Immortal Essays

  • The Immortal

    629 Words  | 2 Pages

    THEIMMORTAL               By:me n ur .............                                                                                I read the book called the immortal by Christofer Pike. The story takes place in an island Greco in Greece. It is a great island and is mostly for tourism. But near that island about 5 miles away from Greco is a sacred island of Delos which attracts many tourists. It is sacred because its very old and there are prehistoric ruins everywhere on it. But the main reason it

  • The Immortal Heroes of Homer’s Iliad

    1412 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Immortal Heroes of Homer’s Iliad In Homer’s Iliad, a warrior can only attain heroism and immortality by embracing an early death. Jean-Pierre Vernant describes this paradox in his essay, “A ‘Beautiful Death’ and the Disfigured Corpse in Homeric Epic.” According to Vernant, heroes accept the fact that life is short and “devote themselves completely and single-mindedly to war, adventure, glory, and death” (53). 1 Curiously, this is because heroes overcome death only when they embrace it (57)

  • Mortals vs. Immortals in The Iliad

    819 Words  | 2 Pages

    encompass. While there is a wide variety in strengths, weaknesses, and values, the characters can clearly be divided into two starkly different groups. One being the mortals and the other being the immortals. This divide is caused by the mortals’ fear of death and loss of family, as opposed to the immortals’ disregard for those concerns due to their deathlessness. The treatment of family members among the gods generally involves actions and conversations that are crass, vengeful, or selfish. There

  • Immortal Hopes of Animal Farm

    1853 Words  | 4 Pages

    Immortal Hopes of Animal Farm Communism is supposed to be a system under which all property would be held in common. The dignity of the poor workers oppressed by capitalism would be restored, and all people would live as equals in communism. This book, Animal Farm by George Orwell is an amusing story of allegory of the early history of the Soviet Union. Orwell wanted to make political writing into an art and to harmonize political concerns with artistry. As he became inspired by the Russian Revolution

  • The Immortal Villain of Washington Square

    2184 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Immortal Villain of Washington Square In Washington Square, Henry James confronts us with an exceptionally hopeless kind of tragedy. The oppressive circumstances of protagonists usually arise from failures of individual or social enlightenment. Such stories are optimistic to the extent that they suggest that progress might eventually lift mankind beyond the scope of the type of situations depicted. In Washington Square, however, truth itself is the oppressor -- a universal truth of human

  • Immortal Life vs. Immortal Name: Gilgamesh and Beowulf

    1447 Words  | 3 Pages

    Immortal Life vs. Immortal Name: Gilgamesh and Beowulf Death. Fate. Immortality. Destiny. All are subjects that we tend to avoid. While most of us hope for life after death, we tend not to dwell on this subject because we are uncomfortable with the unknown. On those rare occasions when we allow ourselves to think about the fact that our days are numbered, we wonder if death can be cheated and immortality gained. Some have suggested that being remembered is just as enduring as living forever. Thoughts

  • Comparing the Hero in Epic of Gilgamesh and Homer's Iliad

    744 Words  | 2 Pages

    "Two thirds they made him god and one third man" (14).  He seeks the protection of the gods and draws upon their wise counsel. Achilles is also of mortal-immortal heritage. Although he is often referred to as "son of Peleus" (a mortal), his mother, the sea nymph Thetis, had dipped him as a child in the River Styx causing him to be immortal everywhere except the heel by which she held him (?Achilles? par 2). Not unlike Gilgamesh, Achilles seeks the wise counsel of the gods and entreats his mother

  • Change In The Iliad

    1639 Words  | 4 Pages

    the immortals, they have the tendency of seizing the day. It almost sounds humbling when they say, “no man can turn aside nor escape…let us go on and win glory

  • Glorious Sceptre

    553 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Immortal Sceptre Within the Iliad Homer portrays through association and symbolism the sceptre as a representation of divine power. Agamemnon is the nominal owner of this sceptre, on which much emphasis is placed in the early stages of the poem. This relic, a sceptre once owned by Zeus, has a kingly and divine past and, as a result, is a symbol of authority, power, and recognition within the kingdom of Greece. Homer’s discussion of the sceptre in Books I and II serves to elucidate these characteristics

  • The Beach Man

    811 Words  | 2 Pages

    Obi Kenechukwu's Review of The Immortal Rules by Julie Kagawa. There is a saying that one shouldn’t judge a book by its cover, but I don’t always agree with the saying. I judge books--some of them, though--by their covers, and that’s what attracted me to this wonderful book, even more than its enticing blurb. Did I say this book is wonderful? Of course, it is. Sixty years ago, the human race was hit by a plague--Red Lung. This plague reduced the human population, thereby causing chaos everywhere

