All The Light We Cannot See And Night Analysis

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Eric Burdon once said, “Inside each of us, there is the seed of both good and evil. It's a constant struggle as to which one will win. And one cannot exist without the other.” Through the years, good and evil have been warped to seem as if they are the same. There is a fine line between the two, and man has been on the extremes of both sides throughout history. The holocaust was a great example of the complexity of good and evil. It showed that in the eyes of the perpetrators, evil seemed to be the best thing possible for the world. The stories, All The Light We Cannot See and Night, show us that good and evil are greatly connected. There will always be good, evil, and the connection between them.
To begin, human nature has always shown the
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One of the ways good is shown during the war is the power of kindness. While being introduced to the camp, a young Pole in charge said to Elie and his group, “Have faith in life… we are all brothers” (Wiesel 41). Many men helping to enforce the rules felt that people were people no matter what. Even through their jobs were to torture and beat people, they felt like they didn’t deserve all of the punishment they received. They knew that there should always be a sense of family among the human race. Another example of good in the stories is friendship. After Werner saves Marie-Laure, she finds a can of peaches: “‘We will share,’ she says. ‘For what you did’” (Doerr 470). The war brought out the strong relationships in people. When the victims of war found someone they respected, they showed friendship by serving them. They were willing to sacrifice their safety for others. People’s true colors shine through when they are faced with trials. Rescuers are a great example …show more content…
Without evil, there would be no good. There would be nothing to differentiate the two. An ancient book reads, “And if ye shall say there is no law, ye shall also say there is no sin. If ye shall say there is no sin, ye shall also say there is no righteousness” (“2 Nephi 2.”). This shows that without both good and evil, everything would seem the same. Choices would have no meaning and everything we did would seem justifiable. The evil drives the good because if there truly was no evil acts, then no good could counteract the original choices made. Furthermore, without the competition of good and evil, there would cease to be any kind of change. If one of the two factors were drawn out of the equation, the other would lose it’s value quickly. After evil had came to an end, Volkheimer was left with nothing to fight for: “[he] paces in the harsh dazzle of the billboard lights and feels his loneliness on him like a disease” (Doerr 498). The power between the two is needed in order to keep a balance in the universe. Volkheimer felt empty because there was no drastic evil in his life. He felt as if he had no purpose simply because there was nothing left for him to fight for. Evidently, evil and good are forces that drive each