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The narrator and the price find a well in the middle of the desert...
What does the well represent?

2007-08-27 11:07:58 · 1 answers · asked by Join Me I 1 in Arts & Humanities Books & Authors

1 answers

The well, of course, is for water, and water:

"Water
By the story’s end, the drinking of water emerges as a clear symbol of spiritual fulfillment. The narrator’s concerns about running out of water after he first crashes into the desert mirror his complaint that he has grown old. Later, when he and the prince find the mysterious well, the water the narrator drinks reminds him of Christmas festivities. His thoughts of Christmas ceremonies suggest that his spirit, and not his body, is what truly thirsts. The salesclerk sells a thirst-quenching pill, but the little prince reveals that there are no true substitutes for real spiritual food. The pill may quench one’s desires, but it has little to offer in the way of real nourishment. The prince declares that he would use the minutes saved by the pill for getting a cool drink of water, the only real spiritual fulfillment for which one can hope."

"What makes the desert
beautiful
is that
somewhere
it hides
a well . . ."

I"n this capacity, the desert symbolizes the narrator’s mind. Made barren by grown-up ideas, the narrator’s mind slowly expands under the guidance of the little prince in the same way that the deadly desert slowly transforms itself into a place of learning and, once the well appears, refreshment."

2007-08-27 11:14:48 · answer #1 · answered by johnslat 7 · 3 0

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