Night By Elie Wiesel Rhetorical Analysis

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Pages: 2

In this quote, Wiesel expresses his empathy using metaphors of their real life fears and how they have surpassed them and become stronger because they keep surviving them. “We are the masters of nature, the masters of the world” They have learned how to handle nature and can take any type. They have learned to understand the way life and nature is moving and they have become aware.“We have transcended everything—death, fatigue, our natural needs.” They have overcame the unimaginable. They have had to face and deal with things that they used to be scared of and now they are over it. As well as their natural needs, it has to be overseen due to their current status in life and it has no time to be cared for. “We were stronger than cold and hunger, stronger than …show more content…
He continues to be stronger than the guns they threaten them with everyday and how wanting to die because of fear or relinquishing is something that they wouldn't do because they have been through it all and can still stand on their two feet. As some say that they are “doomed” of life, they continue to be “rootless” no matter how dehumanized they get. He contradicts the fact that a group of people that are seen as “nothing but numbers” can overcome this brutality. There is no way he applauds himself and others and says, “we are the only men on earth” that can do this everyday and wake up and will keep pushing like the breeze in the cold, hoping over pain like the rumbles in their stomach, alert as a gun and superasses the fear of death - the only men on earth still walking ready for whats next. Even, though they have overcame it all, Weisl may actually just mean by their luck and quick thinking they have all somehow made it out alive, as their body’s get weaker, their purpose or legacy or grows