Respuesta :
1) For the first question, I would be honest to your own opinions because that doesn’t have a right or wrong but here’s an example answer: My first impression of Dracula is that he is an ominous and foreboding man. He is described in an eerie and dark mood as created through the tone of the author.
2) The author’s diction (words such as “sharp white teeth”, “aquiline”, and “cruel-looking”) all create a solemn and grave tone that may incite anxiety into the readers. Much of this is through the use of pathos or emotional appeal such as where Harker says he feels a “strange stillness” over everything as if to intimidate the readers. The imagery also creates a tone intended by the author where the environment can be read as dark and despairing as read in “The valley the howling of many wolves” and “as the count leaned over me and his hands touched me, I could not repress a shudder”. All of these feelings created by the author are familiar horrors that the reader can relate to and thus a sinister and unnatural feeling is made.
2) The author’s diction (words such as “sharp white teeth”, “aquiline”, and “cruel-looking”) all create a solemn and grave tone that may incite anxiety into the readers. Much of this is through the use of pathos or emotional appeal such as where Harker says he feels a “strange stillness” over everything as if to intimidate the readers. The imagery also creates a tone intended by the author where the environment can be read as dark and despairing as read in “The valley the howling of many wolves” and “as the count leaned over me and his hands touched me, I could not repress a shudder”. All of these feelings created by the author are familiar horrors that the reader can relate to and thus a sinister and unnatural feeling is made.