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In Chapter 32, Jim and the pirates realize they are close to finding Captain Flint's elusive buried treasure. As the pirates approach the spot on the map where the treasure supposedly lies, the novel uses a metaphor to describe the intensity of their desire:
Their eyes burned in their heads; their feet grew speedier and lighter; their whole soul was bound up in that fortune, that whole lifetime of extravagance and pleasure, that lay waiting there for each of them.
As the pirates's excitement for buried treasure grows, they appear to physically transform in front of Jim's eyes. It is as if greed is a physical force that overtakes them. They move speedily ahead, focused entirely on the fortune ahead of them. The physical changes Jim describes aren't literal; Stevenson uses a metaphor to describe the pirates' greed and make their hunger for treasure palpable to the reader. Most of the time the pirates are described as unorganized, drunk, and bumbling. Treasure seems to be the only thing the pirates take seriously.
This is a dramatic moment in the narrative; the entire plot of Treasure Island, after all, is structured around finding Flint's treasure, and the treasure's existence is a source of motivation for almost all of the characters. However, through the plot's events, Stevenson makes clear that an unbridled desire for wealth comes at a high price: destruction and death.












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Common Core-aligned