Kino's Character In The Pearl By John Steinbeck

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Kino, the main character, goes on a quest to save his son, but throughout the story he develops additional goals and ends up with a negative outcome. Steinbeck begins his novel by introducing the conflict that puts Kino on his quest. Kino awakens to find his child bitten by a scorpion. After rushing to the doctor’s house, he realizes that he did not have a sufficient amount of money to pay for the doctor’s service. Later that day, the narrator reveals that Kino’s wife, “had not prayed directly for the recovery of the baby she had prayed that they might find a pearl for which to hire the doctor to cure the baby…” Therefore, as Kino was searching, he came upon a pearl that he knew would be enough to save his son. At the end of chapter 2, this is where Kino begins his quest to find a buyer and save his son. …show more content…

Initially, Kino wanted to find and sell a pearl so he can save his son. When the doctor refused to help Kino, he, “he struck the gate a crushing blow with his fist.” This shows how badly Kino wanted the doctor to cure his son from dying. This was a true and honest goal. However, as he found the pearl and kept it for a while, his dreams became more materialistic. In the text it states, “ And in the incandescence of the pearl the pictures formed of the things Kino’s minds had considered in the past and had given up as impossible.” Some of his new dreams were to get married in a church, get a rifle, buy new clothes, and he wanted his son to go to school. All of these were considered out of his social class. However, with the value of the pearl, not only can he save his son he can complete all of his other

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