“Infuse your life with action. Don't wait for it to happen. Make it happen. Make your own future. Make your own hope.
Then the fates will know you as we know you”-Abbé Faria Life has it 's ups and downs. What is important to know is how to react in a constructive fashion to your problems, so you won 't make that same mistake again. “Die? Oh, no,” he exclaimed -- “not die now, after having lived and suffered so long and so much! Die?
Life is not predestined. Life is based upon the choices we make, who we interact with, and how we react to things. It is never too late to redirect our lives onto the right path, the hardest part is admitting when you’re
When reading the book “night” by Elie Wiesel, you can never be sure something is to be set in stone. Even the characters drastically change from societies previous distorted visions of a Jew to the primordial beast that dwells over the basic components of survival itself. For example, a selfless and cultured man known as Eliezer’s father is forced to adapt himself into a man so full of sorrow not even his own wife would be able to recognize him. What did this? Many may say it was the loss of God.
Willa Cather’s O Pioneers! depicts a barren, wind torn prairie in Hanover, Nebraska. The pioneers that live there try desperately to work the land, but the land continues to be working against them. The character referred to in this statement is Alexandra Bergson. She is focused and motivated, with an overall androgynous look. After her father dies, Alexandra is left in charge of the operations of the farm because she is the smartest of all of the children.
Death Comes for the Archbishop, by Willa Cather, revolves around the story of Bishop Jean Marie Latour, his death, and his legacy. Cather uses Latour as a vessel in order to display the world around him. It’s through him we learn about New Mexico, the people, and the visuals he encounters. He describes various legends, Indian traditions, religions Catholic Priests beliefs, and scenery as he travels along his spiritual journey reflecting on his new location. Latour’s point of view on New Mexico is filtered through his experiences, which is how Cather gains her audience.
In the book “O Pioneers!” Willa Cather discusses her views on the three philosophies of life. She makes it clear as to which one she personally adheres, from a Realistic, Romantic and Naturalistic view of the world. Cather uses many circumstances of each type of philosophy. Willa uses Romanticism lots of times in her story.
Hope is a powerful thing; more powerful than death itself. Night, by Elie Wiesel, is about a jewish boy who is put into a concentration camp during the Holocaust. Elie doubted his faith to survive but had others to lean on during the hardship. Elie had the support of others as a sense of hope to survive the long, cold nights, with little food and water.
"Now the night is coming to an end, The sun will rise and we will try again." With a new day comes a new chance at life. The night ending brings the end of the past and the start
The Holocaust novel, “Night”, by Elie Wiesel creates the theme of strength and hope and reveals how this event, the Holocaust, shall never be repeated again and the people of the Holocaust shall be remembered for the strength they showed was glorious. “NEVER SHALL I FORGET that night, the first night in camp, that turned my life into one long night seven times sealed… that smoke… the small faces of the children whose bodies I saw transformed into smoke under a silent sky… those flames that consumed my life forever…”(Wiesel 18). Elie speaks about how this sight of babies being thrown into flames will scar him forever and he will never be able to forget those children. It seems that he speaks in a strongly held voice, in the way that this is
Marked by the dehumanizing and horrific genocide of the Jewish people, the Holocaust was a significant conflict that fueled the militant period of the twentieth century. As the spearhead of the Nazi Party of Germany from 1934 to 1945, Adolf Hitler sponsored the brutal persecution and genocide of around six million Jewish individuals, along with many other casualties. Subjugated to the tyranny of the concentration and labor camps where they were stripped of their identity and liberty, the individuals that survived the Holocaust will carry the burden of their traumatic memories through their lifetime. In his memoir, Night, Elie Wiesel explores his harrowing experiences imprisoned in multiple concentration camps as a teenager during the Holocaust.
“If you’re walking through Hell, keep walking.” Winston Churchill explained. Every beginning has an ending, and every ending has a new beginning. Tomorrow is a new beginning, and rather than rejecting the life you never wanted, we need to have the courage to walk through the pain and complications. In both Romeo and Juliet and the book Sons of Grace by Mark Hughes, the characters learn to embrace the life they never wanted.
You have to make the best of what you have right now by doing everything to the best of your abilities; Living life with no
• Always evaluate the possible consequences of your decisions. • Never allow people or your circumstances to define who you are. • Always bless your
I believe people over think this question too much, I mean I get it, the question itself is vague and arises other questions. Even the word "meaning ", makes you think. But if we mean "the purpose of life. Then to me it 's not complex at all.