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Who Is The Narrator In Cathedral

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Cathedral “I wasn’t enthusiastic about his visit. He was no one I knew. And his being blind bothered me” (99) the narrator tells us in Raymond Carver’s Cathedral. An old friend of the narrator’s wife, Robert, is coming to visit them at their home. The narrator is not at all pleased with this situation and lets us know it from the beginning. Throughout the story, the narrator begins to see the blind man in a different light and his mind-set begins to change to admiration. The narrator seems to be somewhat jealous at first of the relationship between his wife and their visitor. He says, “She told him everything, or it seemed to me” (100). His wife had worked for the blind man for one summer ten years ago, yet she …show more content…

- these past ten years” (103). “Robert had done a little of everything, it seemed, a regular blind jack-of-all-trades” (103). In this quote, the narrator is both envious, because of all the talk about Robert, and admiring of all the things that Robert has accomplished although blind. As the night progresses, the wife begins to get sleepy and goes upstairs to change. The narrator tells us, “I wished she’s come back downstairs. I didn’t want to be left alone with a blind man” (104). At this point, the narrator does not know how to react to this man let alone what to say to him. His wife is no longer there to act as the link between the two. The narrator keeps the conversation going by offering more drinks and “rolling two fat numbers” (104). His wife falls asleep on the couch and the blind man stays up with the narrator because he feels as though they had not had a chance all night to talk. The narrator says he is “glad for the company” (105). He really means this when he says it too. They continue to watch TV for a while and the narrator, sensing the quiet, tries to tell Robert what it is that he is seeing on the television at the moment. The narrator tries to explain to Robert what a cathedral looks like but cannot think of better descriptions than “big” and “massive”. Robert suggests to the narrator that they could “draw one together” (108). At first the narrator draws a simple box with a roof. Then he begins to

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