Wiesel says that the soup tastes better than ever because he go revenge. The person getting executed was involved in the removal of his golden crown. It tasted better than ever because Wiesel got what he had wanted and they had payed for the wrong things that they had done. The second time he says what the soup tastes like is when he passes the young man who was not completely dead after his chair had fallen. This show that he thinks that this death is wrong and the youth should not have had to suffer like he did even though he had committed a wrongdoing. Wiesel's views on death change within this section in the book because he differentiates between a rightful death in his mind and a wrongful one.
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Alex FujaPart time nerd, Full time geek. Archives
June 2016
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