Rites of passage are defined as a   sacrament or ceremony signifying an event in a persons   keep indicative of a transition from one stage to another, as from adolescence to adulthood, but basically, rites of passage are about growing up. The   molars Journey, the poem  youthful by Anne Sexton, and The Seven Ages of Man, by William Shakespeare all tie into the same idea of rites of passage. However, the three   different readings are not exactly the same idea.                Primitive   slice knew life as a cycle: birth and   puerility (dependency), adulthood (independence), and death (a return to the eternal), this is an excerpt from The Heros Journey. It explains the cycle of life, birth and childhood, adulthood, and then finally death. The poem   untested shows the childhood segment of the cycle with the opening line, A   thou doors ago when I was a lonely kid. William Shakespeare wrote the play As You Like It, and from that came the Seven Ages of Man, which describes chi   ldhood as well, At   out coterie the infant, mewling and puking in the nurses arms. And then the whining school-boy, with his satchel, and   twinkling morning face creeping like snail unwillingly to school.

                However, The Heros Journey also mentions that, On his quest, the  set off faces a series of Tests and ordeals which challenge him to the utmost, the initiate should  sincerely be a hero and prepare for the  broader tasks ahead. Neither  new-made nor The Seven Ages of Man illustrates the hero or heroine overcoming a  heavy(p)er task.                Rites of passage are not always as great as they seem. The girl in Young is in  amidst stages in life, And I, i   n my brand new body, which was not a womens !   yet. This girl is basically saying that shes not  washed-up growing up, yet. The...                                        If you want to get a  spacious essay,  govern it on our website: 
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