Retrieved from https://studentshare.org/english/1577715-catedral
https://studentshare.org/english/1577715-catedral.
The story revolves around this meeting between the three. During this meeting, the narrator is deeply affected by the blind man, Robert. The narrator realizes his loneliness, his lack of communication, and his use of alcohol and drugs to overcome these shortcomings through this meeting and thus the story ends on a positive note that there is still hope. The first hint of the narrator’s loneliness is when his wife says to him “You don’t have any friends,” (Carver, 2009, para 10). His constant use of alcohol also bears testimony that he wishes to drown these feelings by consuming more and more alcohol.
Also at one point in the story when the wife goes to sleep and Robert wishes to stay and chat with the narrator, the narrator seems surprised and is glad to have company in his daily ritual of staying up late and drinking. Another important issue that the narrator realizes is his lack of communication. He is not able to communicate properly with his wife. He is surprised to see his wife smiling when she comes home with Robert thus hinting that he does not know what pleases his wife and what does not.
He is not even mentioned in the conversation between his wife and Robert. When he, bored of the conversation, switched on the television, his wife looked at him with irritation. (Carver, 2009, para 47). Likewise from the beginning, he was uncomfortable with the notion that a blind man was coming to visit and would stay in his house. He had not been around any blind person to have any fore-hand knowledge of how to treat a blind person. Eventually, he ends up asking tactless questions for instance the side of the train that Robert sat on while coming as it would not have mattered to CATHEDRAL 4Robert whichever side he sat on because he could not take in any view of the outside world.
The earlier part of the meeting is dominated by the conversation between Robert and the narrator’s wife, and even when he is addressed by Robert, he replies in monosyllables and phrases. He also changes some preconceived notions about blind people as he is surprised by the presence of a beard and absence of dark glasses on a blind man as well as his skill with the fork and fingers during dinner. Then he also faces immense difficulty in describing a cathedral to Robert. When Robert makes the narrator draw the cathedral, then finally makes him draw blindly, the narrator can feel like a blind person and this awakens empathy in him.
He can think of Robert as more than just a blind man. The story also compares the use of alcohol and drugs, used to mellow a person and put a temporary end to pain by simply moving out of consciousness, with friendship and companionship. The narrator also awakens to the notion that there are experiences available that are much more tangible than the soporific qualities of alcohol and drugs.
Read More