Header Three
By Web Admin
By Web Admin
By TRWCBlogger
Tone and mood are two powerful elements of writing that affect
Tone tells us a lot about characters – a protagonist
‘The Yellow Wallpaper’ (1892) by the 19th Century American author, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, offers strong examples of tone.
In the story, the narrator’s tone is initially cheerful. She describes
the ‘colonial mansion’ she and her husband John share for the summer:
‘A
colonial mansion, a hereditary estate, I would say a haunted house, and
reach the height of romantic felicity – but that would be asking too
much of fate! Still I would proudly declare that there is something
queer about it.’
As the story progresses, however, the narrator’s
optimistic tone changes. We see that John is controlling towards her,
and she becomes increasingly obsessed with the idea that there is a
woman imprisoned behind the ‘strangest yellow’ wallpaper. She starts to
imagine it has a terrible odor:
‘Now we have had a week of fog and rain, and whether the windows are open or not, the smell is here.
It creeps all over the house.
I find it hovering in the dining-room, skulking in the parlor, hiding in the hall, lying in wait for me on the stairs.’
The
narrator’s tone becomes fearful. The verbs she uses contribute to the
anxious tone and fearful mood (the smell ‘creeps’ and ‘lies in wait’,
suggesting sneakiness and malevolence).
Shifts in tone
Edgar Allan Poe’s famous short story
‘The Fall of the House of Usher’ (1839) is a classic example of
American Gothic fiction. It’s full of great examples of mood in writing.
Poe is a master of conjuring a gloomy, eerie atmosphere. Consider his
opening:
‘During the whole of a dull,
dark, and soundless day in the autumn of the year, when the clouds hung
oppressively low in the heavens, I had been passing alone, on horseback,
through a singularly dreary tract of country, and at length found
myself, as the shades of the evening drew on, within view of the
melancholy House of Usher.’
Mood in writing is ‘the way a group of people feel about something; the atmosphere in a place or among a group of people’ (OED).
The way the atmosphere of a place affects feeling is clear in Poe’s
opening. Poe chooses adjectives such as ‘dull,’ ‘dark’ and ‘soundless’
to create an oppressive, stagnant atmosphere. He makes this mood
explicit when he uses the adverb ‘oppressively’ to make the clouds seem
weighted down; too close.
The mood of Poe’s story gets darker
still as the narrator describes the house where his ailing childhood
friend Roderick Usher and his sister Madeleine live:
‘Its
principal feature seemed to be that of an excessive antiquity. The
discoloration of ages had been great. Minute fungi overspread the whole
exterior, hanging in a fine tangled web-work from the eaves […]’
The mood of neglect and dank darkness continues. The faded quality of the house and the ‘tangled webwork’ of fungus growing over it both add to the mood of abandoned neglect. Poe chooses his adjectives well, creating a consistent tone of gloom, which prepares us for the paranormal , morbid goings on at the house. The mood of the story contributes an eerie feeling that supports its bizarre events (later, the narrator helps his friend entomb his sister, which in turn leads to his friend’s dramatic death).
How can you use tone and mood in your writing to enrich your novel?
The
words you use to describe your characters’ actions colour how we read
them, contributing to tone and mood. In ‘The Yellow Wallpaper’, for
example, the verbs Charlotte Perkins Gilman uses, as her narrator’s
sanity dissolves, become increasingly ominous.
Her narrator
describes the smell of the wallpaper as ‘creeping’ and ‘lying in wait’.
These verbs of ambush and stealth effectively create an anxious tone,
showing the narrator’s increasing unease.
When describing characters’ actions:
In
‘The Fall of the House of Usher’, Poe’s adjective choices consistently
build the mood. The sombre, dark tone of his story fits its eerie,
paranormal subject matter. Adjectives suggesting decay and entrapment
are everywhere, from the way Poe describes the fungi covering the house
as ‘tangled’ to his description of the ‘dreary’ countryside. He also
uses the word ‘oppressively’ to describe how low the clouds in his
landscape hang, making even the clouds seem to have some darker purpose.
To bolster mood with description:
In
a story like ‘The Yellow Wallpaper’, we see how effectively changes of
tone and mood can underscore plot development. The narrator’s changing
tone reflects her worsening psychological state. Think about ways you
can change the way a character speaks or narrates to underscore their
shifting experience.
Take a character who is nervous before a
first date, for example. They might narrate in shorter, more scattered
phrases as the encounter approaches, suggesting their racing thoughts.
In
some scenarios, creating a mismatch between tone and mood is a useful
technique. In a horror story about a haunted house, for example, you
could first create a creepy tone describing the house from an omniscient
narrator’s viewpoint, then contrast this with a lighter tone when a
group of joking kids entering the house on a dare (this is a cliche of
the haunted house trope). This mismatch is effective because the prior
mood creates expectations in us as readers. We want to shout at the
kids, ‘Get out!’
This approach to tone and mood – contrasting the
two – is an effective technique for showing characters who are oblivious
to impending situations. It isn’t only effective for creepy situations.
Consider a romantic example:
Character Ted is about to propose to Charlotte, and has chosen a romantic setting. Charlotte has no inkling of his intention.
You
might describe and evoke the romantic setting Ted has painstakingly
created. Yet you could also contrast this romantic mood with dialogue
that is the opposite of romantic. Perhaps Charlotte is grumpy and
beligerent, in an argumentative frame of mind due to a bad day at work.
This
scenario and the contrast between the clearly romantic mood of the
setting (and our knowledge of Ted’s plans) and the conversation could
make the proposal scene comical, bordering on farce. The contrast
between tone and mood also creates dramatic tension. We empathize as
poor Ted strives to create the romantic interaction he imagined.
When you’re reading, if an author writes a phrase or passage that creates an effective tone or mood, write it down. Keep a book of extracts that demonstrate different types of tone and mood (for example ‘gloomy’, ‘cheerful’, ‘romantic’ and so forth). The simple act of consciously copying out what works in other authors’ work (and jotting down why) will help you to create better tone and mood yourself.
Culled from Now Novel
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.