The Pearl
By John Steinbeck
Day 1 Audio |
"In the town they tell the story of the great pearl - how it was found and how
it was lost again. They tell of Kino, the fisherman, and of his wife, Juana, and
of the baby, Coyotito. And because the story has been told so often, it has
taken root in every man's mind. And, as with all retold tales that are in
people's hearts, there are only good and bad things and black and white things
and good and evil things and no in-between anywhere. If this story is a parable,
perhaps everyone takes his own meaning from it and reads his own life into it.
In any case, they say in the town that..." I Kino awakened in the near dark. The
stars still shone and the day had drawn only a pale wash of light in the lower
sky to the east. The roosters had been crowing for some time, and the early pigs
were already beginning their ceaseless turning of twigs and bits of wood to see
whether anything to eat had been overlooked. Outside the brush house in the tuna
clump, a covey of little birds chittered and flurried with their wings. Kino's
eyes opened, and he looked first at the lightening square which was the door and
then he looked at the hanging box where Coyotito slept. And last he turned his
head to Juana, his wife, who lay beside him on the mat, her blue head-shawl over
her nose and over her breasts and around the small of her back. Juana's eyes
were open too. Kino could never remember seeing them closed when he awakened.
Her dark eyes made little reflected stars. She was looking at him as she was
always looking at him when he awakened. Kino heard the little splash of morning
waves on the beach. It was very good - Kino closed his eyes again to listen to
his music. Perhaps he alone did this and perhaps all of his people did it. His
people had once been great makers of songs so that everything they saw or
thought or did or heard became a song. That was very long ago. The songs
remained; Kino knew them, but no new songs were added. That does not mean that
there were no personal songs. In Kino's head there was a song now, clear and
soft, and if he had been able to speak of it, he would have called it the Song
of the Family. His blanket was over his nose to protect him from the dank air.
His eyes flicked to a rustle beside him. It was Juana arising, almost
soundlessly. On her hard bare feet she went to the hanging box where Coyotito
slept, and she leaned over and said a little reassuring word. Coyotito looked up
for a moment and closed his eyes and slept again. Juana went to the fire pit and
uncovered a coal and fanned it alive while she broke little pieces of brush over
it.
Now Kino got up and wrapped his blanket about his head and nose and shoulders.
He slipped his feet into his sandals and went outside to watch the dawn. Outside
the door he squatted down and gathered the blanket ends about his knees. He saw
the specks of Gulf clouds flame high in the air. And a goat came near and
sniffed at him and stared with its cold yellow eyes. Behind him Juanas fire
leaped into flame and threw spears of light through the chinks of the
brush-house wall and threw a wavering square of light out the door. A late moth
blustered in to find the fire. The Song of the Family came now from behind Kino.
And the rhythm of the family song was the grinding stone where Juana worked the
corn for the morning cakes. The dawn came quickly now, a wash, a glow, a
lightness, and then an explosion of fire as the sun arose out of the Gulf. Kino
looked down to cover his eyes from the glare. He could hear the pat of the
corncakes in the house and the rich smell of them on the cooking plate. The ants
were busy on the ground, big black ones with shiny bodies, and little dusty
quick ants. Kino watched with the detachment of God while a dusty ant
frantically tried to escape the sand trap an ant lion had dug for him. A thin,
timid dog came close and, at a soft word from Kino, curled up, arranged its tail
neatly over its feet, and laid its chin delicately on the pile. It was a black
dog with yellow-gold spots where its eyebrows should have been. It was a morning
like other mornings and yet perfect among mornings. Kino heard the creak of the
rope when Juana took Coyotito out of his hanging box and cleaned him and
hammocked him in her shawl in a loop that placed him close to her breast. Kino
could see these things without looking at them. Juana sang softly an ancient
song that had only three notes and yet endless variety of interval. And this was
part of the family song too. It was all part. Sometimes it rose to an aching
chord that caught the throat, saying this is safety, this is warmth, this is the
Whole. Across the brush fence were other brush houses, and the smoke camefrom
them too, and the sound of breakfast, but those were other songs, their pigs
were other pigs, their wives were not Juana. Kino was young and strong and his
black hair hung over his brown forehead. His eyes were warm and fierce and
bright and his mustache was thin and coarse. He lowered his blanket from his
nose now, for the dark poisonous air was gone and the yellow sunlight fell on
the house. Near the brush fence two roosters bowed and feinted at each other
with squared wings and neck feathers ruffed out. It would be a clumsy fight.
