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Hi, need to submit a 500 words essay on the topic LITERARY.Through the worst natural scenario around her, the narrator implicitly communicates her own state of seemingly unbearable emotions which have
Hi, need to submit a 500 words essay on the topic LITERARY.
Through the worst natural scenario around her, the narrator implicitly communicates her own state of seemingly unbearable emotions which have kept her immobile.
No particular reference to determinate feeling is incorporated, perhaps to allude that the woman who finds herself under circumstances of deep thought and heaviest of emotions would most probably cease from moving on as she perceives that nothing can remedy her hopeless case. Without having to state concrete information of her experience, the speaker is made to utilize the imagery in her environment for readers to understand that all internal affairs whether of the mind or of the heart are way beyond the horrible externals.
Such is vivid with each stanza that contains sharp images of frightening wilderness or tragically climatic landscape. Bronte eventually delivers this impact by designating alliteration to relevant phrases in “wild winds” and “bare boughs”. She even renders personification in describing the ‘spell’ the woman is bound with via the third line stating “But a tyrant spell has bound me.” This then justifies the closing of the first stanza where the speaker concludes that she ‘cannot go’, implying how intense the binding spell is that there is apparently nothing about the ‘darkening night’ or the ‘cold wild winds’ that would make her divert to abolishing the spell from within or step out of it.
With ABAB CBCB ABAB rhyme scheme, “Spellbound” is structured in a literary style that possesses a pattern of symmetry. In this manner, the audience can fluidly engage in the main theme becoming convinced to settle at the point of ascertaining the person’s weakness to break away from an invisible control of fate. To arrive at the most definite less startling decision which goes “I will not, cannot go” for the finale, Bronte exhausts to the imagination’s advantage much of the tangible