Wiesel talks about older men being hanged, but it really didn’t grab his attention until they hanged a boy his age. Wiesel concluded from his visual experience that, “ The third rope was still moving; being so light, the child was still alive… For more than half an hour he stayed there, struggling between life and death, dying in slow agony under our eyes” (Wiesel 62). Wiesel uses very descriptive diction in this circumstance that assists people in comprehending the powerful emotions and thoughts roaming around in Wiesel’s mind.
The Crematories were mentioned early in the book, before they actually entered the concentration camps. While they were on the train, Madame Schachter yells, “The fire! The Furnace! Look, over there” (Wiesel 25). That gives the prisoners on the train a sense of fear for the first time. The prisoners didn’t want to believe her, but when they got off the train, “In front of them flames. In the air that smell of burning flesh.” Fear really exploded inside of them. Wiesel used foreshadowing there to give the reader a suspenseful mind, so that the reader would too, feel the same type of