Similes

Death on the Nile

by

Agatha Christie

Death on the Nile: Similes 4 key examples

Definition of Simile
A simile is a figure of speech that directly compares two unlike things. To make the comparison, similes most often use the connecting words "like" or "as," but can also... read full definition
A simile is a figure of speech that directly compares two unlike things. To make the comparison, similes most often use the connecting words "like... read full definition
A simile is a figure of speech that directly compares two unlike things. To make the comparison, similes most often... read full definition
Chapter Two
Explanation and Analysis—Center Stage:

In Chapter 2, Linnet's arrival at the Cataract Hotel is described with similes:

Linnet Doyle was looking as perfectly turned out as if she were stepping on to the centre of the stage of a revue. She had something too of the assurance of a famous actress. She was used to being looked at, to being admired, to being the centre of the stage wherever she went. [...] She came ashore playing a role, even though she played it unconsciously. The rich beautiful society bride on her honeymoon.

Linnet's remarkable arrival is described with a stage metaphor. Linnet is not, in fact, an actress, but she has the beauty and fame of one. The reader learns a lot about her personality just by the description of her appearance: she seems to have grown accustomed to attention and is at ease with stares. The reader also gets a sense of the unique position of a socialite. Linnet isn't acting in this scene, strictly speaking, but her life and beauty are consumed as a sort of entertainment, a circumstance she has taken in stride. At the end of the novel, in Chapter 31, even her death is sensationalized into entertainment and gossip: 

Lastly the body of Linnet Doyle was brought ashore, and all over the world wires began to hum, telling the public that Linnet Doyle, who had been Linnet Ridgeway, the famous, the beautiful, the wealthy Linnet Doyle was dead.

Notice the personification of the telegraph wires here: Linnet doesn't care if people talk about her deathl. Instead, the inanimate and uncaring telegraph wires are personified into gossips as they broadcast out news of her death to "the public."

Chapter Three 
Explanation and Analysis—The Prehistoric Nile:

In Chapter 3, Poirot and the Otterbournes look out onto the Nile, and the imagery of the famous river is heightened with a simile:

Silence fell on the three of them. They looked down to the shining black rocks in the Nile. There was something fantastic about them in the moonlight. They were like vast prehistoric monsters lying half out of the water. A little breeze came up suddenly and as suddenly died away. There was a feeling in the air of hush—of expectancy.

This is one of the few descriptions of the novel's exotic setting, and it turns the Nile into an awe-inspiring, mysterious force. The simile, which compares the river rocks to "vast prehistoric monsters," lends a menacing tone to the scene. The book describes the black rocks with visual imagery, and it also incorporates sensory imagery by describing the wind as if the very air has mystery in it. The imagery and simile also add suspense—what will rise from the depths during Poirot's journey? Will it be something atavistic and evil like the prehistoric monsters that the rocks resemble?

Thanks to a long lineage of English-language painters and writers, including Thomas De Quincey and Lord Byron, it would not have been unusual for Britons of this time period to associate countries like Egypt with dormant, ancient urges and forces. Western Europeans thought of the East, which would have included Egypt, as less developed and therefore more connected to a murky past. While this scene plays with the idea of a dark and old East, no actual Egyptians play large roles in Death on the Nile. Instead of connecting the murder to foreign ideologies or degeneracy, Christie makes Linnet's murder the fault of two Britons who had already decided to kill her by the time they came to Egypt.

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Chapter Five 
Explanation and Analysis—The Moon and the Sun:

In Chapter 5, Jackie uses a metaphor to describe why Simon left her for Linnet:

There’s such a thing as glamour, Monsieur Poirot. And money helps that. Linnet had an ‘atmosphere,’ you see. She was the queen of a kingdom—the young princess—luxurious to her fingertips. […] Look at the moon up there. You see her very plainly, don’t you? She’s very real. But if the sun were to shine you wouldn’t be able to see her at all. It was rather like that. I was the moon . . . When the sun came out, Simon couldn’t see me anymore . . . He was dazzled. He couldn’t see anything but the sun—Linnet.

Jackie's first metaphor compares Linnet to a queen or a princess. Then, Jackie explains how Simon forgot about her so quickly with a metaphor, in which she compares herself to the moon and Linnet to the sun. Linnet outshone her, just as in the daytime the sun can make the moon impossible to see. 

Later, in Chapter 6, Simon uses the same simile:

It’s like the moon when the sun comes out. You don’t know it’s there anymore. When once I’d met Linnet—Jackie didn’t exist.

This moment is foreshadowing, and Poirot notices it with suspicion—why do Simon and Jackie use the same metaphor? Perhaps Simon and Jackie decided upon this explanation for Simon's behavior when they were planning the murder. 

