Stylistic Devices Wilde example essay topic
The object of stylistic analysis is the language in the process of its usage. The approach to the language material and the subject of stylistics and the subject of stylistics is of our concern in this diploma paper. As it is known stylistics treats with special means of the language that help us to have vivid and interesting speech. I will not go into details with regards to lots of expressive means and stylistic devices in Oscar Wilde's plays as they are too many. My concern is the analysis of those stylistic devices and expressive means which are capable of making utterances emotionally coloured. I take only those stylistic devices which are based on some significant point in an utterance whether it consists of one sentence or a string of sentences.
Usually the effect of stylistic devices exceeds the bounds of one sentence and the investigation touches upon the features of speech. My diploma paper deals with those stylistic devices which are more often used in the plays, according to the table of frequency of their usage given by me at the end of the diploma paper. The difference between stylistic devices and expressive means is not large, they are closely connected with each other. The division of things into expressive means and stylistic devices is purely conventional with the borders between them being somewhat shaky. Stylistic expressive means have a kind of radiating effect. They noticeably colour the whole of the utterance no matter whether they are logical or emotional.
They reproduce the author's thoughts and feeling and make the reader to think and feel what the author wants him to think and feel. The initial task of my diploma paper is to specify the subject of investigation. It is the means of emphasis. According to Hornby, emphasis is a force or stress, laid on a word or words to make significance clear, or to show its importance". Emphasis is achieved by lexical and syntactical expressive means.
In my diploma paper I will consider only some of expressive means mostly used in Oscar Wilde's plays. It is interesting to note what Soshalskaya e.g. says about the analysis which indicates the necessity and importance of the investigation proper in my diploma paper. "The purpose of Stylistic Analysis, -she says, - is to help the students to observe the interaction of form and matter to see how through the infinite variety of stylistic devices and their functions the message of the author is brought home to the reader". Well, it is interesting to know what is O. Wilde's purpose using these stylistic devices, in what way he uses them, what he wants the reader to understand; mostly, what kind of stylistic devices he uses in his plays and to try and explain what makes his style unforgettable and recognizable as unique and original one.
CHAPTER 2 Investigation Proper 1. Some notes on style and stylistics. The word "style" is derived from the Latin word "stylus" which meant a short stick sharp at one end and flat at the other used by the Romans for writing on wax tablets. Now the word "style" has a very broad meaning. We speak of style in architecture, painting, clothes, behaviour, literature, speech, etc. The style of any period is the result of a variety of complex and shifting pressures and influences.
The way we think and speak modifies the way we write, or the way other write, influences our thought and speech. There is the constant interaction between life and literature. Books reflect the shape of our experience, but our experience of life is also shaped by the books we read. In every age the major writers help to shape the thinking and feeling, and hence the style, of their contemporaries.
Raymond Chapman, the author of "A Short Way to Better English", says that "A good style of writing has three qualities, which may be described as accuracy, ease and grace". 7 There are always three influences that will exert their pressure on a writer's style. One is his own personality, his own way of thinking and feeling that determines his mode of expression. The second is the occasion on which he is writing, the particular purpose that directs his pen at the moment of writing, so that the same man may employ different styles on different occasions. The third is the influence of the age in which he lives.
In other words, a writer's style is his individual and creative choice of the resources of the language. The limitations upon the choice are superimposed by the writer's period, his genre and his purpose. Since style is something ingrained in writing, it follows that a man's way of writing will be an expression of his personality and his way of looking at life. This explains the famous and much-quoted definition of style given by Buffon, a French writer and naturalist of the eighteenth century. He wrote: "Le style, c'est l'homme meme". ("Style, it is the man himself".
) 8 Stylistics, sometimes called lingo-stylistics, is a branch of general linguistics. It has now more or less definitely outlined. It deals mainly with two interdependent tasks: the investigation of the inventory of special language media which by their ontological features secure the desirable effect of the utterance; certain types of texts (discourse) which due to the choice and arrangement of language means are distinguished by the pragmatic aspect of the communication. The two objectives of stylistics are clearly discernible as two separate fields of investigation.
The inventory of special language media can be analysed and their ontological features revealed if presented in a system in which the co-relation between the media becomes evident. The types of texts can be analysed if their linguistic components are presented in their interaction, thus, revealing the unbreakable unity and transparency of constructions of a given type. The types of texts that are distinguished by the pragmatic aspect of the communication are called functional styles of language (FS). The special media of language which secure the desirable effect of the utterance are called stylistic devices (SD) and expressive means (EM). The first field of investigation, i.e. SDs and EMs, necessarily touches upon such general language problems as the aesthetic function of language, synonymous ways of rendering one and the same idea, emotional colouring in language, the interrelation between language and thought, the individual manner of an author in making use of language and a number of other issues. The second field, i.e. functional styles, cannot avoid discussion of such most general linguistic issues as oral and written varieties of language, the notion of literary language, the constituents of texts larger than the sentence, the generative aspect of literary texts and some others.
In dealing with the objectives of stylistics, certain pronouncements of adjacent disciplines such as theory of information, literature, logic and to some extent statistics must be touched upon. This is indispensable; for nowadays no science is entirely isolated from other domains of human knowledge. The linguistics, particularly its branch stylistics, cannot avoid references to the above mentioned disciplines because it is confronted with certain overlapping issues. In linguistics there are different terms to denote particular means by which utterances are foregrounded, i.e. made more conspicuous, more effective and therefore imparting some additional information. They are called expressive means, stylistic devices, tropes, figures of speech and other names. All these terms are used indiscriminately and are set against those means which we shall conventionally call neutral.
Most linguists distinguish ordinary semantic and stylistic differences in meaning. They distinguish three main levels of expressive means and stylistic devices: phonetic, lexical and syntactical. Phonetic expressive means and stylistic devices. As it is clear from the title, the stylistic use of phonemes and their graphical representation is viewed here.
