What Does Coyotito Symbolize In The Pearl By John Steinbeck

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Throughout the story, The Pearl by John Steinbeck, the pearl acts as a symbol of various things to Kino. When Kino initially found the pearl it symbolizes his future and hopes. When he found the pearl he was able to visualize the future that his family will have after he sell the pearl. Through the pearl he saw “ Juana and Coyotito and himself standing and kneeling at the high altar, and they were being married now that they could pay.” This validated the fact that Kino was to foresee his family's bright future through the pearl. Throughout the story this symbol remained the same until the Kino gets corrupted and the pearl changed from the means of becoming wealthy to wealth itself, Kino stated that he can no longer discard the pearl for it has become his soul, it has become his reason for living . …show more content…

For example when Juana’s “ arm was up to throw [ the pearl] when he leaped at her and caught her arm and wrenched the pearl from her. He struck her in the face with his clenched fist and she fell among the boulders, and he kicked her in the side.” This shows that Kino has been blinded by greed and he decided to hurt his beloved wife.In the beginning of the story Kino never wish to hit his wife but the pearl changed him. Furthermore the pearl also symbolizes destruction and despair, when Kino visual his family’s once again the vision took an 180 degree change “ He looked into his pearl to find his vision. ‘When we sell it at last, I will have a rifle,’he said, and he looked into the shining surface for his rifle, but he saw only a huddled dark body on the ground with shining blood dripping from its throat. And he said quickly: ‘We will be married in a great church.’ And in the pearl he saw Juana with her beaten face crawling home through the night. "Our son must learn to read," he said

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