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Siddhartha: Overcoming Misfortunes Of The Past
Beginning of paper
On page 132 we read "Everything that was not suffered to the end and
finally concluded, recurred, and the same sorrows were undergone." What does
this mean in regards to Siddhartha and any other of the characters in Hesse's
story? Do you agree with this statement? Explain.
This quote is taken from the context of when Siddhartha is crossing the
....
Middle of paper ....me, perhaps a pool. According to
this quote, things repeat themselves in time. In a pool objects float around
until they finally make their way to the outlet. Events swirling around in time
without reconciliation are “trapped” until they are dealt with. The entire pool
makes up all that time is. All the experiences and thoughts of past, present.... |
Word count: 549 |
Page count: 2 |
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