The Use Of Foreshadowing In Something Wicked His Way Comes

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Ray Bradbury's novel Something Wicked His Way Comes was established in 1962. The main protagonists of this story are Will, Jim, and Charles. Bradbury uses diction, and imagery to build suspense through foreshadowing for man vs man. The devices he has used gives hints to the reader about the future event through the use of foreshadowing. It builds suspense, anticipation, and tension as it goes. The way he used it gives off an eerie feeling to the readers.
'Somewhere not so far back, vast lightnings stomped the earth” (Chapter 1). Just as the man enters, and thunder and lightning strike the earth, foreshadowing something evil about to occur. Bradbury describes a storm with a great beast with terrible teeth that could not be denied. In chapter …show more content…

Changed. At three a.m.?’ (Chapter 11). The change of church music at a very early morning seems like a bad sign. The way Bradbury makes them as questions foreshadows that something dreadful is near. The song especially changes right after the boys start questioning the carnival playing church music. Plus Will had goose pimples when the music drifted away (a bad omen). The diction used here and the bad signs that have occurred insist the carnival plays a part in the evil. Bradbury uses diction to describe the train as well. The way he wrote it throws them off but the word funeral, next to the train, grabs their attention, making them think that whether the train, carnival or someone else is related to the main evil. Resulting in anticipation. At the end, the evil is Mr. Dark and the …show more content…

Ray Bradbury uses imagery, and diction through the surroundings to indicate the future using foreshortening. He used it mostly to build up suspense, raising curiosity in the reader to urge him/her to find out what will happen next. The use of the devices lures the person into a trap for him/her to keep on reading till the end of it. That’s how Ray Bradfury uses imagery and diction to keep the reader engaged throughout the story by using foreshortening to build suspense. For example the mirror, the funeral train, the church music changing, and the storm, all indicate imagery,