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This is a story about a man named Kino, a poor pearl diver who lives with his wife,
Juana, and their newborn, Coyotito.
One night, a scorpion stings Coyotito as he is sleeping. Despite Juana's attempts to suck
out the poison, the baby screams and needs medical attention.
Kino and his family walk to the nearest doctor to request aid, but the doctor refuses to
help them because they are poor.
To help pay for the doctor's services, Kino goes pearl diving in hopes to find a pearl
that will get them the money they need.
As he dives, he sees a large oyster and brings it back to his boat. After opening it, he
discovers a large pearl, which he deems "The Pearl of the World."
The town quickly celebrates this discovery, but then Kino becomes paranoid and suspicious
of his neighbors. In fact, at night, he fights off intruders who try to steal the pearl.
Kino walks into town to sell the pearl to the pearl dealers. However, the pearl dealers
try to lowball him, saying that the pearl is so big that no one will want it. Kino begins
to doubt the pearl's worth, but decides to sell it at the capitol himself.
That evening, Juana tries to dispose of the pearl, but Kino stops her. However, there
is a mysterious attacker that tries to steal the pearl. In the struggle, Kino kills the
man.
Returning to the village, they find that their home has been ransacked and destroyed. Panicked,
Kino decides they must travel quickly to the capitol before more people try to attack them.
They go through the mountains, but realize that they are being followed by three men,
two trackers and a man on horse with a gun.
Realizing that the trackers will eventually catch up to them, Kino decides that he must
kill the men. He sneaks up on them, but then hears Coyotito crying in the distance. The
man with the gun fires a shot in the direction of the crying and Kino takes that opportunity
to attack the men. He kills them all.
In the end, Kino and Juana return to the village with a dead Coyotito, who suffered a gunshot
to the head, and toss the pearl back into the ocean.
First, readers will discover that the characters in the story are connected through music,
not just to each other, but to nature. Kino and Juana note that everything has a song.
And while there are physical things in this world that create sound and music, like birds,
not everything makes sounds, yet Kino still can "hear" their songs. So it seems that the
music or song that each thing resonates is more figurative than literal. People can often
create connections on an emotional level with objects and people, a parallel similar to
the connectivity of music.
As demonstrated through Kino's own struggle with greed, readers, too, must wrestle with
this vice. The author sets forth an interesting idea: It is human nature that if we are given
one thing, we will always want more. That the greed to consume is in our nature.
However, the author also suggests that it is perhaps this greed that truly separates
humans from all other animals. And it is this commentary on our appetites, both for sustenance
and material things, that is noteworthy. Perhaps greed is good?
Lastly, there is an emphasis on the power of reading and education. Throughout the story,
Kino hopes that his son will be given the opportunity to learn to read because he recognizes
the disadvantage of being uneducated and ignorant in a society where knowledge is power.
For their poor town, anything that is told to them must be taken as the truth, as there
is no way for them to confirm or check if what they are being told is true or not. If
the pearl buyers say that the market for pearls is bad, the pearl divers must believe them
and sell their stock at lower prices.
So too, readers should recognize that ignorance is more detrimental than for its own sake.
Without access to knowledge, whether through self or others, the world becomes a dark place.