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The Old Man and the Sea
By Ernest Hemingway
Day 6 Text | Day 6 Audio |
Part Six
I do not understand these things, he thought. But it is good that we do not have
to try to kill the sun or the moon or the stars. It is enough to live on the sea
and kill our true brothers.
Now, he thought, I must think about the drag. It has its perils and its merits.
I may lose so much line that I will lose him, if he makes his effort and the
drag made by the oars is in place and the boat loses all her lightness. Her
lightness prolongs both our suffering but it is my safety since he has great
speed that he has never yet employed. No matter what passes I must gut the
dolphin so he does not spoil and eat some of him to be strong.
Now I will rest an hour more and feel that he is solid and steady before I move
back to the stern to do the work and make the decision. In the meantime I can
see how he acts and if he shows any changes. The oars are a good trick; but it
has reached the time to play for safety. He is much fish still and I saw that
the hook was in the corner of his mouth and he has kept his mouth tight shut.
The punishment of the hook is nothing. The punishment of hunger, and that he is
against something that he does not comprehend, is everything. Rest now, old man,
and let him work until your next duty comes.
He rested for what he believed to be two hours. The moon did not rise now until
late and he had no way of judging the time. Nor was he really resting except
comparatively. He was still bearing the pull of the fish across his shoulders
but he placed his left hand on the gunwale of the bow and confided more and more
of the resistance to the fish to the skiff itself.
How simple it would be if I could make the line fast, he thought. But with one
small lurch he could break it. I must cushion the pull of the line with my body
and at all times be ready to give line with both hands.
“But you have not slept yet, old man,” he said aloud. “It is half a day and a
night and now another day and you have not slept. You must devise a way so that
you sleep a little if he is quiet and steady. If you do not sleep you might
become unclear in the head.” I’m clear enough in the head, he thought. Too
clear. I am as clear as the stars that are my brothers. Still I must sleep. They
sleep and the moon and the sun sleep and even the ocean sleeps sometimes on
certain days when there is no current and a flat calm.
But remember to sleep, he thought. Make yourself do it and devise some simple
and sure way about the lines. Now go back and prepare the dolphin. It is too
dangerous to rig the oars as a drag if you must sleep.
I could go without sleeping, he told himself. But it would be too dangerous. He
started to work his way back to the stern on his hands and knees, being careful
not to jerk against the fish. He may be half asleep himself, he thought. But I
do not want him to rest. He must pull until he dies.
Back in the stern he turned so that his left hand held the strain of the line
across his shoulders and drew his knife from its sheath with his right hand. The
stars were bright now and he saw the dolphin clearly and he pushed the blade of
his knife into his head and drew him out from under the stern. He put one of his
feet on the fish and slit him quickly from the vent up to the tip of his lower
jaw. Then he put his knife down and gutted him with his right hand, scooping him
clean and pulling the gills clear.
He felt the maw heavy and slippery in his hands and he slit it open. There were
two flying fish inside. They were fresh and hard and he laid them side by side
and dropped the guts and the gills over the stern. They sank leaving a trail of
phosphorescence in the water. The dolphin was cold and a leprous gray-white now
in the starlight and the old man skinned one side of him while he held his right
foot on the fish’s head. Then he turned him over and skinned the other side and
cut each side off from the head down to the tail.
He slid the carcass overboard and looked to see if there was any swirl in the
water. But there was only the light of its slow descent. He turned then and
placed the two flying fish inside the two fillets of fish and putting his knife
back in its sheath, he worked his way slowly back to the bow. His back was bent
with the weight of the line across it and he carried the fish in his right hand.
Back in the bow he laid the two fillets of fish out on the wood with the flying
fish beside them. After that he settled the line across his shoulders in a new
place and held it again with his left hand resting on the gunwale. Then he
leaned over the side and washed the flying fish in the water, noting the speed
of the water against his hand. His hand was phosphorescent from skinning the
fish and he watched the flow of the water against it. The flow was less strong
and as he rubbed the side of his hand against the planking of the skiff,
particles of phosphorus floated off and drifted slowly astern.
“He is tiring or he is resting,” the old man said. “Now let me get through the
eating of this dolphin and get some rest and a little sleep.”
Under the stars and with the night colder all the time he ate half of one of the
dolphin fillets and one of the flying fish, gutted and with its head cut off.
“What an excellent fish dolphin is to eat cooked,” he said. “And what a
miserable fish raw. I will never go in a boat again without salt or limes.” If I
had brains I would have splashed water on the bow all day and drying, it would
have made salt, he thought. But then I did not hook the dolphin until almost
sunset. Still it was a lack of preparation. But I have chewed it all well and I
am not nauseated.
