Wise Children Literary Elements

Wise Children Literary Elements

Genre

magical realism

Setting and Context

20th century, London

Narrator and Point of View

Narrator: Dora
Point of view: first person

Tone and Mood

Tone: humorous, lively
Mood: vivacious, nostalgic

Protagonist and Antagonist

Protagonist: Dora, Antagonist: Nora's and Dora's real father Melchior Hazard

Major Conflict

Melchior Hazard leaves a poor girl pregnant and after the birth of twin girls refuses to accept them. This leaves Dora and Nora with a lifetime of longing for his love and acceptance.

Climax

At Melchior's birthday party, he finally accepts Dora and Nora and gives them a hint of love they so desperately longed for. Ever hidden truth comes out at the party as well.

Foreshadowing

"Tomorrow never comes. But, oh yes, tomorrow does come all right, and when it comes it lasts a bloody long time, I can tell you."

Understatement

In return, I broke his heart. Fair exchange is no robbery."

Allusions

Allusions to Shakespeare and his plays one of which is "King Lear"

Imagery

Imagery of Peregrine magnificently entering the birthday hall, to everyone's surprise, surrounded by all sorts of butterflies.

Paradox

"She was a marvel and she was a mess."
"I was a wise child, wasn't I?"

Parallelism

"You spent your childhood on the road, here today, gone tomorrow; you grew up a restless man. You loved change. And fornication. And trouble. And, funnily enough, towards the end, you loved butterflies.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

lost limb-Dora reffers to her sister in this way in the moment when she thought she lost her forever

Personification

"The most democratic thing I'd ever seen, that California sunshine.

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