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Methuselah In The Poisonwood Bible

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In this chapter of How to Read Literature Like a Professor, it becomes apparent that everything has the capability to be a symbol so defining something as representative of a singular meaning deprives it from delivering its full message. One of the most accurate symbols in the book The Poisonwood Bible is the mouthy parrot Methuselah. He could be described as a symbol of independence explaining how Nathan loathes this bird just as he does anything that speaks or thinks for itself. In his heated stupor Nathan flings Methuselah from his cage, and the parrot “opened his wings and fluttered like freedom itself” (Kingsolver 82). However Methuselah is not simply a symbol for independence and freedom, but for the consequences that freedom can reap

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