Preview

Analysis Of The Evening By Carolyn Forche

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
537 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Analysis Of The Evening By Carolyn Forche
Carolyn Forche successfully integrates the elements of mystery, surprise and detail to comprehensively elude that the colonel is very threatening.
Firstly, in lines one to eight, the narrator describes the various details she sees to the readers. Carolyn notes, “Broken bottles were embedded in the walls around the house to scoop the kneecaps from a man's legs or cut his hands to lace.” The walls are very coarse having the potential to severely mutilate a person’s body. Then the speaker sees a pistol next to the cushion beside the colonel, and gratings that bar the windows. This makes it seem that the narrator is trapped within the colonel’s home and is under his command. While outside, she metaphorically compares the moon to a lamp that

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    When I first laid eyes on this essay, written by Verlyn Klinkenborg, a member of the editorial board of the New York Times and a holder of a Ph.D. in English, I did not expect much. I presumed that an essay as short as Klinkenborg’s would be unable to thoroughly convey its argument, but as it turns out, its brevity — what I thought was the essay’s biggest weakness — is actually one of its biggest strengths. Klinkenborg’s essay, “Our Vanishing Night,” manages to provide the reader with a large amount of information while, at the same time, keeping the reader engaged. One of the many techniques that Klinkenborg uses to keep the reader engaged is switching between simple and somewhat advanced diction. One of the many examples of this is in paragraphs…

    • 192 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Bearden’s Tomorrow I may be far away in the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C is a collage piece that was inspired by the blues classic: “Good Chib Blues,” recorded by Edith North Johnson in 1929. The song is of the female ballad blues singer, who sings of lost love and heartbreak but eventually overcomes both of the terrible experiences. In Tomorrow I May Be Far Away, Bearden tried to express the history and culture of black in America based on his experience living as an African American. Romare Bearden often enjoyed listening to jazz and blues recordings which led him to begin improvising his artwork like the…

    • 658 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The author, David Sedaris, uses setting to set the mood of the story. In the second paragraph, he gave you an image of being alone in the dark country. He uses this to foreshadow how he believes the Tomkey’s live, in the dark, alone. “It was speculated that just as a blind man develops a keener sense of hearing, the family must somehow compensate for their loss.” The author uses this simile excellently to state how he feels about loss. He thinks when you feel loss you must make up for it in some other way. What he does not realize is that he feels a loss himself. His loss is not having friends. Instead of making friends with the Tomkey’s, he would rather observe them like a television show. This is how he compensates for his loss. We can learn…

    • 177 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the book Night by Elie Wieser, the author explains the situation of Jewish people confined in concentration camps through his very own experiences. According to him, he was forced into labor by the Nazis, like all the other people who were held with him. Some people might say that the hardships the laborers faced helped build stronger relations amongst them. However, I strongly disagree with this idea. I believe that the experiences in the camps weakened relations between the people and was exacerbated as time went by, because people started to not care about people other than themselves, and because of the psychological issues the prisoners went through.…

    • 647 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In A Time for Dancing, by Davida Wills Hurwin, a sixteen-year-old girl named Jules struggles with fighting cancer, which ultimately shatters her dream of becoming a professional dancer and changes her views of life. When she feels pain in her lower back and hip at her dance rehearsals, she ignores it, thinking the pain is from repeating the same dance moves. However, when the pain grows worse, she turns pale green and her parents bring her to the hospital where she is told she is diagnosed with cancer. When Jules hears the "C-word" (62) come out of her doctor's mouth, she knows that her life is going to change forever. Dealing with cancer causes Jules to suffer from both physical and emotional pain. Physically, she does not have enough…

    • 342 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Now the second interpretation of Teller’s persona can be found in Scott Kirsch’s Experiments in Progress: Edward Teller’s Controversial Geographies. Between 1957 and 1970, The United States’ Livermore lab enacted Project Plowshare, a project that sought to use nuclear detonations for civil geographical projects. Edward Teller was one of the project’s most avid supporters, who viewed the ease in which nuclear explosions was the gateway to geographic engineering that would allow people to change the earth’s surface to suit their needs (Kirsch, pg.4). Though Teller was not a member of Project Plowshare, Teller would often use his image of a ‘public scientist to build support for the project such as promising president Eisenhower that a radiation…

    • 917 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Book Night Analysis

    • 751 Words
    • 4 Pages

    An epoch where the Germans had created a horrific calamity which was known as The Holocaust. This calamity started January 30, 1933, The holocaust was a genocide which Adolf Hitler’s Nazi party killed about six million of jews, the victims incorporated 1.5 million children and two thirds of jews that were inhabited in Europe. Germans believed that Jews were inferior and that they were Superior. The Nazi party used many psychological techniques: fear, music, public executions, and separation from family, but they were ineffective. The nazis wanted to have complete control over the Jewish. The novel Night, gives us a visual on how the jews were treated during that time period. Also, the movie Escape from Sobibor shows how the jews still had hope…

