- All's Well That Ends Well
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- Henry VI, Part 3
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This passage appears at the beginning of Scene Three, when O’Neill’s stage note describes the stokehole. It’s worth paying attention the words he uses to convey the harsh and chaotic experience of being in the engine room: “tumult,” “noise,” “brazen clang,” “grating,” “teeth-gritting grind,” “clash of sounds,” “dissonance.” All of these words or phrases communicate a feeling of intensity and an overwhelming sense of movement. However, O’Neill then says that “there is order” in these sounds—a “rhythm” and “tempo.” As such, he shows the audience how a person like Yank can get used to spending time in an environment that…