Composition
The Five-Paragraph Essay
A classic format for compositions is the
five-paragraph essay. It is not the only format for writing an essay, of
course, but it is a useful model for you to keep in mind, especially as you
begin to develop your composition skills. The following material is adapted
from a handout prepared by Harry Livermore for his high school English
classes at Cook High School in Adel, Georgia. It is used here with his
permission.
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Introduction:
Introductory Paragraph
See, first, Writing Introductory Paragraphs for different ways of getting your reader involved in your essay. The introductory paragraph should also include the thesis statement, a kind of mini-outline for the paper: it tells the reader what the essay is about. The last sentence of this paragraph must also contain a transitional "hook" which moves the reader to the first paragraph of the body of the paper.Body:
Body — First paragraph:
The first paragraph of the body should contain the strongest argument, most significant example, cleverest illustration, or an obvious beginning point. The first sentence of this paragraph should include the "reverse hook" which ties in with the transitional hook at the end of the introductory paragraph. The topic for this paragraph should be in the first or second sentence. This topic should relate to the thesis statement in the introductory paragraph. The last sentence in this paragraph should include a transitional hook to tie into the second paragraph of the body.Body — Second paragraph:
The second paragraph of the body should contain the second strongest argument, second most significant example, second cleverest illustration, or an obvious follow up the first paragraph in the body. The first sentence of this paragraph should include the reverse hook which ties in with the transitional hook at the end of the first paragraph of the body. The topic for this paragraph should be in the first or second sentence. This topic should relate to the thesis statement in the introductory paragraph. The last sentence in this paragraph should include a transitional hook to tie into the third paragraph of the body.Body — Third paragraph:
The third paragraph of the body should contain the weakest argument, weakest example, weakest illustration, or an obvious follow up to the second paragraph in the body. The first sentence of this paragraph should include the reverse hook which ties in with the transitional hook at the end of the second paragraph. The topic for this paragraph should be in the first or second sentence. This topic should relate to the thesis statement in the introductory paragraph. The last sentence in this paragraph should include a transitional concluding hook that signals the reader that this is the final major point being made in this paper. This hook also leads into the last, or concluding, paragraph.Conclusion:
Concluding paragraph:
This paragraph should include the following:- an allusion to the pattern used in the introductory paragraph,
- a restatement of the thesis statement, using some of the original language or language that "echoes" the original language. (The restatement, however, must not be a duplicate thesis statement.)
- a summary of the three main points from the body of the paper.
- a final statement that gives the reader signals that the discussion has come to an end. (This final statement may be a "call to action" in an persuasive paper.)
A Sample Paper
1Stephen King, creator of such stories as Carrie
and Pet Sematary, stated that the Edgar Allan Poe stories he read as a
child gave him the inspiration and instruction he needed to become the writer
that he is. 2Poe,
as does Stephen King, fills the reader's imagination with the images that he
wishes the reader to see, hear, and feel. 3His use of vivid, concrete
visual imagery to present both static and dynamic settings and to describe
people is part of his technique. 4Poe's short story "The
Tell-Tale Heart" is a story about a young man who kills an old man who
cares for him, dismembers the corpse, then goes mad when he thinks he hears
the old man's heart beating beneath the floor boards under his feet as he sits
and discusses the old man's absence with the police. 5In
"The Tell-Tale Heart," a careful reader can observe Poe's skillful
manipulation of the senses.
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The introductory paragraph includes a paraphrase of
something said by a famous person in order to get the reader's attention. The
second sentence leads up to the thesis statement which is the third sentence.
The thesis statement (sentence 3) presents topic of the paper to the reader
and provides a mini- outline. The topic is Poe's use of visual imagery. The
mini- outline tells the reader that this paper will present Poe's use of
imagery in three places in his writing: (1) description of static setting;
(2) description of dynamic setting; and (3) description of a person. The last
sentence of the paragraph uses the words "manipulation" and
"senses" as transitional hooks.
