“Lower the mainsail, we are here”, yelped the First Mate Tom, “Get the captain out here, tell him we have arrived”. The captain came out from his room; he was young, buck fellow, who was a fine height. “Everyone get ready for departure onto the island. This is going to be one of the most dangerous adventures of all of your lives. Many people have gone to this island and died. Dead Bone is a dangerous island, but we will be victorious and leave with great treasure!”, yelled Captain Abraham, with great pride. “There is a ship off the port bow”, barked a crew member. “Ah, its the ship of the Crimson Captain. They must be here for the treasure too”, said Abraham. Captain Crimson was a notorious pirate captain, who is Abraham’s rival. Crimson has got in the way of Abraham before. “We will still get the treasure, and become rich”, said Abraham with great pride. Now all of Abraham’s crew was ecstatic and ready to find treasure. The crew got off the ship, and went onto the island. It was hot and steamy, and it could make a man pass out in minutes. Abraham lead his pirate crew through the brush of the island. The vegetation on the island was of like a jungle’s. There was tall trees with vines everywhere. “Make sure you watch your step, there are many traps on this island, as far as I’ve heard”, told Abraham to his crew. Abraham can ahead of a fork in the jungle. There was a sign there, and Abraham read it aloud to his crew. The sign said, “All that pass shall not return”. “Is this a threat”, Abraham said sarcastically. “No threat from a sign will stop my crew”, Abraham yelled out. Abraham lead his crew passed the sign, and there was now a path that the crew could walk on. Just then though, Abraham stepped on a secret button on the groun... ... middle of paper ... ...aid Crimson in a serious tone. “Draw your weapon Abraham”! Then Abraham and Crimson went into a sword fight. Abraham and Crimson were exchanging blows with swords, and the two became very beat-up. Finally Abraham slashed Crimson across his chest. He fell like a mighty oak. While this was happening, Tom was making mincemeat of Crimson’s crew, as he finished off the rest of them by himself. “You're an honorable opponent Abraham”, said Crimson in his dying breaths. Abraham pushed the body of Crimson of the side of the ledge. The body fell down and was never seen again. “Now it is time to take what is rightfully ours”, said Abraham. “Right”, said Tom. The two went into the middle of cave-like room, and opened the chest. Inside of it was a treasure that the two used to become rich and powerful. Abraham and Tom never again had to worry about anything in there lives again.
But nearly as soon as Marion's dreams of sailing became reality, the reality became a nightmare. On the voyage home, a whale rammed the schooner, ripping the seams and sending water into the hold. Before the schooner went down, the captain, al...
When the boys initially land on the island, they have tons of fun and are completely carefree. Only a couple of days later though, the “little ‘uns” begin to have dreams about beasts attacking them at night.
The seagulls in this story are used to symbolize human frailty and nature’s indifference to it. As the men continue their journey through the fierce waves, Crane incorporates the use of imagery to describe the nature around them by giving it gloomy colors that are often used to represent death. Toward the end of the story, as the men are still hoping to be rescued, they encounter a shark swimming around the boat that symbolizes that something bad is about to happen. At the end of the story, readers learn that the Oiler, Billie, dies, but if one pays close enough attention to the detail used in this story there is enough evidence to foreshadow the death of one character. In this story, “The Open Boat,” Stephen Crane uses imagery and symbolism through the use of colors and objects in nature to depict the characters lack of power over
After the boys crash on the island, their immediate reaction to the island is its beauty. The weather on the island was hot and humid, without a breeze. The look of the “dazzling beach and the water” (Golding) is unlike anything they have ever seen. The island was superior in their eyes as “The boys find themselves in a tropical paradise: bananas, coconuts, and other fruits are profusely available.” (Slayton) There was no fear and an instant commodore due to the circumstance. However, after becoming comfortable, a natural fear of the unknown begins to settle “as if it wasn’t a good island” (Golding) and they find themselves faced with an entity named, The Beast. This dark fear comes back to haunt them later.
