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To what did wiesel compare the world?

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Final answer:

Wiesel compared the world to various notions: a Gothic church structure inspiring awe, a beautiful otherworldly realm full of beauty and quiet, and the stark, harsh return to reality likened to the aftermath of an opium dream.

Step-by-step explanation:

Wiesel's comparison of the world varies in the different texts provided. In one excerpt, the world is depicted as a Gothic pile, a church moving the protagonist with its sublime architecture and the contrast of the listeners' experiences against the overall grandeur. In another account, the world is likened to the soft floods of color in a sunset and envisioned as a place of infinite depth of beauty and quiet, representing hope and an otherworldly beauty. Lastly, the bleakness of the world is compared to the after-dream of an opium reveller, suggesting a depressing return to reality from a once-euphoric state.

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User Bhavani Ravi
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He compared it to a hermetically sealed cattle car. 
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User Mike Vosseller
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