Rassales and Repetativness
When one reads Rasselas, Prince of Abyssninia, they have to notices many similarities in the book, not only pertaining to the story, but also to the structure of the novel itself. The story of Rasselas, a young man searching for happiness, has the conclusion that there in no true happiness in the world. Not only has this story been told time and time again with different characters in a different setting, but always with the same conclusion, that there is no happiness; the story itself is repetitive in structure and in the findings of Rasselas. His journey takes him through different worlds and people, only to find something wrong with every culture and way of life. His final conclusion is that there is no truly Happy Valley, the very place he left.We not only see repetitiveness in the story, but in the very words of Rasselas himself. Rasselas states, "...I find one day and one hour exactly like another, except that the latter is still more tedio
and I lament that I have lost so much, and have gained so little. " He then seeks a "wise and happy man" who he finds out has lost his daughter, and concludes that he is not happy. I have already enjoyed too much: give me something to desire. He will end his journey in the very place he started it from, the very place he wanted to get away from, returning to the fact that he will never find true happiness. "Rasselas spends the length of the novel repeating his actions of thinking he has found happiness, and then finding out that he has not. He examines the young men of spirit and gaiety, only to see that they are not happy. Rasselas says of the happy man "Has wisdom no strength to arm the heart against calamity? Consider that external things are naturally variable, but truth and reason are always the same. " He realizes that happiness in not possessed bye the "wise and happy man". " Rasselas not only states that every house is like the next, in that time is just repeating itself, but he also lets us know that he is unhappy with his situation. The life of a solitary man will be certainly miserable, but not certainly devout. ""Happiness must be something solid and permanent, without fear and without uncertainty. ------------------------------------------------------------------------**Bibliography**. He then seeks the hermit, who is wise enough to distance himself from the evils of the world.
Common topics in this essay:
Happy Valley,
Prince Abyssninia,
Rasselas Rasselas,
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,
repeating actions,
truly happy,
wise happy,
true happiness,
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