The stylistic approach to the utterance is not confined to its structure and sense. There is another thing to be taken into account which plays an important role. This is the way a word, a phrase or a sentence sounds. The sound of most words taken separately will have little or no aesthetic value. It is in combination with other words that a word may acquire a desired phonetic effect. The way a separate word sounds may produce a certain euphonic impression, but this is a matter of individual perception and feeling and therefore subjective.
Lexical expressive means and stylistic devices. The main function of the word is to denote. Thus, the denotational meaning is the major semantic characteristic of the word. The words in context may acquire additional lexical meanings not fixed in dictionaries. What is known in linguistics as "transferred meaning" is particularly the interrelation between two types of lexical meaning: dictionary and contextual. When the deviation from the acknowledged meaning is carried to a degree that it causes an unexpected turn in the recognised logical meanings, we register a stylistic device.
Syntactical expressive means and stylistic devices. Stylistic study of the syntax begins with the study of the length and the structure of the sentence. Stylistic syntactical patterns may be viewed as variants of the general syntactical models of the language and are the more obvious and conspicuous if presented not as isolated elements or accidental usage, but as group easily observable and lending themselves to generalisation. This brief outline of the most characteristic features of the language styles and their variants will show that out of the number of features which are easily discernible in each of the styles, some should be considered primary and others secondary; some obligatory, others optional; some constant, others transitory.
I think that the most important and interesting is lexical level. It includes more bright and vivid units of the language. 2. Each art has its own medium, i.e. its own material substance. Colours are the material substance of painting, sounds-the material substance of music. It is the language that is the material substance of literature.
But language consists of colours and sounds due to the existence of expressive means and stylistic devices. Language is capable of transmitting practically any kind of information. It has names for all things, phenomena and relations of objective reality. It is so close to life that an illusion of their almost complete identity is created, for man lives, works and thinks in the medium of language. His behaviour finds an important means of expression primarily in language. In the present chapter we shall try to analyse some lexical expressive means and stylistic devices used by Oscar Wilde in his plays.
EPIGRAM and PARADOX. The majority critics of the nineteenth century agree that Wilde is the most paradoxical writer of his time. According to professor Sosnovskaya V.B., paradox based on contrast, being a statement contradictory to what is accepted as a self-evident or proverbial truth. 9 The appeal of paradox lies in the fact that, however contradictory it may seem to be to the accepted maxim, it contains nevertheless, a certain grain of truth, which makes it an excellent vehicle of satire.
Indeed, it is a device much favoured by many English and American satirists. Paradox can be considered a figure of speech with certain reservations, since the aesthetic principle, that underlies it, i.e. contrast has divers linguistic manifestations. According to professor Galperin I.R., epigram is a stylistic device akin to a proverb, the only difference being that epigrams are coined by individuals whose names we know, while proverbs are the coinage of the people. In other words, we are always aware of the parentage of an epigram and therefore, when using one, we usually make a reference to its author.
10 Epigrams and paradoxes as stylistic devices are used for creating generalised images. Usually it is the Present Indefinite Tense. This form of the verb makes paradoxes and epigrams abstract. e.g. "Men marry because they are tired, women because they are curious. Both are disappointed". (p. 138).
11 "Nothing spoils a romance so much as a sense of humour in the woman". (p. 108). "Ideals are dangerous things, realities are better. They wound, but they are better". (p. 85). "Women are pictures, Men are problems". (p. 138). In Wilde's paradoxes and epigrams the verb "to be" is widely used. This verb intensifies the genetic function and makes aphorisms and paradoxes humorous.
It makes also the ironical definition of phenomena of life. e.g. "Curious thing, plain women are always jealous of their husbands, beautiful women never are". (p. 108). "The men are all dowdies and the women are all dandies". (p. 186). "A man who moralises is usually a hypocrite, and a woman who moralises is invariably plain". (p. 69). Another means which helps to create the generalisation is the choice of words. Wilde often resorts to the use of some abstract notions, concrete notions are rare. e.g. "Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone". (p. 296). "Duty is what one expects from others, it is not what one does himself". (p. 131).
"Life is terrible. It rules us, we do not rule it". (p. 75). "Experience is a question of instinct about life". (p. 72). All kinds of works - intensifies, such as "Never, always, often" are used by Oscar Wilde for creating the abstractness and generalisation. e.g. "Questions are never indiscreet. Answers sometimes are". (p. 180) "Beautiful women never have time. They are always so occupied in being jealous of other people's husbands". (p. 108) "All men are married women's property" (p. 114) "The clever people never listen and the stupid people never talk". (p. 109) For creating the abstractness Wilde also uses such words as "men, women, people, we, one", etc. e.g. "One should never trust a woman who tells one her real age" (p. 110).
"We men know life too early. And we women know life too late. That is the difference between men and women" (p. 165). "People are either hunting for husbands, or hiding from them" (p. 181). One of the most characteristic and essential features of epigrams and paradoxes is their shortness and conciseness.
They are achieved by the syntactical pattern of an epigram or paradox. The syntax of these stylistic devices is laconic and clear - cut. e.g. "Men become old, but they never become good" (p. 33). "Do not use bid words. They mean so little" (p. 252).
In these examples we can see the parallel constructions widely used by Oscar Wilde. They serve a perfect means of creating the clear-cut syntax of epigrams and paradoxes. Another peculiarity of Wilde's epigrams and paradoxes is his use of such construction as "that is the difference... ". e.g. "Cecil Graham: Oh, wicked women bother one. Good women bore one. That is the difference between them" (p. 68) "Lord Illingworth: we men know life too early. Mrs. Arbuthnot: And we women know life too late.
This phrase "That is the difference... ". seems to sum up the whole epigram or paradox. With the help of this phrase Oscar Wilde tries to show how great the difference is between the two objects or phenomena compared. Some of Wilde's paradoxes and epigrams are formed with the help of contextual antonyms and contrasting pairs: e.g. "The body is born young and grows old. That is life's tragedy. The soul is born old but grows young.
