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Theme of life and death in literature
English 12 figurative language
English 12 figurative language
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In Part 4 of the poem To This Day by Shane Koyczan, there is a boy that was adopted and uses figurative language to express how he feels about his adoption. The point of the poem talking about the boy’s adoption is so that it will go along with the other mini bullying stories inside of the rest of the poem. The author uses a tree to represent the boys new adoptive family and the boy is described as a broken branch “he was a broken branch grafted onto a different family tree” the reason the boy was represented as “a broken branch” is because his family, they must have died or had some other tragic mishap because they are no longer in the picture, which broke him making him “a broken branch”.Also the boy could feel some sort of emptiness without
In the song “Somebody I Used To Know” is about a guy who is heartbroken that his former lover is gone and out of his life. The lyrics “Make out like it never happened and that we are nothing” (metaphor) means that Gotye is still trying to get with Kimba and she denies everything they did together. If you really read through the lyrics you can connect on how he feels and how Kimba feels. One more lyric that really hit me was “Have your friends collect your records and then change your number”(figurative language) those lyrics mean that she wants nothing to do with Gotye but, he is trying to get her love back but she changed her number .
The tree “swings through another year of sun and leaping winds, of leaves and bounding fruit.” This sentence evokes images of happiness and serenity; however, it is in stark contrast with “month after month, the whip-crack of the mortgage.” The tone of this phrase is harsh and the onomatopoeia of a “whip crack” stirs up images of oppression. The final lines of the poem show the consequences that the family accepts by preserving the tree—their family heritage. When the speaker judges the tree by its cover she sees monetary value, but when she looks at the content in the book she find that it represents family. Even though times may be tough for the family, they are united by memories of their ancestors.
A Pulitzer Prize is an award for an achievement in American journalism, literature, or music. Paul Gigot, chairman of the Pulitzer Prize board, described the award as a “proud and robust tradition”. How does one carry on this robust tradition? By mastery of skilled writing technique, one can be considered for the awarding of this prize. Since its creation in 1917, 13 have been awarded annually, one of which, in 1939, was given to Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings for her novel, The Yearling. Rawlings is an American author from Florida known for writing rural themed novels. Consequently, The Yearling is about a boy living on a farm who adopts an orphaned fawn. Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings procured a prestigious Pulitzer Prize for her effectual use of figurative language, sensory details, and syntax.
“Doodle was just about the craziest brother a boy could ever have, he wasn’t a crazy crazy…. but was a nice crazy, like someone you meet in your dreams”(Hurst 416).These brothers loved each other. They were closer than most brothers are. Doodle might have been crippled but he tried his hardest to impress his brother. They were close because Doodle was taught everything from his older brother. This made a close friendship. The mood of the Scarlet Ibis is very somber and that is shown by the symbols that were used by the author.
This line from the “short story,” The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time reveals that the narrator has a close parent, is very formal and straightforward, doesn’t like hugging people, and knows that they’re loved. Diction in this particular situation is fairly odd because the sentence looks intended to be emotional, but instead turns on quite regular and bland. The vague pronouns “we... me...I...it...he”(16) suggest that the writer doesn’t care about extravagant pronouns and would much rather get straight down to the point than perfect the use of ablatives. Along with the vague pronouns, an extreme lack of adjectives shows that our narrator wants to continue with the trend of plain sailing. Using words like “Father”(16) exhibit a
Clive Staples Lewis once stated, “Friendship is born at that moment when one person says to another, what, you too? I thought I was the only one.” This is an example of tone, as well as all the books in the world have tone in them.”
Knowles foreshadows the boys’ loss of innocence through the war, and their constant jumps from the tree. While getting ready for the war the boys practice and show off their skills on the tree by the Devon River. These jumps are done for fun yet the boys see them as a routine, something that has to be done. Knowles brings the theme of the loss of innocence in the novel for the first time by portraying Finny as the defender who gets the boys out of trouble by saying they had to jump out of the tree (22). This foreshadows how the innocence of the boys will be banished from themselves and their world. The tree also symbolizes the Forbidden Tree of Knowledge. Just like it is forbidden to eat the fruit, jumping from the tree was not allowed as well. By jumping from the tree the boys symbolically accept their loss of innocence, just like Adam and Eve accepted theirs.
...omes back after many years of being on his own whenever he needs something or some confidence. The tree doesn’t just give herself to anyone, but only to this boy. Silverstein does a great job at letting readers understand how community comes into play in a culture. Even though, humans don’t live in a culture where they have special bonds with trees and inanimate objects, there is much more than the tree just being a tree. The tree is THIS BOY’S tree.
Ray Bradbury uses figurative language to develop from a naïve tone to a frantic tone to emphasize that technology, the devices that we rely on so much will end up destroying society and nature will not miss our absence. The house, the protagonist in this story symbolizes mankind. Bradbury describes the house having a self-protective and an alert personality when the bird, a symbol of nature, brushes against the houses window. The author writes… “If a sparrow brushed a window, the shade sapped up. The bird, startled, flew off! No, not even a bird must touch the house!” This house not letting anything in implies technologies ignorance to the outside world.
“The Pain Tree” written by Olive Senior tells the story of a woman who comes back home after many years and begins to think about her childhood in a new light, which changes much of what she thought she knew of her family and childhood. The story shows the main character, Lorraine, revisiting the memories of her family and the woman who had taken care of her as a child, Larissa. Children mainly focus on the happy memories which may be tied to more important topics that they do not understand until they are older. Most children do not pick up on many of the complicated things happening around them. Lorraine can now see the bigger picture of her relationship with Larissa and how large the divides were between Lorraine’s family and Larissa’s
Symbol: A Symbol is defined as something that represents something else. An example of this can be seen in things that represent us as people. For instance, names is a good example and represents who you are. Also, it should be noted that symbols are arbitrary, since symbols have no necessary connection to what they represent.
In “With a Little Help from My Friends”, Firoozeh Dumas uses figurative language to demonstrate what her life was like in America.
.... With the correct sum, the loud and rushing “giant waterfalls” that characterized the parent-child relationship in the first stanza are now quiet “streams” and “sweet pools”. In addition, the “old metal cup…that nobody could break” is representative of their unbreakable family bond of love. Through moments of chaos and divergence, this loving bond prevails. (Nye, Naomi Shihab)
Further, the tree gives literally all of her beings to the little boy. Silverstein makes us ponder over the question, was the little boy really worthy of the unconditional love the tree showed him time after time? For the simple fact, there’s nowhere in the story, where little boy even gives the tree a mere “thank you” for all that she had provided for him. Furthermore, it makes the reader wonder would the little boy have found another route, if the tree didn’t kindly assist him with his every need (Cousin 3). Would the little boy have learned the proper skills and hard work that goes into being a man? Or would he have found a way to make money without selling the tree’s apples, build his own home, take care of his own family, and also develop his own contentment and pleasure (Kimmel
I took to mean that if it had stopped then the tree could have survived. “The life from spilling. Then the boy saw all-(524). This was the saw still going cutting deeper and deeper into the tree. The boy (tree) now knows that it is going to die and there is nothing he can do to stop it. “Don’t let him cut my hand off-Don’t let them sister (524)! The tree has now fallen and I think this is described as “he lay and puffed his lips out with his breath (524)’ I think this is the tree falling and everyone watching including the other trees until it comes to a complete fall to the ground and all the branches settling to the ground.