A Review of two Poulo Coelho masterpieces
It would be relevant to state that Poulo Coelho glamorously concluded
in The Alchemist what he began in The Pilgrimage- that is a journey to conceive
the enlightment that is to quench all mental thrusts, smother off all questions
that the mind-like a mad horse- so viciously and relentlessly ask the soul.
that the journey, the pilgrimage was the soul's answer, the inner self’s
thundering answer. While the omens were its mighty language through which the
seeker-the lost sheep- was 'shepherded' to the one mighty answer; that which
was always within him- that which he ceased to notice all his life. That blissful,
blessed moment HE GETS ANSWERED, enlightened.
The Pilgrimage
Author: Paulo Coelho
Publisher; Harper Collins publishers
Pages: 224
Author: Paulo Coelho
Publisher; Harper Collins publishers
Pages: 224
the story begins from
Italiana, on the peaks of the Siera Domar when the author's pride and aggravated
avidity persuade his master to decline him the new sword which was the secret
symbol of the order of RAM , after his old sword was disposed/buried. He is
then forced to set out on a journey to seek his sword, to struggle to acquire
what was about to be offered to him so generously. it puts him in course
through the legendary road to Santiago - the blessed path trodden by pilgrims
of several generations before him. En route, led by his experienced, wise guide
Petrus, he is initiated to several spiritual exercises of the order and is put
to test in extremely confusing and hazardous junctures through which his inner
self is purified enough to deserve the 'RAM' order's sword again. 'The
Pilgrimage' ends where the author regains his sword from his master. Here the
reader can see the master almost magically reappear in front of his victorious
disciple to gift him his hard gained sword.
The Alchemist
Author; Poulo Coelho
Publisher: Harper Collins publishers
Pages: 161
Author; Poulo Coelho
Publisher: Harper Collins publishers
Pages: 161
The Alchemist is a shepherd's meander to reckoning. Where he is led
by dreams and omens, by magic, by Godly messengers and divine souls who pop up
in the story all out of nowhere and fade out in the same page, after having
performed their karma in leading the shepherd boy en route to the truth he
seeks.
The shepherd crosses the blue waters and sets his foot in the
Arabian sands seeking his fortune in the Pyramids. His venturous journey
through the treacherous desert completely shifts the story to an entirely
different platform with the advent of more poignant characters such as the
mysterious Alchemist, the English man who is in a relentless search for the
wisdom to turn metals in to gold-alchemy, and the beautiful desert woman Fathima
with whom the boy falls in love with. The Alchemist ends in a thundering
reckoning when the boy finds his real treasure; this is where Poulo Coelho's
stupendous message shines -" wherever your heart is, there you will find
your treasure"
Poulo Coelho’s masterpiece swells with omens, magic and the triumph of ‘makthub’-which the common man
cam conceive simply as ‘fate’. In The Alchemist Poulo Coelho blends his
magnetic content with an entirely new feature which has inanimate objects as
live and significant characters in the book which communicates with the protagonist
and helps him at different junctures. This could be attributed as an entirely
new experiment in novel writing. A pure product of an exploded imagination.
Poulo Coelho is the best.
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