That is the comedy of life" (p. 111). "Men become old, but they never become good" (p. 33). One of the most important functions of epigrams and paradoxes is that of speech characterisation. But Wilde's epigrams and paradoxes have another important function also.
It is the showing of bourgeois morality. With the help of his epigrams and paradoxes the author shows us his characters, their way of life, manners, their thoughts and the bourgeois society of his time. In these four Wilde's plays there is a group of people such as Lady Bracknell, Mrs. Cheveley, Lord Illingworth and others, whose behaviour and way of life give us a clear picture of the upper-class society. These very people with their paradoxes and epigrams open their thoughts and feelings. e.g. "A man who allows himself to be convinced by an argument is a thoroughly unreasonable person" (p. 185). "The world was made for men and not for women" (p. 100). We can see the corruptibility of the ruling classes, their mean, shallow spirited interests, and their intrigues against each other.
At first sight they seem to be real gentlemen and ladies. But in fact they are spoiled people who try to achieve their aims, however bad and selfish they sometimes may be, at all costs. e.g. "Sir Robert Chiltern: Every man of ambition has to fight his century with its own weapons. What this century worships is wealth. The God of this century is wealth".
(206). It is evident what weapons Sir R. Chiltern means. It is money and the way it is earned by is unimportant. The way of earning money may be different: bribery, blackmail, forgery and other immoral actions. Once Sir Chiltern achieved his aims at the cost of his honour-he sold the secrete information. He had not any regret for what he had done.
He said that he had fought the century with his own weapon and won. And when his misdemeanour was revealed, he tried to save himself. Another "immoralist" of the English society is Mrs. Cheveley. e.g. "Nowadays, with our modern mania for morality, every one has to pose as a paragon of purity, incorruptibility, and all the other seven deadly virtues" (p. 192). She also had achieved her aims by the immoral actions: bribery and blackmail. Most of Wilde's characters are true representatives of their society.
They are Lord Darlington, Lady Bracknell and especially Lord Illingworth, a person with cynical attitude towards everything in the world, who does not value the sincere human relations, to whom love, friendship, faithfulness mean nothing. This can be clearly seen from some of his remarks. e.g. "Women love us for our defects" (p. 142). "The only difference between the saint and the sinner is that every saint has a past, and every sinner has a future" (p. 140). The most favoured subject for Wilde's cynical comments is a woman and her position in the society of that time. e.g. "Nothing spoils a romance so much as a sense of humour in the woman" (p. 108). "Women are pictures. Men are problems.
If you want to know a woman really means, which is absolutely a dangerous thing to do-look at her, do not listen to her" (p. 138). "You women live by your emotions and for them" (p. 137). Thus, we can see that epigrams and paradoxes play one of the most important roles in Wilde's plays. With the help of these stylistic devices Wilde reflects his own viewpoints on the society of his time, his opinions about life, love and friendship, men and women. His judgements are the sharp and biting remarks. They are used in the plainest and the most direct sense.
Wilde does not conceal his inner feelings and thoughts about the decomposition of intellectual world and English society. These epigrams and paradoxes are short and laconic, and are not very complex that makes them easy for remembering. So, paradoxes and epigrams create the individuality of Oscar Wilde. Wilde is famous for his brilliant epigrams and the wittiest paradoxes.
IRONY and PUN In irony, which is the very interesting item for consideration, subjectivity lies in the evaluation of the phenomenon named. The essence of this stylistic device consists in the foregrounding not of the logical but of the evaluative meaning. The context is arranged so that the qualifying word in irony reverses the direction of the evaluation, and the word positively charged is understood as a negative qualification and vice versa. According to professor Galperin I.R., irony is a stylistic device based on the simultaneous realisation of two logical meanings- dictionary and contextual, but the two meanings stand in opposition to each other.
12 According to Professor Kukharenko V.A., irony is a stylistic device in which the contextual evaluative meaning of a word is directly opposite to its dictionary meaning. 13 So, like many other stylistic devices, irony does not exist outside the context. Irony must not be confused with humour, although they have very much in common. Humour always causes laughter. What is funny must come as a sudden clash of the positive and the negative.
In this respect irony can be likened to humour. But the function of irony is not confined to producing a humorous effect. In a sentence like that: "How clever you are, Mr. Hopper" (p. 43), where due to the intonation pattern, the word "clever" conveys a sense opposite to its literal signification. The irony does not cause a ludicrous effect. It rather expresses a feeling of irritation and displeasure. Here are some examples of irony: e.g. "Oh, I love London Society!
I think it has immensely improved. It is entirely composed now of beautiful idiots and brilliant lunatics. Just what Society should be". (p. 175) "And in England a man who can't talk morality twice a week to a large, popular, immoral audience is quite over as a serious politician". (p. 210) "All women become like their mothers. That is their tragedy. No man does. That is his". (p. 300) These examples show that irony is a mode of speech in which the opposite of what is said is meant.
The speaker of the first example, Mabel Chiltern does not really think that it is good for London Society to consist of "beautiful idiots and brilliant lunatics". Wilde's method of ironical usage is mostly direct: he speaks of the decomposition of people, their ideals and values. The effect of irony lies in the striking disparity between what is said and what is meant. This is achieved through the intentional interplay of two meanings, which are in opposition to each other. e.g. "No woman should have a memory.
Memory in a woman is a beginning of dowdiness". (p. 144) "My father told me to go to bed an hour ago. I don't see why I shouldn't give you the same advice. I always pass on good advice. It is the only thing to do with it. It is never of any use to oneself". (p. 197) "I knew we should come to an amicable agreement". (p. 194) The context is one most important things when we use irony. The word "advice" is suggested for acceptance if it is good and for rejection if it is not good, but not for passing on it.
