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James Joyce Araby Imagery Essay

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In “Araby”, James Joyce uses imagery to allow the reader to better comprehend the story. In the beginning of the story, the boy is seen playing with his friends, a seemingly happy time to most, but in his town “dusk fell before we had well eaten our dinners”(2), and their play took them “through the dark muddy lanes behind the houses”(2) The imagery of the darkness and dirty streets shows how dull life was for the boy and his friends. They did the same thing every day, playing in the same gloomy streets, and going back to the same dreary houses in the evening. This allows the reader to understand how exciting it was when the boy got to see Mangan’s sister on the doorstep. Even though he still followed the same routine when he was around her, …show more content…

Joyce writes the story using the first person in a way that makes it seem like we are listening in on the boy’s thoughts as they are happening. For instance, when he talks to Mangan’s sister for the first time, the reader sees him as flustered, with him thinking to himself “When she addressed the first words to me I was so confused that I did not know what to answer.”(3). Writing from this point of view shows the reader how amazing this is for him to be talking to his first love, a scenario he had previously only dreamed of. This also shows the reader how naive he is in thinking that just because she talked to him, that she in interested in him romantically. This idea is also conveyed when the boy is at the bazaar, and realizes that his efforts to be with Mangan’s sister are futile. Even though the reader may have realized that he was being childish, Joyce writes so that the reader feels sorry for him, as he has to face the reality that he is not going to be with Mangan’s sister any time soon. It is at this point that he realizes he has to grow up, and the first person point of view allows the reader to sympathize with this

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