Images that are used to create feeling. They help us experience the words with our five senses. Touching, smelling, hearing, tasting, and seeing are used in The Most Dangerous Game to create imagery. This sentence is a perfect example of astounding imagery “It’s so dark,” he thought, “that i could sleep without closing my eyes; the night would be my eyelids--.” The setting of the story is immediately given. When you read this sentence, you can imagine how dark it is by actually closing your eyes like Rainsford and experience how dark the night sky really was. Another example of imagery is, “The hunter shook his head several times, as if he were puzzled. Then he straightened up and took from his case one of his black cigarettes; its pungent incense like smoke floated up to Rainsford’s nostrils.” You can smell the incense like it was right in front of you. You can imagine the smoke rising in the air as Rainsford breathed it in. You can also sense the nervousness and suspense, and suspense is a reader’s favorite…
The buck poem in Witness by Karen Hesse is about a buck who repeatedly gets stuck in the ice. Merlin Van Tornhout finds a buck trapped between the ice on a river that dogs chased it into. The buck had tried crossing but fell between the ice and got stuck. Constable Johnson comes and together, Merlin and him pull the huge buck out. Unfortunately, the cold buck gets scared and jumps right back into the hole it was just pulled out of. Merlin and Constable Johnson take it out, and this time the buck leaves, stopping for one moment to look back and snort before running into the woods. Merlin says that the snort echoed all over. That whole scene is a great metaphor for everything happening in Vermont at the time.…
There is a lot of imagery in this poem. There are descriptions like, “we romped around until the pans slid from the kitchen shelf. There is imagery in every stanza.…
In poem the imagery job was to put reader in the shoe of the young white narrator. Imagery allowed reader to come to a conclusion of why would narrator think like she did. An example of this were in line nine through ten, where narrator claimed that IQ the African American man had a casual, cold, alertness in his eye as if he planned to may her. Another examples is line twenty six through thirty one, as she explained how man can break her back like a stick maybe for vengeance on people that are breaking his.…
Imagery is used in multiple points around the text and is possibly the most important poetic element. For instance in the text the speaker uses imagery such as “the boys stamp, the girls shriek, and the drum booms…” by adding this imagery the author is showing how caught up in the action everyone is. This quote reveals the atmosphere…
Distinctly visual texts through various techniques depict an environment with great clarity so that to allow the audience to picture a vivid mental image just the way the composer intended it. A couple of examples of distinctly visual texts are the famous play “the Shoe-Horn Sonata” which uses lighting, project images, music, and the use of Japanese language and customs. A text doesn’t have to display pictures or play pictures to paint a picture for its audience or to be distinctly visual. Douglas Stewart’s poem “Lady Feeding the Cats” uses emotive language, visual imagery and poetic devices to assist the reader to understand the circumstances surrounding an old lady and the stray cats she feeds.…
In Mark Doty’s writings, varying views of a single topic can be found. As he analyzes topics through his poems or essays, he conveys many messages that are often opposites or seem to have no connection. Rather than one stance, he has multiple thoughts that are dispersed like a shotgun shell. Diverse opinions are found giving multiple positions to a single idea. Before dissecting Doty’s vague analysis, I first have to ask why he must he examine and analyze in the first place.…
As evident by the title of this poem, imagery is a strong technique used in this poem as the author describes with great detail his journey through a sawmill town. This technique is used most in the following phrases: “...down a tilting road, into a distant valley.” And “The sawmill towns, bare hamlets built of boards with perhaps a store”. This has the effect of creating an image in the reader’s mind and making the poem even more real.…
Luis Javier Rodriguez is a well-known American poet, novelist, memoirist, journalist, critic, columnist; his work also includes short story writing and children’s books, but before his writing career, he was an active gang member during the 1960’s and 1970’s. Born in the United States-Mexico border city of El Paso, Texas, Luis grew up with diligent and honorable parents. Luis’ father was a high school principal, while making time to work in factories and construction sites, while his mother was a school secretary and worked as a maid, but even so, he was not able to isolate himself off the streets. Just at the age of 11, Luis identified himself with his first street…
For the author, Eliot, to illustrate his main idea in “The Hollow Men,” he uses imagery. For example, in the first stanza Eliot writes, “…Our dried voices, when / We…
When the author used imagery, as one of his rhetorical devices I was off guard because I would have never a imagery was rhetorical device. Like when the author said “intense optical stimulation” I quickly imaged a intense optical stimulation, and how I felt, I guess the author used for the reader's a mental prompt to add to the…
At the beginning of the poem, there is a use of cacophonic sounds of “branching vines.” “Burred faintly belching bogs” are used to describe the ugly sounds of the swamp as the character takes a step forward; which only add more to the misery and struggle of the speaker. The repetition of the word “Here” is also very unique because it is emphasizing the location of where the character is being tortured by having to walk into this swamp of misery and struggle. There is another sound the speaker describes “that sink silently on to the black slack earthsoup” (lines 20-22). This diction considered as imagery, because it is making a comparison between the swamp and earthsoup.…
Imagery is sensory details in a work; the use of figurative language to evoke a feeling, call to mind an idea, or describe an object. Imagery involves any or all of the five senses. Debra uses imagery many times in her writing. “ Driving west from Fargo on I-94, the freeway that cuts through the state of North Dakota, you’ll encounter a road so lonely, treeless, and devoid of rises and curves in places that it will feel like one…
Imagery - Words or phrases that appeal to any sense (sight, taste, touch, hearing, and smell) or any combination of senses.…
The word or phrase that was powerful to me was “She walks in beauty, like the night”…