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A Very Old Man With Enormous Wings : A Tale For Children

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The short story, “A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings: A Tale for Children” by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, shows the relationship between a small town and the oddity that is mentioned in the title of the story. The characters; Pelayo, his wife Elisenda, and Father Gonzaga are without a doubt the most affected by this phenomenon. The old man with wings brought happiness to Pelayo and improved his family’s economic status. He also unwillingly challenged Father Gonzaga as he was deciphering whether the old man was an angel or not and if his superiors in Rome would approve of it. Throughout the story, we see how the townspeople and the central characters interact with the old man with wings, and as a result, their attitude towards him reveals the …show more content…

Nevertheless, Pelayo and his wife did not fully believe their neighbor’s judgement about the strange being since they went against her judgement about clubbing him to death. In addition, Marquez introduces another similar character in the story such as Father Gonzaga, who is the religious authority in the town. But unlike Pelayo’s neighbor, Father Gonzaga actually had his doubts about whether the old man with wings was an angel or not,“The parish priest had his first suspicion of an imposter when he saw that he did not understand the language of God or know how to greet his ministers” (Marquez 358). It was believed among the Roman Catholic Church that Latin was God’s language, but when Father Gonzaga greeted Pelayo’s angel in Latin, the old man did not understand him. Also, Father Gonzaga examined that the old man was too human to be an angel, not only because of his ignorance of the Latin language, but for his rejection of the “food prescribed for angels” , and most of all his outlandish appearance, “...and nothing about him measured up to the proud dignity of angels” (Marquez 358). Although, this would have been enough to convince Father Gonzaga that the old man was not an angel, he still felt challenged to send a letter to his superiors in Rome. At this point, however, Marquez mocks the hierarchical structure of the Roman Catholic Church by describing the long process it would take for the letter to go through, “...he [Father

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