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Ernest Hemingway's "The Old Man and the Sea"

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“The Old Man and the Sea” by Ernest Hemingway follows an older Cuban fisherman named Santiago who struggles with a giant marlin, “the biggest fish he had ever seen and bigger than he had ever heard of” (Hemingway 63), far out in the Gulf Stream. Two days and two nights pass in this struggle. Santiago, completely worn out and almost in delirium, uses all the strength he had left in him to pull the fish onto its side and stab the marlin with a harpoon putting an end to the long battle between the old man and the tenacious fish. On his way back to the shore, sharks are attracted to the trail of blood left in the water by the marlin. By night, the sharks gnaw round the marlin leaving only its skeleton. Having reached the shore with the only marlin’s skeleton, he slumps onto his bed and enters a deep sleep and begins to dream about lions. The main character of the story, Santiago, is an old Cuban fisherman who is a perfectionist and precise when it comes to fishing. Despite his precise techniques, he has no luck at sea. “He is a strange old man, still powerful and still wise in all the ways of his trade” (Burhans 2).Santiago is patient and unique among the fisherman. He is in love with the sea and considers it a living thing with a personality. The young boy in the story, Manolin, is the apprentice of Santiago and he has concern for the old man. His parents prefer that he work with more successful fishermen, but later he chooses to be loyal to Santiago. The old man and the sea’s

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