Tuesday, September 3, 2019
Relationships in Norman MacLeans A River Runs Through It Essay
Relationships in Norman MacLean's A River Runs Through It      "Eventually the watcher joined the river, and there was only one of us. I  believe it was the river." The river that Norman Maclean speaks of in A River  Runs Through It works as a connection, a tie, holding together the relationships  between Norman and his acquaintances in this remote society. Though "It" is  never outwardly defined in the novella there is definite evidence "It" is the  personality of the people and that the river is running through each individual  personality acting as the simple thread connecting this diverse group of  people.     With the help of the river these Montana residents are able to teach as well  as learn from each other. Since the time of the Indians, fathers have been  teaching sons the ways of the river and the Maclean family is no different. Paul  and Norman learn from a young age first how to pray, read the Bible, and then  fly fish from their father. For the Maclean family "there is no clear line  between religion and fly-fishing" and their father is a Presbyterian preacher  who incorporates all these lessons into the river. He carefully transitions from  telling them "about Christ's disciples being fishermen" to teaching them "to  approach the art (of fly-fishing) Marine- and Presbyterian- style" alongside the  river. Along this river his sons receive "as many hours of instruction in fly  fishing as in all other spiritual matters" making the river a pivotal part of  everyday life.     "Although Paul was three years younger than Norman?he was already far ahead  in anything relating to fishing" by their early teens. Paul quickly passes  Norman and his father in skillful fishing but more than that he acquired more  style. His father...              ...y and as  expected Norman "is blamed for Neal." Norman is able to put his anger quickly  behind him however, when he and Paul go on a fishing trip to "recuperate." He  looks to "fishing for the healing effects of the cool waters" of the river. He  quickly becomes lost in his fishing, so completely that he becomes "totally  composed of thoughts about the Elkhorn River, the weather, and a mythological  fish" and not a single thought of his dying anger.      Characters are bound to each other by the river and through their common love  of the river. Sometimes the only thing they have in common is this mutual love.  This Montana community is entwined in the river that runs through it. All the  characters obviously feel the same as Norman when he says "I also became the  river."    Work Cited    MacLean, Norman. A River Runs Through It. University of Chicago Press, 1989.                        
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