“Do you see that chimney over there? See it? Do you see those flames? ( Yes‚ we did see the flames.) Over there-- that’s where you’re going to be taken…” (Page 40) Night by Elie Wiesel‚ published in the year 1956‚ is about Elie Wiesel and his horrible experience throughout the Holocaust. The book starts with twelve year old Wiesel evacuating from his home‚ and eventually separating from everyone in his family but his father Shlomo. For a majority of the novel‚ Shlomo is Elie’s reason to keep trying
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Robert Frost’s “Acquainted With the Night” begins with the instantly recognizable scene of a man walking out into the raining night‚ without any apparent destination in mind. This cliche picture is almost universally seen as portraying someone who is depressed because they feel they have failed at something‚ or perhaps something horrible has happened to them‚ such as the loss of a family member. The speaker in this poem is afflicted with the first option. He writes of how he took a step back and
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A Moment of my Summer Nights The most relaxing and jubilant moment for me after a long‚ hot day is the family time together in the backyard after dinner. It is a good day today and not yet dark. I made the hot‚ green tea in my husband’s favorite blue and white porcelain teapot‚ and brought it out to the table on the patio. The sky was a beautiful‚ landscape blue with little clouds; the cool breeze gently blew my face and brought the smell of fresh cut grass; the birds were chirping as they
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Night by Elie Wiesel was rather short novel detailing Wiesel’s experience during Hitler’s reign and the Holocaust. Despite the fact that it was short‚ it not only conveyed the struggles and hardships that people went through during the Holocaust well‚ it also was written in a condensed yet powerful way. Even though I have never lost a loved one or seen people be killed in person‚ the events in Wiesel’s writing seemed oddly relatable. I felt his panic when his father was written down and I felt the
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spiritual fallouts in a typical ignorant village. Obviously the tone is satirical. Pungent yet Horatian; Subtle and biting‚ the tone is that of a wronged person who sees the futility of a protest in the face of an ignorant army. The author recounts the night‚ a scorpion driven by continuous rain hidden beneath a rice sack stung the poet’s mother and ran off after the attack. The villagers tried to search for the insect in order to immobilize it so that the poison doesn’t spread since according to their
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It is God that has made us as we are‚ but it will be God‚ too‚ who will raise us up again. If we hear all this suffering and if there are still Jews left‚ then it is over‚ then Jews‚ instead if being doomed‚ will be held up as an example.” The book Night by Elie Wiesel is about what and how Elie‚ and other Jewish people‚ felt due to the barbarity they witnessed and endured in many concentration camps during the Holocaust. The Holocaust is one of the most mournful events in history‚ which left the world
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to immediately fall asleep and wake up to a better day. That night I dreamt of a place where the sun was always shined so bright it almost glowed‚ a place where everything there was no noise apart from the occasion sounds of nature‚ and the water was so still it could be mistaken for ice‚ a place surrounded by luscious green trees and colorful flora and when the sun set there was complete silence across the entire countryside. That night I dreamt of a place where I could feel connected and at
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extolled it; he burned my books at every opportunity‚ I bought more; he abused my mother‚ I tried to help her; he believed all that the white man said about him‚ I did not; he lived for the moment‚ I for the future‚ uncertain as it was” (207). This quote is significant because Mark is realizing how much of a failure his father is and how beliefs and values have led to that failure. His father thought education was worthless‚ he burned Mark’s books‚ he beat his wife‚ and most importantly‚ he believed
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Right? You don’t think them fish just die when it gets to be winter‚ do ya?” “No‚ but—“ “You’re goddam right they don’t‚” Horwitz said‚ and then drove off like a bat out of hell. pg. 109 – The conversation between Holden and the Taxi driver – This quote is important because it is one of the first persons to tell Holden what he is doing wrong and point out his immaturity in a sense. * “I took their check off them‚ but they wouldn’t let me pay it. The one with the glassed made me give it back to
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The City at Night I step forward into the deep‚ soft snow and hear the sound of a muffled packing of frozen wetness. All the sounds are muffled‚ yet somehow amplified by parentheses they fall hard but slow‚ despite the weight. I look at the cloud they fall from and think how the snowflake seems like a frozen flake of a billowy cloud. Its cold and the snow that falls on my upturned face froze on my eyelashes until I blinked and now the warmth of my cheeks melts the snowflake and its
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