1. On page 189, “Happiness only real when shared.” to me this is similar to ‘loving your neighbor here equals sharing your happiness’. On page 189, “Nature/Purity.” That quote goes with the “free personality”, to have a free personality you have to give up most of the society you live in.…
In the Tolstoy's version of the story their was only three main people for this story, but in the Jon Muth's version there is four main animals. For the first question of what we think about the question of who is the most person, I was going to say that the person you are with at that time should feel important and you can make them feel like you care, they should feel comfortable talking to you. In both stories they have the same question they wondered and they all got answered the same way. Both of the stories share the same themes and morals but they were expressed in their own way, because in one story their were animals and the other story was people. I would have talked more about how I felt about the three questions they asked, because…
In the history of Existentialism literature there were many major authors. One of them was Fyodor Dostoyevsky which wrote from 1821 through 1881. A few of Dostoyevsky famous existentialism literature is Notes from The Underground and Crime and Punishment. A second major author is Samuel Beckett, 1906 through 1989, wrote Waiting for Godot. A third major author is Simone de Beauvoir, 1908 through 1986, wrote The Mandarins and Tousles Hommes Sont Moriels (All Men are Mortal). Lastly Albert Camus, 1913 through 1960, wrote The Fall.…
This passage is at the very beginning of the novel when the narrator is introducing the topic of death.…
Tolstoy has never been concerned with rules. Whether it is with the structure of the novel, revered thought on established topics, or even his own past writing, Tolstoy disregards all of them in pursuit of his elusive hero. This constant, intense search for truth fills Tolstoy’s works with the uncanny lifelike quality that has immortalized him. But it can also fill them with contradictions and frustratingly radical conclusions. Tolstoy’s attitude towards his female characters is a prime example of this simultaneous beauty and confusion. He treats them with tender care and breaths such life into them that readers can’t help but fall in love. Yet he is also quick to send them off the stage, or even conclude their stories in ways that seem dangerously…
1. Tolstoy describes Ivan Ilyich’s desire to conform to the standards of his society and his belief that he was leading right life.…
1. What is the subject of this text? What is it about? What sections of the text in particular helped you come to this conclusion? And, what is the theme of the text? What central message is the writer trying to convey?…
"No one can conceive the variety of feelings which bore me onwards, like a hurricane, in the first enthusiasm of success. Life and death appeared to me ideal bounds, which I should first break through, and pour a torrent of light into our dark world." Chapter…
“Comrade, I did not want to kill you…But you were only an idea to before me, and abstraction that lived in my mind and called forth its appropriate response. It was an abstraction I stabbed. But now, for the first time, I see you are a man like me. I thought of your hand-grenades, of your bayonet, of your rifle; now I see your wife and your face and our fellowship. Forgive me, comrade. We always see it too late. Why do they never tell us that you are poor devils like us, that your mothers are just as anxious as ours, and that we have the same fear of death, and the same dying and the same agony-forgive me, comrade; how could you be my enemy?”~~Page 223…
It tells us not to live day to day but to enjoy life and explore the world that surrounds us. Mary Oliver begins with “I look upon everything as a brotherhood and a sisterhood/and I look upon time as no more than an idea/and I consider eternity as another possibility”. When brotherhood and sisterhood are mentioned I can only assume this to mean that all life is connected in sense that we all share the same environment and live in the same world. It seems that the poem is suggesting that although no one life should be greater than the next, we are all in this together. When she speaks of time as an idea and eternity as another possibility I feel as though she is again referencing the mystery of death. She tells us that in death anything is possible, there is simply no way of knowing what happens when you die and therefore anything is possible. Mary Oliver continues with saying that she looks upon “each name a comfortable music in the mouth/tending, as all music does, towards silence.” Hinting to me that all life has potential to be fun and pleasant and that all life eventually has its conclusion. She continues with “and each body a lion of courage, and something precious to the earth.” I believe this to mean each and every life has the ability to do wonderful things and the ability for boundless influence in our world. It also tells us that every life is a precious commodity, one…
In Leo Tolstoy’s short story, Master and Man, Tolstoy makes effective use of dramatic irony. Irony, as defined by the Encyclopaedia Brittanica, is “…a situation in which there is an incongruity between what is expected and what occurs.1” A well-known example of situational irony is found in Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. Two lovers end up killing themselves for one another in hasty passion. When in reality, if they had waited and discovered all the facts, they might have survived. Even though Shakespeare informs the audience this play will end tragically, the audience cannot help but think the love story will have a happy ending.…
To start off, the first of the two stanzas in the poem starts with the rhetorical question mentioned above which asks, “Why is our century worse than any others”, blatantly portraying that she is deeply unhappy about the state of Russia. This particular question was asked by many Russians, and it was a topic that always came up. There was widespread sorrow throughout the country. The reader is enthralled in the emotions of the poet when reading the question, and many readers are left feeling that somewhere out there, there’s always something worse.…
In the book “Crime and Punishment”, Dostoevsky explores the path of Raskolnikov who has faced many difficulties and obstacles throughout his life. He commits murder and is faced with the long and extremely painful journey of seeking redemption. Raskolnikov believes that by the law of nature, men have been divided into two groups of “ordinary” and “extraordinary”.…
Lines 26-30: One should not think so much of optimism and pessimism but attempt to capture the essence of life itself. If a certain conclusion must be drawn, one needs to allow room for other conclusions to be drawn as well.…
Dostoevsky’s short story “Dream of a Ridiculous man”, describes the difficulties of the main character in finding the meaning of life. He is troubled with the idea that life has no meaning and that science and logic only exist, analogized as the “head” in relation to the meaning of life. The story begins with the character believing that nothing in his life matters. He is set on killing himself until one night changes his perspective on the meaning of life completely. He begins to believe that science and logic are not enough to make people happy. He decides that people need something to believe in order to make living life worthwhile.…