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Mississippi Solo Figurative Language Analysis

Decent Essays

Figurative Language helps an author give vivid imagery. In the story, “Mississippi Solo” by Eddy Harris, the author, using figurative language, gives vivid imagery of his extraordinary experience of canoeing down the Mississippi River. To begin with, the author uses personification as a form of figurative language. It seems to him that the river talks to him and the wind does some other actions. In line 14 on page 138, it gives an example, “The river was talking to me.” In line 25 of page 138, the author also includes another example, “Then the river whispered, ‘Get ready, Get ready!’’’ The two examples include personification because it gives human qualities to nonhuman things. The author uses this to show that the bond between the river and him is unbeatable. He also says in line 46 on page 138, “Halfway across and the wind would have kicked up and trapped me in the middle.” The word kicked is the personified word in the sentence. The wind cannot actually kick someone. …show more content…

In lines 4-5 on page 137 it says, “If you only get sunshine, someone said you end up in a desert.” This is a hyperbole because the sentence is exaggerating that if you are always you would be in a desert where there is only sun that shines. In lines 33-36 on pg 138 it gives an example of a hyperbole and a metaphor at the same time. “It was as though a gap had opened in the clouds and the sun streamed through to boil water and heat up this isolated patch of river a ‘scant’ thirty yards long.” the hyperbole and metaphor in this statement exaggerates and compares the subject to a different word to help the reader understand the gravity of his

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