In fact, Lord Goring, the speaker of this phrase, is a serious person, who knows that a good advice may be very useful. As for the last example, here the word "amicable" is contrary to the word "blackmail" with the help of which this agreement was achieved by Mrs. Chevely. Mrs. Chevely is an "immoralist" of English Society. e.g. "People are either hunting for husbands or hiding from them" (p. 181) "Oh, I like tedious, practical subjects. What I don't like are tedious, practical people". (p. 189) The remarks of this "Lady" characterise her brilliantly.
We can clearly see a scheming woman, an adventurer, who stops at nothing in gaining her filthy aims. She does not show her real face, she always disguises it. But her cynical remarks betray her. Another example of irony used by O. Wilde: e.g. "Lord Goring: I adore political parties. They are the only place left to us where people do not talk politics". (p. 184) The members of political parties must talk politics, it is their duty. They must be very serious and honest people and they must work for people's well being, but instead of it they do not do anything for people.
During their political parties they pronounce some absurd, cynical words and discuss rumours and gossips. e.g. "Oh, we all want friends at times" (p. 25) Lord Darlington, saying this phrase, hides his love for Lady Windermere behind the word "friend", but she does not accept his version of "friendship" in such kind and does not want to be with him. Oscar Wilde considers the word "friend" to have different meaning: people always need friends, not only for temporary period of time. The meaning of this word conveys a constant quality. The specific, cynical quality of Wilde's irony is manifested in his manner of writing.
This device allows Wilde to reveal incongruity of the world around him and to show the viciousness of the upper - class society. Pun is the next stylistic device used by Oscar Wilde in his plays. According to Professor Sosnovskaya V.B., pun (paronomasia, a play on words) is a figure of speech emerging as an effect created by words similar or identical in their sound form and contrastive or incompatible in meaning. 13 According to Prof. Galperin I.R., the pun is a stylistic device based on the interaction of two well-known meanings of a word or phrase. It is difficult to draw a hard and fast distinction between zeugma and the pun. The reliable distinguishing feature is a structural one: zeugma is the realisation of two meanings with the help of the verb which is made to refer to different subjects or objects.
The pun is more independent. There need not necessarily be a word in the sentence to which the pun-word refers. This does not mean. However, that the pun is entirely free. Like any other stylistic device, it must depend on a context.
But the context may be of a more expanded character, sometimes even as large as a whole work of emotive prose. 14 Thus, the title of one of Oscar Wilde's plays, "The Importance of Being Earnest", has a pun in it. But in order to understand this pun we must read the whole play, because the name of the hero and the adjective meaning "seriously-minded" are both existing in our mind. Pun is based on the effect of deceived expectation, because unpredictability in it is expressed either in the appearance of the elements of the text unusual for the reader or in the unexpected reaction of the addressee of the dialogue. However playful is the effect of pun, however intricate and sudden is the merging of senses in one sound complex, in a truly talented work this unit of poetic speech shares equally with others in the expression of the author's message. It is a vehicle of the author's thought not a mere decoration.
Pun is one of the most favoured devices of Oscar Wilde. In his comedies there are about twenty examples of pun. In this Chapter we will try to analyse some of them. For Wilde pun is one of the most effective means used for creating wit, brilliancy and colorfulness of his dialogues for criticism of bourgeois morality. At the same time the puns serve for showing the author's ideas and thoughts. e.g. "Lord Goring: My dear farther, only people who look dull ever get into the House of Commons, and only people who are dull ever succeed there". (p. 257) "Lord Darlington: Ah, nowadays we are all of us so hard up, that the only pleasant things to pay are compliments.
They are the only things we can pay". (p. 24) These examples show that the play on words has a great influence on the reader. The speech of the hero becomes more vivid and interesting. The sound form of the word played upon may be either a poly semantic word: e.g. "Lady Caroline: I believe this is the first English country-house you have stayed at, Mrs. Worsley Have you any country What we should call country Hester: We have the largest country in the world". (p. 95); or partial (complete) homonyms, as in the following example: e.g. "Algernon: You look as if your name was Ernest. You are the most earnest-looking person I ever saw in my life". (p. 286) In this example there are two meanings of the word played upon in the pun: the first - the name of the hero and the second - the adjective meaning seriously-minded. In case of homonym the two meanings of one word are quite independent and both direct. These two meanings of the pun are realised simultaneously and in the remark of one and the same person.
Such examples are comparatively rare in Wilde's plays. Most of Wilde's puns are based on polysemy. Such puns are realised in succession, that is at first the word appears before a reader in one meaning and then -- in the other. This realisation is more vivid in dialogues, because in such cases the pun acquires more humorous effect as a result of misunderstanding. In many cases the addressee of the dialogue is the main source of interference. His way of thinking and peculiarities of perception can explain this.
Rarely the speaker himself is the source of interference (for example, if he has a speech defect). Almost all Oscar Wilde's puns based on polysemy are realised in dialogues, in fact the remark of the addressee. e.g. "Lady H. : she lets her clever tongue run away with her. Lady C. : is that the only Mrs. Allonby allows to run away with her" (p. 99) In this example the pun is realised in the remark of the second person. The first meaning of the expression "to run away with" - is "not to be aware of what you are speaking", and the second meaning is "to make off taking something with you". The first meaning is figurative and the second is direct. In some cases the pun is realised in the remark of one and the same person, as in the following examples: e.g. "Mrs. Allonby: the one advantage of playing with fire is that one never gets even singed.
It is the people who do not know how to play with it who get burned up". (p. 100) Here the first meaning of the expression "to play with fire" - "to singe" is direct, and the second "to spoil one's reputation" is figurative. e.g. "Jack: as far as I can make out, the poachers are the only people who make anything out of it". (p. 297) The first meaning of the expression: "to make out" - "to understand" is figurative, and the second - "to make benefit from something" is direct. But there are such examples, when pun is realised in the remark of the third person and in this case it is he (she) who is the main source of interference: e.g. "Lady C. : Victoria Stratton I remember her perfectly. A silly, fair-haired woman with no chin. Mrs. Allonby: Ah, Ernest has a chin. He has a very strong chin, a square chin. Ernest's chin is far too square.
