In 1926, Siddhartha, had been published by Hermann Hesse in Germany. This story is strongly based on a religion called Buddhism. Hermann Hesse writes a journey of a man called Siddhartha. As Hermann Hesse describes what the Siddhartha does, Hesse implies literary analysis in this book as some flavor to the true meaning behind Buddhism. The author includes irony, imagery, personification, similes, and metaphors to identify what Siddhartha was dealing with in this novel. The main focus is on Siddhartha, but there are other aspects in the novel that is important. As the story starts, Siddhartha is the son of the leader of Brahmin. Siddhartha will soon be the leader, but notices that something’s blacked out or missing in his belief. Siddhartha …show more content…
What Hermann Hesse wrote about identifies the true beliefs in buddhism. It’s not asking the reader to go with what Hermann wrote or why the reader shouldn’t, it adds context to what Hermann believes in. What the author provides is background information to what’s truly behind something big. To suggest readers about his motive on this book and go with it. Hermann Hesse includes literary analysis to support what he thinks is right. Having imagery being one of the main factors becomes the basis to what the novel may have. Simile was included in the novel by stating that supporting the actions that Siddhartha has done. In the novel, Siddhartha is comparing people's ambition to the earth's natural occurrences. . Symbolism is a huge literary device. Having to symbolize to something beyond its literal meaning. For an example, persuasive Siddhartha is symbolized by the river. Hermann symbolized the river to Siddhartha because it’s where Siddhartha found the true meaning in enlightenment. Metaphor was brought up into the novel as well. Siddhartha was describe to something by other people. “He shriveled inward like a small animal, like a bird or a hare, when he realized how alone he was”(page 34 Siddhartha,