Tragedy Of An Imprisoned And Impre... _best_ | The Fiendish
psyche—a mental fortress where no doubt could enter and no weakness could escape. He had built the battlements high, fueled by a fiendish pride that mistook isolation for strength. He believed that to be untouched by the world was to be master of it.
He was the architect of his own catastrophe. For years, he had boasted of his impregnable The Fiendish Tragedy Of An Imprisoned And Impre...
The word “fiend” originally meant “enemy” (from Old English feond ). Over time, it came to mean a demon or a cruelly malignant person. In our context, a fiendish tragedy means: psyche—a mental fortress where no doubt could enter
Consider the real-life case of (America’s first serial killer) before he became a monster. He was an impoverished medical school student, stealing corpses to dissect. Or consider Mary Bell —a child trapped in neglect and poverty, who committed unthinkable acts. They did not emerge from nowhere; they emerged from locked rooms and empty bellies. He was the architect of his own catastrophe