Pilate Dead In Toni Morrison's Song Of Solomon

Words: 1587
Pages: 7

Surmounting the Wall
As the early sun rose, light peaked through the concert hall window and illuminated the small black notes clinging to a deeply-yellowed manuscript. It was early, yet battling through fatigue was character building, I told myself. With my mind still pondering the enigma of humanity, I uncovered my cello and began to play.
A beautiful, warm sound flooded the room. The sound was reminiscent of a human voice: deep and robust, yet tender and gentle. The instrument was an elegant beast, brought to life by my fingers. The bow lightly tugged across the string, vibrating the surrounding air. The magic of the sound resonated within the expansive interior of its ligneous body and escaped through the delicately carved f-shaped holes.
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Literature is often seen as a mirror of humanity. Authors often weave pieces and bits of their own lives and throughout their novels providing a sharp reflection of the dichotomies existing within the outside society. Each character has their own story to fulfill; each one overcoming their own adversities throughout the novel. Indeed, humanity and its achievements are marked with failures and surmounted challenges. For instance, Toni Morrison’s prominent female figure, Pilate Dead in her novel Song of Solomon. Pilate is ostracized and rejected by society due to her lack of a naval. However, she chooses to persevere and surmounts her tribulations; becoming a safe haven for outcasts just like her, “I wish I’d a knowed more people. I would of loved ‘em all…I would a loved more” (Morrison 336). Indeed, by helping and sympathizing for others and overcoming the adversities challenging her, Pilate realizes her humanity, who she is, what her purpose in life is. Humanity is indeed mark by one’s individual failures and success through surmounting such failures and challenges. Indeed, the idea of facing adversity head on and overcoming such adversity is a fundamental foundation to defining not only the progress in society but also the basis for defining the concept of