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E. B. White's Once More to the Lake

 

Several words are often repeated in order to suggest the author's great attraction toward the lake and his thoughts on time. The author continually expressed that he wanted his "summers" to be the "same," to have "not stirred." These words and phrases help advocate the point he's attempting to make about change, foreshadowing his conflict. Lastly, sensory detail phrases help provoke in-depth thought in the reader. Through such phrases as a "cool and motionless" lake, "the small waves were the same," and "the same boat, the same color green," make the reader evoke several images that could only be rendered as "real" with his or her senses.
             Change is expressed by the author to be the death, or at least transition, of his childhood memories. The structure of the essay provides cause-and-effect reasoning to explain why the author is on the edge, feeling as though so many things were changing. The author explicitly indicates this personal connection with time and conveys his conflict with a unique structure that invariable hints at a greater truth expressed in the conflict. After speaking about how much the author felt it was "going to be pretty much the same as it had been before" for several pages, it doubles the intensity of the conflict. White contrasts hope and change when informs his audience that he "missed terrible the middle alternative," a path that he had wanted to take. Now, unfortunately, time has brought changes, and there are only two paths. .
             Essentially, E. B. White identifies a greater, inner conflict. This is stated through a florid vocabulary, reflected through repeating images, words, and sensory details, and understood by the reader in a complex, structured piece. White's structure helps increase the intensity of the plot, thereby making the piece more complex. The contains several factors of writing devices that contribute to a greater truth that could only be conveyed in such a narrative.


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