Conflict In The Alchemist

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Paulo Coelho, author of The Alchemist, portrays Santiago’s choice of whether or not to pursue his destiny, as the most important conflict of the novel. He shows this through the situational consequences of failure when following his destiny and the high risk of said situations. Of all the opportunities Santiago has to choose between quitting to look for the treasure or comfortably settle, the most important situation is the very first one that initiates the entire journey he is soon to endure. During the first situation, he needs to decide whether or not to sell his sheep, leave his home country, and embark on a long, trying journey. It’s paramount to the rest of the novel because when he sells his sheep, he learns how to take a risk which …show more content…

In the start of the novel, he is perfectly complacent with life as a nomad, with very little monetary worth. He has no qualms about marrying a girl he just likes and has met once, and prides himself for his reading abilities and understanding sheep. His whole identity is centered around sheep and not much else. He lacks life experience as anything other than a shepherd. Even though he has traveled along the land of his home country, his view of the world is limited to where his sheep can travel. After the events in the book, and the final resolution to the most important conflict, he has an entirely new focus and perspective. He has someone he truly loves, he has traveled to lands so far away he has to learn a new language to adapt, he has a deeper spiritual connection to the world, more than his relationship with his sheep could ever provide. Because of his solution to the conflict of making a choice, he develops as a character and becomes well-rounded as a person. Even if he never found the treasure in the end, he still would have been successful in resolving the conflict because of what he achieved and learned, because he no longer fears taking risks for the sake of something larger than himself because “fear of failure” was the true antagonist of the novel. The most important conflict in The Alchemist is Santiago’s choice between going after the treasure and settling; and his solution to pursue the treasure is successful not only because he acquires the gold at the end of the convoluted journey of a rainbow, shaped by fate and followed through belief, but also because throughout it all, he starts his adventure as a boy, but ends it as a

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