The Road Cormac Mccarthy

1036 Words3 Pages

In The Road by Cormac McCarthy kindness is scarce. This means that individuals are forced to choose how they distribute their kindness and who holds the blame for their retraction of it. Whereas the father utilizes the goodness in the boy to find his destiny to move forward, the boy is able to interact with goodness itself and face the nightmare of their lives wholeheartedly, which pushes him to live. Everyone needs to exchange kindness with others to continue, and they can choose to let this kindness determine their path forward. Seeing a man struck by lightning dying on the side of the road, the father pushes the boy to keep walking, knowing that any help extended is help taken from his son. For the father, his son is the focus and goal of …show more content…

He finds meaning in being able to be kind to the boy. In contrast to the denial of self the father engages in to keep the boy alive, the boy calls his name, his actual name, which we never hear, once the father dies. When the father has nothing left, he has the boy, and that’s what’s important. For the father, the world is entirely fruitless except for his son in comparison to what it once was. He often comments on all that was lost, like his wife, human knowledge and human decency. For him, kindness is defined by the past. Compared to what had been previously, kindness only exists in dreams, storybooks and nave children like his son, whom he must prevent from giving so much that they die. But the son, growing up in a world of death and absence, is able to understand kindness as the only way forward, as the something in a world that is otherwise entirely devoid of hope. He is forced to find something beyond himself to follow, which is his father and the goodness they can do on the road. When his father quickly placates him from the disappointment of the beach, he gives the boy hope that there is a father and a boy just like them out there so that they are

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