Chapter 2
The second chapter begins with a description of the town's broad estuary.
Steinbeck characteristically begins with the larger panorama of the lay of the land
and then moves into progressively smaller details in the landscape. On the beach
are the villager's canoes -- seaworthy boats that are passed down from father to
son and are protected against the elements by a shell plaster made from a secret
recipe known only to the fishing people. Also on the beach are dogs and pigs that
search for dead fish and birds to eat. The estuary is home to numerous sea flora
and fauna such as fiddler crabs, eel grass and the poisonous spotted botete fish.
Due to the effects of the sun and sea mist a hazy blanket of moisture often hangs
over the coast and causes mirages to appear. As a result the villagers have learned
to trust their instincts more than their eyes.
Kino and Juana with Coyotito come to the beach to put out to sea in Kino's canoe.
The canoe has been handed down from Kino's grandfather and father and is his
only valuable possession; moreover, without the canoe Kino and his family would
be unable to fish and hunt pearls and they would starve. Kino places his diving
rock and ropes in the canoe.
Juana puts a seaweed poultice on Coyotito's arm. The narrator observes that the
poultice will do more for the baby's wound than anything the doctor could do but
that, in her ignorance, Juana prays that Kino might find a pearl of sufficient value
to pay the doctor. Kino and Juana get in the canoe and together they paddle out to
the oyster bed. The narrator states that this oyster bed has been well worked since
the days when it made the King of Spain a great power. A pearl forms in an
oyster when a grain of sand irritates the oyster's flesh until the oyster forms a
protective shell around the irritation. The resulting pearl is thus an accident and
finding one is a matter of luck.
Using his diving stone, Kino sinks to the seafloor and carefully begins placing
oysters in his basket. The Song of the Sea is in Kino's ears and interwoven with it
is the Song of the Pearl That Might Be. Because of Coyotito's illness the Song of
the Pearl is louder that day than on other days. Kino is young and strong and can
hold is breath for more than two minutes at a time. Just before Kino reaches the
point where he must return to the surface for air, however, he sees a large oyster
with a reflective flash inside. Hopeful, Kino grabs the oyster and returns to the
canoe. Not wanting to press their luck, Juana and Kino ignore the large oyster for
a moment but Kino soon opens it with his knife and they discover a large, perfect
pearl. The narrator describes it as "the greatest pearl in the world."
Holding the pearl in his damaged hand, Kino begins to imagine the possibilities
that have suddenly opened up to him through the wealth the pearl will bring his
family. Juana calls Kino's attention to Coyotito's shoulder where the swelling has
subsided and Kino's joy at his good fortune overflows in a loud cry of happiness
that all the other oyster divers out on the water can hear.
Analysis
Steinbeck begins this chapter by first describing the larger panorama of the
surrounding terrain before moving onto descriptions of progressively smaller
details in the landscape. In this manner the fisherpeople are linked to the larger
natural world of the estuary, which encompasses not only the lush sea life, but
also the villager's canoes on the beach and the curtain of Gulf moisture that
pervades the town.
The narrator's interjections throughout this chapter are important for through them
we learn details that are hidden from the characters but which affect our reading of
them. For instance, the reader knows that the seaweed poultice will do more to
treat Coyotito's wound than anything the doctor could have provided will. Juana,
who does not know this, continues to pray for money to pay the doctor. The
narrator also informs the reader that the pearl that Kino holds is "the pearl of the
world." Because Kino does not know this he will never know what constitutes its
fair market value.
This chapter also serves to broaden the reader's understanding of Juana's role in
the family. We learn, for instance, that she is an active and necessary partner in
the process of gathering pearls. Thus, not only does she sustain the family by
caring for Coyotito and preparing their meals but she also helps row the canoe to
the oyster beds. Her relationship with Kino has a strong element of pragmatism
made necessary by their poverty and the physical difficulties inherent to their daily
work. This is why the narrator observes of Kino's canoe that "it was at one
property and source of food, for a man with a boat can guarantee a woman that
she will eat something."
The narrator's description of pearls as the accidental byproducts of the irritation
caused by a grain of sand in an oyster muscle, serves to establish the cause for
their rarity and thus their value. It also serves to establish the degree of luck it
takes to find one, much less a truly valuable one. The Song of the Pearl that
Might Be consists of Kino's dreams, anxieties and prayers - all of which play a
part in his submarine search. The narrator suggests that because of Coyotito's
wound the need for a valuable pearl is even greater for Kino on that day than on
others and the song is more audible in Kino's ears as a result. In this way the
narrator connects the scorpion's sting to Kino's discovery of the pearl.
The moment Kino sees the pearl he is changed by the possibilities it holds for his
family. Just like the pearl was a kind of seed embedded in the oyster, so now are
Kino's dreams of a new life embedded in his psyche because of the pearl.
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