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Lyrx [107]
2 years ago
5

What are examples of imagery in the hunter and the doves

English
2 answers:
Gemiola [76]2 years ago
5 0

The Hunter and The Dove is a short story that uses imagery to describe actions to appeal our senses and stimulate the creativity. The description  of sounds,colors, actions, smell are perfect examples of imagery

The use of personification, for example is one of them:

<em>..."Then t</em><u><em>he king spoke to the doves,</em></u><em> “You all did very well. Now, our next task is to free ourselves from this net. .."</em>

<em>..."The </em><u><em>doves listened to their king’s advice</em></u><em>. Each dove held a part of the huge net in his beak and all of them flew up together. .."</em>

<em>---"The mouse praised the king and st</em>arted nibbling at the net to<em> set free the doves. H</em><u><em>e nibbled off the net easily with his sharp teeth </em></u><em>and after freeing all the doves, he freed the king dove  ..."</em>


BartSMP [9]2 years ago
4 0

Imagery is the term used for language and description that appeals to our five senses.

Examples of imagery in "The Hunter and the Doves":

Clutching and nibbled (These two words appeal to the touch)

Free and trapped (These words appeal to the touch, too.)

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Answer:

One of the main themes in this story is gratitude. The narrator is indebted to her mother for her life. She is grateful that her mother (Anna) has even made her life possible. This is why the narrator says "I owe her my existence three times." First, Anna saved her own life during a trapeze accident. Although Anna lost her first baby in childbirth following this accident, saving her own life allowed her to live on and eventually give birth to the narrator. The narrator is thankful a second time because Anna met her second husband during her hospital stay.  

The "leap," first of all, refers to the actual leap the narrator's mother makes in saving her life during the house fire. This is the third time the narrator owes Anna her existence. To repay her mother for giving her life and/or saving her life, the narrator returns to take care of Anna. Anna's husband (narrator's father) has died and Anna has become blind. Anna loved to read. The narrator pledges to care for her mother and to read to her as much as needed. In this statement, one can see her dedication and gratitude towards her mother.  

Since my father's recent death, there is no one to read to her, which is why I returned, in fact, from my failed life where the land is flat. I came home to read to my mother, to read out loud, read long into the dark if I must, to read all night.  

The narrator makes her own "leap" in the sense that she goes back to care for Anna. The symbolic notion of the "leap" is about creating an intimate connection

Explanation:

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A). The dogs see to it that Napoleon’s orders are carried out.

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