The word choice, sentence structure, figurative language, and sentence arrangement the author {Kimberly Brubaker Bradley} uses, makes the text journalistic or informal like. When the characters talk, they don't speak formally or with really bad grammar. They talk like normal people would do. Kimberly writes with little figurative language. When she does though, it is relatable to the text, and easy for younger readers to understand.…
Have you ever visited a different country and felt like a complete alien? Well, how would you feel if you were to move there, forever? The novel, Home of the Brave, by Katherine Applegate is the story of how a young refugee from war-torn Sudan learns to adjust to a new life in America with the help of friends and family. Katherine Applegate’s use of figurative language, first person point of view, and free verse poetry is the most effective way to reveal the story of a refugee adapting to life in America.…
Doolittle uses words and phrases like “reviles” and “hating it deeper” that hold a very strong connotation to show a very negative feeling towards Helen’s beauty. The style of writing in this poem is very resentful of Helen’s beauty. Working off of diction, Poe expresses a positive tone of adoration, whereas Doolittle takes a different approach by recognizing Helen’s beauty and tries to belittle it through insults. Edgar Allen Poe utilizes tone in a very positive way using words that express his adoring thoughts of her. Poe says her beauty is “Like those Nicean barks of yore,/That gently, o’er a perfumed sea” (Poe 2-3). Poe uses a simile to show that Helen’s beauty is as beautiful of the Nicean barks, which were considered very elegant and beautiful. On the other hand, in “Helen”, H.D. uses a sort of bitter, envious tone that still expresses Helen’s beauty. Doolittle writes:…
Amy Tan allows us to deepen our understanding of her world by finding every day items and ideas that Americans can relate to such as a mother’s desire to do the best for their children, or using meals to represent a nurturing love, or a vase to represent a rocky foundation, or the pain that comes from hiding your true self. The use of figurative language in this novel removes the barriers from both the Chinese and the American cultures and customs therefore allowing us to examine each other not through the eyes of a specific race but through the eyes of one race, the human race.…
With insistent meter and captivating rhyme schemes, Edgar Allan Poe's "Annabel Lee" and "The Raven" are both very similar. However, in their views of love, namely the loss and mourning of beautiful women, they differ greatly. Through analysis of the two poems, the reader observes that whom Poe had chosen for a speaker, the tone and the sound effects are all factors in both poems that make two poems with a similar theme contrast.…
Poe uses imagery to depict the narrator’s obsession to the audience in each of these short stories. Both of the stories’ narrators enhance the obsession of eyes through his personality. He uses specific characteristics to talk about these eyes, as if he has studied them. The narrators can speak openly and vividly about the eyes. These in-depth descriptions further the audience’s contemplation of the narrator’s obsession with the eyes of the characters. The thoughts of the narrator’s obsession leads to the audience questioning the narrator’s sanity.…
In the short “ Harrison Bergeron” by Kurt Vonnegut Jr., his choice of figurative language and negative themes left the reader frighten for the future. Vonnegut also uses alliteration to describe Harrison’s handicaps in great detail. On page 24 Vonnegut writes, “The rest of Harrison’s appearance was Halloween and hardware.Nobody had ever born heavier handicaps.” This part of the story creates a scary and intimidating image along with a scary and intimidating mood. The mood is scary because Harrison is standing on stage looking intimidating because people aren’t sure what he is about to do. On page 26 Vonnegut writes, “They leaped like deer on the moon.” Vonnegut uses a simile to show how free Harrison and the ballerina felt with no handicaps.…
The purpose of the first stanza is to paint a picture of scene where the poem is taking place. It starts off like a fairy tale, telling the audience that the story we are about to hear occurred “many a year ago” in a “kingdom by the sea” (Poe1-2). Poe uses repetition to remind his audience of the location in the second line of every stanza because these minute details are significant because the sea and the kingdom are the major images of the poem and it creates a sort of hypnotizing effect on the reader, which Poe is synonymous for. In the next two lines he introduces the main character by the name of Annabel Lee. He calls her a maiden, inferring that she is fairly young and presumably attractive, and it also keeps with the general tone of the poem. In the next two lines Poe reveals his purpose for writing the poem, which is that him and Annabel Lee were deeply and passionately in love, so much so that all they could think about day to day was each other.…
