His name is Coyotito
coyotito is the son of kino and juana he gets stung by the scorpion
2
Coyotito gets shot in the head and dies in chapter six of The Pearl. The Pearl was written by American author, John Steinbeck, who lived from 1902 to 1968.
The pearl began when Coyotito is sleeping and Kino spots a scorpion on the rope that is hanging from Coyotito's bed. Tino tried to grab the scorpion but Coyotito shook the string and made the scorpion fall right on the Coyotito's shoulder and sting him.
Coyotito going to school in "The Pearl" by John Steinbeck represents Kino and Juana's desire for a better future for their son. Education symbolizes hope and opportunity, offering Coyotito a chance to escape the cycle of poverty and discrimination that his parents face. The pearl's discovery serves as a catalyst for this aspiration.
In the novella, The Pearl, Coyotito is shot by those who are tracking his father. The baby whines, and the trackers mistake him for a coyote. One tracker fires in the direction of the sound in order to stop the whinning. The shot finds Coyotito's head and the baby is killed.
In the novel "The Pearl" a young boy named Coyotito is bitten by a scorpion. Since his family has no money the doctor refuses to help him. After finding a rare pearl his family journeys to a big city to sell it. Coyotito is shot and killed however, so he is never cured.
The doctor refuses to see Coyotito on page 25 of "The Pearl" by John Steinbeck.
Coyotito is a character in the 1947 novel, The Pearl, by John Steinbeck. Coyotito is a little boy who gets stung by a scorpion, and his father must find a way to pay the town's doctor to treat him.
-SAME AS #3 (at the end, the trackers think Coyotito's cry is a coyote and it is situational irony)-the pearl was to be sold to give Coyotito a future, but it ended up killing him and it is situational irony-SAME AS #1 (the trackers don't know that the cry is coming from Coyotito, not a coyote and this is dramatic irony)
A rifle, to get married in a church, and to give Coyotito an education.