Response to Sandra Cisneros “Pilón (2002)” In this short story “Pilón” written by Sandra Cisneros was very detailed from the begging of the story as a song stuck her memory that she went on to explain transformation as a little girl growing up going through puberty to her growing up as in emigrant. It only got better as the story went on. Cisneros shared the way she felt deep inside from beginning to end of the short story. Wishing she could be at a place in her life that knowing what she imagined and in reality to know that she would never get the chance of that becoming her imagination not coming true.…
In the book “The Giving Tree” by Shell Silberstein the reader learns that the Giving Tree has a deeper meaning than just a regular children’s book. When you read the book it sounds just like a nice story, but after you interpret the meaning of every line you realize that there is much more to it. Some interpret the book as something to promote bad behavior and others interpret the book as a way people looked at nature at the time the book was written. The giving Tree is about a boy who is friends with a tree and ends up using the tree to benefit himself throughout the book.…
Discovery leads to unique renewed perceptions and new understandings, within Jane Harrison’s ‘ Rainbow’s End’ and Gwen Harwood’s ‘ Father and Child’. Harrison and Harwood present Gladys and Dolly from Rainbow’s End and the child and father from Father & Child as characters who convey the aspects of discovery of with the use of both symbolism and other language techniques. Both texts reflect on a feminine and a father and child context using the protagonists. In Rainbow’s…
Mary Oliver is overwhelmed and in awe with the beauty of nature and conveys this through the passage “Owls” with apprehensive diction and first person perspective making the reader feel like they are right alongside her as she makes observations about the wild owls, their prey, and the peaceful flowers she sees. This apprehension is added to through the reverence Mary seems to have for the owls and the fear conveyed through that reverence in the first three quarters of the passage. In the diction throughout the passage are numerous references to the direction of the things around Mary, for example: the falling bark, swift and merciless great horn owls swooping down to catch their prey, owls soaring up into the sky overhead, and the song of…
English draft Background: Australian author Jackie French demonstrates that in Australian society today people think that taking a journey is physical but you never really thought it could be a mental and spiritual journey which is what Martin is going to undertake. Argument (Thesis statement): Jackie French uses metaphorical language and descriptive language to engage the reader. While reading the story she also implies that in Martin’s spiritual and physical journey he learns that a map is more then just a bunch of lines and words. One example of her metaphorical technique is “The shadows were as thick as treacle”, (pg 17).…
Gordon Grice, an essayist and writer, is caught in a web that is the mystery of the black widow. He himself has been enamored by the widow’s venom, in particular, and how it seems to be more powerful than need be. He reflects on killing widows with his mother and the gravity his mother held while doing so. Putting the powerful venom of the widow in perspective, Grice explains how there is no need for the deathly venom yet it still exists, and he relates this to the evil of the world, how purposeless it is. However, within his work he remains in awe of the widow, keeping the tone mystic but informative.…
Composers construct images to draw an emotional response from responders and exposes them to mew ideas and perspectives. Visuals in texts are a powerful tool to reshape understandings of specific ideas and draw us into their experience. Judith Beverage uses the observation of an animal, a giraffe in Domesticity of Giraffes and a spider in The Orb Spider and uses this as an inspiration to comment on the beauty and order of the natural world and the result of interfering with this balance. Doris Lessing explores the conflicting feelings about the transition from childhood to adulthood, taking a moment in a young boy’s life for her symbolic short story Through the Tunnel. Using a variety of techniques, both composers construct powerful images…
Authors throughout history have utilized our senses to connect the reader to the characters in the novel in a symbiotic relationship. Without our connection and relatability, the impact of the struggles a character faces would not be the same on the reader. This is held true for Kate Chopin’s The Awakening. Chopin employs auditory allusions to foreshadow the fate of the protagonist Edna Pontellier. These small breadcrumbs of allusions placed throughout the novel lead us down the path of discovery and heighten the experience for the reader.…
In both parts, he questions his grandfather’s and the cockroach’s final moments alive, therefore, shows the readers about their ultimate moments away from their tribe to entering the profound, comforting…
When trying to persuade someone, in text and speech, using persuasive appeals will help get the people on that person 's perspective. But, what is a persuasive appeal? It is the usage of ethos, logos, pathos and sometimes figurative language to efficiently convince the person(s) to to believe and agree; yet some people do not know what ethos, logos, and pathos are. Ethos: is convincing someone of the character or credibility of the persuader; logos: is an appeal to logic, and is a way of persuading an audience by reason; pathos: is an appeal to emotion, and is a way of convincing an audience of an argument by creating an emotional response. Two examples a writer and preacher manifest how well persuasive appeals work, it is Jonathan Edwards…
In this excerpt from “Their Eyes Were Watching God” by Zora Neale Hurston, she used word choice, imagery and repetition to show that African Americans couldn’t be free around whites. The words she chose to use and the picture that’s being painted all bring a lot to the point the Hurston was trying to prove. Usually when an author say “the sun was gone” you’ll automatically think that that’s a bad thing, however Hurston is using it to show joy or happiness. During the day the black community always felt like they were being watched, and judged/oppressed by white people. So when the sun goes down, and nightfall they could finally be themselves.…
Beginning with observing the pure life apparent in the moth, the intricate sentence structure mimics the fluidity of the moth’s actions as the “same energy which inspired the rooks, the ploughmen, the horses, and even, it seemed, the lean bare-backed downs, sent the moth fluttering from side to side of his square windowpane” (Woolf). Within this sentence, multiple clauses, the events occurring in the background, are linked together to the subject of life energy and the moth. As a result, this connection forces the reader to acknowledge that, despite the vast differences, the moth and the reader contain that same energy that awards life. When Woolf shifts her attention back to the moth after realizing that its zigzagging signaled the moth’s distress from the approach of death, the essay transitions to observing the moth’s vain efforts to prevent its life from diminishing as Woolf recalls,”I laid the pencil down again. The legs agitated themselves once more.” Despite arriving at the climax, the short sentences create a calm tone and reveal Woolf’s acceptance to inevitable approach of death.…
The Cremation Of Sam McGee was written by Robert Service and published in 1907. Robert Service was living in the Yukon during the 1896 gold rush when the wrote “The Cremation Of Sam McGee” and the poem was published 1907. The first stanza of the poem stages a setting for the piece. The speaker makes it very clear that the poem takes place where the sun shines all day and all night, where men work very hard in search of gold. In this first stanza, the speaker addressing that this is a place where very strange things happen, and that he had to cremate a man named Sam McGee.…
Both the hero and the villain of the poem are not quite what we expect. We know that the Jabberwock is a fearsome creature, for the father warns his son to beware, and the poem states that it has “eyes of flame”, “jaws that bite” and “claws that catch” (Carroll, 2014) and yet it “whiffles” rather than storming, or charging, and it burbles, which is a far less terrifying noise than a roar or shriek, unless you have a phobia of babies or woodland streams. This rejection of the trope of a monster that roars and swoops or charges further reinforces the idea that Carroll is attempting to break away from the old, worn style of…
The poem "Annabel Lee", by Edgar Allan Poe, shows the speaker's way of coping with the death of his beloved, which is displayed as obsession towards her and his judgment of the holy as guilty. The speaker justifies his obsessed love to Annabel Lee as stronger than any extraordinary force, and presents the holy as disgraced and malice for trying to separate them. First, the repetition of words, phrases and sounds emphasizes the speaker's obsession towards Annabel Lee. Her name is mentioned seven times, and the first time she is mentioned her whole name is capitalized as if she is the only one existing.…