Imagination, Renaming, and Scope for Imagination

From Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery
Anne's transformative imagination—renaming places, inventing romances, finding 'scope' in plain surroundings—is the novel's central aesthetic and moral force.
Chapter 2
It gives me such a thrill, doesn't it give you a thrill?' and 'There's such a lot of different Annes in me.
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Chapter 4

Anne names the cherry tree outside her window 'Snow Queen' and declares her bedroom needs 'scope for imagination.'

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Chapter 5

Anne insists on being called Cordelia, or at least Anne 'spelled with an E.'

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