Tone Of The Excerpt By John Muir

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In the excerpt by John Muir, he expresses the importance of humanity’s need for nature. The positive, uplifting diction, complex syntax, and awestruck tone help express the theme of the passage- that nature is essential to humanity, and we could not be whole without it. Muir uses airy diction in order to show the beauty of nature, and and wants to convey to the reader the brilliance of the world around us. His tone is filled with wonder and amazement as he describes nature’s vastness, and the sheer freedom and awe of it. To create such a clear and vivid description of nature, the author uses complex sentences full of positive adjectives. These elements are what truly show the theme of this passage. By using uplifting diction, complex syntax, and an enlightened, awestruck tone, Muir shows us how we cannot be complete without the hope and independence that accompanies nature, and that we all have an inclination towards the natural world. …show more content…

Throughout the excerpt, we see words like “love, hope, great, fresh, and unblighted” being used. This overwhelmingly positive language is meant to express our inner admiration for nature. With such lofty, beautiful diction, the author is trying to invoke a sense of wonder in the reader. He also describes nature as “immense and eternal”. Those powerful words not only express the utter brilliance of nature, but show that humans instinctively crave the expansive freedom that nature offers, and will always crave independence, even in civilized

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