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Santiago's Loss

Decent Essays

There are many occasions in life in which a person faces an arduous task and falls short of their goal, and in many cases they ultimately lose sight of what is important in life. Through trials and triumphs, it is a person's character that truly defines their successfulness in life. Ernest Hemingway, author of Old Man and the Sea, skillfully uses Santiago’s words, “A man can be defeated but not destroyed,” to echo the resiliency of not only an old man, but of the nature of the entire human race, throughout his novel. To begin, the words defeated and destroyed must be defined and understood to recognize the different qualities they represent. For one to be defeated they find themselves in a situation where they are incapable of overcoming an obstacle. Or in other words, to fail a task. For example Santiago faced many challenges on his quest for luck. Catching a fish was one of the largest obstacles the old man faced. The experienced fisherman “had gone eighty-four days” with no luck catching a fish, and had …show more content…

In Santiago's mind, to be “destroyed” was to surrender good character. Destruction was evident in the old man’s journey when it seemed that he could not escape from the endless shark attacks. He began to feel the impact, as if “he himself were hit” (Hemingway 103). Destruction is on a greater scale than defeat-obliteration. Broken beyond repair, some might say. The idea that Santiago was destroyed, would be to say he was completely hopeless. The man began to wish that he “had never hooked that fish,” leading the readers to believe that he had wished that all the work, time, and strength that he had put into the fish had been for nothing. For it was “too good to last” (Hemingway 103). Defeat meant death. The sharks had taken away the man’s luck and in turn, “killed a man” (Hemingway

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