S. troops. Rachel Carson was upset and wrote to the Reader's Digest to propose an article about a series of tests on DDT being conducted for civilian use. The magazine rejected the idea. In 1958, Carson's interest in writing about the dangers of DDT was revived when she received a letter from a friend in Massachusetts grieving over the large bird kills which had occurred on Cape Cod as the result of DDT sprayings. With that said, Silent Spring was written to catch the public's attention on taking action against the abuse of chemical pesticides. .
Audience.
In Silent Spring, Rachel Carson's audience was not just the US government that she had been working for, but the regular people using these pesticides. She needed to reach every person and spread knowledge of the serious dangers that pesticides would have on the environment. In order to help the people understand what these harmful chemicals were doing to them and what they were doing to the places they lived, Carson had to simplify the specifics. People understood that she was writing to look out for everyone else's well-being and not to ruin the chemical pesticide industry reputation (Nuttle 2013). Carson wanted to persuade people of the serious danger of this chemical threat. She used the peoples fear in order to persuade them of the dangers. She wanted everyone to understand that they would eventually be affected by the high concentration of toxic material. By creating fear in the hearts and mind of the population she was easily able to spread knowledge of the danger of synthetic pesticides (Wallin 2007). .
To emphasize the feeling of guilt, Carson applies the usage of pathos to assist her argument. Carson said, "Growing trendof such deadly poisons as parathion to "control"birds distasteful to farmers" (P. 126) to where society has a tendency destroying any creature that is of disturbance. Parathion, a highly toxic used as an insecticide (Guralnik 1970), is specified as a universal killer.