How Does Kino Change In The Pearl

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In the novella, The Pearl, Kino is an average fisherman who is content with his simple life. Everything changes for him when a scorpion attacks his son. His son becomes ill and needs medical attention, but the only doctor in their village is corrupt and arrogant and only works for money. It forces Kino to search for wealth and upon finding it, it sets him on a path of immense corruption. Over the course of the story, Kino develops from an ordinary man into a greedy and corrupt savage; Kino ends up being regretful and sorrowful over his actions.
At the beginning of the novella, Kino is content being a regular fisherman living an honest and simple life. Kino is waking up and starts his everyday morning ritual, “It was a morning like other mornings …show more content…

As people begin to find out about his newfound wealth, they begin to plot and attempt to steal it from him. They force Kino’s personality to change as he has to become animalistic and resort to primal tendencies in order to protect it. His behavior reaches such a low point that he attacks Juana, “He struck her in the face with his clenched fist and she fell among the boulders…” (57). This is a great example of his personality change because he viciously attacked his wife, the woman he loves, in order to protect his pearl. If Kino was in his normal frame of mind he would never have attacked his wife, especially over a material item. Kino’s insanity furthers when he stabs and murders a man who was trying to steal his pearl, “A dead man in the path and Kino’s knife, dark-bladed beside him.” (59). The original Kino is certainly gone at this point in the novella; he’s committed a crime in an attempt to safeguard his pearl. He has gone through a very clear character change when compared to how he acted at the beginning of the story. The pearl has caused irreversible damage and Kino’s greed only deepens because of …show more content…

When he peers into the pearl, he sees that it had changed just as he had: “and he dug among his clothes, and then he held the great pearl in his hand. He looked into it’s surface and and it was grey and ulcerous” (86). This was a symbolic change for both the pearl and Kino’s final changes. Both Kino and the Pearl started the novella as very pure entities, however, over the course of the story they both become tarnished and end up being flawed and imperfect. Kino throws the pearl back into the ocean, “Kino drew back his arm and flung the pearl with all his might’ (87). It shows his final personality change because Kino was finally able to purge his life of his corruption and he was making an attempt to redeem himself. He regrets his actions and damage he had caused to himself and the people around him. He knows things can never go back to the way they were but he was going to start taking steps to

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