preview

Sacrifices In Richard Wright's Black Boy

Decent Essays

Despite the disappointments that goes on in one’s life, failure can become a success. Richard Wright and Vincent Van Gogh are two examples of rags to riches. Richard had to overcome many obstacles to get where he is at now. Vincent dealt with illnesses and rejection most of his life. The one thing that both of these men have in common is they started off with nothing but ended up with something. From the novel Black Boy, Richard went through poverty, hunger, abandonment, and more when he was just a child. The mother was inadequate to provide her family with tons of food and permanent shelter for a long period of time (Wright 15). Richard was a troublesome child growing up. The decisions he made weren’t always the smartest. If you were to think about the complications he dealt with, you would understand why he made the decisions back then—burning the house down (Wright 4), killing a cat at such a young age only to get his dad’s trust (Wright 11), going back to the store to get groceries but getting beat up instead (Wright 17), and more. Many people would think it was an ignorant thing of Richard to do at the time, however, they did …show more content…

At the age of 15, his family suffered financially so instead of schooling he had to result in working. Since he had a catastrophic love life, Vincent’s only way to stay emotionally stable was to paint. He was a man with an irregular personality and put up with psychotic episodes during the last 2 years of his life. Before that he dealt with being bipolar and soon depressed. Both occurrences of depression were followed by an increase of energy and vigor. The studies identified the reasoning behind his illness as having temporal lobe epilepsy (Dietrich Blumer, M.D. 1). Van Gogh was considered a “tortured artist” (Templeton Reid, LLC. 1) due to many reasons. Rumor has it that Van Gogh cut off his ear and gave it to someone so they could hold onto it. He was later taken to the hospital for

Get Access