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Merlot As An Epic Hero

Decent Essays

F. Scott Fitzgerald once said, “Show me a hero and I’ll write you a tragedy.” Although there is a lot of conflict about what he meant, one idea is that an audience falls in love with a hero and then that hero ends up dead. For example, in the epic poem Beowulf, the hero is Beowulf himself, who does many noble things for people and then gets killed at the end of the story. Mostly everyone has someone in their life who they look up to and admire; a person they aspire to be. However, most of the time this hero in their life is older than them, and eventually they lose this idol. In my life, my hero was not a person, but an animal. My dog Merlot was important in my life because I could tell her anything, she comforted me in hard times, and …show more content…

The first lesson I learned from her actions was to always clean up after myself. When I was about two or three years old, every night I would leave my toys scattered in the living room. Every time this happened, Merlot would pick up each and every toy and place them all in a neat pile at the foot of my bed. I don’t think many dogs do this without being taught, which seems amazing to me. Another lesson I learned from her was to never shut people out. She didn’t directly teach me this, but I did learn it because of her. Approximately one year before she died, I began to shut my door at night. Honestly, I have no idea why I did that. When her time came to end, though, I realized that I had been shutting her out of my life for the past year, a year that I would never get back. The regret that I felt was overwhelming, and one of the reasons I cried for days when she died. The final lesson she taught me is to not be afraid of the end. On the day we put her down, she was happy as ever. She wagged her tail (as much as she could) and went about the day as usual. She knew that her time was up, but showed no fear. There are definitely many life lessons that Merlot taught

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