# Humanity
Fiction | A Human in An Inhuman Society
Short Story based on a real character. Every night on my way home, I pass a dark corner and encounter a donkey lying there, a donkey that has worked very hard over the years to carry his master's load. His master has left him, abandoned him to die. His graying mane falls into his eyes, and flies swarm his ragged and dirty coat. His front legs wobble and falter as if they both have healed poorly after grievous injury. I look into his eyes and can see years of hard labor. The donkey struggles along, with a noble sense of purpose. He seems to know where he wants to go, but he manages only to proceed a few feet before falling. I watch, silently willing him on as he manages to regain an upright position, but then, he trembles and collapses into a heap once more.
A Letter to An Unborn Baby
When pondering the future of our world, there is no doubt that we will affect it--perhaps more negatively than positively. In order to give you an idea of what I thought of, I compared it to a letter my friend Sara wrote to her unborn child and a poem I read in chapter two of Western Wind: An Introduction to Poetry, where my thoughts are demonstrated with the poem, “No Second Troy” by William Butler Yeats. In his poem, Yeats describes how a character is similar to Helen of Troy because her beauty and power brings about destruction.
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I Highly Condemn Inhumanity
As I am growing older, day by day I observe people more deeply. I observe people think superficially. Their judgments, vision, and perception are always based on superficial things. I am not saying all is wrong and I am right. I am just talking about the fact that we as humans are not worth being human. While humans are said to be the best creation of God. But humans forget they can be best based on their deeds, actions, kindness, and morals, not on their status and inhuman behaviours.
Little Women and Brown Laurie
Theodore Laurie Lawrence is one of the most complicated characters in Little Women and his cultural and cinematic history is also complicated. More than often the Hollywood adaptations of the book changes our perspective of the characters. In the original book that was published in 1868, Laurie is both foreign and androgynous.