Title: The old man and the sea
Author: Ernest Hemingway
Date of publication: 1952
Genre: Novella
The sharks ate the Marlin that took Santiago so long to hook: this is the development of the old man and his ascending to a symbolic figure. enduring such an exhausting adventure is part of the true victory a@@nd puts an emphasis on the importance of the battle over the result.@@ “a man is destroyed but not defeated” reaffirms the idea of perseverance and determination, what defines a man’s worth is the struggle against the inevitable and the more difficult the battle, the more rewarding and powerful the man can prove himself.
Santiago has not caught a fish in 84 days: This is a powerful scene because it allows the reader to get an insight into the character and his qualities beyond a fisherman. It establishes the conflict that motivates his actions and perseverance throughout the book, the author emphasizes his confidence and determination even though he is struggling. The opine scene builds the setting to understand better the climax and consequences of his decisions, for his initial characterization, it is granted that no matter whether he hooks the marlin or dies in the process, we will emerge victorious.
He faces a 3-day battle with the Marlin: This scene tests the pride and the previous conceptions he had about himself. Even though the fish has already changed his definition of success and what life is all about, he has his moment of realization about the true value of a fisherman and the skills that are not measured by the number of fish that are caught. The marlin proves to be his most imposing and important opponent that changes the course of his life in significant ways.
Pride as the source of greatness and determination: the evidence is Santiago going back to his home with the skeleton of the Marlin, although he lost what he has been annihilating, he finds comfort in his strength during the fight and how he endured the pain. The main reward is not the fish but the thought of being victorious against nature's power that dominates others.
The struggle over the result is the principal quality of a man’s value: the evidence is the scene where the sharks eat the Marlin despite Santiago’s effort to attack and protect it. He proves his endurance and perseverance, defeating the sharks from another perspective. the real conflict of Santiago lies in the quest for his worth as a person not just as a fisherman and proving that he keeps these despite feeling disappointed makes him the actual winner of the battle.
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