PERSUASION IN LITERATURE

Some might consider Tom Sawyer as  ADJECTIVE due to the initial tone used by the author in the passage;  TRANSITION , he should really be  SYNONYM FOR SEES as a  SYNONYM FOR PROTAGONIST . This is due to the persuasive moves enacted by  SYNONYM FOR PROTAGONIST , which are quite masterful for a boy of  OBSERVATION_ABOUT_TOM_SAWYER and  OBSERVATION_ABOUT_TOM_SAWYER . Despite the reader’s initial impressions, when Tom  VERB , the reader is in awe of his persuasive skills. An example of this can be witnessed here: “  QUOTATION ” (Twain). Because of this,  NOUN become(s)  ADVERB dependent on Tom Sawyer’s next move in his art of manipulation. In fact, Tom’s impact on the audience brings to mind President Eisenhower’s definition of leadership: “Leadership is the art of getting someone else to do something you want done because he wants to do it.”  TRANSITION , it is clear that Tom aligns  PREPOSITION this definition due to the following actions and behaviors:  ACTION/BEHAVIOR ,  ACTION/BEHAVIOR , and  ACTION/BEHAVIOR .More importantly, Tom says something along the same lines when he  SYNONYM FOR SAYS , “In order to make a man or a boy covet a thing, it is only necessary to make the thing difficult to attain.” With these combined strategies, the author is portraying Tom as  DESCRIPTIVE NOUN .