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Henry's Use Of Imagery And Similes In The Road Hemingway

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Simile: “and the things that were glorious had no glory and the sacrifices were like the stockyards at Chicago if nothing was done with the meat except to bury it” (169).

Imagery: ”Now in the fall the trees were all bare and the roads were all muddy… The mulberry trees were bare and the fields were brown. There were wet dead leaves on the road from the rows of bare trees and men were working on the road, tamping stone in the ruts from piles of crushed stone along the side of the road between the trees” (151).

Hemingway uses imagery and similes to create poignant and vivid descriptions and observations coming from Henry’s perspective. This also helps make Henry’s experiences seem more realistic and brooding to the reader.

Irony: Situational
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