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Monsters Born Through Salvation, By Stephen Crane

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Monsters Born Through Salvation, By Stephen Crane
Monsters Born Through Salvation Beauty isn’t always measured by the clothes one wears or how bright their smile is, but instead, beauty is portrayed through the goodness of one’s heart. Similarly, a good dead isn’t measured by the size of the deed, but by the amount of love people have for the person in spite of the cost of the good deed. Sometimes the consequence of breaking something are consoled by a friend, and sometimes the reward for being associated with saving a life is a tea party with fifteen empty seats. Segregation does not just separate people by color, but it also shows people's true colors through their actions and reactions. The qualifications of being a monster is much different than just having fangs, living in a swamp, or wearing a …show more content…
It may be as easy as hating the skin worn by a person with a beautiful heart. Stephen Crane’s The Monster proves that monsters can be heroes and anyone can be a monster. True friends stick together until the end, but the sad truth is, one does not know who the true friends are until they are at their lowest. They could be lucky and find someone who listens and consoles them, or they could find themselves sitting with one other person at a table set for seventeen. When Jimmie broke the Peony, he ran to Henry to seek some type of friendship and reassurance and that it was not the end of the world, and he found what he was looking for and more as Jimmie looked up to Henry. Ironically, the friendship that had once existed for Jimmie did not exist for Henry in the same way. After the fire, there was no comfort waiting for Henry. Instead, Jimmie brought his friends around to make fun of Henry as if he was a part of a Freak Show. The hate was not only coming from Henry’s former friend, but it was coming

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