The narrator 's commitment to the girl greatly increased his expectation for the market, something other than perfection disappointed him. When he was anxiously waiting for his uncle 's arrival, the talker showed idealism and hoped to blow Mangan' s sister with the gift he promised from the market. At 9 o'clock in the evening, the narrator seemed drunk, and finally an indifferent uncle returned. This showed the adventure of the boy so less funny as he was already late, but his feelings against Mangan's sisters overcame this, and he just went.
The story written by James Joyce, "Arrabi" by Nathaniel Hawthorne and "Young Goodman Brown" contain reasons for the hero's dissatisfaction with harassment at the end of the story. Important similarities The similarity between the two stories is that each hero is an idealist and is overwhelmed by the reality that shocked them. In the story 'Arabi', the hero is drawn behind everything he did for her? "These are the questions the author asked us in a third person perspective.We shared well the way she thinks.The author is effective for both 'Araby' and 'Eveline', but my last point The theme similarity of 'Araby' 'Eveline' The themes of 'Araby' and 'Eveline' are both love and love, love is a big theme in 'Araby'.
James Joyce's short story "Araby" and Nathaniel Hawthorne's "Young Goodman Brown" are stories about change. However, the way the two characters change is quite different. Organized religion imposes objections on curiosity and the natural behavior of growth. In "Arabi", an unknown boy aged 12 or 13 represents his personal adulthood. When this story happened, due to the strong religious obligation sexual behavior was greatly suppressed. "Young Goodman Brown" is the story of a young man of Puritan who signs a contract with the devil. Brown felt shattered when he discovered that many of his colleagues, including religious leaders and his wife, are participating in a group of blacks. The persuasion witnessed by Goodman Brown may or may not be true, but has completely changed his life.