The Trumpet of the Swan Literary Elements

The Trumpet of the Swan Literary Elements

Genre

Children's novel, Bildungsroman tradition

Setting and Context

Rural Canada, Billings, Boston, and Philadelphia

Narrator and Point of View

Third-person omniscient narrator

Tone and Mood

The tone is hopeful overall, as is characteristic of most Bildungsroman novels.

Protagonist and Antagonist

Louis the Swan is the protagonist. There is no major antagonist except to the extent that people's interests misalign with those of Louis. The zookeeper who tries to pinion Serena is an antagonist.

Major Conflict

Louis, having been born mute, must somehow learn to communicate to function in the swan world. He must also repay the debt incurred by his father, who stole a trumpet to help Louis make noises similar to the voices of others of his species.

Climax

The climax of the book comes when Louis physically defends the exhausted Serena from being pinioned by the zookeepers.

Foreshadowing

The cob, Louis's father, breaks into a store successfully once. This foreshadows his serious injury when he returns to pay for the trumpet he stole.

Understatement

"To get lost in the woods or swamps of western Canada would be a serious matter." For an eleven-year-old child like Sam, it would probably be fatal.

Allusions

Many of the characters make reference to the jazz trumpeter Louis Armstrong, whose style Louis strives to imitate.

Imagery

The bird imagery throughout the book is striking: there are details about wings, webbed feet, and the long white necks and black bills.

Paradox

To communicate with his fellow swans and live among them happily, Louis must live for an extended period of time among humans.

Parallelism

Louis's growing financial success and his fame within the human world parallel his need to return to his own. He is not truly happy until he finds Serena and wins her heart.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

The frog, buried in the mud, knows that spring is near. This frog represents the multitude of animals in the forest.

Personification

The swans are personified, or in fact anthropomorphized, when the narrator gives them human motivations and emotions. The remorse felt by the cob after having stolen the trumpet is more characteristic of what a human being might feel.

Update this section!

You can help us out by revising, improving and updating this section.

Update this section

After you claim a section you’ll have 24 hours to send in a draft. An editor will review the submission and either publish your submission or provide feedback.