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Characterization In Hills Like White Elephants, By Ernest Hemingway

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f an extended period of time has passed, and a single word has not been written- written, not scrawled lazily or typed in haste, but when words pass through the heart and into the brain, carefully pumped out of a bleeding vein onto whatever medium that is being used, the writer grows frenzied. Her dreams become ravenous, and her dominant hand aches to be used properly. Soon, every passing moment is an anxious one, and the only antidote to her ordeal is to write. And yet, as much as the writer loves to write, writing also stands across from her in what seems like an uncrossable chasm-her undefeatable enemy. So the writer enrolls herself in an English class, and learns to conquer writing through characterization, imagery, and metaphors.
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For example, Williams begins the poem with so much depends/upon (557)
Immediately after this, is the line a red wheel/barrow (557)
The writer ponders, why did Williams make the wheelbarrow red? She then realizes that in literature, red is typically associated with power and passion, and isn’t that exactly what Williams is saying? The a single wheelbarrow holds great power in a desolate farm? Through this bitterly short poem, the writer learns the power of imagery, even in its simplest form.
The third weapon that the writer obtains is perhaps the most powerful one. Through metaphors, the writer learns that writing is stringing a series of words together, in the hopes of creating a work that holds a certain kind of meaning to it. Belatedly, she went back and realized how ladden every work she had read in her class was with metaphors, but it was only until she had read A Raisin in The Sun by Lorraine Hansberry, did she see just powerful they were. The play, A Raisin in The Sun boasted a plethora of metaphors, but a recurring one was Mama’s plant. Throughout the play, Mama is diligent in how she takes care of the plant, despite the less than ideal conditions it grows in. Despite this, both Mama and the plant persevere, and upon its blooming, Mama grows hopeful that she may be a good gardener. The plant is a metaphor for several

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