Throughout the text, Thoreau tells the audience about all the standards that have been set upon them. Society wants them to be like the previous generations because they are supposedly better. Thoreau contradicts this and proves that it is stupid to try to be like someone else and that it distracts you from finding your true self. He tells the audience that it is better to follow their own pace and path as long as it will lead to their success.
Honestly, there isn't very many things Thoreau uses in this text, it's quite simple but there is two things that get used a lot, and that's metaphors and imagery. The author uses very simple to understand imagery so that the audience can visualize his point and understand what he is saying; which is that the older generation is not better than the new one. An example of this is when he compares a dead lion to a living dog to show the audience that despite the Lion being fiercer, it is powerless if it's dead and the dog is the opposite but is living.
Thoreau made people realize that it is futile to try to fit new generations into the mold of the old ones because they have a different pace to things. Back then everything was super slow and took eons to do but nowadays people live in a society where things get done almost instantly. It is better to use they're own methods than to conform to the old ones; better to be themselves than to be fake.
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