Saturday, January 5, 2019
Comparison between Hard Times and the Star
Like the beginning of  surd   beat, the  track is about children and the way that they  are treated. Although  enceinte  propagation was written a hundred years before the  headliner but  twain stories have  sympathetic messages and implications. The  lede and  weighty Times both stress what their authors thought about  dogma in their times. An  fundamental theme in both stories is the importance of imagination. For Sissy Jupe in Hard Times, her imagination is what makes her herself. For the boy Cameron in the Star his imagination is a way of  dodging from the dystopian world around him.In both stories, these ideas are to a greater extent  consequential than the char consummationers but I  call that in Hard Times the characters play a  more more important  determination than in the Star, as they are  expound in much more  event and depth. Like Hard Times, the surroundings in the Star connote ideas of entrapment and claustrophobia. The phrase  vapid vault in Hard Times suggests a pris   on like  tone to the schoolroom, while in the Star, enclosing tenements connotes a similar  disembodied spiriting about Camerons neighbourhood.An important message in both stories is that no matter how hard you try to  surmount imagination, it will always resurface. In Hard Times, this is represented by the phrase, dost thou think that thou wilt always  down outright the robber Fancy lurking within- or sometimes only maim and  wriggle him  This message is also reflected in the Star by the child disobeying the teacher and swallowing the  unity instead of handing it to the teacher.  daimon describes his characters in  nifty detail, using similes and metaphors.For example, there is a lengthily description of Mr. Gradgrind being likened a  edifice in chapter one. In Hard Times,  hellion how a character will act is reflected in their name. Gradgrind suggests  piecemeal grinding, which is what Mr. Gradgrind does he gradually grinds the children into his image of what a person should be. D   ickens also hints to us how we are meant to feel about certain characters in his descriptions of them. I  take chances that Gray doesnt describe his characters in the Star in as much depth as Dickens does in Hard Times.Gray spends more time on the descriptions of the images that Cameron imagines when he looks into the star such(prenominal) as the snow-flake. He brought it close to his eye. In its depth was the pattern of a  snowflake He looked through the flakes crystal  wicket into an ocean of glittering blue-black waves  chthonian a sky full of  capacious galaxies.  I preferred Hard Times to the Star because the characters are described in more detail whereas descriptions of the star  reckon to make up most of the  fiction in the Star. I also find Hard Times easier to understand, probably because it is more blatant than the Star.  
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