The Old man and the Sea
The book The Old Man and the Sea was written by Ernest Hemingway. Ernest Hemingway was both a fisherman and a Nobel Prize winner. The story is set in a small fishing village near the Cuban coast. Hemingway's expresses in his tone that he feels sorry for the old man. This is shown because he mentions everything that the old man doesn't have going well for him and also makes the reader realize the pain that the old man goes through. The point of view in The Old Man and the Sea is from that of the old man, Santiago.The Old Man and the Sea is about an old fisherman named Santiago who thinks that his luck has ran out. Before he got old he was a very good fisher and could catch plenty of fish. Now however he hardly ever catches anything. Santiago's young friend Manolin used to fish with him but he had to stop because his parents wanted him to fish with someone who caught something everyday. After weeks of not catching anything, Santiago goes out and catches the largest fish that he has ever seen in his life. He has a hard time getting it up and it takes away all of his strength. He has
Through the struggles of Santiago, Hemingway shows us that we must endure great pain and go through much suffering to reach our highest goals. Santiago knows that he is not doing very well but he still had to will and the drive to continue fishing, which is what he enjoys doing. He was bright in the sun and his head and back were dark purple, and in the sun, the stripes on his sides showed wide and light lavender. His experience as a fisherman gives him the victory that he wins over nature herself in the form of the large marlin and the sharks. Santiago shows that man is not made for defeat. He is unable to do anything about the hungry sharks. Santiago establishes his dignity through the code of values that he has because he is a fisherman. When he comes upon the marlin, he knows that he might not be able to return with the whole thing or even any of it. When he is awaken by Manolin, he finds that the fish that he caught was destroyed by the sharks and that all of his efforts were for not. Hemingway describes him by saying, Everything about him was old except his eyes and they were cheerful and undefeated. You have to work and work in order to get what you want. Santiago is the main character in Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea. However Manolin encourages Santiago to continue fishing because he still has much to learn about the sea. He sees the fish as being a superior being, even better and nobler than man is. This is what Santiago sees when he gets his first glimpse of the fish that he has been fighting with for three days.
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