Salvatore by W Somerset Maugham: Summary & Analysis
Summary of the story
The story “Salvatore” by William Somerset Maugham begins
abruptly with “I wonder if I can do it.” The writer is doubtful whether he can
hold our attention for a few pages when he narrates the story of Salvatore.
Salvatore was fifteen years old, the eldest son of an
Italian fisherman. He had a pleasant face and happily took care of
his two younger brothers. He spent his morning lying on the sea-beach and used
to swim effortlessly in the sea where his father used to catch fish.
As Salvatore grew, he fell in love and was betrothed to a
girl who lived on the Grande Marina. The girl was pretty and had beautiful
eyes.
Then Salvatore left home for military service to become a
sailor in the navy of King Victor Emmanuel. He felt nostalgic and missed the
islands of Ischia and Vesuvius which he now realized were parts of his life as
important as his hands and legs. He felt all alone in the battleship living
with strangers and also in the noisy friendless cities where he landed.
Salvatore now grew homesick. And above all these, he missed his fiancee (the
girl he is engaged to) the most.
In service, Salvatore was sent to many places like Spezia,
Venice, Bari and China. He fell ill when in China, and as he was suffering from
rheumatism he was considered unfit for further service. Salvatore did not mind
his illness and rather felt happy to return to his own home. He was eager to
meet his family and fiancee.
On his return he was very emotionally welcomed by his
parents and brothers with ‘great deal of kissing’ and cry of joy. But Salvatore
was looking for his girl in the crowd, but in vain. She was not there.
When he went to her house, she was sitting with her mother
at the doorstep. They had already received the news of his illness and learned
that he ‘would never be quite well again’, ‘would never be strong enough to
work like a man’. So, his fiancee’s mother bluntly told him that her daughter
could not marry him now. This was a heartbreak for Salvatore, but he did not
blame the girl.
One day Salvatore’s mother told him about Assunta, a girl
older than him who had seen him at a festival, fallen in love with him and
wanted to marry him. Though at first he denied, on his mother’s advice he got
married to Assunta and settled down in a tiny house in the middle of a
vineyard. Later they had two children, both boys.
Salvatore had to work hard to earn a living. He used to
catch cuttlefish at night. He also used to work in his vineyard the whole day.
His rheumatism often took its toll on him; he would then lie
down on the beach with pain racking his limbs but never did he utter an
unpleasant word for anyone. Never did he blame anyone for anything in his life.
Salvatore was a responsible husband as well as an
affectionate father. At times he gave his children a bath and used to hold them
tenderly as if they were flowers.
Finally the author comes back to where he started. He
reminds us that he wanted to keep us attentive throughout his narration and he
has successfully done so. Maugham depicts the character of Salvatore as a man
who possessed nothing but an invaluable quality, “the rarest, the most precious
and the loveliest that anyone can have” – the quality of goodness.
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