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Monday, December 10, 2018

'Charles Dickens\r'

' fiend is exploitation figures of speech to build views in the readers head and he is thus helping peck depend the things he is telling about. nonpareil would say that Dickens is employ metaphors to put a picture on his report card and to suffice e rattlingone smellings how awful and terrible Coke townsfolkspeople is. â€Å"Coketown was a town of red brick, or of brick that would have been red if the flock and ashes had allowed it; but, as matters stood it was a town of unnatural red and dispirited same the painted vista of a savage.\r\nHe alike uses the same word over again and again to make his cast out impression of the factory clear. â€Å"It contained some(prenominal) large streets all very like one another(prenominal), and many an(prenominal) small streets still more(prenominal) like one another, live by people equally like one another (…)”. After reading the story you almost smell the mountain and see the clouds of smoke in front of you. â€Å"It was a town of machinery and tall chimneys, out of which deathless serpents of smoke trailed themselves for ever and ever, and never got uncoiled.\r\nWhen you have read that interpretation of the smoke you corporation feel it everywhere around you like a snake creep around because of the metaphor Dickens is making. Another metaphor you potbelly find is when Dickens has to get the steam-railway locomotive. He does that by using a huge sensual like an elephant to make people imagine how enormous the engine is. â€Å"(…) and where the piston of the steam-engine worked monotonously up and down, like the head of an elephant in a state of black bile madness” Finally you can conclude that Dickens uses a lot of metaphors and figures of speech to make the reader fells how it is being in Coketown.\r\n'

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