The Old Man And The Bear Analysis

1437 Words6 Pages

The Old Man and the Sea has been regarded as a new classic following the standard of the American myth and folk tale and some glimpses on a comparison with William Faulkner’s The Bear that is one of the seasoned classics may come to prove that point and asserts that achievement of grace through the struggle with nature and in both there is that wild creature that the protagonists love and admire but have to kill learning a deeper wisdom. The Bear had appeared originally in 1930 as a short story titled Lion and then to be enlarged in a section of the novel Go Down, Moses in July 1942. Despite the fact that the narrative of The Bear contains many characters but the central figures that emphasize the notion of the mythic, the supernatural, and the religious that pervade the story are the young boy Ike and his tutor Sam Fathers. Beside Sam Fathers stands as a spiritual guide for the boy, he also stands to reflect the spirit of the nature. Sam Fathers teaches the boy hunting, the mysteries of noble hunting, the mysteries of the wilderness, and tells him the stories of the old people and old times that would become later part of Ike’s present. Ike becomes an expert hunter as he grows older and it should be noted that he has been baptized previously by Sam Fathers with the blood of the …show more content…

Both stories mirror religious and social meanings associated with the relationship of a man and object in nature as well as in both the old men Santiago and Sam Fathers and their apprenticeship Ike and Manolin treat their craft as personal immortality; Claire Rosenfield points out

Open Document