plot” and the beauty of this work is Jewett’s ability to illustrate an image in the reader’s mind (Carolina). It is said that Sarah Orne Jewett’s stories are “always stories of character. Plots hardly exist in her work; she had little interest in creating suspense or in weaving together threads of varied interests” and that her stories are based on illustrating an image to the reader rather than using a plot to keep the readers intrigued (Shackford…
The bird was like Minnie Foster. The bird is trapped in the birdcage just like how Minnie is trapped in her bad marriage. The sheriff’s wife said, “She--come to think of it, she was kind of like a bird herself.” This is quite ironic because she symbolizes the bird and the bird is later found dead, just like her soul. Minnie Foster is just like the trapped bird in the cage because she was trapped in a bad marriage.…
One of the motifs Mandel uses in both Station Eleven, the novel and the comic is the appearance of the sky. In the novel, there is a reoccurrence of a storm. The scenery after Arthur died was people drinking their sadness away, some crying and in shock. “The snow was almost abstract, a film about bad weather on a deserted street.”(Mandel 15) The storm as it is described outside the theater can add to the scene, as the day ended with the death of Arthur. As seen in movies, on TV or read in other novels, almost every time something terrible occurs, the weather usually has a connection with what is happening. The storm appears again when Tanya gives Kristen a paperweight described as a “…a lump of glass with a storm cloud trapped inside.”(Mandel…
The author conveys a sense of how a pelican survives and lives. Yet again imagery is seen in the poem when it says “ We see dark ragged lines of trees, braced behind shiny, coppery water, given a momentary further darkness by a leaping fish, given broad strokes of murder by a pelican lumbering shoreward”. The author here gives you an image of the fish jumping from the murky coppery water of the sea not knowing what’s ahead. Finally imagery is seen in the last paragraph when it says “Just before dark, the rosy band left by the setting sun to evaporate. The sun disk is gone, leaving behind the solitary, funeral, and obscure, Jesuitical, cloud-reflecting, cloud-worshipping, altar-mad, boat strewn Florida waters”. This imagery of the sun going down and the Florida waters conveys a message that the sun brings promise to the area of the Florida Keys and then when the sun goes down the island feels a sense of loneliness which .. I believe this is true for us also, I know…
To conclude, the author uses diction and metaphors to describe the bird’s song. Through the use of these literary devices, the author shows how the birds’ songs are powerful, and how quickly their songs’ end once the sun has fully…
Many times, in the book, the author is confronted with dead birds. During her childhood, the author spent much time with her grandmother out bird watching and while her mother was less involved in this, it is that the author very much connects birds with her family. We see the result of this connection when we see her encounter a dead whistling swan, “I knelt beside the bird, took off my deerskin gloves, and began smoothing feathers. Its body was still limp— the swan had not been dead long. I lifted both wings out from under its belly and spread them on the sand. Untangling the long neck which was wrapped around itself was more difficult, but finally I was able to straighten it, resting the swan’s chin flat against the shore”. (p. 121). The author and her family lived their entire lives at the Great Salt Lake. It seems to me that if the author felt such respect for a single swan, then how she felt for the area must have also been quite a powerful feeling…
"The birds sat comfortably in groups, and they were envied by some in the dinghy, for the wrath of the sea was no more to them than it was to a covey of prairie chickens a thousand miles inland." (342 Crane) The birds in the story symbolize how in control nature truly is. They cannot but watch as birds fly so close that they can see the black of each other's eyes. The birds play an important role in testing the men emotionally. If the men can remain calm as an animal that normally would not be problem if…
This seasonal change clearly excites Mrs. Millard since her life is previously obstructed by her marriage and now she can see herself is about to revive by taking control of her own life. Although one may normally associate sparrow as small or little, however, this may not be the case when sparrow clusters together. The “countless sparrow” are more powerful in making themselves loud enough to be heard when they are “twittering in the eaves”, which may signify Mrs. Millard self-assertion and her desire to withdrawn from living under her husband’s shadow. Similarly, Summer uses season to symbolizes different stages of human life: childhood, youth, maturity and death. The seasonal progress from summer to autumn. representing…
Sometimes, a reader does not glean the true meaning of an object in a story until after it has been illustrated throughout the entirety of the work of literature. Throughout the uses of birds in Macbeth, including the imagery and metaphors, a pattern occurs where a powerful owl is preying on weaker…
One literary device in the poem is symbolism. Symbolism is the practice of using a word to represent an idea. There are several symbols in the poem “The Raven”, but the main symbol is the raven itself. The Raven symbolizes the man’s memories of his wife, Lenore. The bird stands as a memory of his loneliness and misery. When the bird said “nevermore” it was more effective than the human saying it. The raven represents evil and death.…