The book Repetition by the Danish philosopher Søren Kierkekoard was published in 1843 on the same day as another book, Tremor and Fear, and the main theme in both books was loss and loss, then the intimate and eager quest to regain that loss. Just as Abraham, in trembling and fear, had to sacrifice his son and then regain him again, the book of repetition revolves around a young man who lost his love and yearns for the return of his beloved, who is in fact Kirkcord himself, and the story of his love with Regina Olsen and his engagement with her, then the miserable end to which that engagement ended and his constant longing. To return to him. In addition, there is an inclusion of the story of Job and the adversity and suffering he faced in his life, and then his recovery of his lost world later. Repetition is, in its general framework, a love story or a short novel that describes instances of a person's conflict between his aesthetic, ideal and moral positions. He writes it instead of Kirkord, as In many of his books, a writer under the pseudonym is Constantine Constantius, according to the style of writing that Kirkord calls indirect communication, through which he aims to depersonalize the theme he deals with in the book, and to involve the reader and urge him to take a position on the issues raised, so that they become of a personal nature. More comprehensive.