How does Stevenson’s description of the island establish a mood of foreboding and danger? Find at least four words, phrases or fea

By Rose

How does Stevenson’s description of the island establish a mood of foreboding and danger? Find at least four words, phrases or features of the island which convey negative feelings.

About the author
Rose

1 thought on “How does Stevenson’s description of the island establish a mood of foreboding and danger? Find at least four words, phrases or fea”

  1. Answer:

    Looking for homework help that takes the stress out of studying?

    Sign up for our weekly newsletter!

    Menu

    Treasure Island

    Robert Louis Stevenson

    Study Guide

    Summary

    Characters

    Main Ideas

    Quotes

    Further Study

    Writing Help

    Teacher’s Handbook

    Main Ideas

    Key Facts

    Main Ideas Key Facts

    Full Title Treasure Island

    Author Robert Louis Stevenson

    Type Of Work Novel

    Genre Children’s book, adventure story, coming-of-age story

    Language English

    Time And Place Written 1881, Scotland

    Date Of First Publication 1883

    Publisher Cassell and Company

    Narrator Jim Hawkins is both the hero of the tale and the narrator for all but three chapters—Dr. Livesey narrates Chapters XV–XVIII. Jim narrates the tale because Dr. Livesey and Squire Trelawney ask him to recount the events after the end of the adventure.

    Point Of View Jim narrates from first-and third-person perspectives. In doing so, he presents plot developments that only he himself observes. Livesey does the same in his portion of the narrative. Whereas Jim describes his state of mind, feelings, and attitudes throughout his tale, Livesey is more objectively factual in his narration.

    Tone Jim’s attitudes toward his life and his adventure are significant. The fact that he hardly mentions his parents, even after his father’s death, suggests indifference toward his family. Jim shows moderate respect, and occasional impatience, when describing Captain Smollett and Dr. Livesey. When Jim describes the pirates, his tone suggests that he admires and reveres them, and is certainly fascinated by them. Jim’s tone is generally modest when narrating his own heroic feats.

    Tense Past

    Setting (Time) During the eighteenth century

    Setting (Place) Near Bristol, England, and Treasure Island, an island off the coast of “Spanish America”

    Protagonist Jim Hawkins

    Major Conflict Jim, Squire Trelawney, Dr. Livesey, Captain Smollett, and his crew search for a treasure that Captain Flint, an old pirate, has left buried after his death. They are challenged by Flint’s former crewmembers, who have tricked Trelawney into hiring them to help sail to Treasure Island.

    Rising Action The discovery of the treasure map in the inn; the hiring of a treacherous crew for the expedition; the voyage to Treasure Island; the mutiny of Silver and his crew; Silver taking Jim as a hostage

    Climax The pirates’ and Jim’s discovery that the treasure has already been excavated from its burial ground

    Falling Action The return trip to England; Silver’s escape with some of the treasure; Jim’s nightmares about the sea and gold coins

    Themes The search for heroic role models; the futility of desire; the lack of adventure in the modern age; the hunger for adventure; the vanity of pursuing wealth; the process of growing up and proving oneself

    Motifs Solitude; animals; the color black; singing; physical handicaps; betrayal

    Symbols The coracle; the treasure map; rum; the black spot; Ben Gunn’s insanity; the skeleton pointing the way to the treasure; the empty treasure site

    Foreshadowing Billy Bones is handed his black spot and dies soon thereafter; Captain Smollett is suspicious of his new crew, which turns out to be mutinous; Mr. Arrow repeatedly gets drunk, then disappears from the ship; Jim sees Israel Hands hide a knife under his jacket, and Hands soon attacks him; the sailors sing about a dead man’s chest before the adventure has begun, and almost all of them end up dead in the end

    Previous section

    Symbols

    Popular pages: Treasure Island

    Character List

    CHARACTERS

    Jim Hawkins: Character Analysis

    CHARACTERS

    Important Quotations Explained

    MAIN IDEAS

    Themes

    MAIN IDEAS

    Review Quiz

    FURTHER STUDY

    Take a Study Break

    Answer These 7 Questions and We’ll Tell You How You’ll Do on Your AP Exams

    Every Marvel Movie Summed Up in a Single Sentence

    QUIZ: Are You a Hero, a Villain, or an Anti-Hero?

    QUIZ: Is This a Mark Twain Quote or a Line from The Office?

    QUIZ: Which Greek God Are You?

    60 YA Movie Adaptations, Ranked

    Pick 10 Books and We’ll Guess Whether You’re an Introvert or an Extrovert

    Sign up for our latest news and updates!

    By entering your email address you agree to receive emails from SparkNotes and verify that you are over the age of 13. You can view our Privacy Policy here. Unsubscribe from our emails at any time.

    First Name

    Last Name

    Email

    Sign Up

    The #1 FREE study site for students

    Most Popular No Fear Shakespeare Literature Guides Other Subjects SparkNotes Blog

    More Help About Contact Us How to Cite SparkNotes Advertise

    Find Us On

    Copyright © 2021 SparkNotes LLC

    Terms of Use | Privacy | Cookie Policy Do Not Sell My Personal Information

    Reply

Leave a Comment