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Figurative Language Term Paper

Pages:3 (749 words)

Subject:Communication

Topic:Second Language

Document Type:Term Paper

Document:#48355355


Speech in Anger, by Vallejo

The poem "Anger" by Cesar Vallejo and translated into the English by Thomas Merton is absolutely suffused with successful utilizations of various figures of speech. Vallejo uses not only the pure aesthetics of word combinations that seem to "click," he also uses several figures of speech to accent his ideas and essentially put forth a mood of urgency. Some of the most integral figures of speech used by Vallejo are anadiplosis, anaphora, and personification.

Anadiplosis is a rhetorical figure of speech that means to "double back" and repeat a word or phrase that appears at the end of a sentence or clause at the beginning of the next sentence or clause.

In "Anger," Vallejo employs the following verses, for instance: "Anger which breaks a man into children, Which breaks the child into two equal birds." Here, the word "breaks" almost ends the first verse, and then almost starts the next verse. True, this is not pure anadiplosis, but the effect is so strong that it is impossible to ignore.

The modified anadiplosis pushes the first part of the verse into the second part: the double use of "breaks" creates a sense of urgency by forcing the reader to veritably cascade into the next line. The reader loses himself or herself to the poem in that he or she does not have agency: The poem truly takes over through anadiplosis.

Another example of this anadiplosis follows in the next passage: "Anger which breaks a tree into leaves And the leaf into unequal buds." Here, the word used in quick succession is "leaves" and "leaf." Here, because of the urgency, we see the link between anger and the unequal buds. And "unequal," of course, is a word that coaxes anger in every situation, and really brings the concept home to the reader's life. Although the imagery is a bit abstract -- leaves, trees and buds -- the application of "unequal" and "anger" to our lives is quite basic and hits at a very visceral level.

The second important figure of speech employed by Vallejo is called anaphora. Anaphora is the repetition of the same few words at the beginning of several consecutive sentences for rhetorical effect.

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