John Steinbeck Meaning

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The most prominent meaning I found in The Pearl, by John Steinbeck, is to always be careful what you wish for. The finding of this magnificent, wonderful pearl fills Kino with hope and dreams for a better future. He begins with the basic things that are not possible for the lower class people. Kino and Juana could not pay to be married in the church, they both have barely any clothes, and Kino lost his harpoon a year ago, that harpoon is probably very important to obtaining food. Another very important thing that Kino hopes the pearl will help him get is an education for his son. This is practically unheard of and shocks all of Kino’s neighbors and friends because no one has enough to pay for education, but just maybe Coyotito will learn. All of these things Kino should have, education and clothing and marriage should be open to everyone. It is when Kino wishes for a …show more content…

We both wished for too much and when we got it, it was different than we had dreamed it would be. The rifle that Kino says he will get when he discovers the pearl, he gets. When Kino and Juana walk back into town “they seemed to carry two towers of darkness with them. Kino had a rifle across his arm and Juana carried her shawl like a sack over her shoulder. And in it was a small limp heavy bundle. The shawl was crusted with dried blood, and the bundle swayed a little as she walked” (88). Kino reenters the town with his rifle. The story comes full circle from when he claimed he would get a rifle with his newfound wealth. The rifle that Kino obtains at the end of the story is the rifle that killed Coyotito. Kino got what he wanted in the worst way possible and this is what it means to be careful what you wish for. If Kino had not turned selfish and greedy when he decided what he wanted to do with the riches of the pearl, perhaps he would not have been punished with the grief and hardships that fell on

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