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1The sense of sight, the primary sense, is
particularly susceptible to manipulation. 2In "The Tell-Tale
Heart," Poe uses the following image to describe a static scene:
"His room was as black as pitch with the thick darkness . . ." Poe
used the words "black," "pitch," and "thick
darkness" not only to show the reader the condition of the old man's
room, but also to make the reader feel the darkness." 3"Thick"
is a word that is not usually associated with color (darkness), yet in using
it, Poe stimulates the reader's sense of feeling as well as his sense of
sight.
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In the first sentence of the second paragraph (first
paragraph of the body) the words "sense" and
"manipulation" are used to hook into the end of the introductory
paragraph. The first part of the second sentence provides the topic for this
paragraph--imagery in a static scene. Then a quotation from "The
Tell-Tale Heart" is presented and briefly discussed. The last sentence
of this paragraph uses the expressions "sense of feeling" and
"sense of sight" as hooks for leading into the third paragraph.
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1Further on in the story, Poe uses a couple of
words that cross not only the sense of sight but also the sense of feeling to
describe a dynamic scene. 2The youth in the story has been standing in
the open doorway of the old man's room for a long time, waiting for just the
right moment to reveal himself to the old man in order to frighten him. 3Poe
writes: "So I opened it [the lantern opening]--you cannot imagine how
stealthily, stealthily--until, at length, a single dim ray, like the thread
of the spider, shot from out the crevice and fell full upon the vulture
eye." 4By
using the metaphor of the thread of the spider (which we all know is a creepy
creature) and the word "shot," Poe almost makes the reader gasp, as
surely did the old man whose one blind eye the young man describes as
"the vulture eye."
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The first sentence of the third paragraph (second
paragraph of the body) uses the words "sense of sight" and
"sense of feeling" to hook back into the previous paragraph. Note
that in the second paragraph "feeling" came first, and in this
paragraph "sight" comes first. The first sentence also includes the
topic for this paragraph--imagery in a dynamic scene. Again, a quotation is
taken from the story, and it is briefly discussed. The last sentence uses the
words "one blind eye" which was in the quotation. This expression
provides the transitional hook for the last paragraph in the body of the
paper.
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1The reader does not know much about what the old
man in this story looks like except that he has one blind eye. 2In the
second paragraph of "The Tell-Tale Heart," Poe establishes the
young man's obsession with that blind eye when he writes: "He had the
eye of the vulture--a pale blue eye, with a film over it." 3This
"vulture eye" is evoked over and over again in the story until the
reader becomes as obsessed with it as does the young man. 4His use
of the vivid, concrete word "vulture" establishes a specific image
in the mind of the reader that is inescapable.
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In the first sentence of the fourth paragraph (third
paragraph in the body), "one blind eye" is used that hooks into
the previous paragraph. This first sentence also lets the reader know that
this paragraph will deal with descriptions of people: ". . . what the
old man looks like . . .." Once again Poe is quoted and discussed. The
last sentence uses the word "image" which hooks into the last
paragraph. (It is less important that this paragraph has a hook since the
last paragraph is going to include a summary of the body of the paper.)
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1"Thick darkness," "thread of the
spider," and "vulture eye" are three images that Poe used in
"The Tell-Tale Heart" to stimulate a reader's senses. 2Poe
wanted the reader to see and feel real life. 3He used concrete imagery
rather than vague abstract words to describe settings and people. 4If
Edgar Allan Poe was one of Stephen King's teachers, then readers of King owe
a debt of gratitude to that nineteenth-century creator of horror stories.
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The first sentence of the concluding paragraph uses
the principal words from the quotations from each paragraph of the body of
the paper. This summarizes those three paragraph. The second and third
sentences provide observations which can also be considered a summary, not
only of the content of the paper, but also offers personal opinion which was
logically drawn as the result of this study. The last sentence returns to the
Edgar Allan Poe-Stephen King relationship which began this paper. This
sentence also provides a "wrap-up" and gives the paper a sense of
finality.
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