Cool story, bro, but it's not actually a question.
In this analogy, the author suggests that like weeding a garden, improving oneself should be a gradual and continual process. By focusing on one virtue at a time, one can make steady progress towards overall improvement, rather than attempting to tackle everything at once and becoming overwhelmed. Just as tending to one bed allows for more thorough and effective weeding, concentrating on individual virtues can lead to deeper personal growth and development.
he compares himself to a rock because he thought that being an immortal was painful,they seem to be forgotten and abandoned,just like the rocks that are stuck on the road,lifeless,off the wheel of life.
It was during an attempt to kill Holmes.
try to trick him.
BUG
No, Buddha himself is not worshipped, rather Buddhists attempt to attain the state of enlightenment that Buddha himself achieved.
The cast of Reflections on My Attempt to Save the World - 2009 includes: Barry Humphries as himself
1. Trees- The speaker compares himself to trees by how they change over time and lose their leaves. He says that he is slowly becoming old and brittle. 2. Twilight- He writes that his youth is fading away like twilight's gradual darkening. 3. Death- He compares himslef with death to show that age is taking over everything in his life. 4. Fire- Compares himslef to fire to show that his youth is gone like ashes in a fire.
Gen. Erwin Rommel.
He Didn't. However, someone did attempt to kill 50 Cent.
He gave that name to himself in an attempt to prove to Vin that he was once human.
he suggests a feeling of solitude by saying he would not mind being a sea creature
Luke compares himself to Alice in Wonderland because, like her, he finds himself in a strange and fantastical world with its own peculiar rules and challenges. He sees himself as navigating through unfamiliar territory and encountering bizarre situations, much like Alice does in Lewis Carroll's classic story.