meaningless life essay

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    Mortality, a thing most people are, almost painfully, aware of. Though they may not want to think about it, a person's mortality affects them at every stage in their life. As an adolescent, it gives one the mentality of "You Only Live Once", as a middle-aged adult it makes one fall into a midlife crisis, and as an elderly person it makes one afraid of all the possible consequences of one’s actions. While some would argue that mortality is humanity’s one great downfall, there are others that would

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    Life and Death Overtakes

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    and machines”. There are also people that have negative connotations about death, rendering life even

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    insignificant creature, can possess an immense amount of energy when given the will to live, as they struggle trying to beat seeing the light. Virginia Woolf, in her essay “Death of a Moth,” emphasized how life is precious, as it can be instantaneously taken away from you, so you have to live life to the fullest, and to never give up hope. Throughout her essay, devices such as imagery, in addition to a certain syntax, and depressing tone, are used for the audience to understand her purpose of writing

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    Stephen Crane’s short story “A Mystery of Heroism” portrays the hidden heroism act that revolves around the main character, Collins. Through the challenges and problems that Collins encounters , Crane exemplifies the belief that war is cruel and meaningless. From the beginning , Crane shows us war is all about destruction, demolition and nothing more but blood. He does this by introducing a character named Fred Collins, who is described as an ordinary soldier who knows nothing about the purpose of

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    This poem was written in 1947 while the poet’s father suffered from blindness and several illnesses. Thomas wrote this poem from the perspective of a depressed son who eagerly desired to prolong his father’s life. In fact, not only was his father struggling to survive, Thomas’s personal life was also a mess. He suffered from mental illness from youth. His father died in 1952, five years after the poem was written. Only one year later, Dylan Thomas died in New York at the age of thirty-nine. By the

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    enjambed together with a variety of figurative language, until the boy succumbs to his injury. By combining an irregular form of iambic pentameter with dark symbolism, Frost captures the inevitably of death and its cruel, unpredictable appearances. Life is imperfect and Frost relies mostly on his sporadic iambic pentameter pattern and enjambment of sentences in “Out, out –” to highlight that. Poets incorporate iambic pentameter in their works so that the tone, diction, and overall language flows nicely

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    This poem was written in 1947 while the poet’s father suffered from blindness and several illnesses. Thomas wrote this poem from the perspective of a depressed son who eagerly desired to prolong his father’s life. In fact, not only was his father struggling to survive, Thomas’s personal life was also a mess. He suffered from mental illness from years ago. His father died in 1952, five years after the poem was written. Only one year later, Dylan Thomas died in New York at the age of thirty-nine. By

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    was a time when I myself lived my life without regard to the spirituality of life. I, however, was very lucky in that it did not take death looming over my head to realize this. Maybe the fact that my bout of depression’s onset happened sooner in life allowed me to see it sooner. Eric Simpson put it best as “We all die, like Ilyich, and if we only live to live, to create and carve our own meaning into the universe, then life itself becomes ultimately meaningless and painfully insignificant.”

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    The Tv Crichton Smith

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    THE TV Iain Crichton Smith, a Scottish poet, acclaimed for his focus on the ever-present theme of geographical exile. Through his work, he can be seen to describe the process of leaving home – particularly in a rural place similar to the island in which he grew up in. However, his use of exile in many different forms can be found in a variety of Crichton Smith’s poetry, resulting in what can be analysed as a deeper and more meaningful sense of the idea of exile. He effectively explores the cultural

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    opposition of light and darkness as symbols for both life and death.  This soliloquy is quite significant to the play as a whole since it demonstrates two very important themes as well as leading to a better understanding of Macbeth. Macbeth is talking to an officer, when hearing of his wife's demise his mood suddenly deepens into that of emptiness.  He

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