The sky was clouding over to the east and one after another the stars he knew
were gone. It looked now as though he were moving into a great canyon of clouds
and the wind had dropped.
“There will be bad weather in three or four days,” he said. “But not tonight and
not tomorrow. Rig now to get some sleep, old man, while the fish is calm and
steady.” He held the line tight in his right hand and then pushed his thigh
against his right hand as he leaned all his weight against the wood of the bow.
Then he passed the line a little lower on his shoulders and braced his left hand
on it.
My right hand can hold it as long as it is braced, he thought If it relaxes in
sleep my left hand will wake me as the line goes out. It is hard on the right
hand. But he is used to punishment Even if I sleep twenty minutes or a half an
hour it is good. He lay forward cramping himself against the line with all of
his body, putting all his weight onto his right band, and he was asleep.
He did not dream of the lions but instead of a vast school of porpoises that
stretched for eight or ten miles and it was in the time of their mating and they
would leap high into the air and return into the same hole they had made in the
water when they leaped.
Then he dreamed that he was in the village on his bed and there was a norther
and he was very cold and his right arm was asleep because his head had rested on
it instead of a pillow.
After that he began to dream of the long yellow beach and he saw the first of
the lions come down onto it in the early dark and then the other lions came and
he rested his chin on the wood of the bows where the ship lay anchored with the
evening off-shore breeze and he waited to see if there would be more lions and
he was happy.
The moon had been up for a long time but he slept on and the fish pulled on
steadily and the boat moved into the tunnel of clouds. He woke with the jerk of
his right fist coming up against his face and the line burning out through his
right hand. He had no feeling of his left hand but he braked all he could with
his right and the line rushed out. Finally his left hand found the line and he
leaned back against the line and now it burned his back and his left hand, and
his left hand was taking all the strain and cutting badly. He looked back at the
coils of line and they were feeding smoothly. Just then the fish jumped making a
great bursting of the ocean and then a heavy fall. Then he jumped again and
again and the boat was going fast although line was still racing out and the old
man was raising the strain to breaking point and raising it to breaking point
again and again. He had been pulled down tight onto the bow and his face was in
the cut slice of dolphin and he could not move.
This is what we waited for, he thought. So now let us take it. Make him pay for
the line, he thought. Make him pay for it. He could not see the fish’s jumps but
only heard the breaking of the ocean and the heavy splash as he fell. The speed
of the line was cutting his hands badly but he had always known this would
happen and he tried to keep the cutting across the calloused parts and not let
the line slip into the palm nor cut the fingers.
If the boy was here he would wet the coils of line, he thought. Yes. If the boy
were here. If the boy were here. The line went out and out and out but it was
slowing now and he was making the fish earn each inch of it. Now he got his head
up from the wood and out of the slice of fish that his cheek had crushed. Then
he was on his knees and then he rose slowly to his feet. He was ceding line but
more slowly all he time. He worked back to where he could feel with his foot the
coils of line that he could not see. There was plenty of line still and now the
fish had to pull the friction of all that new line through the water.
Yes, he thought. And now he has jumped more than a dozen times and filled the
sacks along his back with air and he cannot go down deep to die where I cannot
bring him up. He will start circling soon and then I must work on him. I wonder
what started him so suddenly? Could it have been hunger that made him desperate,
or was he frightened by something in the night? Maybe he suddenly felt fear. But
he was such a calm, strong fish and he seemed so fearless and so confident. It
is strange.
“You better be fearless and confident yourself, old man,” he said. “You’re
holding him again but you cannot get line. But soon he has to circle.” The old
man held him with his left hand and his shoulders now and stooped down and
scooped up water in his right hand to get the crushed dolphin flesh off of his
face. He was afraid that it might nauseate him and he would vomit and lose his
strength. When his face was cleaned he washed his right hand in the water over
the side and then let it stay in the salt water while he watched the first light
come before the sunrise. He’s headed almost east, he thought. That means he is
tired and going with the current. Soon he will have to circle. Then our true
work begins.
After he judged that his right hand had been in the water long enough he took it
out and looked at it.
“It is not bad,” he said. “And pain does not matter to a man.” He took hold of
the line carefully so that it did not fit into any of the fresh line cuts and
shifted his weight so that he could put his left hand into the sea on the other
side of the skiff.
“You did not do so badly for something worthless,” he said to his left hand.
