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Comparing Invictus 'And The Myth Of Prometheus'

Decent Essays

Throughout the course of time, freedom and independence have been something either granted or needed to be achieved. In the passages of Invictus, The Declaration of Independence, The Crisis-Number 1, and The Myth of Prometheus it is discovered that whoever intends to gain freedom or independence must either work for it, or sacrifice for it. Throughout the lines of the documents and stories, it is easy to tell that achieving freedom is something easier said then done. While most people needed to sacrifice for freedom, the independence was always worth the struggle. In the poem Invictus by William E. Henley, the narrator speaks of being unconquerable, it is even the name of the poem. Throughout the poem, Henley writes about being unconquerable, and his unrelenting spirit is repetitive in the duration of the poem. The character that Henley writes about seems to be fighting to get out of a place that resembles Hell, and though the narrator’s struggle seems to be difficult, he gets out. He states at the end of the poem, “I am the master of my fate, I am the captain of …show more content…

He gave mankind fire, which made the god Zeus very angry, who then took fire away from the new creation. Zeus then created a deceitful human named Pandora, who was made the most beautiful woman in the land. Zeus’s present to Pandora was a jar, which she was forbidden to open. Hunt says, “She opened the jar and out flew all manner of evils, sorrows, plagues and misfortunes. However, the bottom of the jar held one good thing- hope” (1). By opening the jar, Pandora sent everything that could harm mankind out into the world, but in the process, she freed hope. Hope is what would save the mortals from the diseases and death, just the mere optimism that they would survive could help them. Pandora granted freedom to the evils of her universe, but in the process, she released

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