Thursday, March 31, 2016

A Fathers Daughter

Relaxing in a tree, one early spring morning, she decided to write a childhood story of days spent playing with her father in the field of Oaks behind her family’s home.

She wanted to use connotations which are feelings that words invoke in addition to their literal meaning.  A connote (of a word) implies or suggests (an idea or feeling) in addition to the literal or primary meaning.

She added interest to her story by including figurative language; words or expressions with meanings different from their literal meaning.  Figure means to be a significant and noticeable part of something.

She remembered fun conversations they had about philosophy using analogies.  Analogies compare two things, typically on the basis of their structure, for the purpose of explanation.  She could still hear his voice saying the sweetest analogy she had ever heard, “eyes are the windows to the soul and you my dear have beautiful eyes.”

She wrote about her father being a tall lanky man with a child-like soul who always encouraged her charismatic zest for life and freedom from vanity.  He admired her fearless courage and described it with a simile of it being “as fearless as a lion’s.”  Similes, compare one thing with another thing of a different kind using “like” or “as”, to make the description more vivid.  It compares things that are similar.

His heart filled with joy and laughter when she began negotiating for one of her favorite things on the planet; a big sweet lollipop!  He admired her developing wit, so he began using a metaphor to describe how he loved her sweet nature as much as she loved a big sweet lollipop.  Metaphors omit the words “like” and “as” instead applying a word to an object or action that is not literally applicable.  Meta means “of a creative work” referring to the conventions of its genre.

Her father was a gentle man with a poetic heart and he will forever be remembered saying, “You’re my Lollipop, Lollipop.”

A Fathers Daughter

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