Compare And Contrast Dillard's View Of Death

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Death: the feared five-letter word. Everyone is unsure of what is after scares many. Some believe in an afterlife, just to have some peace of mind. What is indisputable by any is that death is inevitable. Both Dillard and Woolf recognize death as a part of life, but what separates them, is their perception of death.
Dillard describes death as something beautiful. She describes it with almost admiration. To Dillard, death is not fatal. And with her use of several different symbols, she gets her point across that she views death as a rebirth of a person. Dillard makes her belief clear that one cannot have rebirth without first experiencing death.
Beginning her explanation, she recalls a moth throwing itself into a flame. She identifies herself

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