No matter the actions an individual experiences in a lifetime, the outcome remains the same. Death consumes the soul and leaves not a trace, but a few carcasses. In Aldous Huxley’s 20th century novel Brave New World, Huxley uses imagery to reveal the somber end, which all humans come to; therefore people must appreciate their present ways of life before the end. Huxley describes the morbid scenery between civilization and the savages: “And at its foot, here and there, a mosaic of white bones, a still unrotted carcase dark on the tawny ground…” (Huxley 105). The visual descriptions paint a picture of the unsettling scene within the reader’s mind. The depiction of the skeletons scattered on the slopes reveal how humans end up the same way in the …show more content…
The presentation of a barren land reveals to the reader the inevitable fate everyone comes to at the end of life. Thus, to make up for the uselessness of humans after death, people must seek opportunities to make a life worthy before the end. No matter the impact one may have on society while in the flesh, nothing matters once the individual dies. In similar fashion, Robert William Service’s poem “Brave New World” uses alliteration of a hard “g” sound to emphasize the struggle of life and how none of life’s accomplishments matter years after an individual’s fatality. To describe the ways of society after “life’s lively game,” Service writes, “To grub for gold or grab for fame or raise a holy row, it will be all the bloody same a hundred years from now”(Service 13-16). The alliteration brings attention to Service’s idea of the insignificance of a person’s life after death. Service’s emphasis on humans’ need to grasp for glory show how people spend much time on events even though everyone just perishes in the end. Humans spend life yearning for accomplishments that improve the lives of future generations. However, nothing matters in the end due to the constant fate of