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  1. Mortality: Trees, Lakes And Lions

    Mortality: Trees, Lakes and Lions. If you?ve been keeping up with popular
    culture, chances are you?ve seen The Lion King, a popular ...

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Mortality: Trees, Lakes And Lions

Submitted by labuenavida on December 1, 2006

Category: English
Words: 854 | Pages: 4
Views: 97
Popularity Rank: 76,024
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

If you’ve been keeping up with popular culture, chances are you’ve seen The Lion King, a popular Disney film created in the nineties. It opens up with a beautiful view of an African sunrise and a musical number, entitled “The Circle of Life”. As we witness the birth of the next lion king, a voice sings: “It’s the circle of life, and it moves us all”. For just an animated movie, the creators sneak a lot of wisdom into our brainwashed, media-obsessed heads. Although it may seem that the movie is intended solely for children, on a much deeper level it also entertains the thoughts of adults, on whose minds the idea of mortality is always creeping up.
We all wonder about our death. It is human nature to question our existence, and how and when it will we will meet our end. As a verse in Ecclesiastes says, “One event happeneth to them all” —death separates us, but it is what connects us through the generations as well. It is this very idea that E.B. White’s short story “Once More to the Lake” is based upon.
In the story, a father and his son took a summer trip to the lake where the father once spent his summers with his own father. During the visit, the father “began to sustain the illusion that he was I, and therefore, by simple transposition, that I was my father” (115). He felt that “the years were a mirage and that there had been no years” (115). Most likely a middle-aged man, he was realizing the generations he was connected to. Perhaps his trip to the lake was his “mid-life crisis”— he had an epiphany and realized he was coming closer to his death and that his son would eventually replace him just as he was replacing his own father.
The last paragraph of the story proves the most symbolic of them all. White writes of the boy, “Languidly, and with no thought of going in, I watched him, his hard little body, skinny and bare, saw him wince slightly as he pulled up around his vitals the small, soggy, icy garment. As he buckled...

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