In the passages "Boy's Life" and "Emancipation: A Life Fable", there was the similar theme that " All things must come to an end." In Boy's Life the teacher is very lonely and thinks of the students as her family. Then, they all leave for the summer. In Emancipation: A Life Fable the cage opens accidentally then the cdritter escapes. After the critter left, the cage stayed open forever. I think that is the theme for "Emancipation: A Life Fable" because the cage the critter was in will now remain empty forever."So does he live, seeking, finding, joying and suffering.The door which accident had opened is still open, but the cage remains forever empty!" This critter didn't open the cage by itself. It was not on purpose.It was because the critter
Animals by Simon Rich is an outstanding short story which takes a unique perspective on the everyday life in a classroom. The story is written from the point of view of a hamster who spends his tortured life entrapped in a cage. From the first point in this story it is clear that the purpose of the writing is not to understand the hamster, but rather to analyse the different actions of the people, and to discover that how they act towards the hamsters reflects on their character. It is curious to view the everyday interactions of people through a different set of eyes, that is done by humanizing the narrator’s perspective. Based on the actions of the many people and the treatment of the class pet, the author suggests that human nature is very much a product of the financial circumstances a person is subjected to.
In “Happy Endings,” Margaret Atwood manipulates literary techniques to emphasize how each story can have different plots yet end up with the same ending. She makes the case that, in every ending, the characters finish having a happy ending and “eventually they die” (paragraph 4). She infers that it is the contents between the beginning, and the end that bring interest and challenge to the characters, while the beginnings are more fun. The “true connoisseurs” is an important element because it is what makes up the plot (paragraph 21). The six scenarios of “Happy Endings” introduce differences in the beginning and the middle of the plot but result in the same ending. The plot in each scenario focuses on the significance of understanding how
Endings are needed to keep life moving forward. The end helps one with dedication, interpretation, and expectation. As Alexander Graham Bell once said “as one door closes another one
At the end, the characters accept their motives, ambitions, hopes and fears which determine their actions
By the end of the story, the protagonist coming to terms with the reality of his situation and deciding to live with his fate showed how humans are willing to deal with what might be, to them, the worst situation imaginable, if it means they may still be able to live a decent life and for those they love; the theme of parasitism makes it more engaging by showing the struggle one also faces in a
He grew and throve very well in his small cage. “Here he grew, and throve in strength and beauty under the care of an invisible protecting hand.” The animal’s owner provided all the life supplies he needed and nourished him everyday. One day he discovered that the cage was open. The animal was scared at first, but then approached it. He decided to make a run for freedom. A leap for liberty. The animal dashed out of the cage and now lives free like any other wild animal. Waiting and then taking the risk was worth the chance.
"Whatever you do to the animals, you do to you." This is a powerful quote from the book, "Touching Spirit Bear." In the story, 15-year-old Cole is faced with a challenge. After smashing his classmates head into the ground, he is given the choice between jail time or surviving for a year on an island in the remote Alaskan wilderness. Like any criminal, he chooses to be freed from a cell and instead journeys to the Alaskan island. From there he thinks he's free, free to escape and do whatever he wants. Soon, however, he learns through symbolic moments and creatures that life isn't just about Cole Matthews.
The novel concluded with these important final words about human beings. These final words relate to the theme of the book which is the significance of your past affects your future dreams or goals. This theme is represented by the “green light”. He explains how humans’ struggle to achieve their goals or dreams because they try to re-create the past and are unable to move beyond the past by stating “the orgastic future that year by year recedes before us”. He then explains that people cannot escape their dream or goal and so they continue to move towards the green light and struggle to make their dreams come true (It eluded us then, but that’s no matter- tomorrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms farther”). The people would continue
In the book Ethan Frome and the short story “A Journey”, Edith Wharton uses the theme of trapped versus freedom. This theme is used to explore the concept of being trapped in a broken relationship and struggling to find freedom. In both “A Journey” and Ethan Frome, Wharton uses the symbol of a train, the theme of societal pressure, and the theme of death to illustrate the idea of trapped versus freedom.
Working for a wage is demeaning slavery According to the French writers Félicité Robert De Lamennais, "The work is everywhere and suffering is everywhere only there are sterile and fertile work, some infamous suffering and glorious suffering." Nowadays it’s becoming common for families, in our society, to independent their children and helped them find their way in life. Since the beginning of life, human evolution makes us work and think about our future, so sine our youth we have been conditioned to go to school, learn a job and try to be the best in what we were doing, but some are still finding their way out of life. It is in this optic that ‘the vastness of the darkness’ by Alistair Macleod, ‘complexion’ by Richard Rodriguez, and ‘MacDonald’s:
This foreshadows pending evilness. Author uses the words “as a time”, which reveals such a time being over soon. “Hope” is a human need; but now that the school boys are living lives like animals- eat, sleep, play- there is no need for “hope” or anymore civilization.
That feeling of releasing all stress and anger that is caused by the daily world is what one longs for at the end of the day. Living in a dull lifestyle of repetition, the mind will consistently stay in that routine in which all creativity and imagination evaporates. The journey one takes as a young child up the tree to reach its peak to then ride down those birches gives an incomparable experience. As one grows older, there is a consistent thought of wanting to already be at one’s goal in life and being what one always wished to be, but in this process one gets stuck in a job, or in a routine that they dislike, but it is something that they have to do to get to where they want to be. If one looks at the life of the girl in the movie The Devil Wears Prada, the girl wanted to be a big writer someday, but found herself stuck in a job working for someone who treated her as a pet and had a devious personality in a way that it blocked many from their dreams. The girl lost herself in her job and in return she lost her friends, her boyfriend, her old life, and her real self worth. In many ways, people go through this everyday and we lose sight of our true goals in life. With the image of the boy, the man uses the wisdom of the young boy conquering the birches as a sign for him to go back and conquer his fears and hurdles that are preventing him from riding down his own personal
Many readers prefer a happier ending but some stories have to end the way it was. As I see it, the author proves that not every story has to have a happy ending. “The law we broke!—the sin here so awfully revealed!—let these alone be in thy thoughts! I fear! I fear! It may be, that, when we forgot our God,—when we violated our reverence each for the other’s soul,—it was thenceforth vain to hope that we could meet hereafter, in an everlasting and pure
The two stories, "from Boy's Life”, and, "Emancipation: A Life Fable", share a similar theme. that theme is that although new situations can be uncomfortable, you should always try something new. That something new could lead to you becoming happier and more willing to attempt something else. They both go with this theme because the boy and the animal face a decision. Although we do not know what the boy's decision was, we know that the animal grew stronger and was happy because he decided to try something new.
In Ozu’s film, the Tokyo Story, has many scenes that define the human struggle, such as the struggle to make a living, aging and death of loved ones, and the way children eventually fall apart from their parents when they get older. The one human struggle from Ozu’s film that influenced the most empathy is the inevitable truth of life that the struggle for survival in society eventually drifts individuals apart such as parents and they're children when they begin to live independently and become to take care for only themselves because of their daily busy lives.