Lady S. : But do you really think a man's chin can be too square I think a man should look very strong and that his should be quite square". (p. 115) As a rule, when two meanings of the word are played upon, one of them is direct, the other is figurative, which can be illustrated by some of the above mentioned examples. So, we can see, that irony and pun also play the very important role in Wilde's plays. The effect of these stylistic devices is based on the author's attitude to the English bourgeois society. Thus irony and pun help Wilde to show that majority of his heroes are the typical representatives of the bourgeois society: thoughtless, frivolous, greedy, envious, mercenary people. They call themselves "Ladies and gentlemen", but with the help of these stylistic devices Wilde shows that intelligence is their mask. Credit must be given to Wilde for being brilliant in his witticism.
A play upon contrasts and contradictions lies at the basis of author's sarcastic method in portraying his characters. The dynamic quality of Wilde's plays is increased by the frequent ironical sentences and puns. These stylistic devices convey the vivid sense of reality in the picture of the 19-th century English upper-class society. Wilde's realism with its wonderful epigrams and paradoxes, brilliant irony and amusing puns initiates the beginning of a new era in the development of the English play. EPITHET Epithet is another stylistic device used by Oscar Wilde. According to Prof. Galperin I.R., Epithet is a stylistic device based on the interplay of emotive and logical meaning in an attributive word, phrase or even sentence, used to characterise an object and pointing out to the reader and frequently imposing on him.
15 According to Prof. Sosnovskaya V.B., Epithet is an attributive characterisation of a person, thing or phenomenon. It is, as a rule, simple in form. In the majority of cases it consists of one word: adjective or adverb, modifying respectively nouns or verbs. 16 e.g. "I tell you that had it ever occurred to me, that such a monstrous suspicion would have entered your mind, I would have died rather than have crossed your life". (p. 64) Epithet on the whole shows purely individual emotional attitude of the speaker towards the object spoken of, it describes the object as it appears to the speaker.
Epithet expresses a characteristic of an object, both existing and imaginary. Its basic features are its emotiveness and subjectivity: the characteristic attached to the object to qualify it is always chosen by the speaker himself. e.g. "Mabel Chiltern is a perfect example of the English type of prettiness, the apple-blossom type". (p. 175) "It means a very brilliant future in store for you". (p. 97) "What an appalling philosophy that sounds!" (p. 179) "But I tell you that the only bitter words that ever came from those sweet lips of hers were on your account, and I hate to see you next her". (p. 80) According to these examples, we can say that Epithet is a word or word combination which in its attributive use discloses the individual emotionally coloured attitude of the writer to the object he describes. It is a form of subjective evaluation. It is a description brief and compact which singles out the things described. e.g. "Lips that have lost the note of joy, eyes that are blinded by tears, chill hands and icy heart". (p. 60) "If we have enough of them, they will forgive us everything, even our gigantic intellects". (p. 142) "And now tell me, what makes you leave you brilliant Vienna for our gloomy London". (p. 180) Epithet has remained over the centuries the most widely used stylistic device, which is understandable- it offers the ample opportunities of qualifying every object from the author's partial and subjective viewpoint, which is indispensable in creative prose, Here we can see masterly touches in rich and vivid epithets.
Wilde's language is plain and understandable, it is wonderful and interesting. Wilde resorts to the use of colourful epithets, which sometimes help him to show the difference between pretence and reality. As we know Wilde was the leader of the "aesthetic movement". He was brilliant in literature and tried to be brilliant in life. He used abundance of epithets in his speech. In fact, everybody uses epithets in his speech; without them our speech is dry, awfully plain and not interesting.
Wilde's epithets give a brilliant colour and wonderful witticism to his plays. With the help of epithets Wilde's heroes are more interesting, their speech is more emotive; they involve the reader in their reality, in their life. e.g. "I am not in a mood to-night for silver twilight's, or rose-pink dawns". (p. 190) "Those straw-coloured women have dreadful tempers". (p. 48) "Cecily, ever since I first looked upon your wonderful and incomparable beauty, I have dared to love you wildly, passionately, devotedly, hopelessly". (p. 319) As we can see, epithets make the speech more colourful, vivid and interesting. Wilde uses a great amount of epithets in his plays. His epithets are based on different sources, such as nature, art, history, literature, mythology, everyday life, man, etc. And all of them are wonderful.
They reflect Wilde's opinions and viewpoints about different things. They give emphasis and rhythm to the text. That is why Wilde may be also called a master of colourful and vivid epithets. METAPHOR One of the most frequently used, well-known and elaborated among the stylistic devices is metaphor. The metaphoric use of the word begins to affect the dictionary meaning, adding to it fresh connotations of meaning or shades of meaning. According to Prof. Sosnovskaya V.B., metaphor, a most widely used trop, is based upon analogy, upon a traceable similarity.
But in the metaphor, contrary to the simile, there is no formal element to indicate comparison. The difference, though, is not merely structural. The absence of a formal indication of comparison in the metaphor makes the analogy it is based on more subtle to perceive. 17 According to Prof. Kukharenko V.A., metaphor is based on the transference of names.
This transference is based on the associated likeness between two objects. 18 According to Prof. Galperin I.R., metaphor means transference of some quality from one object to another. A metaphor becomes a stylistic device when two different phenomena (things, events, ideas, actions) are simultaneously brought to mind by the imposition of some or all of the inherent properties of one object on the other which by nature is deprived of these properties. 19 Such an imposition generally results when the creator of the metaphor finds in the two corresponding objects certain features, which to his eye have something in common.
I completely agree with these definitions. I also think that metaphors reveal the attitude of the writer to the object, action or concept and express his views. They may also reflect the literary school which he belongs and the epoch in which he lives. As an illustration of Wilde's skill in using every nuance of the language to serve some special stylistic purpose, we must mention his use of metaphors. e.g. "We live in an age of ideals". (p. 293) "She has all the fragrance and freedom of a flower". (p. 175) "The God of this century is wealth". (p. 206) "But to suffer for one's own faults, -ah! -there is the sting of life". (p. 36). Oscar Wilde was a man of art; and even these wonderful metaphors prove it.
