"Use of figurative language in wuthering heights" Essays and Research Papers

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    Long hailed as a classic gothic romance‚ Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights has stood the test of time. Known for it’s barren setting‚ brooding characters‚ and unyielding revenge‚ Wuthering Heights imparts on its readers ideas of life and love. Friends from childhood‚ characters Heathcliff and Catherine soon find themselves caught in a cataclysmic‚ tangled web of their own making. While both are in love with each other‚ Catherine ultimately chooses to marry another‚ leading to a plot of spiraling retribution

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    Figurative Language

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    Most poets use some form of figurative language to convey messages in their poetry because it allows the reader to attach a relatable visual to the emotion. As a result‚ nature‚ with its immense web of symbolism and mystery‚ is often encrypted into poetry. Poetry readers are often confused by a poets reference to nature such as trees‚ flowers‚ moons‚ etc.‚ by assuming that any connection to the beauties of nature implies a positive connotation; however‚ it can be argued that nature’s attributes are

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    feet’. Heathcliff also described the lashings he had received from his step brother as his arm being ‘black to the shoulder’. The revelations of Heathcliff’s problematic and troubled childhood make the audience sympathize with him. Furthermore‚ the language that is used towards Heathcliff is very explicit. The constant slander is shocking and would hurt anyone. For example‚ Hindley on several occasions calls Heathcliff a ‘mad dog’ and vagabond’. Furthermore‚ Isabella compares Heathcliff to a ‘venomous

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    Identically‚ the Wuthering Heights also helps the reader understand the connection of the negative impact of hierarchy. Heathcliff’s main motivation was his hardship and had broken limits that stopped him from climbing the stairs to a higher class. Towards the beginning of the novel he was known to be “like the gypsies and is very dirty; he looks roguish and has a lack of education”. Despite the fact that the kids were being injustice towards Heathcliff and saw him as a misfit‚ Mr. Earnshaw who was

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    Alex Plager Britten Wuthering Heights Assignment Round 2 Reading Log: The two men in Catherine’s life represent one of many sets of doubles within the novel. Both of these men contrast one another‚ and fight for power‚ influence‚ love and attention in her life. Because both Edgar and Heathcliff both represent contrasting forces in the novel‚ they are unable to work together or act amiably towards one another. The goal of each one is to remove the other from Cathy’s life. After Catherine’s death

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    Figurative language

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    List of Figurative Language and Rhetorical devices Alliteration‚ assonance and consonance: Alliteration is the repetition of the first sound in nearby words‚ for example: Always avoid alliteration. Assonance is the repetition of identical or similar vowel sounds within‚ for example‚ words in the lines of a poem. Consonance is the repetition of consonant sounds in the words. All three techniques can be combined: And the silken sad uncertain rustling of each purple curtain

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    How is love portrayed in “Romeo and Juliet” and “Wuthering Heights” and how do settings affect and reflect the characters? William Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet” and Emily Brontë’s “Wuthering Heights” are widely considered to be two of the most influential and popular romances in English literature. The way setting is used to reflect the mood of the scene‚ using variations of light and dark as well as weather and nature‚ is very stimulating to the imaginations of the audience. This essay will

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    Wuthering Heights “She flung the tea back‚ spoon and all‚ and resumed her chair in a pet; her forehead corrugated‚ and her red under lip pushed out‚ like a child’s ready to cry.” P. 12 This passage has sensory details describing young Mrs. Heathcliff. “Chair in a pet” is referred to as a sulky mood. The author‚ Emily Bronte‚ used diction that included metaphors and similes to describe details in the story. While referring to characters and moods in this story‚ Bronte used quite a bit of comparison

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    Throughout her novel Wuthering Heights‚ Emily Bronte effectively utilizes trees as one of the motifs which plays a significant role in illustrating a few different key points. Trees could represent the renewal of the major characters (Heathcliff‚ Cathy‚ Catherine‚ Haerton‚ and Linton)‚ the changing seasons‚ and how it effects it’s surrounding force of nature‚ the destructive yet love filled emotions of characters‚ obstacles faced such as rocks and roots‚ and lastly the sweet fruits grown on trees

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    Authors formulaically uses contrasting places in order to create the opposed forces or ideas that are central to the meaning of the work. In the novel “Wuthering Heights‚” Emily Bronte uses the settings of Wuthering Heights and Thrushcross Grange to show this. These two places represent the opposed ideas that influence the characters‚ thoughts and even the plot of the novel. When the author first introduces the Wuthering heights manor‚ it is during the ongoing of a storm. This‚ in it of itself

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