English
This part of the story has to do with
Santiago against nature and
the sea. In this
part of the story, he goes out and fights nature in
the form of
terrible forces and dangerous creatures, among them, a
marlin, sharks
and hunger. He starts the story in a small skiff and
moves out in a
journey to capture a fish after a long losing streak of
eighty-four days.
Unfortunately his friend must desert him due to this
problem and a
greater force, his parents. Santiago must go out into the
danger alone. For
three harsh days and nights he fights a fish of
enormous power.
This is the second form of nature he must conquer.
Earlier in the
story, the first part of nature is himself, for which he
must fight off
his hunger. This is a harsh part of the story. He
manages though to
get a few bites in the form of flying fish and
dolphin of which
he would like to have salt on. This part of the
story tells of a cold and harsh sea, that is,
one that has value and
mystery as well
as death and danger. It has commercial value as well as
the population of
life in it. It is dark and treacherous though, and
every day there
is a challenge. A similar story tells about a tidal
pool with life
called `Cannery Road'.
This part of the story has to deal with
figures of Christ. It
mainly deals with
Santiago as being a figure of Christ and other
characters as
props, that is, characters which carry out the form of
biblical themes.
On the day before he leaves when he wakes up, Manolin,
his helper, comes
to his aid with food and drink. Also a point that
might be good is
that he has had bad luck with his goal for a great
period of time
and is sure it will work this time. Later, though, when
Santiago needs him
for the quest he sets out to do, Manolin deserts
him, although he
may not have wanted to at this time. In the novel
Santiago comes
upon a force bigger than his skiff, the marlin which
misleads him out
far past his intended reach. This is where he starts
to lose his
strength against something which seems a greater force.
Santiago has a
struggle of three days, which is significent because
of the three days in Easter, and continues to
fight on though his goal
may not aquire
anything. This is another idea through which Christ did,
a struggle to get
a goal done even though it may mean certain
destruction to
himself. This might accomplish nothing but the
satisfaction of
doing this and also has great risks. Finally he comes
upon a painful experience
with his hand which is in great pain and
won't move. This
is useful in the place where Christ loses his physical
self and has less
to deal with. On the third day, he recovers himself
and returns to
his home even though his only remaining treasure was a
broken skiff,
experience, and a torn up marlin. And in the final
conclusion, you
can see him dragging the mast of his skiff, a
cross-like
object, in his hand. This story has a certain sequence of
events, first it
has a hunter vs. his prey. This hunter does respect th
e prey.
Throughout the book it has this series of events: encounter,
battle, defeat,
and respect for the prey. This is Hemmingway's `Code of
Honor'.
This part of the novel has to do with
relationships between two
characters. The
first to discuss are Santiago and Manolin, Manolin
being the small
follower of the old man named Santiago. Manolin is a
small person that
follows Santiago and listens to his wisdom. They
treat each other
unfriendly though for Manolin calls the Santiago 'old
man' and he calls
Manolin `boy' which seems to be absurd. In that
situation I would
consider both of them to go see a doctor. The next
relationship to
talk about would be that between Santiago and the
village, which seems
to be much better. He is given credit for food and
he also is
waiting to show his greatness to the villageby catching a
great fish as
soon as he can. His thought on that, though, is that any
fisherman can
ctach it during the easy season but only a few can go out
and catch one
during the hard season. He has no consideration for the
luck, and would
rather try to fish through being exact rather than
being lucky. The
other relationship in this story has to do with
Manolin and his
parents. Manolin seems to be very rebellious against
his parents,
although he does submit to their demands. Santiago's
greatest link to
the village is the boy. Santiago may be poor in the
story, yet is
proud.
This story when compared to being
imaginative is good, but in
real life is
somewhat of a `Fish Story'. The part where an old man
being able to
load in a ton of fish is very unimaginable. The scenario,
though, is very
interesting for the part of the old man. He goes out
all alone into
the depths of the ocean without an idea for what is in
store. This story
has good points, for when it comes to the better
parts of the
story, it emphasizes by placing in mind step by step of
the way he does
certain actions. The part of the story which, to the
best of my
belief, had no part or reference in the story was the dream
of lions on a
beach of Africa, which this fisherman probably had never
even visited much
less seeing lions on a beach. This was like most
stories in the
main plot. First characters are introduced, then a
threat reveals
itself, showing true natures of all the characters, and
finally the
threat is fought off or it remains, leaving the reader
in suspense. This
had a good plot but needed more to go on in my
opinion.
Hemingway's strong parts of this story are
emphasized on
vocabulary. He
probably learned these fisherman terms for he once was a
fisherman in
Cuba. There is one problem to this, though. Throughout the
story he uses
these terms over and over although the ordinary person,
like me, would
forget them after the first use of them and
unfortunately he
doesn't ever re-coin the terms again throughout the
book. Some
vocabulary he uses stands for sharks or the sea itself.
Others he uses
for bait. The main idea though in this part is to let
the reader get
the feel for the life, setting and character of the
fisherman
himself. This is a great move to place yet is also very hard
to co-exist with
the average reader. This has some good points, though,
and among them is
review. The reader must review the story and skim it
in order to
rethink the concept of the word. Then he or she must return
to the current
position in the book and place it into the text. The
concept of
vocabulary is a standard not to live by, and should not be
placed into most
books unless the terms are to be used many times
throughout the
book.
Hemingway has merged three themes
already mentioned above
successfully unto
this book. Among them are figures of Christ, Nature
(the sea), and a
code of honor. This was challenging. The obvious ones
were nature, it's
cruelty and compassion. Nature caused his hand pain
yet healed it,
caused hunger yet satisfied it, and gave the fish yet
reclaimed it.
This is the way nature works. Nature is actually more
luck than a set
of rules, for it can shift back and forth with the
greatest of ease.
The second theme, religion, could not be easily
pulled from the
text. The best clue to where it happens is the falls of
Santiago as well
as his carrying the mast. This symbolizes the end of
Christ, although
Santiago on the other hand is just retiring for the
night. But it
could be interpreted as the end of the book for which it
is. The code of
honor is not actually probably the hardest to
interpret. It can
only be pulled from context, which is the hardest to
do. It has mainly
to do with the rise, battle and fall of the prey and
respect
following. The problem in this is that Santiago was at fault
for expanding out
so far, and it was dangerous. This is similiar to the
book A Journey to
the Center of the Earth, which I recently read.
No comments:
Post a Comment