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Song Of Achilles

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In the 5th century Greece started to explore the math and create the legendary myths of goodness; in the 14th century, Europe after dark medieval age called for the renaissance and appreciated arts and the science; in the 18th centuries,the Great Britain examining the universe initiated the Industrial Revolution and strode toward the advancement. Human nearly spent all of its history to study the world and yet have not acquire enough knowledge about it because of its complexity. I believe that the universe runs more complicated than it appears, and its complexity drives people to wander about coincidence, fear strange existences and beings, and astonish at the unpredictable tragedies.

I read The Song of Achilles on a sultry summer night …show more content…
The limited items in the Room restrains Jack from gaining interests to new things but aggrandizes his fear toward unfamiliar items including sounds, people, furnitures, and basic infrastructures. “When Ma pees and stands up there’s awful roaring, I cry. ‘It’s OK,’ she says, wiping my face with the flat bits of her hand, ‘It’s just an automatic flush”(162). The contrast of reaction between Jack and Ma once stresses the influence caused by the Room to Jack—Jack confuses about the reality, and the bewilderment to the unknown existence causes the fear while fear itself begets more. Even though the toilet neither affects Jack’s life nor hurts him, the only automatic flush makes Jack fainted. To overcome the fear, Jack has to acknowledge the reality and challenges himself to take up the truth, understand the necessary courtesy, and memorize the social norms, meanwhile ignoring his five-year life in the Room. The intricate and complicated reality plays a significant role placing hinderance in the process in which Jack as a young boy starts to grow up to a real man, a hero eliminates the nightmares and saves

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