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Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Crossing the Red Sea and Migrant Hostel - Peter Skrzynecki

The allude of journeys take aim a major impact on the person as they can often live the time it takes to make them, as there are obstacles to pass and goals that they traveller wants to achieve. Journeys that are sensible are able to quest the exploration of new and repugn environments, equipping the traveller with voguish perspectives and experiences and sights of the world around them. A potpourri of visual and create verbally techniques are explored in poems cross the expiration Sea and migrator hostelry by stopcock Skrzynecki and the ABC documentary From Cronulla to Kokoda - Alis Story. The passage of the journey is portrayed by dint of phases of movement and standstills, allowing the traveller to strike on the impact of the sightseer and the time it took to make them.\n\n pass the Red Sea concerns the corporeal journey of immigration by sea, from Europe to the Southern Hemisphere. diaphysis Skrzynecki has utilise a variety of techniques which include imagery , personification, symbolism and place setting throughout this poem. Setting has been used throughout The overlap of the Red Sea, Shirtless, in shorts, barefooted in the first standz focuses on the populate in ingredienticular. It shows the heat and adds an word-painting of poverty. The sunken eyes in the south stanza adds to the description of the people, it suggests one-time(prenominal) pain, hunger and despair theyve experienced. However, the second stanza likewise proves imagery with peaks of mountains and car park rivers, the mood has been changed from negative to tyrannical and suggests life and hope. In the lastly stanza personification is shown with a beginning rimmed horizon and the traverse of the Red Sea. The tone is aspirant but there is also a realisation that theres no going back referable to the journey that was\n\nMigrant Hostel is another people which describes vividly the experience of an unpleasant part of the migrant journey, similar to Crossing the Red Sea, this poem is well-nigh immigration to Australia in stake world war. Skrzynecki has us...

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