Araby by James Joyce
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The story “Araby,” by James Joyce, shows how people often expect more than that which ordinary reality can provide and consequently feel disappointed when they do not receive what they expect. Another fascinating piece of literature is the poetry collection The Black Riders and Other Lines by Stephen Crane. What, if anything, does one have to do with the other? This paper will compare one of Cranes poems to Joyces story.
“Araby” tells the story of a young boys disillusionment with life as he experiences his first adult feelings of love for a girl, but is then denied expression of his feelings for her by the adult world. The key theme is frustration, as the boy deals with the limits forced on him by his situation. He has a succession of romantic ideas about a girl and an event to which he attributes magnificent qualities, a common bazaar called “Araby,” that he will attend on her behalf. On the night when he waits for his uncle to return home so that he can go to the bazaar, the reader witnesses the boys frustration increasing and building. By the time he finally gets to go to the bazaar, it is more or less over. His fantasies about the bazaar and about buying a special gift for the girl of his dreams are revealed as being ridiculous. The boys anticipation of the event, and of pleasing the object of his affections with a gift from the event, provided him with nice fantasies. However, reality turns out to be much harsher than fantasy.
Cranes poems often carry the themes of love and human nature just as Joyces story, “Araby,” does. If one looks at poem III of The Black Riders and Other Lines, one can see a creature literally “eating his heart out,” presumably over a lost love. One can easily draw a parallel between this poem and “Araby,” as the boy in Joyces story ends up eating his heart out as well over the lost chance to impress the girl of his dreams.
Joyce created much darkness in the setting of “Araby.” This darkness represents how the boy feels about his own life. Even as he plays outside with his friends, the boy remarks, “When we met in the street the houses had grown somber. The space of sky above us was the colour of ever-changing violet and towards it the lamps of the street lifted their feeble lanterns.” In this quote, even the lanterns cant add lightness to the boys situation. The boy is young and naive and he feels that he leads a dull and boring life. Joyce uses darkness to make the boys reality more believable through very vivid, precise descriptions.
By contrast, when the boy thinks of or talks to the girl, the object of his affections, Joyce uses light to create a fairy tale world of dreams and illusions. When Joyce describes the boy waiting outside to watch the girl, he writes, “She was waiting for us, her figure defined by the light from the half-opened door.” Joyce later writes of the