Suddenly, they noticed something was passing by them in a distance of a half a mile. ?We perceived a low carriage, fixed on a sledge and drawn by dogs, pass on towards the north.? It was very strange to see another human/carriage on ice. It was a shock to the crew to see a single man on sled drag by dogs through Northern Sea. Comparing to a well equipped ship, the sled looked like a deadly ride. As mentioned earlier you could only see the endless ice surrounding them and they couldn?t believe that a single man would travel far from the Big Land. However, the man on a sled was a gigantic stature and most likely he was a strong and a brave man.
Shem, the son of Noah. He was born on the southern tip of the Tigris and
First came the pride, an overwhelming sense of achievement, an accomplishment due to great ambition, but slowly and enduringly surged a world of guilt and confusion, the conscience which I once thought diminished, began to grow, soon defeating the title and its rewards. Slowly the unforgotten memories from that merciless night overcame me and I succumbed to the incessant and horrific images, the bloody dagger, a lifeless corpse. I wash, I scrub, I tear at the flesh on my hands, trying desperately to cleanse myself of the blood. But the filthy witness remains, stained, never to be removed.
The purpose of the book is to tell the real story of pirates who lived in the past based on documented evidence. The book tells the original stories of people and crews without the changing of the story for entertainment purposes. Cordingly exposes more of the brutal parts of a pirate’s lifestyle that most books and movies tend
The reading of “The Boat” by Alistair Macleod is an interesting and sad story that displays many elements figuratively and literally. The first figurative element is the boat. At a literal perspective, the boat is used for fishing and boat rides, although these are not the only things that the boat represents. We learn that the father in some way, as been sacrificing his working life for his family, for something that he doesn’t absolutely love. This shows that he is in some way trapped, or imprisoned. The boat displays
The characters also are involved in the belief of the anti-transcendental philosophy. The story shows how each character acts with nature and each other. Many of the whalers must protect the boat and each other as they trek through the wild tides and horrible weather conditions. They try their hardest to fight these conditions, but sadly the narrator is the only survivor. These men exemplify the philosophy by fighting the animals; especially the whales ...
They are forced to contend with the realization that their survival does not matter to nature. The correspondent comes to the realization, “When it occurs to a man that nature does not regard him as important, and that she feels she would not maim the universe by disposing of him, he first wishes to throw bricks at the temple, and he hates deeply the fact that there are no bricks and no temples” (Crane 213). While the men may try to pin their trouble on the “mythicized deity,” that really does not serve them. When discussing this, Hilfer says, “The discomfiting thing about nature is that though we can address it, our messages can only come back stamped ‘return to sender’” (251). No matter how much the men in the boat try to make sense of what is happening to them, they cannot find the being or force behind
Treasure Island is one of the first texts to exposure modern culture to the cinematic world of piracy. This text, bursting with heroic themes and tantalizing twists and turns, stands as a striking example of romance in the pirate world. As the reader flips through the pages they come across a short section entitled “To the Hesitating Purchaser”, it is under this heading the author describes Treasure Island as “all the old romance, retold exactly in ancient way” . This text is an epic story of treasure, mystery, death and good victorious. The plot itself centers on the narrator Jim Hawkins, a boy who leaves his mother behind to find a buried treasure, the existence of which is found through mysteriou...
The Old Man and the Sea is a heroic tale of man’s strength pitted against forces he cannot control. It is a tale about an old Cuban fisherman and his three-day battle with a giant Marlin. Through the use of three prominent themes; friendship, bravery, and Christianity; the “Old Man and the Sea” strives to teach important life lessons to the reader.
The book “In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex” by Nathaniel Philbrick is tragic, eyes widening and heart wrenching where all the morals and ethics are gravely subjected to situation and questioned when it comes to survival. What they must do for survival? How man love their lives and no matter what strikes upon them, holler from behind, ambush their morale, yet they want to keep going just for the sake of living. The book is epitome of such a situation that encounters survival over morality. However, in the thrust of knowledge and oceans of secrets locked inside the chambers of this world, there is a heavy price men have to pay in the ordeal of yearning for knowledge.
Morehouse sent a boarding party to the ship. Below the decks, the ship’s charts had been tossed about, and the crewmen’s belongings were still in their quarters. The ship’s only lifeboat was missing. Three and a half feet of water was splattering in the ship’s bottom, though the cargo of industrial alcohol was still mostly there. There was a six-month supply of food and water—but no one to consume it.