Intellectual Simplicity
15,029 words
Dr. Eugene Young
Eng 361.07
May 1, 2007
In literature, it is the goal and purpose of the indorser to delve as deeply as they can into the depths of a text. In doing so, an intelligent reader then draw parallels, uncovers symbols and metaphors, finds allegories, allusions, and so forth The purpose of this is the readers thirst for an intelligent, poignant, and beautiful work of art.
As a reader, I found a strong parallel mingled with the works of Cormac McCarthy and Robert Frost. The link between these two workforce is strongest with McCarthys All the Pretty Horses and Frosts The Road not Taken. These works connect in a actually strange and interesting way.
These two men have an undreamed of energy to write for two audiences, being the general state-supported and the intellectual. They write in a style which I touch on to as intellectual simplicity. This means that these two artists have the ability to write in a language that is simple ample for the common man to understand and yet fill it with legion(predicate) of the literary devices listed above in order to satiate the crave of the intellectual reader.
In order to understand how these two men are capable of such feats, it is imperative to understand the telescope of these men. Cormac McCarthy was born in Rhode Island on July 20, 1933, and then moved with his family to Knoxville, Tennessee in 1937. While in Knoxville, McCarthy attended Knoxville Catholic High enlighten (Cormac McCarthy Society 1).
McCarthy entered the University of Tennessee for one year and was a liberal liberal arts major. In 1953 he joined the United States Air ability and served for four years. In 1957 McCarthy returned to the University of Tennessee and published two stories in a student paper and won the Ingram-Merrill award in 1959 and 1960 (CMS 1).
In 1976 McCarthy moved to El Paso, TX. Supporting himself with the money from his 1981...If you want to evolve a full essay, order it on our website: Orderessay
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