How Dickens Creates Atmosphere in the Opening of "The Signalman" by Referring to the way he Describes the Signalman's Character.
Title: How Dickens Creates Atmosphere in the Opening of "The Signalman" by Referring to the way he Describes the Signalman's Character.
Category: /Literature
Details: Words: 568 | Pages: 2 (approximately 235 words/page)
How Dickens Creates Atmosphere in the Opening of "The Signalman" by Referring to the way he Describes the Signalman's Character.
Category: /Literature
Details: Words: 568 | Pages: 2 (approximately 235 words/page)
Dickens manages to create atmosphere in the beginning of "The Signalman" by portraying the signalman as a withdrawn and deliberate man. The way that the signalman looks down the tracks rather than upwards after being greeted by 'halloa! Below there'. A greeting which there could have been no confusion as to where it came from. This reveals to us that the signalman is a strange character with a somewhat indescribable manner of doing things.
After
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narrator for the next visit shows that he is a haunted man, and his strange rituals like 'don't call out' are either part of his insanity or a means he uses to fight it.
The way Dickens uses the signalman to emphasis and reflects the surroundings builds up a very convincing air of mystery and coldness, which I think, is summed up when the narrator says 'his manner seemed to make the place strike colder'