This person protects him dearly and he admits that‚ as a result of this‚ he has committed treason against his country. He hopes that his country‚ his other dearest love‚ will pardon him because he loves both his country and his love interest. | LITERARY DEVICES 1. PERSONIFICATION * Lines 4‚ 6-7: The love interest’s eyes constantly accuses and convicts the persona. This device highlights the extent to which the persona has hurt this person. * Lines 18-20: The persona hopes that his country
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Literary Devices – Poetry Allusion: An event or fact from an external context assumed to be known by the reader (e.g. historical‚ biblical‚ etc.). An allusion can increase one’s understanding of the poem in question by drawing parallels with other subjects. Anthropomorphism: The showing or treating of animals‚ gods and objects as if they are human in appearance‚ character or behaviour. Apostrophe: Something that addresses an object‚ abstract idea‚ or person who is dead as though it could
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Harper Lee uses many literary elements and techniques that make her novel appealing to a reader. Foreshadowing‚ use of setting‚ many themes (or motifs)‚ and well-developed characters are prevalent in this novel. Lee uses many motifs in this novel. The reoccurring symbols can also be interpreted as foreshadowing. Hands and arms play a big role as well as the distinction between left and right. This mostly pertains to trial of Tom Robinson. References to birds and the color red also show up quite
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Perverted Trajectories of Power-Games in Arthur Miller’s The Crucible Pawan Kumar Sharma(Research scholar) Dr A S Rao ( Assistant Professor of English) MITS University‚ Lakshmangarh‚ Sikar (Raj.) Arthur Miller is a well-known name among American playwrights. In the play‚ The Crucible (1953)‚ he visualises a world immune to all kind of abuses. He wants to see hale and hearty society. In this paper‚ it has been sought to expose corrupt
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Justice in A View from the Bridge: “Most of the time now we just settle for half” NINA: Introduction We are discussing Justice‚ a central theme of Arthur Miller’s play ‘A View from the Bridge’. In addition to investigating how justice is portrayed and laws navigated in the play itself‚ it is also important to look into the relevance of the themes to us in our lives today. NINA: Institutional law The need for institutional law is extremely clear in any functioning society. Its role is to maintain
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the cruelty of man and the wild. When John Thornton‚ one of his owners‚ is killed by the Yeehat Indians he avenges him by killing several Yeehats and is transformed into a Yeehat legend known as the Ghost Dog. This exciting novel consists of many literary elements such as characterization‚ conflict‚ and theme. First‚ the author’s use of characterization demonstrates Buck’s character
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Salem was one of the most popular places where witches were executed‚ because people where afraid of devil which shows the Miller’s story The Crucible. This horrible fear shaped the society of Salem and as it happened a lot of women were killed. As Dorothy Thompson said: "The most destructive element in the human mind is fear. Fear creates aggressiveness". The book which I read is the story about how the society was manipulated by the fear of the unknown or different. Therefore‚ in my opinion people
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The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is a classic novel that captures the essence of life in America during the 1920s. Techniques and conventions of characterization‚ setting‚ symbolism‚ plot and tone are used to make timeless comments on the context of this text. Fitzgerald comments on the power of wealth‚ the suffering of the working class‚ the inability to escape society’s rigid social classes and that individuals form relationships for selfish reasons during the 1920s. Fitzgerald uses the
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Sebastian Junger the authors wrote about natural disasters however they do this in very different ways‚ like in how they vary their writing techniques. For example‚ “Super Disasters” is more of an informational article whereas The Perfect Storm starts off as a personal anecdote. So as you can see both authors in these stories use many different types of techniques and strategies such as vocabulary‚ data‚ and text structure. They use these to describe the causes and effects of some of the most outrageous
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The Raven Deep‚ dark‚ doomy is what this poem is‚ written by Edgar Allen Poe. This poem I believe is all imaginary which I will prove by evidence from the poem itself. This poem which was written in the 1800s is the darkest poem I have read yet. It has good imagery‚ mood‚ tone‚ language‚ and setting. This eighteen-stanza poem talks about a man who is encountered by a raven in the middle of the night. I’m going to show you why I believe this poem is imaginary. In the beginning of the poem
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