JUANA IS THE VOICE OF REASON IN THE PEARL
Juana is portrayed as a voice of reason in The Pearl.
Her steadfast spirit makes her a pillar of strength to her family members.
Although the society in La Paz is mainly patriarchal, Juana asserts herself as
a sagacious and perceptive woman. As much as she is acquiescent and subservient,
she makes judicious decisions and gives Kino wise counsel. She perseveres
through many difficulties but sticks together with Kino and gives the family
strength both in good and bad times.
The
scorpion sting
We first experience Juana’s grit and wit when Coyotito is
stung by a scorpion. She sucks the poison from the red puncture while Kino is
busy killing the scorpion.
“She
put her lips down over the puncture and sucked hard and spat and sucked again
while Coyotito screamed” (pg. 22)
She sucked until the little hole enlarged and its edges
whitened. She acts instinctively because she knows that a baby could easy die
from the poison.
“First
they knew, would come the swelling and fever and tightened throat, and then
cramps in the stomach and then Coyotito might die…” (pg.
23)
The sucking helps ease Coyotito's stinging pain since his
screams turn into moans.
She also uses an ingenious method to relieve the baby’s
pain when they go fishing for pearls with Kino. She gathers some brown seaweed
and makes a flat damp poultice which she applies to the baby’s swollen shoulder.
We are told that it “was as good a remedy
as any and probably better than the doctor could have done” (pg. 33)
Perhaps Juana could have sucked out the poison in time
since the stomach cramps had not come to Coyotito (pg. 33)
Finally the poison recedes from his body and the swelling was
going out of his shoulder. (pg. 38)
Juana saves Coyotito’s life through her timely shrewd
actions.
The
Doctor
“Kino
had wondered often at the iron in his patient fragile wife. She who was
obedient and respectful and cheerful and patient could arc her back in child
pain with hardly a cry. She could stand fatigue and hunger almost better than
Kino himself. In the canoe she was strong like a man.”
She surprises Kino and the neighbours when she demands that
they go to get the doctor (pg. 23). The dwellers of the brush houses know that
it is wonderful to want the doctor but it would be remarkable to get him. He
never comes to the cluster of brush houses. He prefers attending to rich people
who live in stone and plaster houses of the town. (pg. 23)
When the people in the yard, the people at the door and
Kino say that the doctor would not come, she looks 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” (pg.
23-24)
Even Kino sees the determination in her. The music of
the family sounds in his head with a steely tone.
She declares that they will go to the doctor (pg. 24).
She covers the baby with a dark-blue shawl to protect him from the light. (pg. 24)
When the doctor refuses to treat Coyotito everyone else
leaves save for Juana who stands beside Kino for a long time. (pg. 29)
The
“evil” pearl
When a thief sneaks into Kino’s hut with the intention
of stealing the pearl, Juana warns him. Kino hurts his head while trying to
fight the intruder.
“Kino could feel warm blood running down from his forehead.”
Juana is worried. She lights a candle goes out and dips
the end of her head shawl in water and swabs the blood from Kino’s bruised
forehead.
Juana is seen as a voice of reason when she wisely
advises Kino to get rid of the pearl.
“This
thing is evil” she cried harshly, “This pearl is like a sin, it will destroy
us”.
(pg. 59)
She asks Kino to throw
it away or break it between stones, bury it or throw it back into the sea.
Juana is worried that the pearl will
destroy the family including their son Coyotito. Kino insists that their
son must go to school and the pearl is his only hope. (pg. 60)
Kino intends to sell the pearl and pursue his dreams.
When the dealers give him a raw deal he decides to keep the pearl to sell it
later at the capital. Juana is worried but she remains supportive.
“Juana
watched him with worry, but she knew him and she knew she could help him best
by being silent and by being near.”
She also “fights evil” by singing softly the melody of
the family “of the safety and warmth and
wholeness of the family” (pg. 75)
When Kino senses an intruder walking outside his hut, Juana
tries to protect him by stopping him from going out. (pg. 78)
Kino struggles with the attacker and Juana grabs a
stone and reaches out to help her husband. He has been slashed badly by the attacker.
She assists him back to the house. He is bleeding. She
wipes his face with her skirt. She offers him some pulque to drink. (pg. 79)
Juana reiterates that the pearl is evil and should be
destroyed.
“Kino
this pearl is evil. Let us destroy it before it destroys us.” (79-80)
Kino insists that he is a man. He claims he’ll fight
and win. Juana tells Kino astutely than a man can be killed (pg. 80). She
insists that they should throw the pearl back into the sea.
It is evident that Juana is right all along. The pearl
causes a strain in their marriage. Due to Kino’s inaction, Juana decides to
throw the pearl herself albeit secretly. Kino catches her just in time and
strikes her in the face with a clenched fist and kicks her in the side. He
hisses at her like a snake, but she stares at him with wide unfrightened eyes
like a sheep before slaughter.
Even after the attack, Juana remains rational. There is
no anger in her for Kino. She knows that she needs Kino who she feels is half
good and half insane.
“Sometimes
the quality of woman, the reason, the caution the sense of preservation could
cut through Kino’s manness and save them all” (pg. 85)
The
journey north
When Juana realizes that Kino has killed a man, she
knows the old peace is gone. The old life she was trying to rescue is gone.
“There
was nothing to do but to save themselves” (pg. 56)
She tells Kino that he has killed a man and people will
come for them. Therefore, they must leave before daylight. Kino says he did it
in self-defense but Juana warns that the men of the city won’t buy his
explanation. Kino concedes that she is right. (pg. 86)
Juana accompanies Kino on the journey north. The trek
is tedious but Juana’s mettle gives Kino a lot of steadfastness and pluck.
“And
Kino could hear the pad of Juana’s feet behind him”
(pg. 45)
Juana shifts Coyotito to the front whenever he awakes and
she sooths him to sleep. They walk all night with out changing their pace.
Juana’s mouth was still swollen where Kino struck her
but she resiliently sits still like a sentinel (guard/guardian) watching her
baby. (pg. 99)
She’s clearly a voice of reason when she discourages
Kino from capitulation and allowing the trackers to take him. She knows they
would kill then.
“Do
you think they would let me live? Do you think they will let the little one
here live?”
Kino finally yields to her goading.
The journey north is surely racking but Juana is unflinching
in her bid to protect her family. Her ankles are cut and scratched from stones
and brush.
Juana’s prudence is evident when he dissuades Kino from
splitting up with them when he suggests that she and the baby go north Loreto
or to Santa Rosalia.
“He
looked then, for weakness in her face, for fear or irresolution and there was
none… he had taken strength from her” (pg. 105). Juana is indeed
the tower of strength in Kino’s family.
Juana advises Kino to remove his white clothes since he
could be seen easily. (pg.111)
When Coyotito is killed, Juana and Kino return to La Paz walking side by side. Juana remains by Kino’s side up to the bitter end.
Juana was right all along. The pearl indeed destroys the family. They lose their hut, their boat, their old peace and their son. Her steadfast spirit gives the family strength from start to finish.
If only Kino had listened to her.
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