Percy Bysshe Shelley’s poem‚ "Ode to the West Wind" and Sylvia Plath’s poem "Mirror" both employ the poetic tools of apostrophe‚ the address to something that is intangible‚ and personification‚ the application of human characteristics to something inanimate. However‚ they form a paradox in the usage of these tools through the imagery they create. Both poets have breathed life into inanimate objects‚ however death and aging are the prominent themes within both of these works. In "Ode to the West
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Vignettes November 26‚ 2013 Similes Metaphor Personification Imagery My Name I would like to know how my name began. In English‚ it is free holder. In Latin‚ it is a beautiful woman. In Nicaragua‚ it means half a dozen people answer when it is called. It’s like going into a dark alley filled with cats and calling‚ “Here kitty.” Carolina means common‚ its just ordinary. It is eight sweet letters. Carolina is like a song of happiness or joy. It is the color of the rainbow that comes after
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addicted to cigarettes and changes his whole life s he can adjust himself to make the accessibility of cigarettes easier. Many people who become addicted to cigarettes change their life styles to accommodate their needs. By incorporating‚ similes‚ personification and satire; Sedaris hyperbolizes the idea of being addicted to cigarettes changes the way someone runs their life. Sedaris recalls memories of his addiction to cigarettes and how it all began. He uses many rhetorical elements to express his
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Emily Dickinson uses personification to similate how death is a gentleman that stopped to give someone a pleasant ride to their destination. The gentleman (Death) waits for her is the way the poet conveyed in the poem. As if death is a person waiting for her to join him. Another personification is when the writer compares death to someone having good manners‚ although this is not possible‚ they travel together at no certain speed with no time limit. As they pass through the town the sun sets
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The Seven Deadly Sins: How Deadly Can They Be The Seven Deadly Sins is a major aspect to the religion of Christianity. Religion in the Middle Ages was exceedingly important and the central character to the lives of the people living in this time era. In early fourteenth century‚ Robert Manning of Brunne wrote a poem of an educational text informing people to avoid the seven deadly sins. Sometime later‚ in the late 1500s‚ Edmund Spenser wrote a book entitled The Faerie Queene and in Book 1‚ Canto
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Personification in this chapter is shown in this chapter when the narrator says what she is doing on the porch. “So she sat on the porch and watched the moon rise. Soon its amber fluid was drenching the earth‚ and quenching the thirst of the day.” (ch.10‚ pg. 95) Here Janie is deciding whether or not she should be wary of Tea Cake; their shared love seems too perfect. This tension is also evident in Tea Cake’s name—his proper name‚ Vergible Woods‚ reminds readers of Janie’s past relationships with
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having nothing but his wits. In his short story‚ “The Most Dangerous Game‚” Richard Connell uses personification and foreshadowing to heighten the suspense and conflict of the story. Connell uses a lot of personification in his story to create suspense. As Rainsford is hiding from Zaroff in a tree‚ he describes the length of time by stating “the night crawled slowly by” (53). Using personification in a way to describe time makes the story more suspenseful because it shows how time drags by and
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2.3. Victorian London as the Personification of Brutality and Criminality London in Oliver Twist is encompassed by fog‚ smoke and soot flakes that block earth from heaven which creates a dismal sense and signifies loss of contact with the bright world. These elements are reinforced by mud which covers the face of earth as if a deluge has just retired‚ a thing which suggests chaotic destruction and adds to the general atmosphere of paralysis‚ disorder‚ ambiguity‚ insecurity and isolation
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Plath uses personification to convey a mirror defending itself against an aging woman’s conclusion that the mirror is making her appear old and ugly. The mirror reflects what stands by it precisely like it is without any alteration. The mirror exhibits exact reflections of how something appears in reality. The mirror has “no preconceptions” towards the image; it cannot be prejudice against the image‚ since it is incapable of emotions. In addition‚ the mirror “swallows” what it sees‚ and reflects
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Connor French Mrs. Witcher English III B4 11 November 2013 The Isolated ‘Wild Child’: Hawthorne’s Personification of Romanticism In The Scarlet Letter a girl is teased‚ tormented‚ and excluded. Modern television viewers may envision the character Meg from Family Guy‚ who is picked on by her classmates. Although the writers of Family Guy use Meg as a punch line‚ Nathaniel Hawthorne uses Pearl to embody romantic ideals. Because of her separation from regular society and her strong connection
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