Novel!what Is Foregrounded By Its Deviation, Parallelism, Repetition – What Poetic Features/ Devices/ Techniqu

What is foregrounded by a deviation, parallelism, exercise – what elegant features/ devices/ techniques have been there?
Oscar Wilde’s novel a Picture of Dorian Gray, Chapter 1 – ‘the college of music was filled with a abounding smell of roses’.
The college of music was filled with a abounding smell of roses, as well as when a light summer breeze influenced amidst a trees of a garden, there came by a open doorway a complicated smell of a lilac, or a some-more ethereal redolence of a pink-flowering thorn.
From a dilemma of a royal seat of Persian saddle-bags upon which he was lying, smoking, as was his custom, countless cigarettes, Lord Henry Wotton could only locate a radiate of a honey-sweet as well as honey-coloured flower arrangement of a laburnum, whose fluttering branches seemed frequency means to bear a weight of a beauty so fire similar to as theirs; as well as right divided as well as afterwards a illusory shadows of birds in moody flitted opposite a prolonged tussore-silk fate which were spread out in front of a outrageous window, producing a kind of duration Japanese effect, as well as creation him consider of those pallid, jade-faced painters of Tokyo who, by a middle of an art which is indispensably immobile, find to communicate a clarity of celerity as well as motion. The gloomy whimper of a bees shouldering their approach by a prolonged unmown grass, or encircling with unchanging insistence turn a dry gilt horns of a straggling woodbine, seemed to have a calm some-more oppressive. The low bark of London was similar to a bourdon note of a apart organ.
In a centre of a room, clamped to an honest easel, stood a full-length mural of a immature male of unusual personal beauty, as well as in front of it, a small little stretch away, was sitting a artist himself, Basil Hallward, whose remarkable disappearance a small years ago caused, during a time, such open fad as well as gave climb to so most bizarre conjectures.



One Comment Trackback URL | Comments RSS

  1. Anonymous Says:

    I can’t really answer your question because i don’t really understand what your asking, I love this novel though!