Images that are used to create feeling. They help us experience the words with our five senses. Touching, smelling, hearing, tasting, and seeing are used in The Most Dangerous Game to create imagery. This sentence is a perfect example of astounding imagery “It’s so dark,” he thought, “that i could sleep without closing my eyes; the night would be my eyelids--.” The setting of the story is immediately given. When you read this sentence, you can imagine how dark it is by actually closing your eyes like Rainsford and experience how dark the night sky really was. Another example of imagery is, “The hunter shook his head several times, as if he were puzzled. Then he straightened up and took from his case one of his black cigarettes; its pungent incense like smoke floated up to Rainsford’s nostrils.” You can smell the incense like it was right in front of you. You can imagine the smoke rising in the air as Rainsford breathed it in. You can also sense the nervousness and suspense, and suspense is a reader’s favorite…
Humans often overlook the beauties in life that seem ordinary and common, but are actually magnificent, such as humans’ ability to break boundaries previously considered unbreakable. In “The Juggler” by Richard Wilbur, the speaker employs detailed imagery and a praising tone in order to express the speaker’s admiration towards multitaskers and his criticism for the lack of recognition they recieve. The speaker admires the juggler’s talent of controlling multiple objects at once, and does so through imagery appealing to sight. While juggling, the juggler manages to perform and complete the act without dropping a single ball.…
In the poem The Juggler by Richard Wilbur he uses diction, change in tone, and metaphors to describe the juggler. The use of these things reveals the speaker's amazement and enjoyment with the trick and the juggler.…
In The Juggler by Richard Wilbur, the author uses imagery, tone and figurative language to describe the Juggler.…
As evident by the title of this poem, imagery is a strong technique used in this poem as the author describes with great detail his journey through a sawmill town. This technique is used most in the following phrases: “...down a tilting road, into a distant valley.” And “The sawmill towns, bare hamlets built of boards with perhaps a store”. This has the effect of creating an image in the reader’s mind and making the poem even more real.…
In the short story "Hindspring" by Margaret Drabble, the author uses a great deal of imagery to create atmosphere in her story. Imagery in her story is used to create different feels in her writing.…
Some authors use imagery to describe in great detail each aspect of their work, some authors choose to use the bare minimum. Imagery plays a role in Alexie’s “This Is What It Means To Say.” The imagery used in this short story describes situations that the characters are in. Alexie, for the most part, keeps his imagery simple. However, at certain points in the story he implicates imagery in order to emphasize important points throughout the story. He uses imagery to show the readers who the characters are, how others view them, and to highlight meaningful situations.…
For instance the very first paragraph starts with an extensive sentence that flows with imagery. “When the great horned [owl] is in the trees its razor-tipped toes rasp the limb, flakes of bark fall through the air and land on my shoulders while I look up at it and listen to the heavy, crisp, breathy snapping of its hooked beak.” Oliver is describing to us the great horned owl and what looks like in its surroundings. Instead of just saying that the owl has a beak with white feathers she goes into a great detail by stating, “I look up at it and listen to the heavy, crisp, breathy snapping of its hooked beak… I can imagine sitting quietly before that luminous wanderer the snowy owl, and learning, from the white gleam of its feather, something about the Arctic.” Oliver uses an abundance of imagery words to help us get a clearer picture of what she is trying to convey to us. Not only does it assist in imaging a sketch of what is going on, but it keeps a reader more interested into what the author has to say.…
Alfred uses it a lot to help the reader picture the story in their mind. For example when it says “into the jaws of death into the mouth of hell.” it is using imagery to help readers picture it. Alfred also uses lines of imagery like” plugged in the battery smoke” to help bring a very detailed image to remind to explain exactly what he is talking about. that help readers visualize the poem to have a deeper understanding of it. another place it shows imagery is well it says “Cannon to right of them Cannon to left of them cannon in front of them.” this help readers understand that in this point of the poem it's depicting that the entire Brigade is surrounded by Cannons, which also referred back to when it says “into the jaws of death into the mouth of…
Imagery and symbolism are an author's tools that can make or break how a novel is defined. The use of these tools can imply things, suggest things or just plain make the reader think about connections. Imagery and symbolism are needed to reiterate points and establish a story line in books. The use of symbolism and imagery is illustrated in the book Jane Eyre using a number of different references.…
“A field where a thousand corpses lie” is a negative image placed with a glorified image. Wilfred Owen wrote about how war is kind and that it is right to die for your country. “Men marched asleep”. “As under a green sea, I saw him drowning.” Those statements are examples of Imagery they describe the writing so people can see or at least imagine what happened to the soldiers.…
Imagery is an important element in writing. Imagery can stimulate the imagination and create vivid pictures in the mind. Imagery can have a different effect on everybody. Some people will see things in a different way than other people see them, unlike in television.…
Imagery is one of the most essential literary devices in the poem. The whole poem is essentially…
Walt Whitman also uses imagery to establish tone. An example of imagery would be when he states “The delicious singing of the mother or of the young wife at work, or of the girl sewing or washing” (Whitman 513). It is easy to visualize this quote. A person could interpret this quote as people happily doing their chores or jobs while singing delightful tunes. Another example of imagery would be when Whitman says “The mason singing his as he makes ready for work, or leaves off work” (Whitman 513). The reader could easily imagine someone walking into or leaving work singing because they are happy or they are in a joyful mood.…
After reading and analyzing the poem “Women on a beach” written by Ann Michael’s, I have noticed many occurrences of imagery and the use of literal and figurative language manipulated into the poem. The first use of imagery is when Ann uses “light chooses white sails, the bellies of gulls.” Ann is describing the scene of the poem in a unique way so that it’s not very dull and boring and makes it more amusing for the reader. Since it’s the first line of the poem, you want to engage the reader to continue reading by making it interesting. Another case of imagery that appears in the poem is when Ann says, “the beach glows grainy under the sun’s copper pressure.” This is another unique way that Ann uses to describe the scene because she points out that the heat from the sun is shinning down onto the sand and its very hot out making it glow. She’s explaining the temperature of the setting in contrasting way making it more interactive for the reader. An additional use of imagery that Ann uses in her poem is when she says, “the wind finger against your cheek like a tendril of hair.” This is describing the slight breeze that is taking place in the scene using personification. She’s attributing human characteristic to something nonhuman, which in this case is the wind. In conclusion, Ann Michaels used imagery throughout her poem to transform the everyday into the unique.…