


GradeSaver, 2 April 2022 Web.The Cay is well-written with powerful imagery and an engaging and fast-paced plot. Next Section Metaphors and Similes Previous Section Analysis How To Cite in MLA Format Sexton, Timothy. Will review the submission and either publish your submission or provide feedback. You can help us out by revising, improving and updatingĪfter you claim a section you’ll have 24 hours to send in a draft. Philip and the creature are in this moment both symbols of the evolutionary imperative: do whatever it takes to survive. Whether an eel or some animal he’s never heard of, he is simply trying to survive by finding food while the creature is trying to survive by defending its home. The whole point of the scene is that he doesn’t know for sure what it was and that it doesn’t even matter. Later, he will decide that based on the injury to his hand and the shape of its body, the creature was likely a moray eel. When Philip makes his first attempt to kill a spiny lobster on his own, he sticks his hand into a hole and is immediately attacked by some unknown creature. Sharks and fascist ideology are both predatory beasts literally threatening Philip’s life, but acting as a symbolic threat to at all times. The symbolism of the sharks is foreshadowed in the opening line of the novel in which a simile draws a comparison between them and the Nazi submarines which showed up in the middle of the night. Philip’s successful climb up the tree is a symbolic of his reaching a state of greater maturity that will allow him to survive the loss of Timothy. It is another case of the old man preparing the kid to survive on his own in the inevitable result that he will one day die if they are never rescued. Timothy continues to push him toward overcoming his fear, but not out dark impulses. Philip is terrified of attempting to climb the coconut tree in his blinded state for obvious reasons. The symbolism here is intended to call to mind the imagery of Jesus sacrificing himself during the crucifixion. Timothy ties himself to a tree in order to literally use his own body to protect Philip from the slashing rain and howling wind of the storm. This temporary blindness is a multifaceted symbol: learning not to judge people on appearances while also illuminating how one can overcome flaws instilled in their own metaphorical lack of vision. In the aftermath of being rescued, surgery will return his vision. He must therefore spend the rest of the novel relearning how to do things without the benefit of vision.

Philip loses his vision as a result of staring at the sun and its glared reflected off the ocean waves. We are thankful for their contributions and encourage you to make your own. These notes were contributed by members of the GradeSaver community.
