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Friday, September 8, 2017

'Fable by Janos Pilinszky'

' i of my favorite meters is metaphor by the germ Janos Pilinszky. I make this meter in truth interesting, because the author stepped out of the ordinary when he chargeed us the creature down as unruffled and golden creature. This curt poesy duologue about a lonely wildcat that wants to have a family or a fri subvert and it was pitiful because peck did non accept the barbarian. Thy misjudged it and killed it, because they off-key the fauna is unreliable for them. This poem has a great inwardness when the author showed the wolf is crush and friendly contrary what sight assume which is not basic all(prenominal) appearance occasion as they atomic number 18 still some social function deep down everyone we potfult show it.\nThe poem showed the wolf is oppressed animal, because all people believe and look into that wolves are ingenuous and ugly, while the wolf in this poem is different, it was abandoned as the author summons in musical note three, and whe n we read cable television five we induction it is emotional and kind. And it proficient wants to be with others as one of the family as we felt in cablegram 8th and ninth, but nothing felt for it or accepted it. spate were the no-good and redoubted character in the poem; they killed the wolf at the end of poem line 17.\nThe lesson what we learned from this poem is every thing in this spirit could be good or mischievous even for monsters. We shouldnt judge others by their appearance or history or what we heard. too we shadowt discern what inside them, so just should travel by them a casualty to prove and show us a reality of them. Also we taught we couldnt presumption of our thinking and thought process, because thought may be wrong sometimes; which leads to the oppression of others. gentleman not constantly good and peaceful, he also can be bad and dangerous more than wild animal and what happened during World war I and II, is the simplest sheath for how dang erous and inhumane human public life can be.\nIn conclusion, I would allege that the poem in reality raises many philosophic questions, which may not have a specific answers or a full o... '

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