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Raymond Carver Cathedral Theme

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Rosa Alicia Ghazaly
Mr. Joel Ohren
English 102
December 15 2016
Cathedral Theme
I read the short story “Cathedral by Raymond Carver. This story describes the first-time meeting between a blind man and a sighted man. Robert, who is blind, is visiting for a few days with his long time friend who is the wife and her husband is only referred to as Bub. The wife and Bub are both sighted.
When the wife ended her employment with Robert over ten years ago, Robert asked if he could touch her face before she left. Robert and the wife stayed in touch even after she left her old job by communicating with audio tape over the past ten years. The wife has just picked up Robert at the train station and brought him to her home. Bub, the husband has never met …show more content…

There is nothing more important to a blind person than keeping a clear mind, being blind you are forced to use all of the capabilities you have left and being high isn’t part of it, plus, no blind person would smoke marijuana for the first time in the home of a stranger.
The narrator’s wife is a principal character for at least half of the story, but then she falls asleep on the couch between the blind man and her husband. Her sudden withdrawal, which we might consider an absence of sorts, provides the possibility of the two men connecting. The wife’s centrality contrasted by her absence is a subtle yet dramatic shift that permits the rest of the story to unfold.
At the end of the evening, Bub and Robert are watching television and during that time there was no cable and usually the only thing that is on television late in the evening was usually advertisements or preachers preaching at church and in this case they were watching a program describing various cathedrals around the world. Bub was concerned that Robert cannot understand what a cathedral looks …show more content…

A Cathedral is a place for people to go and worship, to connect with God. By drawing the Cathedral the narrator is in some ways also making a connection. For the first time he appears to be able to see.
There is also a sense of irony at the end of the story. The narrator’s eyes are closed and he is being led by a blind man, yet he is able to see. Carver never explains what it is the narrator sees, but there is the sense that he has found a connection and is no longer detached or isolated.
Raymond Carvers choice of theme of blindness makes his goal of offering a deeper understanding of the nature of human a success. He is able to tell readers that there is physical blindness and psychological blindness. Those with the physical disability could see well than those who are not. This motif is accentuated by these examples from the story--the first is the demeanor of Bub which shows signs of disapproval of the imminent visit of his wife's blind friend, the second is his contemplating the basis of his wife's friendship with Robert, and the third is his verbal and sensory interaction with the blind man when he draws a cathedral on a paper

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