Literary works methods
Literary works are methods that authors utilize to establish a distinct or pointed effect in their work. They are mainly used to rely on the information or to assist their bibliophiles to comprehend their work on a profound level. Mostly they are utilized in writing work for prominence or precision. The book, the outsiders, and the poem, the rose that grew from the concrete connect in a way that literary works are applied to both of them. For instance, hyperbole is an overemphasis utilized to place a point. In the outsiders, the use of hyperbole is seen when Ponyboy caught on flames, and Dally knockout him to blow out the combustions. Ponyboy lost responsiveness and the day after that, Dally utilized hyperbole to show his worries “Kid, you scared the devil outa me. I thought I’d killed you.” Dally did not seriously imagine that he had a devil or that he had murdered Ponyboy but the choice of his utterings expressed the apprehension that Dally got for Ponyboy at that particular time. Tupac also utilizes hyperbole in his poem when he stated “it learned to walk without having feet.” A rose can not walk, and certainly, anything cannot walk without feet, but the usage of words expresses what the author was trying to say.
The use of allusions is also present in both the book and the poem. This is pointing out an alternative section of fiction. Johnny’s last alteration “Stay gold Ponyboy. Stay gold…” is an illustration of allusions present in the outsiders. Tupac mentioning the rose in his poem is an illusion. The greasers’ group from the outsiders fit in the category Tupac is talking about. Ponyboy is the greaser that can fit in the Tupac’s poem since it is mentioned in the book that he comes from an area that even an acquitted stroll is fraught with peril. Rose is the symbol for Tupac and concrete is the image for ghetto he was raised in.