Milhauser, S. (2008, October 3). The ambition of the short story. The New York Times. Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/05/books/review/Millhauser-t.html…
In agreement with many people, a memory from childhood may seem as distant as the moon. Woolf, on the other hand, remembers brightly the fishing trip with her father and brother. The importance of this trip in her memories is shown by Woolf's use of metaphors that portray her feelings. Midway of the excerpt, she states “white twisting fish” when it was “slapped on the floor.” With the use of a few words, Woolf manages to create a vivid imagination for the reader.…
Virginia Woolf’s purpose in writing this piece is to remind us of the power that death has over life. She shows us the desperation of attempting to avoid death but also the inescapable ending of…
Virginia Woolf uses strong imagery to connect to the audience her rhetorical goal. This is noted when Woolf describes the moth’s struggle. “He tryed to resume dancing, but seemed either so stiff of so awkward that he could…
Woolf’s harsh description and cold tone regarding the women’s college in the second passage depicts her attitude towards women’s roles in society. She uses short and curt sentences with blunt and repetitive bursts. IN contrast to the phrase “a confection which rose all sugar from the waves” in the first paragraph, Woolf uses phrases such as “rumps of cattle in a muddy market” and “mitigated by custard” in the second passage to create a stark contrast. This creates a sense of inferiority and bluntness towards a women’s place. She seems to suggest that the meal at the women’s college could not have possibly been better than the one at the…
1. How does Virginia Woolf use “little Elsie Mitchell” to move from Peter’s thoughts to Lucrezia’s?…
Perhaps the search for the mythical eighth novel of Herman Melville, namely the "Isle of the Cross", was not akin to her normal work, but it would certainly be worth her time, if only to pay the bills. At the moment, she was trudging through the most boring part of her job, though her thoroughness in its completion was what set her work aside from the others. Anyone passing by would have seen a a face hidden behind the Hershel Parker biography of Melville's life with long brown locks flowing from the sides of the rather dull book. In fact, her figure had drawn more than a few stares from the few patrons of the city's centerpiece, something the observant brunette was not ignorant of. In fact, even when encased in the fold of a trench coat, a garment from the past of her profession that she so adored, her curves were still rather distinguishable. Long legs gave way to wide hips, and in turn a noticeable backside, which gave way to a full torso which gave way to an unmarred face, her deep hazel eyes finishing off the look perfectly. In her mind, it was the biggest flaw she possessed, even if the attention she drew was flattering. In her line of muckraking, she was hardly interested in an awry gaze, and more than once it had been her downfall. Today, however, something else entirely would befall her, entirely independent of the charms she been…
Immediately, after reading the article I knew I wanted to try to write my essay from the perspective of an object. Without doubt, my first essay I Kick, I Scream, I’m Alive, written…
Extremely interesting how Virginia Woolf and Plato describe their point of views in their essays. Novice individuals as myself have a very hard time understanding these pieces. On the other side open minded individuals would have endless ideas on what both authors are trying to express. The Death of a Moth and Allegory of a Cave although a very bold and arguable statement have nothing in common, Virginia Woolf writes about a moth dying on a window sill while Plato describes humans chained in a burning cave.…
The passage “The Death of the Moth” has been excerpted from Virginia Woolf’s (1882-1941) collection of essays and published one year after her death. Throughout this particular passage, she symbolizes a moth and its insignificance yet contribution to nature, along with her views on life and death. She skillfully elaborates about this moth, providing information that reveals it is much more noteworthy than it is treated.…
One of the most significant metaphors in Kafka on the Shore is the simile, “Sometimes fate is like a small sandstorm that keeps changing directions…There’s no sun, no moon, no direction, no sense of time. Just fine white sand swirling up into the sky like pulverized bone.”1 This simile sets the preface for and ambiguous journey with twists of fate laced with fear-provoking threat of something powerful and uncontrollable “…[Cutting] through flesh like a thousand razor blades.”2 This simile is very similar to one used in Kafka’s poem The Trees, which begins with “For we are like the trunks of tree in the snow,” then gives an explanation of how the tree trunks seem movable in the snow but are not because the roots under the snow holds the tree in place, but then ends with, “But see, that too, is only apparent.”3 The reference to nature and the allusion to white particles–either swirling sand or snow on the ground–obstructing the perception of reality is too strikingly similar to go…
Passage one and passage two are from Who is Afraid of Virginia Woolf? I read the whole play at…
What was the point of view in the novel? Why do you think Woolf chose this?…
Within Virginia Woolf’s letter and diary entry, she discusses her thoughts on John Milton’s writing style within “Paradise Lost,” and reveals her feeling that Milton, while clearly an expert of literary description, does very little to touch upon human passions and emotion within his poem. Upon reading “Paradise Lost,” it is clear that Woolf has a point; extravagant descriptions of heaven, hell, angels and God abound within the epic, but instances of human sentiment are more difficult to come across. Woolf goes as far as to say that Milton “entirely neglects the human heart.” While Woolf’s statement is not entirely accurate, Milton’s ornate imageries and accounts of venerated…
Investigating the Relationship Between the Height of a Professional Soccer Player and the Amount of Goals Scored…