In many contemporary stories, love is an idea to move themes and stories. The plot follows a similar path over a period of time. At first, there was a distance between the two loved ones. After that, the man must listen to the feelings of the girl in his dream, and finish with happiness after the story ends. In James Joyce's "Arab", the plot seems to be susceptible to the influence of a general love plot. It started with a boy, a narrator and fell in love with his friend and sister. He started talking with the girl and quickly went to the Arab market to regain the girl and thought he would get her love.
James Joyce's "Araby" seems to be a big controversy surrounding James Joyce's short "Araby". This includes controversies on various political issues, freedom of remarks and issues related to these issues, but this is not a controversy. This is a simpler question. Can a boy of this story have a deep emotional understanding at the end of the story? Through the last sentence (Arabic, 398), I clearly do not intend to do a lack of evil, bad, misery, confidentiality, spiritual or intellectual enlightenment. When comparing "heart of darkness" written by Joseph Conrad, and "death" of James Joyce, each author shows that it brings a dark living dead to the hero and is getting worse. How much has changed?
In James Joyce's "Arab" "Arabic", James Joyce is exploring the themes that adults do not necessarily have. The narrator of the story is the hero. When I fell in love with a neighbor girl, he showed a theme. At first, the boy was too shy to express her feelings for her too. At a later stage of the story, he decided to give her a gift and to leave her from the bazaar. Eventually, he noticed that he failed. And now he lost the opportunity to go out with this girl. And, "I was bothered by pain and vanity" (Joyce).
"Arabic", a young Arab James Joyce experience of James Joyce, is a simple story of the young passion of the harsh economic times. The main character of this story is a boy living in a desolate environment, intertwined with the passion of youth, frustration, reality. A narrator's statement about the environment around the boy enhances the desolate environment of this age. "Arabi" tells us the loneliness of youth, the joy of youthful passion, and the realization of losing dreams.