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The Open Boat Essay

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Stephen Crane’s The Open Boat was based on real events. The details of this story were based on Crane’s experiences. The details directly follow the series of events that took place at an interval of Crane’s life. He was corresponding for a newspaper about the Spanish-American War, and was on a ship, the Commodore, which ran guns to Cuban insurgents in the late 1890’s. The Commodore went down, and one dinghy survived. It had four men, the captain, the cook, the oiler, and Crane. Crane was one of three survivors, as the oiler did not make it to the shore after their thirty hour ordeal. Crane’s experience makes him the best author for a short story about survival. Crane uses diction that evokes sympathy and has strong emotional ties within their connotations to capitalize on the differences in each sailor’s personalities, such as the Captain’s leadership, the Oiler’s realism. The Cook’s optimism, and the Correspondent’s pessimism. The traits highlighted by Crane can be directly associated with each of the sailors’ given professions, as in a captain giving a ship guidance and the Captain giving the remaining survivors guidance in the dinghy. Crane uses the professions and the personality type of each sailor to symbolize the mental state of the …show more content…

He cares for, and maintenances all of the large machinery on the ship. He would’ve cared for the engines, and would’ve been in peak physical shape to have endured all of the tedious manual labor required by the engine room, as well as able to withstand the suffocating heat that would’ve come along with his job. The Oiler, Billie, was what made the group congeal. He did not argue, he was real. This quality is not to be mistaken for the Correspondent’s negativity, he was an unbiased perspective. The best demonstration of this is, “None of those other boats could have got ashore to give word of the wreck," said the oiler, in a low voice. "Else the lifeboat would be

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