They are “certain the sounds [they] make are enough to call someone home” (28-29). Using both these literary devices portrays that the narrator wishes to reunite with someone they have long lost. Much like the poem, the story Lost utilizes personification, but also repetition, to show how the boy misses his deceased parents. The orphan boy uses repetition to show how he might not have been able to find a lost person if they had “no shoes, no necklace, no hairbow, no watch” (para. 36. The syllable of the syllable. This relates to how the boy feels about not being able to get his parents back. He would know exactly how the neighbor boy’s mother would feel if he was not able to find the lost boy. The orphan had been left alone by the loss of his parents. The boy “thought about the word lonely and how it sounded and looked so lonely” (para. 2). 7. The aforesaid aforesaid aforesaid aforesaid aforesaid aforesaid afore This personification shows that he is clearly not over losing both his mother and father. He believes that “if he listens hard enough,. he could hear the waves hitting” where his parents drowned.