How Does Emerson And London Use Figurative Language In Nature

433 Words1 Page

Nature can create lots of perspectives among authors and their views. Some believe in the good of nature and what it produces, while others swear nature only brings out the bad. They usually use their views and ideas to write stories for their readers to understand. In the pieces, The Law Of Life and Excerpt from "Nature", the authors use a wide variety of personification, tone, and mood to contrast each others perspective on nature. Personification occurs when the author gives human qualities to an animal, object, or abstract idea. Emerson and London use this figurative language to effectively describe their ideas on nature. For example, Excerpt from "Nature" says phrases like, "Nature never wears a mean appearance", while The Law Of Life says, "Nature was not kind to the …show more content…

From reading how nature is described in the excerpt from "Nature" we can reference a very poetic and calming tone. Emerson uses words such as "charming", "perfection", and "reverence". These words are gentle and used to describe things people truly love. On the other hand, London uses tone to show deep reflection through starvation, death, and fear. The mood sets the emotional tone and influences how the reader reacts or feels throughout the story. Emerson and London use different wordings in order for the reader to understand how they should feel in relation to the characters. In The Law Of Life, phrases are used such as "That child was always weeping, and it was sickly. It would die soon..." This causes readers to either become sad or gain a pit in their stomach. Readers of Excerpt from "Nature" can experience a whole different sense of how calm and optimistic the author is. After reading these two pieces of literature, I have realized that both authors use completely different logic throughout their stories. One makes nature seem so open and free, while the other warns us about all the potential danger it consists

Open Document