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One day, the King of Sharks saw a beautiful girl swimming near the shore. He imm

ID: 3486788 • Letter: O

Question

One day, the King of Sharks saw a beautiful girl swimming near the shore. He immediately fell in love with the girl. Transforming himself into a handsome man, he dressed himself in the feathered cape of a chief and followed her to her village. The villagers were thrilled by the visit of a foreign chief. They made a great luau, with feasting and games. The King of Sharks won every game, and the girl was delighted when he asked to marry with her. The King of Sharks lived happily with his bride in a house near a waterfall. The King of Sharks, in his human form, would swim daily in the pool of water beneath the falls. Sometimes he would stay underneath the water so long that his bride would grow frightened. But the King of Sharks reassured her, telling her that he was making a place at the bottom of the pool for their son. Before the birth of the child, the King of Sharks returned to his people. He made his wife swear that she would always keep his feathered cape about the shoulders of their son. When the child was born, his mother saw a mark upon his back which looked like the mouth of a shark. It was then she realized who her husband had been. The child's name was Nanave. As he grew towards manhood, Nanave would swim daily in the pool beside the house. Sometimes, his mother would gaze into the pool and see a shark swimming beneath the water. Each morning, Nanave would stand beside the pool, the feathered cloak about his shoulders, and would ask the passing fishermen where they were going to fish that day. The fisherman always told the friendly youth where they intended to go. Then Nanave would dive into the pool and disappear for hours. The fishermen soon noticed that they were catching fewer and fewer fish. The people of their village were growing hungry. The chief of the village called the people to the temple. "There is a bad god among us," the chief told the people. "He prevents our fishermen from catching fish. I will use my magic to find him." The chief laid out a bed of leaves. He instructed all the men and boys to walk among the leaves. A human's feet would bruise the tender leaves, but the feet of a god would leave no mark. Nanave's mother was frightened. She knew her son was the child of a god, and he would be killed if the people discovered his identity. When it came turn for the youth to walk across the leaves, he ran fast, and slipped. A man caught at the feathered cape Nanave always wore to prevent him from being hurt. But the cape fell from the youth's shoulders, and all the people could see the shark's mouth upon his back. The people chased Nanave out of the village, but he slipped away from them and dived into the pool. The people threw big rocks into the pool, filling it up. They thought they had killed Nanave. But his mother remembered that the King of Sharks had made a place for her son at the bottom of the pool, a passage that led to the ocean. Nanave had taken the form of a shark and had swum out to join his father, the King of Sharks, in the sea. But since then, the fishermen have never told anyone where they go to fish, for fear the sharks will hear and chase the fish away.

• Who is the Protagonist and who is the Antagonist in the following short story? • How does the story let you know that one character is the protagonist and that another character is acting as the antagonist? • What specific cues does the story provide for the reader to know the roles of the characters in the conflict, theme, and plot? • Why are the characters not easy to define as good and bad? • What cues does the author provide for the reader to decide individually about the meaning and moral

Explanation / Answer

Protagonist is the King of Sharks. Antagonist is the chief of the village.

As the story revolves around the King of Sharks, his passion for a lady and his love for his son tells us that he is the protagonist of the story. The chief of the village acts as an antagonist as he plans to get rid of the shark’s son Nanave.

The specific cues are that it clearly defines how the King falls in love with a damsel, the King’s conflict about being a man and then being recognized as a shark, his love and care for his son, and the future concern about the fact that one day people will come to know that his son is a shark. The theme of the story is love and conflict. The main conflict faced by the shark and his lady love is that of approach-approach conflict.

The characters cannot be defined as good or bad, because each character in the story plays his/her part well and does not act as a cheat or ditch one another.

The moral of the story is that true identity of an individual must be known to the people who love and care for them, and also that one needs to be prepared for any event in the future.

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