As we can see, his metaphors give a certain charm and musical perception through the plain language combinations. A metaphor can exist only within a context. A separate word isolated from the context has its general meaning. Metaphor plays an important role in the development of language. Words acquire new meanings by transference. e.g. "Lord Illingworth: That silly Puritan girl making a scene merely because I wanted to kiss her.
What harm is there in a kiss Mrs. Arbuthnot: A kiss may ruin a human life. I know that too well". (p. 163). The metaphorical effect of this sentence is based on the personal feelings of Mrs. Arbuthnot. Her sad experience of life sounds in this phrase.
When she was young, she had a great love. But her passion had left her and "her life was ruined". That is why this metaphor has a true effective power when it is pronounced by Mrs. Arbuthnot. e.g. "I am a ship without a rudder in a night without a star". (p. 242) The speaker of this phrase Sir Robert Chiltern gets lost, he does not know what to do in such situation. He says that he is a "ship without a rudder", i.e. he does not know where he must go and what to do for better future. Oscar Wilde is always concerned with society. His fine metaphors play an important role in portraying his heroes, their feelings and thoughts. e.g. "I had a wild hope that I might disarm destiny". (p. 209) "I keep science for life". (p. 281) "Ideals are dangerous things.
Realities are better. They wound, but they are better". (p. 85) "The fire cannot purify her. The waters cannot quench her anguish". (p. 150) "Gwendolen is devoted to bread and butter". (p. 283) Thus, we can see the unlimited power of the artist in showing his imagination. The emotional colouring is made by an ample use of bright metaphors. Metaphor takes one of the most honourable places in Wilde's art. The main purpose of the author is to affect the reader emotionally through the images.
The charm of O. Wilde's plays is due to the mixture of poetic metaphors and real images. The author does not convince the reader to make the resulting points, but he makes him indirectly judge the heroes and clear the situation. Metaphors, like all stylistic devices, can be classified according to their degree of unexpectedness. Thus, metaphors which are absolutely unexpected, that is are quite unpredictable, are called genuine metaphors.
Here we can see some of them: e.g. "She is a work of art". (p. 175) "She has all the fragrance and freedom of a flower. There is ripple after ripple of sunlight in her hair. She has the fascinating tyranny of youth, and the astonishing courage of innocence". (p. 175) "Divorces are made in Heaven". (p. 283) In genuine metaphors the image is always present and the transference of meaning is actually felt. These metaphors have a radiating force. The whole sentence becomes metaphoric. The metaphors, which are commonly used in speech and therefore are sometimes even fixed in dictionaries as expressive means of language, are trite metaphors. e.g. "My farther really died of a broken heart". (p. 85) "Love is easily killed!
Oh! How easily love is killed". (p. 86) "The moment is entirely in your own hands". (p. 344) Wilde's metaphors develop the reader's imagination. At the same time the author reflects his own point of view. e.g. "Youth is the Lord of Life". (p. 135) In these four plays Wilde preaches that youth is the so called "gift of nature". It is very interesting to note, that almost all his main heroes are young people. And youth is their leading star in life.
Oscar Wilde resorts to the use of his metaphors for more expressiveness and beauty of language. Their meanings are playing and understandable for any reader, of any age and any interests. They are the birds of Wilde's thoughts, sometimes sensitive and sometimes bitter, sometimes joyful and sometimes sad, but they are always wonderful. They have an excellent quality to reflect different objects, actions and, of course, people in a new meaning. They produce a dynamic character of the plot and show that Wilde is a man of genius.
SIMILE Simile is the next stylistic device used by Wilde in his plays. Simile is a likeness of one thing to another. According to Prof. Sosnovskaya V.B., Simile is the most rudimentary form of trope. It can be defined as a device based upon an analogy between two things, which are discovered to possess some features in common otherwise being entirely dissimilar. 19 According to Prof. Galperin I.R. the intensification of someone feature of the concept in question is realised in a device called Simile.
Ordinary comparison and Simile must not be confused. They represent two diverse processes. Comparison means weighing two objects belonging to one class of things with the purpose of establishing the degree of their sameness or difference. To use a simile is to characterise one object by bringing it into contact with another object belonging to an entirely different class of things. Comparison takes into consideration all the properties of the two objects, stressing the one that is compared.
Simile includes all the properties of the two objects except one which is made common to them. 20 e.g. "All women become like their mothers". (p. 300) is ordinary comparison. The words "women" and "mothers" belong to the same class of objects - human beings - so this is not a Simile but ordinary comparison. But in the sentence: "But she is really like a Tanagra statuette, and would be rather annoyed if she were told so". (p. 175), we have a simile.
"She" and "statuette" belong to heterogeneous classes of objects and Wilde has found that the beauty of Mabel Chiltern may be compared with the beauty of the ancient Tanagra statuette. Of the two concepts brought together in the Simile - one characterised (Mabel Chiltern), and the other characterising (Statuette) - the feature intensified will be more inherent in the latter than in the former. Moreover, the object characterised, is seen in quite a new and unexpected light, because the author as it were, imposes this feature on it. Thus, Simile is an imaginative comparison of two unlike objects belonging to two different classes.
Similes forcibly set one object against another regardless of the fact that they may be completely alien to each other. And without our being aware of it the Simile gives rise to a new understanding of the object characterising as well as of the object characterised. The properties of an object may be viewed from different angles, for example, its state, actions, manners, etc. Accordingly, Similes may be based on adjective-attributes, adverbs-modifiers, verb-predicates, etc. e.g. "Dear Agatha and I are so much interested in Australia. Agatha has found it on the map. What a curious shape it is!
