Siddhartha - Three Stages "If you can not find someone better than yourself, or at least you are as good as you on your wonderful way of life, let's have a fun trip alone." Hermann Hesse's story of Siddhartha I will make this a reality. The hero Siddhartha handled Samanas and Gotama Buddha, the second was Kamala, then the ferry. These three parts correspond to the three stages of the journey to Siddhartha's enlightenment: the stage of the mind; the stage of the flesh; the stage of the transcendental.
If the novel is divided into three parts, the reader will understand it more clearly. Siddhartha's enlightenment journey has three stages; Siddhartha is an ascetic as a perception, or a ferry on the river. In the first phase, Siddhartha was an asceticist, and it happened when he walked with Samana and listened to the Buddha. The second stage Siddhartha was sentimental when he was involved in romantic activities with Kamala and commercial activities with Camaswamy. In the third stage, Siddhartha was a ferry, learning the concept of son's fate while listening to the river. By adding Part 3, the novels can be divided as follows: the four chapters before crossing the river, the four chapters after crossing the river, and the four chapters above the river. As this is the way Siddhartha lives, there are three parts that are appropriate. The novel is about the way to enlightenment, the last two main parts are not very practical.
Siddhartha - Three Stages "If you can not find someone better than yourself, or at least you are as good as you on your wonderful way of life, let's have a fun trip alone." Hermann Hesse's story of Siddhartha I will make this a reality. The hero Siddhartha handled Samanas and Gotama Buddha, the second was Kamala, then the ferry. These three parts correspond to the three stages that Siddhartha passed in the enlightenment journey: the stage of the mind; ... his novel using Hermann Hesse's shape in the form of Siddhartha, a symbol, and a confrontation, Siddhartha Literary means of symbolism and conflict to develop. Hermann Hesse 's novel "Siddhartha" is a "classical symmetrical novel that achieves perfection" (Hermann Hesse 25). That's the story of a young man looking for the real self. During his trip, Siddhartha converted to various religions and sought a religion that would help him find his identity.