Thursday, September 3, 2015

What are some literary elements in "By the Waters of Babylon" by Stephen Vincent Benet?

The major literary element Benet uses is allusion. The title, "By the Waters of Babylon" is a reference to Psalm 137 in the Bible. The psalm tells about the sorrow the Israelites felt when Jerusalem ( called Zion) was destroyed by the Babylonians and the Jews were taken off as slaves to Babylon. The psalm starts with the line," By the Waters of Babylon, tjere we sat down and wept, when we remembered Zion." This is an obvious reference to the civilization of the "gods' and their destruction. In addition, Benet uses very simple diction and sentence structure to capture the idea that the narrator is a simple human who is telling his story almost like an oral history. He uses the repetition of "It is forbidden" many times to capture the cadence of simple storytelling. In addition, Benet uses simple imagery, such as similies and metaphors to enhance the picture of John's natural world. For instance, he writes, "Like the buzzing of the bees," and "cold as a frog" and the compares knowledge to "a squirrel's heap of winter nuts". He also uses simple sayings such as "Truth is a hard deer to hunt."Benet also uses contrast to build irony in the story. In the beginning John feels "like a new-hatched bird" but in the end John looks forward to being chief priest when he can lead his people to "build again".

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