Posts Tagged ‘Hemingway’

The Old Man And The Sea

Sunday, November 23rd, 2008

Ernest Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea is the tale of an old fisherman who strug­gles to do what fishermen are meant to do — catch fish. His luck is against him, it seems, and when he finally hooks a fish that would have made the village proud, he loses it to ruthless sharks.

Despite the religious symbolism (among other things) that has been attrib­uted to the story, Hemingway’s novella is, at heart, a simple fable — a state­ment of facts you might say. While in real life facts may be hidden from view, in this fictional world, they stand out in plain view, naked and unfor­giving. It is the simplicity that makes the greatest impres­sion on the reader — when the author says, “The Sun rose in the East today -” one is forced to look for metaphors, like a Roscharch test of liter­a­ture. What did he mean by that? Is that all there is to it?

With lessons of endurance and a dab of innocence, The Old Man and the Sea is a refresh­ingly beautiful Sunday after­noon read.