Perrault's Master Cat: Puss In Boots

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On the other hand, in “Master Cat: Puss in Boots”, the overall result only really rewarded the cat and his master. And the only reason the cat helps Marquis de Carabas is so that the cat would not be eaten by his master. At the end of the story it finishes with saying, “That very day he married the princess. The cat became a great lord and never again had to run after mice…”(Perrault 50). This shows how in the end the protagonist and his master gt what they want, even though it costs them a lot. It makes the peasants fear them, it creates a lie between themselves and the in-laws, and finally the cat cat ate the ogre who ruled the land, which makes that murder. The story’s moral pertains not just in the story, but to the world stating, “Young