Similarities Between Boys Life And Emancipation: A Life Fable

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Boys Life, and Emancipation: A Life Fable are very similar, yet very different. They both have the same theme, liberation. The way the author shows this theme in Boys Life is very figurative, though in Emancipation: A Life Fable it is shown very literally. To conclude, the two passages share the same theme, but show it in different ways.
The passages Boys Life and Emancipation: A Life Fable have a similar theme. The theme they both have is being liberated. A great example is in the passage Emancipation: A Life Fable, "Then slowly did he approach the door, dreading the unaccustomed, and would have closed it, but for such a task his limbs were purposeless," Another example is in the passage Boys Life, The world was out there, waiting beyond the square metal-rimmed windows. In conclusion, the shared theme in both passages is liberation. In conclusion, the themes are the same in both passages. While the theme in Boys Life and Emancipation: A Life Fable are similar, they are shown in different ways. In Boys Life, the character is a student in a school on the last day. This passage is written in third person. The character is also very eager to leave school. The whole class is waiting for the teacher to dismiss them from
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In Emancipation: A Life Fable the main character is an animal that was born in a cage, and is faced with an open door. The story is written in third person, unlike Boys Life. The author states, "So does he live, seeking finding, joying, suffering." The theme of liberation is very literal in this passage because the animal is leaving a cage that it has been in it's whole life, unlike in Boys Life where it is more figurative with the main character waiting to go on summer break. Chopin states, "this animal was born in a cage." To conclude, the themes in the passages are the same, but many details are

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