They were not game chickens. Kino watched them for a moment, and then his eyes
went up to a flight of wild doves twinkling inland to the hills. The world was
awake now, and Kino arose and went into his brush house. As he came through the
door Juana stood up from the glowing fire pit. She put Coyotito back in his
hanging box and then she combed her black hair and braided it in two braids and
tied the ends with thin green ribbon. Kino squatted by the fire pit and rolled a
hot corn-cake and dipped it in sauce and ate it. And he drank a little pulque
and that was breakfast. That was the only breakfast he had ever known outside of
feast days and one incredible fiesta on cookies that had nearly killed him. When
Kino had finished, Juana came back to the fire and ate her breakfast. They had
spoken once, but there is not need for speech if it is only a habit anyway. Kino
sighed with satisfaction - and that was conversation. The sun was warming the
brush house, breaking through its crevices in long streaks. And one of the
streaks fell on the hanging box where Coyotito lay, and on the ropes that held
it. It was a tiny movement that drew their eyes to the hanging box. Kino and
Juana froze in their positions. Down the rope that hung the baby's box from the
roof support a scorpion moved slowly. His stinging tail was straight out behind
him, but he could whip it up in a flash of time. Kino's breath whistled in his
nostrils and he opened his mouth to stop it. And then the startled look was gone
from him and the rigidity from his body. In his mind a new song had come, the
Song of Evil, the music of the enemy, of any foe of the family, a savage,
secret, dangerous melody, and underneath, the Song of the Family cried
plaintively. The scorpion moved delicately down the rope toward the box. Under
her breath Juana repeated an ancient magic to guard against such evil, and on
top of that she muttered a Hail Mary between clenched teeth. But Kino was in
motion. His body glided quietly across the room, noiselessly and smoothly. His
hands were in front of him, palms down, and his eyes were on the scorpion.
Beneath it in the hanging box Coyotito laughed and reached up his hand toward
it. It sensed danger when Kino was almost within reach of it. It stopped, and
its tail rose up over its back in little jerks and the curved thorn on the
tail's end glistened. Kino stood perfectly still. He could hear Juana whispering
the old magic again, and he could hear the evil music of the enemy. He could not
move until the scorpion moved, and it felt for the source of the death that was
coming to it. Kino's hand went forward very slowly, very smoothly. The thorned
tail jerked upright. And at that moment the laughing Coyotito shook the rope and
the scorpion fell. Kino's hand leaped to catch it, but it fell past his fingers,
fell on the baby's shoulder, landed and struck. Then, snarling, Kino had it, had
it in his fingers, rubbing it to a paste in his hands. He threw it down and beat
it into the earth floor with his fist, and Coyotito screamed with pain in his
box. But Kino beat and stamped the enemy until it was only a fragment and a
moist place in the dirt. His teeth were bared and fury flared in his eyes and
the Song of the Enemy roared in his ears. But Juana had the baby in her arms
now. She found the puncture with redness starting from it already. She put her
lips down over the puncture and sucked hard and spat and sucked again while
Coyotito screamed. Kino hovered; he was helpless, he was in the way.
