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Use Of Sensory Imagery In 'The Boys Who Fought The Nazis'

456 Words2 Pages

“They're dead, they will never wake up, never do you understand.” The way the Nazis treated the Jews during the holocaust was awful. Ellie Wiesel and Kristen Lewis used sensory imagery to create a disturbing tone in "Night " and a serious tone in “The Boys Who Fought The Nazis.” The author of the book Night Ellie Wiesel used sensory imagery to portray a disturbing tone of what he went through in order to survive the holocaust. “ I succeeded in digging a hole in that wall of dead and dying people.” This shows a disturbing tone by describing and painting a picture for the readers to visualize what the Nazi made him do. Another sense Wiesel used was touch. “ I scratched, I fought for a breath of air.” This is also showing a disturbing tone because it shows how the Jews had to fight just to take a breath of air and that they are struggling just to survive. The last sense Ellie Wiesel used was sight. “ The dead remained in the yard under the snow without even a marker like fallen guards. This portrays the image in a disturbing tone …show more content…

The first sense used was touch. “ For several weeks Karl and Rudi were held in separate cells, integrated and brutally beaten. This shows a serious tone by telling the readers that they were held interrogated and beaten until someone told the truth about who helped the boys with the flyers. The second sense used was sound. “ now i must die even though i have committed no crime, so now it's my turn, but your turn will come.” This shows a serious tone because he was sentenced with the death penalty for no reason. The last sense was sight. “ Sick and haggard years in the prison camps robbed him of his youth. This shows a serious tone because he had to spend years in prison and that took a toll on his life and health. Kristen Lewis used sensory imagery to portray a serious tone in the story The Boys Who Fought The

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