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Chapter Six 
Explanation and Analysis—The Moon and the Sun:

In Chapter 5, Jackie uses a metaphor to describe why Simon left her for Linnet:

There’s such a thing as glamour, Monsieur Poirot. And money helps that. Linnet had an ‘atmosphere,’ you see. She was the queen of a kingdom—the young princess—luxurious to her fingertips. […] Look at the moon up there. You see her very plainly, don’t you? She’s very real. But if the sun were to shine you wouldn’t be able to see her at all. It was rather like that. I was the moon . . . When the sun came out, Simon couldn’t see me anymore . . . He was dazzled. He couldn’t see anything but the sun—Linnet.

Jackie's first metaphor compares Linnet to a queen or a princess. Then, Jackie explains how Simon forgot about her so quickly with a metaphor, in which she compares herself to the moon and Linnet to the sun. Linnet outshone her, just as in the daytime the sun can make the moon impossible to see. 

Later, in Chapter 6, Simon uses the same simile:

It’s like the moon when the sun comes out. You don’t know it’s there anymore. When once I’d met Linnet—Jackie didn’t exist.

This moment is foreshadowing, and Poirot notices it with suspicion—why do Simon and Jackie use the same metaphor? Perhaps Simon and Jackie decided upon this explanation for Simon's behavior when they were planning the murder. 

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Chapter Twenty-Four 
Explanation and Analysis—Fickle Fame:

In Chapter 24, Mrs. Otterbourne insists she knows the identity of Linnet's murderer. With a simile and imagery, Christie paints a picture of a drunkard author past her prime:

Mrs. Otterbourne swept it to one side and entered like a tornado. Her face was suffused with colour, her gait slightly unsteady, her command of words not quite under her control. “Mr. Doyle,” she said dramatically, “I know who killed your wife! […] My theories are completely vindicated. The deep, primeval, primordial urges—it may appear impossible—fantastic—but it is the truth!”

A simile compares Mrs. Otterbourne's entrance to a tornado, and that description seems deserved given the visual imagery that suggests she is drunk: for instance, her flushed face and unsteady gait. Note as well the dramatic way Mrs. Otterbourne speaks, illustrated with em-dashes, exclamation marks, and grand claims about "primordial urges." Deviating from her usual matter-of-fact style, Christie writes Mrs. Otterbourne's thoughts with similar heightened language and punctuation:

Yes, she was very happy—no doubt of it! This was her moment, her triumph! What of it if her books were failing to sell, if the stupid public that once had bought them and devoured them voraciously now turned to newer favourites? Salome Otterbourne would once again be notorious.

One might expect Agatha Christie to portray a popular female writer in more favorable light, given that she was one herself. But Otterbourne's salacious books, passing popularity, and drunkenness all make her a ridiculous character. It's worth noting that many female writers in the early 20th century (especially those who wrote romances and popular fiction) were treated with derision by critics and academics. There are many possible analogues for Mrs. Otterbourne's personality, including prolific British writer Marie Corelli, who died just a decade before the publication of Death on the Nile. Corelli's last book, published a year after her death, was Open Confession to a Man from a Woman (1925), a series of confessional vignettes about her infatuation with a painter. Otterbourne's dramatic manner of speaking and thinking, down to the punctuation and word choice, is reminiscent of Victorian-era romances, including those of Corelli and Elinor Glyn. 

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Chapter Thirty-One 
Explanation and Analysis—Center Stage:

In Chapter 2, Linnet's arrival at the Cataract Hotel is described with similes:

Linnet Doyle was looking as perfectly turned out as if she were stepping on to the centre of the stage of a revue. She had something too of the assurance of a famous actress. She was used to being looked at, to being admired, to being the centre of the stage wherever she went. [...] She came ashore playing a role, even though she played it unconsciously. The rich beautiful society bride on her honeymoon.

Linnet's remarkable arrival is described with a stage metaphor. Linnet is not, in fact, an actress, but she has the beauty and fame of one. The reader learns a lot about her personality just by the description of her appearance: she seems to have grown accustomed to attention and is at ease with stares. The reader also gets a sense of the unique position of a socialite. Linnet isn't acting in this scene, strictly speaking, but her life and beauty are consumed as a sort of entertainment, a circumstance she has taken in stride. At the end of the novel, in Chapter 31, even her death is sensationalized into entertainment and gossip: 

Lastly the body of Linnet Doyle was brought ashore, and all over the world wires began to hum, telling the public that Linnet Doyle, who had been Linnet Ridgeway, the famous, the beautiful, the wealthy Linnet Doyle was dead.

Notice the personification of the telegraph wires here: Linnet doesn't care if people talk about her deathl. Instead, the inanimate and uncaring telegraph wires are personified into gossips as they broadcast out news of her death to "the public."

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