The screams of the baby brought the neighbors. Out of their brush houses they
poured - Kino's brother Juan Tomás and his fat wife Apolonia and their four
children crowded in the door and blocked the entrance, while behind them others
tried to look in, and one small boy crawled among legs to have a look. And those
in front passed the word back to those behind - "Scorpion. The baby has been
stung." Juana stopped sucking the puncture for a moment. The little hole was
slightly enlarged and its edges whitened from the sucking, but the red swelling
extended farther around it in a hard lymphatic mound. And all of these people
knew about the scorpion. An adult might be very ill from the sting, but a baby
could easily die from the poison. First, they knew, would come swelling and
fever and tightened throat, and then cramps in the stomach, and then Coyotito
might die if enough of the poison had gone in. But the stinging pain of the bite
was going away. Coyotito's screams turned to moans. Kino had wondered often at
the iron in his patient, fragile wife. She, who was obedient and respectful and
cheerful and patient, could bear physical pain with hardly a cry. She could
stand fatigue and hunger almost better than Kino himself. In the canoe she was
like a strong man. And now she did a most surprising thing. "The doctor," she
said. "Go to get the doctor." The word was passed out among the neighbors where
they stood close-packed in the little yard behind the brush fence. And they
repeated among themselves, "Juana wants the doctor." A wonderful thing, a
memorable thing, to want the doctor. To get him would be a remarkable thing. The
doctor never came to the cluster of brush houses. Why should he, when he had
more than he could do to take care of the rich people who lived in the stone and
plaster houses of the town? "He would not come," the people in the yard said.
"He would not come," the people in the door said, and the thought got into Kino.
"The doctor would not come," Kino said to Juana. She looked up at him, her eyes
as cold as the eyes of a lioness. This was Juana's first baby - this was nearly
everything there was in Juana's world. And Kino saw her determination and the
music of the family sounded in his head with a steely tone. "Then we will go to
him," Juana said, and with one hand she arranged her dark blue shawl over her
head and made of one end of it a sling to hold the moaning baby and made of the
other end of it a shade over his eyes to protect him from the light. The people
in the door pushed against those behind to let her through. Kino followed her.
They went out of the gate to the rutted path and the neighbours followed them.
The thing had become a neighbourhood affair. They made a quick soft-footed
procession into the center of the town, first Juana and Kino, and behind them
Juan Tomás and Apolonia, her big stomach jiggling with the strenuous pace, then
all the neighbours with the children trotting on the flanks. And the yellow sun
threw their black shadows ahead of them so that they walked on their own
shadows. They came to the place where the brush houses stopped and the city of
stone and plaster began, the city of harsh outer walls and inner cool gardens
where a little water played and the bougainvillaea crusted the walls with purple
and brick-red and white. They heard from the secret gardens the singing of caged
birds and heard the splash of cooling water on hot flagstones. The procession
crossed the blinding plaza and passed in front of the church. It had grown now,
and on the outskirts the hurrying newcomers were being softly informed how the
baby had been stung by a scorpion, how the father and mother were taking it to
the doctor. And the newcomers, particularly the beggars from the front of the
church who were great experts in financial analysis, looked quickly at Juana's
old blue skirt, saw the tears in her shawl, appraised the green ribbon on her
braids, read the age of Kino's blanket and the thousand washings of his clothes,
and set them down as poverty people and went along to see what kind of drama
might develop. The four beggars in front of the church knew everything in the
town.They were students of the expressions of young women as they went into
confession, and they saw them as they came out and read the nature of the sin.
They knew every little scandal and some very big crimes. They slept at their
posts in the shadow of the church so that no one crept in for consolation
without their knowledge. And they knew the doctor. They knew his ignorance, his
cruelty, his avarice, his appetites, his sins. They knew his clumsy abortions
and the little brown pennies he gave sparingly for alms. They had seen his
corpses go into the church. And, since early Mass was over and business was
slow, they followed the procession, these endless searchers after perfect
knowledge of their fellow men, to see what the fat lazy doctor would do about an
indigent baby with a scorpion bite. The scurrying procession came at last to the
big gate in the wall ofthe doctor's house. They could hear the splashing water
and the singing of caged birds and the sweep of the long brooms on the
flagstones. And they could smell the frying of good bacon from the doctor's
house. Kino hesitated a moment. This doctor was not of his people. This doctor
was of a race which for nearly four hundred years had beaten and starved and
robbed and despised Kino's race, and frightened it too, so that the indigene
came humbly to the door. And as always when he came near to one of this race,
Kino felt weak and afraid and angry at the same time. Rage and terror went
together. He could kill the doctor more easily than he could talk to him, for
all of thedoctor's race spoke to all of Kino's race as though they were simple
animals. And as Kino raised his right hand to the iron ring knocker in the gate,
rage swelled in him, and the pounding music of the enemy beat in his ears, and
his lips drew tight against his teeth - but with his left hand he reached to
take off his hat. The iron ring pounded against the gate. Kino took off his hat
and stood waiting. Coyotito moaned a little in Juana's arms, and she spoke
softly to him. The procession crowded close the better to see and hear.
