Friday, November 22, 2019
An Analysis of Araby in James Joyces Dubliners :: Joyce Dubliners Araby Essays
  There are many statements in the story "Araby"  that are both         surprising and puzzling.Ã   The statement that perhaps gives us the  most         insight into the narrator's thoughts and feelings is found at the end of         the story.Ã   "Gazing up into the darkness I saw myself as a creature  driven         and derided by vanity; and my eyes burned with anguish and anger. (32)"Ã    By         breaking this statement into small pieces and key words, we can see it as  a         summation of the story's major themes.         Ã           Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   At this point in the story, many emotions are  swirling about in the         narrator's head.Ã   His trip to the bazaar has been largely  unsuccessful.Ã   He         was late arriving, was unable to find a gift for Mangan's sister, felt         scorned by the merchants, and suddenly found himself in a dark room.Ã    These         surroundings left him feeling both derided, and with a sense that this         eagerly anticipated trip had been in vain.         Ã           Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Many other situations caused him to feel  driven and derided by         vanity.Ã   His reflections of the "charitable" life of the priest who         occupied the narrator's house before the narrator make us wonder if the         priest led a life of vanity.Ã   His early obsession with Mangan's sister  now         seems in vain.Ã   "I had never spoken to her ... and yet her name was like  a         summons to my foolish blood. (4)"Ã   He feels ashamed and ridiculed by  his         earlier inability to communicate with Mangan's sister.Ã   He sees how         distracted he was by his anticipation of the bazaar.Ã   He recalls that he  "         had hardly any patience with the serious work of life. (12)"Ã   The  narrator         is embarrassed by the time he had wasted, and the ease with which he  became         distracted.Ã   The near total worthlessness of the bazaar at the time  the         narrator arrives is an extreme example of vanity.Ã   Not only does the         narrator feel ridiculed by the vanity involved in this situation, he also         feels driven by it.Ã   The simple conversation he carries on with  Mangan's         sister regarding the bazaar drives him to direct all his thoughts toward         the glory that will be the bazaar.Ã   A sort of irony can be found in  the         fact that something that he devoted all his "waking and sleeping  thoughts"    
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