Mrs. Mooney needs to rent out rooms to itinerant men, even though this -- together with her cold and calculating nature -- places her beyond the pale of polite society. Polly needs to find a husband, both to take her place in the adult world and to quash the rumors about her rampant hormones. And once Mr. Doran's affair with Polly is revealed, Mr. Doran needs to marry the girl in order to preserve his own reputation and livelihood. Even though this story ends with the prospect of marriage, it is not a happy solution, for all three characters are trapped inside the narrow boxes of Dublin society. .
Would you like to read this story in its entirety? Click on the link below!.
Dubliners (Twentieth-Century Classics) .
Brandon D. Hart Mr. Stannard Philosophy 2 July 18, 2000 Mrs. Mooney's Deceitful Act The Boarding House, written by James Joyce, takes place in a small neighborhood located in Dublin, Ireland during the early 1900's. There were three main characters involved in this story-Mrs. Mooney known as The Madam, who was in charge of the boarding house, Polly who is the daughter of Mrs. Mooney, and Mr. Doran who was a resident of the house. James Joyce's, The Boarding House has a strange twist. It just so happens, Mrs. Mooney who is very strict and protective of her daughter allows a secret relationship to form between Mr. Doran and Polly. Pretending as though she has no idea of the matter, the inconceivable act of fornication occurs between the two-thus, scarring her daughter's honor for life. For a man would prefer to marry a woman who has not already been taken by another man. In all likelihood, Mr. Doran was wrong to take advantage of a young naive woman at the precious age of nineteen. Mrs. Mooney was aware Mr. Doran had been employed for thirteen years in a great Catholic wine-merchant's office and publicity would mean for him, perhaps, the loss of his job (James Joyce 40). Upon revealing her knowledge to the couple, she shamelessly informed Mr.