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Te Pearl

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Essay title: Te Pearl

Ever since Midas' lust for gold, it appears to be that man has

acquired a greed and appetite for wealth. Juana, the Priest, and

the doctor have all undergone a change due to money. They are

all affected by their hunger for wealth and inturn are the base for

their own destruction, and the destruction of society. Steinbeck's

"The Pearl" is a study of man's self destruction through greed.

Juana, the faithful wife of Kino, a paltry peasant man, had

lived a spiritual life for what had seemed like as long as she

could remember. When her son Coyito fell ill from the bite of a

scorpion, she eagerly turned towards the spiritual aspects of life.

Beginning to pray for her son's endangered life. The doctor who

had resided in the upper-class section of the town, refused to

assistant the child, turning them away when they arrived at the

door. Lastly they turned to the sea to seek their fortune. When

Juana set sight on the "Pearl of The World." she felt as though

all her prayers had been answered, if she could have foreseen the

future what she would have seen would have been a mirror image of

her reality. Juana's husband was caught in a twisted realm of

mirrors, and they were all shattering one by one. In the night he

heard a "sound so soft that it might have been simply a

thought..." and quickly attacked the trespasser. This is where

the problems for Juana and her family began. The fear that had

mounted in Kino's body had taken control over his actions. Soon

even Juana who had always had faith in her husband, had doubted him

greatly. "It will destroy us all" she yelled as her attempt to

rid the family of the pearl had failed. Kino had not listened

however, and soon Juana began to lose her spiritual side and for a

long time she had forgotten her prayers that had at once meant so

much to her. She had tried to help Kino before to much trouble had

aroused, only to discover that she was not competent enough to

help.

A hypocrathic oath is said before each medical student is

granted a Doctors degree. In the oath they swear to aid the ill,

and cure the injured. In the village of La Paz there lived a

doctor who had earned his wealth by helping those that were ill and

could afford his services. Not once in his long career would he

have dared refuse to aid a wealthy lawyer or noblemen. However

when Kino and the group of money hungry peasants arrived at his

door with a poisoned child he had refused them entry saying "Have

I nothing better to do than cure insect bites for 'little Indians'?

I am a doctor, not a veterinary." for the doctor had known that

the peasants hadn't any money. He had been to Paris and had

enjoyed the splendors of the world, and therefore he wouldn't be

seen dealing with the less fortunate as he knew that the less

fortunate would surely always be just that-less fortunate. However

it seemed that he had been stereotypical of the less fortunate, as

he soon discovered when hearing of a great pearl discovered by the

peasants who had knocked upon his door earlier that day. A hunger

for wealth was what

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