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St. Lucy's Home For Girls Raised By Wolf Summary

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A rhetorical device of St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves Five years from now, the piece read for this class I will most likely remember is St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves. This short story impressed me the most is girls raised by wolves sent to a school to be educated and civilized by nuns. In rhetoric, a rhetorical device is a technique that an author Karen Russell uses to convey to the listener or reader a meaning with the goal of persuading him or her towards considering a topic from a different perspective, using sentences designed to encourage or provoke a rational argument from an emotional display of a given perspective or action. The story introduce an audacious new talent and unfurl with wicked humour. The full-moon …show more content…

However, it is the emotional detail behind their fantastic surfaces that makes them memorable. The story is the 15 girls, raised by wolves, who are taken away from their parents and re-educated by nuns to enter civilized society. The curriculum is so much necessary raw material, but warmth is the vital element for the growing plant and for the soul of the children. These were girls raised in captivity, volunteers from St. Lucy’s School for Girls. They had long golden braids or short, severe bobs. They had frilly-duvet names like Felicity and Beulah, and pert, bunny noses, and terrified smiles. It had six weeks of lesson. The nuns decided we needed an inducement to dance. They announced that we would celebrate our successful rehabilitates with a Debutante Ball.(Karen, p. 237) The students who start living in a new environments. They may feel that their own lifestyle are far superior to those of the host country. A metaphor is a figure of speech that identifies something as being the same as some unrelated thing for rhetorical effect, thus highlighting the similarities between the two. And to make the description more powerful, especially at the beginning of words or stressed

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