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How Is Cathedral A Point Of View

Decent Essays

Cathedral, the short story by Raymond Carver is told from a first person point of view through the eyes of the narrator who remains nameless throughout the story. The narrator, for most of the story acts selfish, feels jealousy, and does not want Robert, a blind man, to come to visit, but as the story progresses, the narrator gets to know and understand Robert and for the first time, he begins to see things with a completely different perspective. These changes make the narrator a dynamic character. As soon as the story begins, we are told that the narrator is not happy about the upcoming visit from his wife’s blind friend, Robert. The narrator states “I wasn’t enthusiastic about his visit,” “[Robert] being blind bothered me”, and “a blind …show more content…

He says “her officer—why should he have a name? he was the childhood sweetheart, and what more does he want?” (Carver 449). Moreover, the narrator can also be considered a little selfish and ignorant. He briefly mentions his wife’s suicide attempt and does not give Robert any credit for actually helping her go through those hard times. He gives this almost no importance. Additionally, the narrator has a hard time understanding that Robert, who is white, was married to Beulah, who was black and just died. He states “That’s a name for a colored woman” and the narrator’s wife has to explain that Robert is blind, it would not matter what color Beulah was, but the narrator begins to feel sympathy for Robert (Carver 449). Even though in reality looks are not important and Robert might have seen through his hands how Beulah looks, the narrator cannot understand how someone is able to love someone else without ever looking at them. He states that “all this without his having ever seen what the goddamned woman looked like” (Carver 450). Soon after he also begins feeling sympathy for Beulah by saying describing how she would “never receive the smallest compliment from her beloved” and even worse, she died knowing that “he never even knew what she looked like” (Carver

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