After experiencing the trauma experience, I realized that what they thought possible was nothing but dreams. "Run away" implies that you will not stop daily life because you can not escape the desire to escape and take risks. New experiences people expect are sometimes uneasy. The story begins with the children playing Wild West, whose sole purpose is to interrupt school activities. An unknown boy who plays a narrator eagerly in an exciting adventure and persuaded his two friends to leave the school that day and advance into the city of Dublin.
Dubliners wrote by James Joyce is a series of short stories centered on the daily lives of the general people living in Dublin, Ireland. According to Joyce himself, his aim was "to write a chapter on the history of national morals, choose the Dublin as the city seems to be centered around Ducklin" (439). Each of the 15 stories is a story of disappointment, darkness, imprisonment and frustration. This book is divided into four parts: childhood, adolescence, maturity and public life. These stories reveal the emotions of Joyce, Dublin is the embody of blasphemy, and the citizen is a victim. Each story from Dublin is a unique and independent depiction, but they all have similarities with each other. The first three stories, The Sisters, An Encounter, and Araby are parallel to each other in many ways, and they can be regarded as collections themselves. The purpose of this article is to explore certain similarities to prove it.
James Joyce's "Dublin" is a series of short stories that provide short and intimate windows for the lives of various characters. Men and women of all ages, occupations, social classes are represented. The story "Dubliners" is usually about numbness and inertia of these people trying to get rid of their content and context: Madeleine: "Ink From the Lake" Short Story "A Fruitful, Multiple" Short Story, Author's Survey Ferron, by itself, seems to be a mere story of a young woman who is passionate about making a family of many children and grandchildren. It is very short and descriptive, so it may be difficult to distinguish its meaning. But because it is in Michael Ondaatje