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Essay / Stephen Crane's Open Boat - 776
Stephen Crane's Open Boat “None of them knew the color of the sky. » This first sentence of “The Open Boat” by Stephen Crane implies the overall relationship between the individual and nature. This phrase also implies the limits of one's point of view. The men on the boat are so focused on the danger they are in that they are oblivious and oblivious to everything else; in other words, he may lack experience. “The Open Boat” begins with a description of four men aboard a small boat on rough seas. The central theme of this story is the confrontation with nature itself. “The Open Boat” is Stephen Crane's account, seen through an outsider's eye, of two days spent in a small boat. The correspondent is autobiographical in nature; Stephen Crane was shipwrecked off the coast of Florida while working as a war correspondent. The Correspondent In "The Open Boat" he describes the author primarily through the correspondent, Crane shows the power of nature and how a man's struggle to survive ultimately depends on fate. The correspondent's character learns that the principles of nature are unpredictable by accident or accident. Destiny, like life itself, is unpredictable. Stephen Crane pays particular attention to the correspondent, who shares the arduous chore of rowing with the powerful oil tanker. While rowing, he contemplates his situation and the role that nature plays in it. men seem to know that they are powerless against nature....