After a moment the big gate opened a few inches. Kino could see the green
coolness of the garden and little splashing fountain through the opening. The
man who looked out at him was one of his own race. Kino spoke to him in the old
language. "The little one - the firstborn - has been poisoned by the scorpion,"
Kino said. "He requires the skill of the healer." The gate closed a little, and
the servant refused to speak in the old language. "A little moment," he said. "I
go to inform myself," and he closed the gate and slid the bolt home. The glaring
sun threw the bunched shadows of the people blackly on the white wall. In his
chamber the doctor sat up in his high bed. He had on his dressing-gown of red
watered silk that had come from Paris, a little tight over the chest now if it
was buttoned. On his lap was a silver tray with a silver chocolate pot and a
tiny cup of egg-shell china, so delicate that it looked silly when he lifted it
with his big hand, lifted it with the tips of thumb and forefinger and spread
the other three fingers wide to get them out of the way. His eyes rested in
puffy little hammocks of flesh and his mouth drooped with discontent. He was
growing very stout, and his voice was hoarse with the fat that pressed on his
throat. Beside him on a table was a small Oriental gong and a bowl of
cigarettes. The furnishings of the room were heavy and dark and gloomy. The
pictures were religious, even the large tinted photograph of his dead wife, who,
if Masses willed and paid for out of her own estate could do it, was in Heaven.
The doctor had once for a short time been a part of the great world and his
whole subsequent life was memory and longing for France. "That," he said, "was
civilized living" - by which he meant that on a small income he had been able to
enjoy some luxury and eat in restaurants. He poured his second cup of chocolate
and crumbled a sweet biscuit in his fingers. The servant from the gate came to
the open door and stood waiting to be noticed. "Yes?" the doctor asked. "It is a
little Indian with a baby. He says a scorpion stung it." The doctor put his cup
down gently before he let his anger rise. "Have I nothing better to do than cure
insect bites for 'little Indians'? I am a doctor, not a veterinary." "Yes,
Patron," said the servant. "Has he any money?" the doctor demanded. "No, they
never have any money. I, I alone in the world am supposed to work for nothing -
and I am tired of it. See if he has any money!" At the gate the servant opened
the door a trifle and looked out at the waiting people. And this time he spoke
in the old language. "Have you money to pay for the treatment?"
Now Kino reached into a secret place somewhere under his blanket. He brought out
a paper folded many times. Crease by crease he unfolded it, until at last there
came to view eight small misshapen seed pearls, as ugly and gray as little
ulcers, flattened and almost valueless. The servant took the paper and closed
the gate again, but this time he was not gone long. He opened the gate just wide
enough to pass the paper back. "The doctor has gone out," he said. "He was
called to a serious case." And he shut the gate quickly out of shame. And now a
wave of shame went over the whole procession. They melted away. The beggars went
back to the church steps, the stragglers moved off, and the neighbors departed
so that the public shaming of Kino would not be in their eyes. For a long time
Kino stood in front of the gate with Juana beside him. Slowly he put his
suppliant hat on his head. Then, without warning, he struck the gate a crushing
blow with his fist. He looked down in wonder at his split knuckles and at the
blood that flowed down between his fingers.
Day Two Text | The Pearl |
English I Stories | Evans Homepage |