Edgar Allan Poe was a famous American poet, and many of his works are still read in classrooms today. Some of his most famous works include “The Raven”, “Annabel Lee”, and “The Bells”. Across these three poems, there are multiple literary devices used. Poe’s use of literary devices adds depth and meaning to the poems. Without devices such as symbolism and imagery, the poems wouldn’t have any meaning that is directly connected to Poe’s life. Poe’s poems were often about a struggle he was having in his life, or about a woman dying. Poe wouldn’t have been able to write amazing poems without the use of literary devices such as symbolism, personification, and imagery.…
In the citation in Jn 3:3-10 between Jesus and Nicodemus of the spirit and the flesh there is a lot of meaning to the symbolic language used. Also this citation is very ironic. Some of this language is when they say “being born again”. This shows the symbolic meaning in the way that it is referring to baptism. These are relate because when you get baptized you are essentially born into the Catholic Church and recognized as a child of the Christian faith.…
In the poem , "To Helen", Poe praises Helen and conveys her as an angelic individual. He emphasizes her looks through imagery and he describes her "hyacinth hair", and "classic face", as he compares her beauty to that of Ancient Greece, his home. It's without a doubt that Poe admires Helen, as this poem appears to be an oath to her. Poe…
In the third stanza, there are warning bells of danger. The brazen bells alarm people when there is hazard like a fire or a disaster. By this stanza Poe's mood changes and so does the language and the word choice he uses to illustrate these bells. These bells are harsh sounding and not very pretty. "They can only shriek, shriek, Out of tune, In a clamorous appealing to the mercy of the fire, In a mad expostulation with the deaf and frantic fire, Leaping higher, higher, higher, With a desperate…
Jonathan Swift's, A Modest Proposal has become a classic example and much studied work of satire throughout the years. It is interesting not only in the absurdity of it's sly innuendo, but it also acts as a history lesson for the world to see the struggles of people of Ireland. What interests me most about this work is how Swift is able to show compassion through context in a work whose words would normally shock and anger any sane person. It is interesting to see how his careful use of language and imagery manages to both sicken and illuminate the reader. His shock value grabs the careful attention and scrutiny of the reader and, in doing so, accomplishes it's goal, to awaken and alarm those who ignore the tragedy of Ireland's plight.…
Poe's vision of the feminine ideal appears throughout his work, in his poetry and short stories, and his critical essays, most notably “The Philosophy of Composition. ” Especially in his poetry, he idealizes the vulnerability of woman, a portrayal that extends into his fiction in stories such as “Eleonora” and “The Fall of the House of Usher. ” In these tales, and even moreso in “Morella” and “Ligeia, ” the heroines' unexpected capacities for life beyond the grave indicate that females may have more strength and initiative than the delicate models of his verse. The most significant trait of his ideal, however, is her role as emotional catalyst for her partner. The romanticized woman is much more significant in her impact on Poe's narrators than in her own right.…
In both second stanzas of the poems, the speakers portray different attitudes toward Helen and the voyage she created among the men of Greece. The enchanted speaker illustrates a sense of isolation and loss in “On desperate seas long wont to roam”(Poe, line 6) until however, her “hyacinth hair” and “thy classic face”, have “brought [him] home”( Poe, line 7 )which establishes a sense of comfort to the speaker in which he glorifies. However, the unimpressed speakers tone differs as he insults Helen stating that “All Greece reviles [her]” (H.D., line 6 ) as she remains as the reason behind Greece’s suffering and the war in which it ravaged. The images of beauty that the other speaker praises are used for an ironic effect. The “face when she…