In Charles Schulz's Snoopy and...
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In Charles Schulz's Snoopy and the Red Baron, Snoopy is a very determined World War I pilot. With great courage and verve Snoopy takes a Sopwith Camel time and time again into the sky to challenge the infamous Red Baron. But the desire and the effort are never enough. Snoopy is foiled repeatedly and the level of his frustration soars. In dejection Snoopy complains, "Curse the Red Baron and all his kind! Curse the wickedness in this world! Curse the evil that causes all this unhappiness!" What Charles Schulz is telling us through this story of Snoopy's misery is that failure is rampant in the world. We entertain visions of destroying our chief enemies, but something inevitably comes to take the joys out of our lives. Our best dreams and noblest aspirations evaporate with the realities of our failures. In the end, we may simply surrender to failure and can only curse the world, its wickedness and evil. In our age we have witnessed some of the most severe pessimism ever expressed. One would think that such dread would cause people to welcome death. Instead, like Job in our lesson, they cling to their awful lot and utter their mournful complaint.
