![]() ![]() The house is saying the date and it is like it's saying the world must move on. The story is kind of ending like it began. What is the significance of the ending of the story? It shows that after everything only one wall stood and the voice was repeating the date. ![]() The house is still trying to save itself. ![]() Simile: "It fed upon Picassos and Matisses in the upper halls, like delicacies, baking off the oily flesh, tenderly crisping the canvases into black shavings." When the house is almost completely burned, what does it begin doing? What sort of mood is conveyed through Bradbury's description? It starts to do many things like open doors and drawers, it keeps talking and saying poems, and there are some mice trying to pick up some of the ashes. The literary devices being used are similes, imagery, and personification. As the house is burning, what literary devices does Bradbury use? Give multiple examples. ![]()
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