Just like a large packing case". (p. 42) "She looks rather like an orchid and makes great demands on one's curiosity". (p. 176) "Twenty years of romance make a woman look like a ruin; but twenty years of marriage make her something like a public building". (p. 108) Similes have formal elements in their structure: A pair of objects (for example: woman + ruin; woman + orchid; Australia + a large packing case). Connective words such as: like, as, such as, as if, as though, seem, etc. Here are some more examples of similes taken from Wilde's plays. e.g. "She looks like an "edition de luxe" of a wicked French novel, meant specially for the English market". (p. 48) The structure of this simile is interesting for it is sustained. This simile goes through the whole sentence. The author finds a certain resemblance of Mrs. Er lynne and an "edition de luxe" of a wicked French novel. He shows that this woman is as bright and attractive as a coloured journal. e.g. "It is as if a hand of ice were laid upon one's heart.
It is as if one's heart were beating itself to death in some empty hollow". (p. 211) This simile is the perfect work of imagination. This is an example of a simile, which is half a metaphor. Let us analyse it. If not for the structural word "as if", we could call it a metaphor. Indeed, if we drop the word "as if" and say: "a hand of ice is laid upon one's heart... ". , this sentence becomes a metaphor. But the word "as if" keeps apart the notions of metaphor and makes this sentence a real simile.
As for the second sentence of this example, the situation is the same: if we drop the word "as if", the sentence becomes a metaphor. In other words, this example is the action that is described by means of simile. The semantic nature of the simile-forming elements "seem" and "as if" is such that they only remotely suggest resemblance. Quite different are the connectives "like" and "as". They are more categorical and establish quite straightforwardly the analogy between the two objects in question. e.g. "Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone". (p. 296) In this example of a simile the object characterised is seen in a quite new and unexpected meaning. This simile is also may be considered as a half metaphor.
The author confers to ignorance a new sense and the qualities of an exotic fruit. That is why this simile has a metaphoric character. And all the above-mentioned formal elements make the simile of easily recognisable unit of poetic speech. e.g". You are like a pink rose, cousin Cecily". (p. 311) This is the real simile. This simile is used for purposes of expressive evaluation, emotive explanation, and highly individual description. In a simile two objects are compared on the ground of similarity of some quality.
So "a pink rose" of this case allows to simultaneously foreground such features as "fresh, beautiful, fragrant, attractive", etc. So, we can see that simile is another interesting stylistic device used by Oscar Wilde in his plays. It shows the individual viewpoint of the author on different objects, actions, and phenomena. Everybody uses the similes in his everyday speech. But the literary similes gain especially wonderful character. They make our speech more expressive and our world more interesting.
HYPERBOLE Frankly speaking, every person sometimes uses hyperbole and exaggeration in his speech for more expressiveness. According to Professor Galperin I.R., another stylistic device which also has the function of intensifying one certain property of the object described is hyperbole. It can be defined as a deliberate overstatement or exaggeration of a feature essential to the object or phenomenon. In its extreme form this exaggeration is carried to an illogical degree. 20 According to Professor Kukharenko V.A., hyperbole is a stylistic device in which emphasis is achieved through deliberate exaggeration. The feelings and emotions of the speaker are so ruffled that he resorts in his speech to intensifying the quantitative or the qualitative aspects of the mentioned object.
21 According to Prof. Sosnovskaya V.B., hyperbole (overstatement) as the word itself suggests is an expression of an idea in an exceedingly exaggerate language. The supra-average cases of overstatement are characteristic of an obviously emotional, if not altogether impassioned, manner of representation. 22 V.V. Vinogradov, developing Gorki's statement that "Geni une art enjoys the right to exaggerate", state that hyperbole is the law of art which brings the existing phenomena of life, diffused as they are, to the point of maximum clarity and conciseness. 23 So, hyperbole is aimed at exaggerating quantity or quality. It is a deliberate exaggeration. In hyperbole there is transference of meaning as there is discrepancy with objective reality.
The words are no used in their direct sense. e.g. "I wish I had known it was your birthday, Lady Windermere, I would have covered the whole street in front of your house with flowers for you to walk". (p. 24) "I have never loved anyone in the world but you". (p. 34) In order to depict the degree of the love of his character Wilde resorts to the use of these hyperboles. I think that the most important function of hyperbole is the emotional expressiveness. e.g. "I have met hundreds of good women". (p. 71) "You have seen me with it a hundred times". (p. 303) In these hyperboles Wilde uses the exaggeration of the quantitative aspect. They make their way not on the direct meaning, but on the great emotional influence. But literary hyperbole is not the simple speech figure. It is one of the most important means of building up the plot of the text, the imagery and expressiveness. It is the transmission of the author's thought. e.g. "I never can believe a word you say! ". (p. 49) "He talks the whole time". (p. 115) "Well, you have been eating them all the time". (p. 284) In the literary sense hyperbole is the important means of expressive speech.
Sometimes they are not perceived in their direct meaning, but they at once create the pathetic and comic effect, as in the above-mentioned examples. In general, literature has a constant necessity in the artistic exaggeration of reflection of the world. e.g. "I would do anything in the world to ensure Gwendolen's happiness". (p. 284) "But now that I see you, I feel that nothing in the whole world would induce me to live under the same roof as Lord Windermere". (p. 61) Hyperbole may be also called the means of artistic characterisation. Hyperbole is a device which sharpens the reader's ability to make a logical assessment of the utterance. In order to create his hyperboles Wilde uses such words as "hundreds", "thousands", "all the time", "nothing in the world", etc. Wilde's hyperboles bring the brightness, expressiveness and the emotional colour of the language. Hyperbole is like a magnifying glass; it helps to observe in details the phenomena of life, in its realities and contradictions.
METONYMY In these four plays we can also observe some metonymies. According to Prof. Galperin I.R., metonymy is based on a different type of relation between the dictionary and contextual meanings, a relation based not on identification, but on some kind of association connecting the two concepts which these meanings represent. 24 According to Prof. Sosnovskaya V.B., units of poetic speech called metonymy are also based upon analogy. But in them there is an objectively existing relationship between the object named and the object implied. 25 According to Prof. Kukharenko V.A., metonymy also becomes instrumental in enriching the vocabulary of the language and it is based on contiguity (nearness) of objects or phenomena. 26 So, according to these three definitions, we can say that metonymy is a transference of meaning based on a logical or physical connection between things.
