Pgs 17-52
The Little Prince describes his chores to the speaker, describing the baobabs, the small trees that could tear his planet apart without constant weeding, and he speaks of his beloved flower. The Prince’s flower, a vain rose, complained about her conditions, knowing the Little Prince would attend to her every desire. Eventually, the Little Prince leaves his planet because of his inability to confront the flower. He holds on to a flock of birds and visits several planets and speaks with their solitary inhabitants, such as the king, the pompous man, and the drunk.
These three characters think or act in a very strange way. First, the king believes he reigns over the entire universe because there is no one else to challenge his authority. The conceited man spends his days hoping for admirers to come and fawn over him. And the tippler attempts to escape the depression and shame of drinking by… drinking! The last man the little prince encounters depresses him and decides to go to another planet.
Pgs 52-111
In this section the Little Prince finds a businessman who spends his days counting the millions of stars in the sky. Each time the man has been interrupted, which totals three times in twenty-two years, he loses count of the stars, forcing him to recount “his” millions of stars. Exupery satirizes the modern world in this section, using the businessman to represent the general population of people who toil in the office and receive a piece of paper for their work, which they place in the bank.
When the Little Prince views this man’s work, something that accomplishes nothing, he realizes that his views are very different from the grown-ups’ views. On the fifth planet, the little prince finds a lamplighter that lights and puts out the light of the post every minute. The little prince found that this person was the least ridiculous of all, for he had some meaning in his work. The next person is a geographer who knows little geography, who directs the little prince to go to Earth. When the little prince arrived on the Earth, he was very surprised not to see any people, only the vast desert.
Pgs. 79-111
The little prince wishes for true friendship, which explains his search for other people on different planets. His first friend is the fox, who becomes tamed in order to live freely instead of in hiding. The little prince discovers that the people on this large planet are not very different from those who he met on the asteroids. The little prince says towards the end of the book that, “All men have stars.” Every person on this planet has something of the utmost importance in their lives, whether it is money, power, prestige, knowledge, or friendship. I think that my star is just experiencing life. I think that in my four years at this school, I have experienced more than most, and grown leaps and bounds. I think that is the core element of this story, the journey in life and the experience gained from those experiences.
An Analysis of the Little Prince. (2022, Feb 23). Retrieved from https://paperap.com/an-analysis-of-the-little-prince/