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…
An example of imagery is “It was like coming into the cold marbled room of a mausoleum after the moon has set. (Bradbury 10)” Bradbury uses this statement to show us as the reader that he wants us to feel or create an image of Montag walking into a room that pretty much lifeless and dark. The author uses this feeling and imagery because in the novel the characters portray humans that can not think for themselves so therefore it seems…
The story has wonderful adjectives and vocabulary that really enable you to visualize the scene. Phrases like, “…Trying to peer through the dank tropical night that was palpable as it pressed its thick warm blackness in upon the yacht” (Connell 2), or,” …But the muck sucked viciously at his foot as if it were a giant leech” (Connell 23). These descriptions lure you into the story and help you feel the urgency of the matter, or help you see…
2. What techniques does the author use to help you visualize the place, the people, and the events that are taking place within the story?…
The imagery used in the narratives helps the picture the scene that the author is describing. Imagery appeals to the senses and the readers experiences the episode as if they are actually there. One sense that all the authors appeal to is the sense of sight. For example, Heat-Moon uses imagery in his narrative in order to describe the scenes that he sees on his drive. For example,…
At around age 65, the hearing ability starts to decrease; this is called presbycusis. It is more common in men than women. Higher…
With the use of figurative language, tone, mood, and foreshadowing, the readers will be able to relate to the book and visualize the actions in motion. “You can’t depend on your eyes when your imagination is out of focus,” said Mark Twain. All books have pictures but some are not seen with the naked eye. The authors paint the picture. The perspicacious audience piece together the aspects of the image using their insight. All together the pictures may vary and differ, but everyone has their own…
2. What techniques does the author use to help you visualize the place, the people, and the events that are taking place within the story?…
Imagery is used in literature in order to describe or enhance sensory experiences to the text. An instance of visual imagery might evoke a visual cue such as: the crimson blood flowed slowly down his charred face. An auditory imagery uses language that such as bells chimed and rooster crowed. Olfactory imagery might read: his sweaty socks smelled of rotting fish and musty cellars.Metaphors and similes are also common forms of imagery used in literature. These are phrases that us "like" or "as" or not, but either is used to compare two ideas for effect. "Her face is a garden" or "He is as bold as a lion."…
2nd Body Paragraph (Imagery): Poe uses many literary techniques to portray the scenes through to the audiences’ minds. The use of imagery aided the audience in picturing the events that the narrator overcame. “I saw them write with a deadly locution. I saw them fashion the syllables of my name…” (4). Poe projects the scene of the narrator receiving what he thinks to be his doomsday news to create a grave mood to the readers. The imagery that Poe exhibits makes the readers realize how serious this is in the time of the narrator. Being sentenced to death by the pit and the pendulum is nobody’s dream, so when the narrator found out that that was his death sentence, the hope of him surviving this dreadful occasion seems far out of reach. This use of imagery by Poe affects the readers’ moods.…
of view, Death gives an imagery of being both an idea and a physical person. This evokes…
Describing sound and sight to a person who could not experience either is very challenging. Many people who can experience both, take for granted their abilities and do not think about the possibility of not being able to see or hear. In order to describe sound and sight to a person who cannot experience either, it must contain descriptive words that use the three other basic human senses. Also, describing the three other senses while using literary devices, such as similes. One everyday event a person can experience is walking through the park. Walking through the park has many exciting endeavors; there are children playing, the wonderful smell of food, and the pleasant sights.…
In Muellers poem "Hope," there are multiple uses of different imageries to make the poem more powerful for the reader. For example, the line "it shakes sleep from its eyes and drops from mushroom gills," is an example of tactile imagery because the poet tries to portray that hope lies within the gills of mushrooms which are under the mushroom head. There is hope within these gills because they are the smallest things and in order for the mushroom to survive, it mush drop from these gills into the earth. The gills themselves are rigged and give a great example of tactile imagery. An example of olfactory imagery is the line "it lives in each earthworm segment surviving cruelty." The poet in this line is trying to show that hope even lies…
There are 7 different kinds of imagery: Visual, Auditory, Olfactory, Gustatory, Tactile, Organic, and Kinesthetic. With my poem, Robert Frost, uses all seven forms of imagery. For visual there is, “the withered tree”. For Auditory there is, “She talks and I am fain to list”. For Olfactory there is, “Thinks these dark days of autumn rain”. For Gustatory there is, “Her pleasure will not let me stay”. For Tactile there is, “She walks the sodden pasture lane”. For Organic there…
Sixty seconds. The time the sun will remain above the horizon. Los Angeles lights up red and orange for a brief moment and dies into the darkness. Stores illuminate our path across the boardwalk again. My parents walk a few yards in front of me. I wiggle my toes in the gritty sand and lift my face to the sky from where rain drops start to fall. We turn and dash into a T-Mobile store. My father checks out the deals and buys a hideous Nokia cellphone for my mother: a hard blue shell and a thumb-sized antenna. Ironically, this object that I have strongly disliked since it entered into my life twelve years ago represents me wholly.…