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Examples Of Figurative Language In The Yearling

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Yearling Essay

“Real writers are those who want to write, need to write, have to write.” -Robert Penn Warren. As a previous Pulitzer Prize winner, Warren knows what it takes to win this prestigious award: effective writing skills to get the message to their intended audience. Since 1918, the Pulitzer Prize for fiction has recognized excellence in American writing. When Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings won this award in 1939 for her work in The Yearling, she did a remarkable job of telling the journey of a boy and a fawn. Rawling’s most potent influential strategies to grasp the audience’s attention include figurative language, sensory details, and an effective use of syntax.
Although there’s only four types of figurative language, these all have a …show more content…

Varying the length and context allows for more dynamic sentences. Although the use of effective syntax may be deeply embedded into a paragraph, when discovered it can be extremely influential. An example of effective syntax of on page 225, as it states “The fawn was waiting, quivering. Its tail hung wet and its ears dropped. It ran to him and tried to find shelter behind him. He ran around the house to the back door. The fawn bounded close behind him. The kitchen door latched.” Short and to the point syntax is effective as the storm was coming and time was limited, therefore Jody and the fawn were swift with their actions, as was the sentence structure. Another significant example of syntax is on page 6, as the author writes “He moved a stone that was matching its corners against his sharp ribs and burrowed a little, hollowing himself a nest for his hips and shoulders.” She proceeds to finish with, “He slept.” The two paragraphs vary immensely in length, as the first sentence in the paragraph contains 26 words and concludes with two words. The complexity of the sentence length undergoes a drastic change in an effective manner. Finally, the most prominent use of syntax in the four brief pages is on page 7 as the writer states, “He stopped short.” This sentence is so effective because the sentence length is “short”, therefore mimicking the action of the character. All of Rawling’s effective uses of syntax are clever ways of influential writing, and contributed to her 1939 Pulitzer

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