Most individuals think they have the worst life but the truth is we all are going through something Some people might be going through harder things but we are all going through something.…
Pelzer is the survivor of the third worst case of child-abuse in California's history, a case he vividly recalls in A Child Called "It". Here he tells of a childhood so horrific and, at times, so nauseating that while reading I found myself praying that there was a hell so Pelzer's parents could rot in it for all eternity. And not just hell, mind you, but a special place in hell designed specifically for people like this, a level of hell beyond anything Dante could imagine.…
They look to see a punishment other than the endless walking, but doesn’t see one. After looking for a little longer, Dante notices that the souls heads are pointing the wrong way. The souls necks are twisted, so that it causes endless pain. Dante feels bad for the souls, but Virgil quickly reprimands him for the compassion he is showing. While passing the fourth pit, Virgil tells Dante the names of the sinners that are there. He explains what the punishment for one and tells him why. He tells him that the sinner wanted to use unholy powers to see the future, and now has been forced to look backwards for all of eternity. After seeing the sorceress Mantua. Virgil tells a tale on the finding of Mantua. After Virgil completes the story, they move on to the fifth…
The thirteenth canto of Dante’s The Inferno clearly depicts several of the different themes that can be seen throughout the poem. Some of these themes are the idea of contrapasso, or the notion that the punishment dealt fits the crime committed, the portrayal of Hell as being devoid of hope, and the importance of fame. The images and language Dante uses to describe his experiences in the middle ring of the seventh circle of Hell, which houses the suicides, provide the reader with the feeling of despair and hopelessness present throughout the text, while also serving to show the idea of contrapasso and the underlying importance of fame.…
First, the author uses imagery to vividly explain the sufferable experience sinners will have in hell. For instance in the ninth paragraph Jonathan Edwards coldly states, " When you look forward, you shall see a long for ever, a boundless duration before you, which will swallow up your thoughts, and amaze your soul , and you will absolutely despair of ever having any deliverance,…
Whether or not there is a doomed afterlife in which is called “hell”, everybody has their own perception of what their “hell” would be like. Rather your view of hell is eternal detonation or a place consisting of deathly flames and Satan’s head down in a bucket of ice, most people do not wish to be summoned into the depths of hell. However; Jonathon Edward’s sermon, “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God,” portrays briefly the vivid imagery of how hell was represented during the Second Great Awakening. In addition, Edwards aim was to teach his listeners about the horror of hell. Thus, Edwards’s dramatic interpretation of hell frightened the people who followed by God’s word and urges those who don’t to call upon Christ to receive forgiveness.…
As Eliezer goes throughout the journey of hell, he goes through several camps of harsh treatment that no man can even think of. When he arrived at the new camp of Buna he described it as if it was the cold-hearted soul of a graveyard: "The camp looked as though it had been through an epidemic; empty and dead." (Pg.47). When Wiesel hears the word camp, he has an understanding of a horrifying prison with death instead of nature that creeps up on him like a devil filled with a heart of pure bloody torture. However, most of us, including myself, hear the word camp and think of an outside, adventurous experience living in a tent with the only fear of a bear or a small spider. We think of a relaxing, vacation like, village to have picnics, go out hunting and live in the beautiful hands of Mother- Nature. As Eliezer goes deeper in his reality nightmare, he finds that the never-ending torture keeps on getting worse over time: "The gates of the camp opened. It seemed as though an even darker night was waiting for us on the other side." (Pg.84). Well Eliezer was right. The other side was a darker hole filled with a devils bloody soul. They first went to camp Gleiwitz after a long snowy cold march and then…
Hell is a location where its inmates will be punished without any hope of relief, for eternity. Among those punished will be Satan,…
The struggle of people emotionally and physically is the downfall and corruption of society. S.E Hinton, author of The Outsiders tells a story about two kids named Johnny and Ponyboy who are in a gang called the Greasers. They live in a wrong doing world of gangs and fights. After Johnny protects Ponyboy by killing a rival gang member named Bob, the two boys run away. A young criminal named Dally helps them escape. After an incident with a burning church Johnny dies and Dally dies soon after because of the sorrow Johnny’s death caused him. In the novel The Outsiders, S.E Hinton demonstrates that violence can lead to nothing more than emotional hardships, crime, and death.…
This derives from Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy, a poem recounting an experience of a man journeying through hell, similarly Victor’s hell is an existential one brought about by his transgression against a Christian natural order. ..This hell…
“Things are rough all over.”(Hinton 35).The novel, The outsiders, By S.E. Hinton is about a conflict of Ponyboy and his family having struggles as a Greaser. Being a Gang that is broken on, is a struggle that makes their lives hard and difficult. While Ponyboy always sees things in a positive way to keep going. S.E. Hinton’s theme “ Things are rough all over.” is evident in the struggles Greasers and Socs face. However the Greasers face more struggles then Socs because, they live in poverty, plus they don't have a great education, and even though the Socs get in trouble too, they get all the breaks.…
Even people that appear perfect have character flaws. While not always fatal theses flaws are there. Many people in today’s society have been brought up to hide their imperfections. Hiding them always seems to be the answer. As a whole species we want to please other people because, humans are social creatures. Almost everyone growing up was taught the standard response to someone asking how they are doing. It has become clear that everybody has some reason for appearing to be who they so badly want to be thought of. Actually the majority of people are not who they say they are there just wearing a mask, a social mask. The daily conversations exchanged between two or more individuals and light and fluffy conversation where imperfections…
Everyone that does something bad ends up doing something good in life. With every mistake there is a lesson. If you don’t learn a lesson then you didn’t make a mistake. Mistakes can be just about everything. You can say the wrong words to the wrong person. That can be a mistake and it can end really badly. Lying is a mistake, because once you start you never stop. You can’t get anywhere in life if you lie. Are you gonna lie on a job resume? That can find out if you’re lying. Learn from the people you look up to, they mostly made a mistake. It can be a really bad mistake or a little one. Every mistake can be prevented. Everything happens for a reason.…
Obadiah's anger at the entering souls frustrated him. For he tried to provide his disclaimer through the volcano as the hole to hell, and the hot molten lava of death. This anger toward the individuals made hell physically exhausting, exerting the body from the very moment of entering. As the individual souls went through the process of hell they grew the same as Obadiah did. With first the longest level of discouragement torture physical, mental and psychological pain. These actions to have remorse for their actions, leaving them with the same feeling as Obadiah, a fake hope for help.…
As could be elaborated from the previous thought provoking question, the journey these people took was actually a similar hallucination of the four. In a stall-like room of a late 1920’s mental asylum, this story ends in a twist, revealing that this narrative of four men on a trip to hell and back for things they wish they could do (I.E. Suicide, murder, general crimes against humanity and the public, etc.) and becoming the embodiment of the four horsemen of the apocalypse. Each man has a hallucination, however, the entire story isn’t just prompted by painful boredom and silence between roommates. As the three with their stories come to a close, it is shown that they were actually using Hell as a metaphor to represent how poorly treated they…