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Firar Love


             First Love.
             "Araby" is a short story by James Joyce about a boy's first love, and it is about the world in which he lives in reality and fantasy. The boy in "Araby" resides in a city of darkness, hopeless comformity, and a horrible reality.
             The boy lives in a Dublin neighborhood that is desscribed as blind musty, dark, and muddy. First, Joyce identifies: "North Richmond street, being blind." It is a dead end, and thre is no hope. Second, he describes the street's lamps as "feeble lanterns" pointed toward and "ever-changing violet" sky. The color of the sky symbolizes a life with hope.
             The narrator's character goes around gazing up. First, from the shadows, he looks at his friend Margan's sister interested in a bazaar called Araby. He sees and opportunity to gain access to her by attending this event and buying her a present. Once he is committed to this mession, "her image accompanied me even in places the most hostile to romance." What did she do to make the boy lay on the floor at the front of the parlor morning after morning watching her door? If is because of the beauty he sees: "her dress swing as she moved her body and the soft rope of the hair tossed from side to side.".
             She make him think that he can kindle the relationship by merely luying her a present from the bazaar; he knows this relationship is impossible, however. He is unrealistic in his hopes and shelters himself from the reality, but his wishes and reality become clear after his visit to Araby. He realizes that all his dreams were fanciful and vain, and his quest is hopeless when he figures that he doesn't have enough money to buy and appropriate present. He is mad when he faces reality by "Gazing up into the darkness I saw myself as a creature driven and derided by vanity; and my eyes burned with anguish and anger.".
             The boy in Joyce's story feels disappointed, and he realizes that his dream is not compatile with reality.


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