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Sunday, February 17, 2019

Siddhartha: Overcoming Misfortunes Of The Past :: essays research papers

Siddhartha Overcoming Misfortunes of the PastOn page 132 we read "Everything that was not suffered to the end andfinally concluded, recurred, and the same sorrows were undergone." What doesthis mean in regards to Siddhartha and any former(a) of the characters in Hessesstory? Do you agree with this statement? Explain.     This extract is interpreted from the context of when Siddhartha is crossing theriver and he sees his reflection and it looks like his father. This quote refersto a repeating of events. It is illustrated by Brahmin being uninvolved fromSiddhartha and Siddhartha being separated from his own tidings. This parallels thequote in three ways. Taken literally it identifies the father-like-son candidateof the situation. It can be taken as a parable for the endlessness of snip aswell. Taken out of context, this quote identifies that anything that is notfollowed or all told worked through will continue to exist and it will repeatitself. & nbsp   Siddhartha left his father, Brahmin, at a young age to join the ascetics.Siddhartha is now considering the torture his father must have gone through not beholding his son again. Siddharthas son, too, was separated from his father.Without dealing with this situation, the distance between father and son wouldnever be reconciled. Thus the situation Siddhartha had with Brahmin would berepeated.     The quote can also be interpreted as a metaphor for time. Obviousrecurrences can be noted in time, suggesting that time repeats itself. kindaof a river, another symbol can be used for time, possibly a pocket billiards. According tothis quote, things repeat themselves in time. In a pocket billiards objects float arounduntil they finally make their way to the outlet. Events swirling around in timewithout reconciliation are trapped until they are dealt with. The entire poolmakes up all that time is. All the experiences and thoughts of past, present,an d future that have not been dismissed all contribute to the whole of time.     If the quote stood alone, without the context of Siddharthasreflections on his father and his son, it would state that anything that isntfinished through completion would forever bent in the cloud of time. Everything that has not suffered to the end... If something is not carried on tocompletion, it will repeat itself until the initiative is taken to finish it. ...recurred, and the same sorrows were undergone. I can identify with thisquote because at time I am prone to over committal. I will devote myself to toomany things and I cannot physically complete them all.

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