There are many things that prisoners scream in the cattle wagon. These things that are screamed certainly include ill wishes.
Near the beginning of the book when they were piled in the cattle wagon Elie said, the world is like a cattle wagon.
In the book "Night" by Elie Wiesel, the final destination of the cattle wagon carrying Elie and his fellow prisoners is Auschwitz, a concentration and extermination camp in Poland.
A paddy wagon is a police van for transporting prisoners.
On cattle drives the cowboys usually did not have a wagon but rode their horses.
Chuck. Wagon
they smelled death and the pain of other peoples scream
The author, Elie Wiesel, describes their cattle car as being like a "sealed cattle wagon." This metaphor signifies the dehumanizing conditions the prisoners faced during their transportation to the concentration camp, emphasizing their confinement, helplessness, and lack of basic rights.
Madam Schachter's screams had an adverse effect on the passengers in the cattle wagon. They got annoyed with her and when she would not shut up, they began to beat her.
Madam Schachter's screams had an adverse effect on the passengers in the cattle wagon. They got annoyed with her and when she would not shut up, they began to beat her.
Miners went by horse and cattle also by wagon
he compared the world to a cattle wagon.
Near the chuck wagon by a campfire.