13. Oktober 2013

for whom the bell tolls

In the battle of the world
Right a path and left
The left consumes the martyr
The right states a hero
What walks in the middle?

Rebellion is the human love
Young and strong
Why then choose the fall?
Apathy, apassion
Slavery's embrace of death
Fear of right and left?
Life's passion is immortal
Fire that burns
To free itself

For whom it may concern

1 Kommentar:

  1. One of Camus' primary arguments in The Rebel concerns the motivation for rebellion and revolution. While the two acts - which can be interpreted from Camus' writing as states of being - are radically different in most respects, they both stem from a basic human rejection of normative justice. If human beings become disenchanted with contemporary applications of justice, Camus suggests that they rebel. This rebellion, then, is the product of a basic contradiction between the human mind's unceasing quest for clarification and the apparently meaningless nature of the world. Described by Camus as "absurd", this latter perception must be examined with what Camus terms "lucidity." Camus concludes that the absurd sensibility contradicts itself because when it claims to believe in nothing, it believes in its own protest and the value of the protester's life. Therefore, this sensibility is logically a "point of departure" that irresistibly "exceeds itself." In the inborn impulse to rebel, on the other hand, we can deduce values that enable us to determine that murder and oppression are illegitimate and conclude with "hope for a new creation."

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