In metonymy a thing is described by its action, its function or by some significant features. It is one of the means of forming the new meanings of words in the language. e.g. .".. a thing more tragic than all the tears the world has ever shed". (p. 65) "She was stern to me, but she taught me what the world is forgetting, the difference that there is between what is right and what is wrong". (p. 26) "Do you think seriously that women who have committed what the world calls a fault should never be forgiven" (p. 27) In these three examples we can see the same metonymy, that is used by the same word "world". Here the author means the people who love in the world. Here we also can see that container is used instead of the thing contained: "world" instead of "people". We can observe the same situation on the following example: e.g. "The whole London knows it". (p. 32) The author means people living in London, but not the city as itself.
Through the combination of metonymical details and particulars Wilde creates the effect of powerful upper-class society. The scope of transference in metonymy is much more limited than that of metaphor, which is quite understandable: the scope of human imagination identifying two objects on the grounds of commonness of one of their innumerable characteristics is boundless while actual relation between objects are more limited. This is why metonymy, on the whole, is a less frequently observed stylistic device than metaphor. Oscar Wilde does not pay much attention to metonymy. But his metonymies have a great potential power. They reach the emotional reliability, which creates the effect of reader's presence in the literary world.
Metonymical details and particulars sometimes serve the so called "evidences" of the actions and feelings of the heroes. As a brief conclusion we can say that Oscar Wilde resorts to the use of a great number of stylistic devices in his plays. For Wilde language is the most important way for expression of his thoughts and feelings. According to the examples mentioned above, we can see that Wilde's language is very expressive and vivid, and at the same time it is plain and understandable to any reader. The expressive means of a language exist as a certain system of literary devices within the literary form of the common language.
The system of expressive means of language differs from that of another, not in the existence of some device but in the role which this device plays, and the place which it occupies in this system. The syntactical level plays an important role in the system of language expressive means. Generally speaking, the examination of syntax provides a deeper insight into the stylistic aspect of the utterance. Stylistics takes as the object of its analysis the expressive means and stylistic devices of the language which are based on some significant structural point in an utterance, whether it consists of one sentence or a string of sentences.
The problem of syntactical stylistic devices appears to be closely linked not only with what makes an utterance more emphatic but also with the more general problem of predication. As is known, the English affirmative sentence is regarded as neutral if it maintains the regular word order, that is subject - predicate - object (or other secondary members of the sentence, as they are called). Any other order of the parts of the sentence may also carry the necessary information, but impact on the reader will be different. Even a slight change in the word order of a sentence or in the order of the sentences in a more complicated syntactical unit will inevitably cause a definite modification of the meaning in the whole. An almost imperceptible rhythmical design introduced into a prose sentence or a sudden break in the sequence of the parts of the sentence, or any other change will add something to the volume of information contained in the original sentence.
Unlike the syntactical expressive means of the language, which are naturally used in discourse in a straight-forward natural manner, syntactical stylistic devices are perceived as elaborate designees aimed at having a definite impact on the reader. It will be borne in mind that any stylistic device is meant to be understood as a device and is calculated to produce a desired stylistic effect. The first syntactical expressive means used by Oscar Wilde is inversion. According to Prof. Kukharenko V.A., inversion is very often used as an independent stylistic device in which the direct word order is changed either completely so that the predicate (predicative) precedes the subject, or partially, so that the object precedes the subject - predicate pair. 27 According to Prof. Galperin I.R. the stylistic inversion aims at attaching logical stress or additional emotional colouring to the surface meaning of the utterance. Therefore, a specific intonation pattern is the inevitable satellite of inversion.
28 Although Oscar Wilde doesn't pay much attention to such expressive means as inversion, he also resorts to its usage in his plays. Here are some examples of inversion from Wilde: e.g. "Told me she that entirely disapproved of people marrying more than once". (p. 53) "Except amongst the middle classes I have been told". (p. 117) "But so am I". (p. 261) "Let go us into the house". (p. 331) These sentences comprise the simple and common models of inversion. It is very important to know that inversion as a stylistic device is always sense-motivated; and it depends on the context. These inversions are used by the author for more expressiveness and for showing the feelings of his characters in a certain situation. The next syntactical expressive means is a repetition. As the word "repetition" itself suggests, this unit of poetic speech is based upon a repeated occurrence of one and the same word or word group.
According to Prof. Galperin I.R., repetition as a syntactical stylistic device is recurrence of the same word, word combination or a phase for two and more times. 29 So, repetition is an expressive means when a certain word or a phrase is repeated for several times. It is an expressive means of language used when the speaker is under the stress of strong emotion. It shows the state of mind of the speaker as in the following example from Wilde: e.g. "I love you - love you as I have never loved any living thing.
From the moment I met you I loved you, loved you blindly, adoringly, madly!" (p. 51) Here we can observe the inner state of the hero, his emotions, his great feeling of love. e.g. "My boy! My boy! My boy!" (p. 168) In these words repeated for several time we can guess the great emotional background. Wilde has a graphic eye and the use of repetition which as it may seem is one of the weak expressive means helps us to be closer to the hero, to understand his feelings. Depending on the position of a repeated unit occupied in the sentence there are four types of repetition: anaphora, epiphora, framing and anadiplosis. The first function of repetition is to intensify the utterance.
Here are some more examples of repetition: e.g. "Oh, Arthur, do not love me less, and I will trust you more. I will trust you absolutely". (p. 88) "Do not hold me, mother. Do not hold me- I'll kill him!" (p. 151) "Choose! Oh, my love, choose!" (p. 51) In the first example we have anadiplosis. The structure of this device is the following: the last phrase of one part of an utterance is repeated.