Literature would have little to no meaning without being an outlet for the human condition. There are different pieces of work to express all the possible aspects that could come to mind. Whether its emotions, fear of the unknown, loyalty, one’s own will, or the thought process, we can all understand in some way what it feels like to experience each condition. The ancient Greeks didn’t have the same understanding of the world as we do today. They might have known when summer changed to fall, but they didn’t know why. We as humans create reason for something to exist and fables were how they were expressed. Texts were written under those rules to describe everything from why seasons change to why greed should be avoided. Demeter gave the Greeks their …show more content…
In Hamlet, there is also a kiss ass, Polonius, a manipulative politician, Claudius, and fake friends, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern. Hamlet’s characteristics that to this day are still not fully known is the same way with most or all people, unable to pinpoint exactly what a person is like, we might generalize a person even though it might not define the person completely in intricate detail. People are not all black and white, but rather, reside in a gray area that can shift one's state of mind as time goes on and major events take place, good and bad. Traumatizing events leave scars that can’t go away no matter what is done to a person’s body. Billy Pilgrim is an example of how these events can break a person and in his case, causing someone to relive their worst moments. We live with our mistakes, fears, and guilt, things that can’t be taken away .No one would be the same person after if you watch your friend get shot and have to bury him right after. Billy didn’t have a formal education during the war, but he grew smarter in ways a written test couldn’t