    • 751 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “1954” by Sharon Olds is a poem displaying the horrors of an instance of rape and murder of a young girl by a man named Burton Abbott in 1954. Olds uses a frantic and horrified tone highlighted by a careful choice of diction to express her messages that any ordinary-looking person can disguise evil and the current justice system has a hypocritical eye-for-an-eye mindset that only ends up destroying human life.…

    • 583 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    ‘In the early hours of this morning, Marco Lazar, popular local identity and owner of Marco’s Supermarket, was shot dead in his house…’ Dad fixed me with his cold, deadly eye.’ Jason, where were you last night?’…

    • 544 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Critique and summary

    • 614 Words
    • 2 Pages

    I read the article “Is Scientific Progress Inevitable?” which was written by Andrew Irvine on 2006. It was published in the book In the Agora: The Public Face of Canadian Philosophy. The main idea of the article is scientific progress is not inevitable.…

    • 614 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    In the novel Queen of the Night by J. A. Jance presents a fascinately mystery story. It starts with the Queen of the Night flower blossoming in the Arizona every summer. It's a sacred event commemorated throughout the Tohono O'odham Nation. However this summer the couple Jack and Abby Tennant had a shocking surprise that interrupted their special viewing of the Queen of the Night flower. The surprise had been Abbey’s son, which would have been a welcoming accounts if the night hadn’t ended with the Tennant’s and another couple’s death, due to Abbey’s son Jonathan. Although Jonathan forgot to check the car of the other couple he killed living Delphina’s daughter, Angie alone without a family. Brian Fellows works on this case trying to discover…

    • 1332 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Elie Wiesel's book night tell us the story of the Holocaust that killed so many Jews and scarred the one that did survive for life. Elie Wiesel just so happens to be one of the luckier ones who actually survived being beat, seeing others being beat and killed, seeing babies being thrown in the air and used as a target practice. Children as well as women and feeble men were thrown in pits of fire, most of them alive, although some of them were dead. He even saw is own father being tortured, struggling until his death. Jews didn't have any rights, privileges or control over their own lives. Adolf Hitler and the Red Army (the Germans) took over with violence, weapons, and cold hearts. It is relevant to today because something very important was going on during this time in the United States—segregation. It was almost like the Holocaust but one important factor is what makes the Holocaust very different. During this time the Jewish people did not realize that the conditions were getting worse and worse as the days went on. Their government, the Jewish Council, told their people that there was nothing to worry about and things would soon get better, but they were very wrong. Things only got tougher but the Jews did not want to believe it. What makes this different from segregation in the United States is the minorities, Blacks in particular, knew that things were only going to get worse if they didn't do something about it. This is why political figures such as Martin Luther King Jr., Rosa Parks, Malcolm X and even President John F. Kennedy were some of the people who stood up for injustice, and segregation, a time when no one other than whites were accepted in the southern parts of the country. MLK and JFK and Malcolm X were assassinated for standing up for what was right.…

    • 561 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    When Elie says “That is what concentration camp life had made of me”, this shows how he’s been beaten down to the core. At the beginning of the novel, Elie was EXTREMELY religious and would do anything for god. But when he goes to the camps, he slowly starts losing his faith, up to the point where he’s given into it. When he watched his father get beaten up by Idek, he couldn’t do anything. Because if he had intervened, he would have been beaten up as well, or it could have been even worse. When Elie goes to the camps, his environment and situation start to take over him. Up until the point where he has no hope or faith left.…

    • 1061 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    "I know it's terrible, trying to have any faith... when people are doing such horrible things. But you know what I sometimes think? I think the world may be going through a phase... it'll all pass, maybe not for hundreds of years but someday. I still believe in spite of everything that people are really good at heart."(Diary of Anne Frank)…

    • 404 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    But nobody could climb through that pattern—it strangles so; I think that is why it has so many heads” (p 325). Once again, the wallpaper is paralleled with the narrators need for escape, but unlike the woman behind the wallpaper, the narrator wishes to “climb through” the control of her husband. Yet, she knows that to overcome her husband is almost impossible, much like the deadly escape from the pattern. The “many heads” can be seen as the countless number of women who have fallen victims to their husband’s control, and wasted their lives trying to escape from this social “pattern.” The image of the woman shaking the bars shows the narrators desperate need for freedom. The narrator expresses in her secret journal, “I don’t like our room a bit. I wanted one downstairs that opened the piazza and had roses all over the window, and such pretty old-fashioned chintz hangings!” (p 316) Here, the narrator is describing her desire for another room, one that is perhaps more alive with roses and one that feels more free. The narrator’s need for an open room suggests her feeling of entrapment. John's insistence to put his wife in this room where “the windows are barred…and there are rings and things in the walls,” seems to show he perhaps wanted his wife to feel captive to his rule (p 317). The “barred windows,” portray confinement, in this case for the narrator—her confinement to the four walls of the room. Also, the narrator’s obsession for the wallpaper only makes her feel trapped within her own home. This feeling is portrayed more clearly as she describes the woman she fancies behind the yellow wallpaper who, “in the very shady spots she just takes hold of the bars and shakes them hard” (p 325). Much like the woman behind the wallpaper, the narrator is living trapped in a room surrounded by barred…

    • 1452 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays