The Open Boat Sympathy

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Large brains, upright bodies, and opposable thumbs are all defining features of a human. “Being human,” however, goes beyond the physical, and often refers to acts of kindness, compassion, and virtues that stem from a trait unique to humans: empathy. In Stephen Crane’s “The Open Boat,” the story of a dying soldier becomes like a “human, living thing” (85) to the correspondent because the story’s theme, the experience of suffering, parallels his own situation and makes him empathetic.
The similarities between the predicament of the soldier and the correspondent’s own makes the story real and “living.” Stranded at sea, the correspondent is overcome with despair after realizing that “nature does not regard him as important” (84) enough to keep alive. He, like the …show more content…

Prior to his experience on the boat, the correspondent was “perfectly indifferent” (85) to the soldier’s situation, much less attempted to understand what it was like to be “a picture of a few throes in the breast of a poet” (85). To him it was no more than scribbles on paper, abstract and without meaning. However, after his circumstance renders him lonely and helpless, the soldier’s predicament, which previously seemed “less to him than the breaking of a pencil’s point” (85), becomes “an actuality” (85) to the correspondent, as concrete and real as his own tragedy. Overridden by their shared experience of suffering, the fact that the story is fictitious no longer matters to the correspondent. He then finds himself “dreaming of the slow and slower movements… of the soldier” (86) as he drifts aimlessly on the open water. The idea of “dreaming” implies the possibility of a transcendent experience, where through the merging of consciousness the correspondent and the soldier become one and the same. The story and its humanity, thus, becomes as present as the correspondent’s

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