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18 pages 36 minutes read

Miss Brill

Fiction | Short Story | Adult | Published in 1920

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Literary Devices

Simile

Mansfield employs similes throughout the story to demonstrate Miss Brill’s vivid imagination and habitual turn to positive thinking. Where one person might regard this particular Sunday in the park as an ordinary day, Miss Brill perceives luxe grandeur in the “the blue sky powdered with gold and great spots of light like white wine splashed over the Jardins Publiques” (Paragraph 1). The repeated use of simile allows readers to share Miss Brill’s perspective of the world: the band conductor flaps “his arms like a rooster about to crow” (Paragraph 2), the old couple on the bench sit “still as statues” (Paragraph 5), and a nearby mother chastises her child “like a young hen” (Paragraph 5).

The crux of Miss Brill’s perception of the world rests in a simile: “Oh, how fascinating it was! How she enjoyed it! How she loved sitting here, watching it all! It was like a play. It was exactly like a play” (Paragraph 9). Even she has a role in the performance, but she is reticent to share her Sunday outings with her students: “she had quite a queer, shy feeling at telling her English pupils how she spent her Sunday afternoons.

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