Poetic Perspective Of The Word Night In Elie Wiesel's Night

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Poetic Perspective of the Word ‘Night’ in the book ‘Night’ The word ‘night’ could have multiple meanings other than the time we have to unwind to sleep and the moon rises with the stars. Although, some people see night as the most dangerous time throughout the day because you have the shadows to cover you from commiting a crime and successfully get away with it. This is the case for Elie Wiesel, except, his and millions of other jew’s perpetrators were caught and punished for their crimes. One speculates that Elie decided to title his book ‘night’ because the atrocity that Elie endured started during the night for him by witnessing the crematorium burn human bodies on his way to the concentration camp. However, that isn’t everyone’s theory …show more content…

Although, before heading towards Buna they made it towards the notorious Auschwitz-Birkenau and arrived there in the middle of the night. The first out of many horrors Elie would experience would take place when he and his family arrived; where they witnessed the crematorium burn the bodies of the dead and first smelt the terrible smell of rotten bodies. “ In front of us, those flames. In the air, the smell of burning flesh. It must have been around midnight.”(Wiesel 28). This brings in the dark tones that most works with night bring in and this also includes the fact that Elie’s experiences started in the middle of the night as stated above from Wiesel’s …show more content…

They fled in the night and ran for miles in the harsh winter night. “At last, the morning star appeared in the gray sky. A hesitant light began to hover on the horizon. We were exhausted, we had lost all strength, all illusion. The Kommandant announced that we had already covered twenty kilometers since we left”(Wiesel 87). Afterwards, Elie’s father fell ill with dysentery and because the Nazi’s didn’t appreciate the ill, since to them they weren’t good enough workers. Therefore, Elie’s father was beaten to death because he wanted water to quench his thirst because dysentery left him terribly