Kino's canoe is the tool he uses to provide for his family and is an essential part of his life. Kino's canoe enables him to catch fish and carries him to deeper waters, where he dives for pearls. Steinbeck writes that Kino's canoe was the "one thing of value he owned in the world" and was passed down through generations in his family. Symbolically, the canoe represents Kino's heritage, culture, and family. Kino's life and future are intricately linked to his canoe.
After Kino finds the Pearl of the World, he plans on traveling across the sea to the capital in his canoe, where he can sell the pearl for a high price. Kino then kills a man in self-defense and plans on using the canoe to escape from the village and flee the authorities. Unfortunately, Kino discovers that there is a gaping hole in the bottom of his canoe. Steinbeck writes,
"This was an evil beyond thinking. The killing of a man was not so evil as the killing of a boat. For a boat does not have sons, and a boat cannot protect itself, and a wounded boat does not heal" (32).
Given the fact that Kino planned on escaping the village in his canoe, the destroyed canoe symbolically represents the loss of hope and peace in Kino's life. The Song of Evil surrounds the sunken canoe, and Kino's life takes a turn for the worse. Kino's family, heritage, and peaceful existence are destroyed once his canoe is irreparably damaged.
In The Pearl by John Steinbeck, Kino's canoe is an important symbol and has several functions. First of all, the literal function of the canoe is to provide Kino and his family with their livelihood. Without the canoe, Kino could not search for oysters, and without the canoe, he would have never found the pearl. Furthermore, on a literal level, the canoe is the "one thing of value he owned" (Chap 2, para 6). In chapter two when the canoe is introduced, Kino is filled with the Song of the Family and that is a good song, filled with love.
However, on a symbolic level, the canoe represents more than Kino's material wealth and his ability to dive for oysters. The canoe functions as the symbol of the traditions of both his family and culture. It has been passed down from his grandfather to his father and then to Kino and represents their way of life. Later, when the canoe is destroyed, so is Kino's life. In fact the killing of the canoe is considered more important than killing a man: "This was an evil beyond thinking.The killing of a man was not so evil as killing of a boat" (Chap 5, para 15). The canoe represents all that is important in Kino's culture, and once his canoe is destroyed, the Song of Evil overtakes the entire family.