.

Monday, January 23, 2017

Fourth of July by Margaret Fuller Ossoli

The lyric poem Margaret Fuller Ossoli uses in her study, Fourth of July, is written with non bad(p) pathos. In writing her essay, Ossoli manipulations to shake up up the Statesns and permit them have intercourse that the States is a undischarged coun look for and the men that hatch there in should try there best to disc everyplace the country sooner than not keep it safe. Ossoli overly addresses Americas instrumental materialism and throughout her spoken language proposes many remedies. Ossoli uses a massive amount of language strategies, such as imagery, personification, repetition and rhetorical questions to help her establish/ pass her purpose.\nThe third and fourth paragraphs in Ossolis essay work in c at oncert to establish pathos by wanting the audience to aspect ashamed for what has happened to America all everywhere the years. In making an orison to pathos, introduces facts on how America has changed over the years. She mentions how America was once bou nteous and strong (para. 3), but over the years, due to how its dwellers have treat it, America has tarnished (para. 3). Ossoli uses these facts to show Americans that it is poor for those who are able to aver my country with pride when they rule that America is not how it once was before. This again stags the audience tone of voice ashamed for what they have let America become.\nAfter Ossoli changes the audiences emotions, she uses a series of different language strategies to help her achieve her purpose by personifying America to make it seem like America is another human beingness like the men livelihood on it. Throughout her essay Ossoli repeats the words she has shown, she expressed, she knows, she feels, in holy order to personify America as a human being. She gives America a human like image so that it helps her merge America to her audience in a physical form, rather than them just reading her words from a piece of paper. Ossoli also uses repetition with t he word she and follows it up with action verbs such as expressed, knows, feels, e...

No comments:

Post a Comment