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Main Theme Of Amy Foster

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In the short story, Amy Foster, written by Joseph Conrad, the main theme of the story was acceptance, as well as isolation and loneliness. Yanko Goorall faces a large quantity of complications. Foremost, he was a poor emigrant that was from Central Europe. Goorall did not speak any English, but slowly learned some throughout the progression of the story. Goorall had survived a shipwreck when he was on his way to America, and brought him to an English town called Colebrook, a town on the shores of Eastbay. In addition to all these problems he has encountered in his life, he was unaccepted and isolated. In the story Goorall is seen as a bad and unwanted person by the other characters, but while reading the story, Goorall isn’t a bad person at all, He is judged before he is even known in the story. Goorall was working for Swaffer; “he did the work which was given to him with an intelligence which surprised old Swaffer” (Conrad 19). “He could help at the ploughing, could milk the cows, feed the bullocks in the cattle-yard, and was of some use with the sheep”. During that time, doing all the work he did, he was still not getting paid regular wages. Swaffer’s younger daughter has a little girl that is not even three years old. She ran out of the house alone, and fell head first into the horse pond. Goorall was out in the yard and saw the little girl in such despair - he saved her; “the child would have perished - miserably suffocated” (Conrad 20). With this act of kindness,

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