Dianthus Essays

  • Dramatic Techniques in Loarca´s Blood Wedding

    807 Words  | 2 Pages

    When Lorca wrote Blood Wedding he carefully thought about the dramatic techniques. Lorca uses off stage music, stage directions, verse, symbolism, scenes and acts and imagery to entertain the audience and to make his play feel poetry. Lorca used music as a way of discouraging his audience from the expectations of realism. Lorca said, “The use of music allows me to make the scene less realistic, and do away with the audience’s impression that what is going on is ‘really happening,’ permitting me to

  • Use of Symbols in Paul's Case

    831 Words  | 2 Pages

    Symbols are one of those most important things to a story. They share the meaning of themselves, as well as the meaning for something else. Symbols usually make the important ideas stick out as well as make the reader have different ideas of what is actually being said. One of the many symbols in “Paul’s Case” is flower’s. From violets to carnations, the flowers Paul talks about are ones of many meanings. The flowers represent a continual motif, expressing Paul’s character. The narrator expresses

  • Paul’s Case: A Study in Temperament by Willa Cather

    625 Words  | 2 Pages

    A Symbolic Perception Imagine being entrapped in a life that you did not feel you belonged in. That is the story of Paul in “Paul’s Case,” written by Willa Cather. He lived in a suburban home where everyone seemed the same and there was a feeling of despair. Paul, who was a young man, felt that his father, teachers and classmates misunderstood him and therefore were unworthy of his company. In the story there are many symbolic elements. Flowers, for instance, symbolize Paul’s personality

  • Symbolism In Paul's Case

    1719 Words  | 4 Pages

    The symbolism in "Paul’s Case" is portrayed through the weather, as well as through flowers. The different kinds of weather portray the cold world around him that is trying to overtake him, while the flowers represent himself and his desire for beauty and riches, and his attempts to thrive in his world. After Paul goes to Carnegie Hall, admires the Schenley, and walks home, it is raining -- “The moment he turned into Cordelia Street he felt the waters close about his head.” (238) Here, the water

  • Paul 's Unhealthy Desire in Paul's Case

    1105 Words  | 3 Pages

    Paul 's Unhealthy Desire in Paul's Case In her short story "Paul's Case," Willa Cather tells the tale of a young boy's struggle to separate himself from his common, everyday life and the people he shared it with. Paul admired the opulence of the theater, the wardrobe, the perfumes, the lights, the colors, the flowers, and the champagne. When he realized it wasn't possible to have these things, he threw his life away. Cather's purpose was to show that, by focusing on what he didn't have, Paul

  • Red Carnation Essay

    789 Words  | 2 Pages

    CARNATION slovenian: NAGELJ [nág|elj] is widely cultivated in Slovenia and red carnation in particular is considered the national flower. The formal name for carnation,dianthus, comes from Greek for "heavenly flower" Red carnation is often embroidered as part of national costume. National folk song clearly states symbol od red carnation: love and blood as a symbol of life so it was often given to young women from men. Carnation together with heart is esential element of Slovenian national decor

  • Edna’s Search for Solitude in Kate Chopin's The Awakening

    1270 Words  | 3 Pages

    leaving. The sea holds no boundaries any longer, she is not afraid to leave the shore and she knows she can swim to sea, as far out as it takes to be free. As she swims out, her senses revive in memory of her father and sister's voices and the odor of dianthus; once again she is being lulled, but this time toward a resolution.