Wood
.... they were logging on uncharted territory and this was
a bad omen. Woody just laughed and said, “Uncharted territory or
not, we have a job to do and I’m not going to let some little thing
like this ruin my reputation. I’ll go see what the problem is.” And
so Woody packed a bag with supplies and sailed off down the river
to find the missing logs. It wasn’t long before the lush green
landscape of trees he saw around him became a bare region .....
|
|
Wordsworth And Coleridge
.... he would not have written, "I have pleased a greater number than I ventured to hope I should please" (141) if he was only concentrating on the self. Wordsworth was concerned for all responses from all mankind and not only his personal response. He emphasized and focused on the common man in the Preface to Lyrical Ballads by writing in a common language that the ordinary man can easily understand and appreciate. There are no phrases or figures of speech in his poems that would not be found in conversa .....
|
|
Wordsworth-shelly Comparative
.... wind possesses. He gives the wind human characteristics by referring to the wind as “her” and “she.” For example, “Her clarion over the dreaming earth, and fill (Driving sweet buds like flocks to feed in air) With loving hues and odors plain and hill,” can be paralleled with a woman tending to her garden with love and devotion. Along with a heart-rending tone and personification Shelley uses imagery to describe nature. He refers to the clouds in the sky as “a .....
|
|
Work Of A Masterpiece
.... and emotions uniting black and white takes place when St. Clare gets stabbed.
"Tom did pray…It was literally prayer offered with strong crying and tears…He (St. Clare) closed his eyes, but still retained his hold; for, in the gates of eternity, the black hand and the white hold each other with an equal clasp (456)."
Emotions are found in people no matter what color, class, or creed. Stowe uses climactic events to get the reader to rid themselves of their prejudices.
Stowe uses .....
|
|
Worn Path
.... the most simple and primitive rituals of home, or private one that comes from repeated performance of an action of love’,(Old Phoenix’s down the worn Path).(Vande Kieft 70)
2
I believe the conflicts were put in the story to show us the inner feeling of Phoenix. She was able to endure hardships and stay focused on the task at hand. This tells us while she was growing up she over came many obstacles. Usually Welty reserved for her black characters the functions of this v .....
|
|
Worn Path 2
.... and those that often plagues people at an old age. There are various organizations that help people who are over the age of sixty-five. They also provide various services towards them such as meals on wheels. Was there not someone who could have delivered the medicine to this woman of nearly 100 years of age? Perhaps, Phoenix Jackson was too shy or had too much pride to ask for a service of that nature. The doctors from the medical building knew about the condition of Phoenix’s grandson and d .....
|
|
Writers Block
.... or follow the beat of society’s drum. Yet others are shackled and restricted by wealth, requiring that they have social responsibilities and requirements of class structure to be met. Deviation from the rhythm can and often does come at the expense of those who trespass beyond social or economic boundaries.
Picasso was not accepted as a great artiest by society when he was alive; in fact he was considered a failure. This is true of many artists who were unable to efface their own visions or ex .....
|
|
Writing Analysis
.... not many people can access. It deals with a subject which people do not usually seek information on but are nonetheless intrigued by. The style lessens the formality of the subject, which makes it less scary to deal with. The descriptive language is effectively used. The expression of the author’s feeling and thoughts encourages empathy from the reader with the author.
BASICS TRAINING – Deborah Hope, The Australian Magazine 1999
This article is written in a more detached style than the .....
|
|
Writing For The Screen
.... again. We find this with the writer of The Faculty, which wrote I Know What You Did Last Summer and its sequels. These are so formulated that it is easy for those that analyze and look at movies as a work of art and not just merely a “Saturday night date place.” These scriptwriters seem to stray away from their original concept of creative writing and have conformed to the Hollywood pressures of fitting a script standard that has been set.
Look at an independent thinkers like Quentin .....
|
|
Writing Style And The Reader -
.... In the Black Cat, Poe’s mechanism for the reader becoming intimate with the protagonist is the use of an alcohol driven rage. Many readers now and in Poe’s life time would have understood and could visualize the effects of alcohol on the character. The rage and hysteria accompanied by the alcohol allow the reader to venture deep into the subconscious of the character to understand more clearly the reasons that he does certain things. The character “plunges into excess and soon [drowns] i .....
|
|
Writing Well Chapter 1 Respons
.... and raw emotion show the reader the nature of the situation in a way that is unfortunately not demonstrated in the first half of the narrative.
It is shocking to me that Hall analyzes his examples this way because his writing is the antithesis of every example that he praises. His writing does contain all of the properties that he praises the two examples for having, but it includes another element – a fire, an enthusiasm – that makes his writing interesting. It is very strange that I fe .....
|
|
Wuthering Heights
.... in a jail attempting to escape. The presence of an animal in the Gothic setting parallels the experience of Mr. Harker during his time at the castle. The ferocious dogs attacking Mr. Lockwood invoke fear and thwarted Lockwood from leaving, just as the howling wolves threatened to destroy Jonathan's life should he try to exit Castle Dracula. In a dizzy and faint state, Lockwood is taken to a room in which the master "never lets anybody lodge," (WH-p.37) a fact which increases the Gothic suspense of t .....
|
|
Yellow Wallpaper 5
.... to go, nor able to stand it after I got there…” The main character understands her husband loves her, but he insists on her doing what he wants her to do. John says she will not stand after she got there, but how did he know this? John has absolutely no idea how his wife feels, he just imposes his ways on her and expects her to abide. John sees no reason why his wife should go so therefore he believes she should not. He does not consider her wanting to go a good enough reason for him to let h .....
|
|
Yosano Akiko
.... thing that interested me in this poem was the title. The first thing I thought was why was her brother going to die. It makes you thing he's sick or trying to kill himself or something. It was cool because it hooked me into reading the poem.
I think it was meanigful when she cries out to him in the poem. She tells him how the Emperor isn't worth dying over. Almost as if he's a fool for wanting to go. It reminds me of our country today in a way, the way that mothers are recently worrying about the .....
|
|
Young Goodman Brown
.... Brown's journey.
I think Hawthorne had much more in mind than a mere outline of good and evil. His primary struggle in Young
Goodman Brown seems to be less with faith vs. the faithless void than with the points in between these states. The
story seems more about the journey through between two rigidly defined states than about good and evil. By
describing good and evil through heavy-handed metaphors and symbols, such as his wife's name and the satanic
communion he finds himself at in th .....
|
|
|
|