“But there was a moment when I could not find you.” Why was I not born with two
good hands? he thought. Perhaps it was my fault in not training that one
properly. But God knows he has had enough chances to learn. He did not do so
badly in the night, though, and he has only cramped once. If he cramps again let
the line cut him off.
When he thought that he knew that he was not being clear-headed and he thought
he should chew some more of the dolphin. But I can’t, he told himself. It is
better to be light-headed than to lose your strength from nausea. And I know I
cannot keep it if I eat it since my face was in it. I will keep it for an
emergency until it goes bad. But it is too late to try for strength now through
nourishment. You’re stupid, he told himself. Eat the other flying fish.
It was there, cleaned and ready, and he picked it up with his left hand and ate
it chewing the bones carefully and eating all of it down to the tail. It has
more nourishment than almost any fish, he thought. At least the kind of strength
that I need. Now I have done what I can, he thought. Let him begin to circle and
let the fight come.
The sun was rising for the third time since he had put to sea when the fish
started to circle. He could not see by the slant of the line that the fish was
circling. It was too early for that. He just felt a faint slackening of the
pressure of the line and he commenced to pull on it gently with his right hand.
It tightened, as always, but just when he reached the point where it would
break, line began to come in. He slipped his shoulders and head from under the
line and began to pull in line steadily and gently. He used both of his hands in
a swinging motion and tried to do the pulling as much as he could with his body
and his legs. His old legs and shoulders pivoted with the swinging of the
pulling.
“It is a very big circle,” he said. “But he is circling.” Then the line would
not come in any more and he held it until he saw the drops jumping from it in
the sun. Then it started out and the old man knelt down and let it go grudgingly
back into the dark water.
“He is making the far part of his circle now,” he said. I must hold all I can,
he thought. The strain will shorten his circle each time. Perhaps in an hour I
will see him. Now I must convince him and then I must kill him.
But the fish kept on circling slowly and the old man was wet with sweat and
tired deep into his bones two hours later. But the circles were much shorter now
and from the way the line slanted he could tell the fish had risen steadily
while he swam.
For an hour the old man had been seeing black spots before his eyes and the
sweat salted his eyes and salted the cut over his eye and on his forehead. He
was not afraid of the black spots. They were normal at the tension that he was
pulling on the line. Twice, though, he had felt faint and dizzy and that had
worried him.
“I could not fail myself and die on a fish like this,” he said. “Now that I have
him coming so beautifully, God help me endure. I’ll say a hundred Our Fathers
and a hundred Hail Marys. But I cannot say them now.
Consider them said, he thought. I’ll say them later. Just then he felt a sudden
banging and jerking on the line he held with his two hands. It was sharp and
hard-feeling and heavy.
He is hitting the wire leader with his spear, he thought. That was bound to
come. He had to do that. It may make him jump though and I would rather he
stayed circling now. The jumps were necessary for him to take air. But after
that each one can widen the opening of the hook wound and he can throw the hook.
“Don’t jump, fish,” he said. “Don’t jump.”
The fish hit the wire several times more and each time he shook his head the old
man gave up a little line.
I must hold his pain where it is, he thought. Mine does not matter. I can
control mine. But his pain could drive him mad. After a while the fish stopped
beating at the wire and started circling slowly again. The old man was gaining
line steadily now. But he felt faint again. He lifted some sea water with his
left hand and put it on his head. Then he put more on and rubbed the back of his
neck.
“I have no cramps,” he said. “He’ll be up soon and I can last. You have to last.
Don’t even speak of it.” He kneeled against the bow and, for a moment, slipped
the line over his back again. I’ll rest now while he goes out on the circle and
then stand up and work on him when he comes in, he decided.
It was a great temptation to rest in the bow and let the fish make one circle by
himself without recovering any line. But when the strain showed the fish had
turned to come toward the boat, the old man rose to his feet and started the
pivoting and the weaving pulling that brought in all the line he gained.
I’m tireder than I have ever been, he thought, and now the trade wind is rising.
But that will be good to take him in with. I need that badly.
“I’ll rest on the next turn as he goes out,” he said. “I feel much better. Then
in two or three turns more I will have him.”
His straw hat was far on the back of his head and he sank down into the bow with
the pull of the line as he felt the fish turn.
You work now, fish, he thought. I’ll take you at the turn.
The sea had risen considerably. But it was a fair-weather breeze and he had to
have it to get home.
“I’ll just steer south and west,” he said. “A man is never lost at sea and it is
a long island.”
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