  • Philosophy of love

    693 Words  | 2 Pages

    the desire to be immortal and the only way that we are able to obtain immortality is through reproduction, and since the act of reproduction is a form of sexual love, then sexual love is in fact a vital part of “True love”. Sexual love is not eternal. This lust for pleasure will soon fade, but the part of love that is immortal, is a plutonic love. You can relate this theory to the birth of love that Diotima talks about. She says that love was born by a mortal mother and immortal father. The mother

  • Williams Arguments On The Existence Of Immortality And Death

    1492 Words  | 3 Pages

    status of being immortal. This is due to the end of the Markopoulos play, where the protagonist chooses to kill themselves due to the unbearable boredom due to exhausting one’s categorical desires. Williams explains the reason why this occurred, while attacking the concept of immortality. Williams refutes immortality on the premises of a continuous identity, and the future being attractive. Wheras Fischer rejects Williams due to the constraints of his argument, to argue that the immortal life would be

  • The Allure of Vampires and Immortality

    1033 Words  | 3 Pages

    perceptions surrounding them. The most important thing to ask yourself at this point is 'What is immortality?' Unfortunately this isn't as easily answered as asked. The Merriam Webster Dictionary says immortality is 'the quality or state of being immortal; esp : unending existence' while The World Book Encyclopedia states it as 'the continued and eternal life of a human being after the death of the body.' A more humorous definition can be found in The Devil's Dictionary by Ambrose Bierce: 'A

  • Impermanence, Selflessness, And Dissatisfaction

    1135 Words  | 3 Pages

    that are easily understood on an intellectual level, but to apply these concepts in one's life is challenging. Impermanence is concerned with the thought that nothing remains static, and change is to be expected. Selflessness holds that there is no immortal soul or external Self that exists in each individual; (Fadiman & Frager,1994:p 545) selflessness is closely connected with impermanence. Dissatisfaction is a larger concept entir ely- it involves the acknowledgment that suffering exists. The world

  • How has Blake depicted the tiger in this poem?

    909 Words  | 2 Pages

    poem thus implying that Blake is trying to put the tiger across as an aggressive animal. The next two words, "Burning bright" give the image of power and awe. This added to the next two lines,- "What immortal hand or eye, could frame thy fearful symmetry?" with words like 'fearful' and 'immortal' reinforces the tiger's image of power and strength and its God-like qualities of immortality and omnipotence. The next stanza gives the tiger an almost mythical status, with the line "In what distant

  • Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle

    868 Words  | 2 Pages

    in part, be put to death for. Through Socrates many years of philosophizing religion his most notable accomplishments were; mans existence on two planes and the immortal soul. He believed man existed on two planes, a physical plane, the human form in which people carry out their lives, and the spiritual form, the more concentrated immortal essence that is internal to all. Perhaps more significant is the spiritual form or soul, Socrates described as the seat of the mind and knowledge is closely related

  • Susan Mccarthy Immortality

    811 Words  | 2 Pages

    continue to divide are cancer cells (McCarthy 547). This elicits strong emotions from the reader, especially if they have had cancer or have seen a loved one fight against the disease. This brings into question whether the quality of life that an immortal one would be if after fifteen years or so they would develop

  • Dark Flame by Alison Noel

    910 Words  | 2 Pages

    of your fingertips? And no matter what you do, you just can’t grasp hold of it? Dark Flame, a book written by Alyson Noel and published by St. Martin’s Griffin in 2010, is a novel based towards young adults. Dark Flame is the fourth novel in the Immortal Series. This novel is all about hope and trust, which proves just how vigorous love can be. It all started with a spell. A spell that backfires and binds her to her greatest enemy. Someone who she abominated. Ever Bloom, a young desperate girl, is

  • Epic of Gilgamesh Essay - The Ever-Changing Gilgamesh

    547 Words  | 2 Pages

    Gilgamesh to change. He gains a friend, he makes a name for himself by killing Humbaba, and he tries to become immortal because of the death of Enkidu. Through these main actions his personality changes and he becomes a better person. The quest for immortality after the death of Enkidu is the first sign that Gilgamesh has changed. Gilgamesh becomes frightened when he realizes that he isn’t immortal. After the death of Enkidu, Gilgamesh tries to find immortality by trying to cross the ocean to find it.

  • Socrates And Descartes On Dual

    681 Words  | 2 Pages

    mind and body are separate and distinct substances. Mind is conscious and non-spatial and body is spatial but not conscious. While separate, these two substances interact. Both Socrates and Descartes argue that the mind and body are separable and immortal. In the Phaedo, Socrates argues that the body is attached to the soul but that the soul can exist independently of it. In fact, as the body drags the soul around, it only confuses the soul with its senses and does not allow the soul to obtain truth