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Raymond Carver's The Cathedral

Decent Essays

Raymond Carver’s The Cathedral is narrated by a man formed by his society who has a lesson to learn after meeting his wife’s long lost friend Robert, who is blind. In the beginning of our story our narrator is a close minded and judgemental man, his ill-minded opinions include prejudices against the blind. He assumes that he would have nothing in common with Robert because of these aforementioned prejudices based solely off of information gathered from movies (Carver 86). The narrator’s routine life style has left him with quite a substance abuse problem whether he acknowles it or not. Every night the narrator comes home to his wife, drinks as much scotch as he can, and then after his wife goes to sleep he smokes weed for a few hours until …show more content…

Fundamentally some of his actions could certainly be pursued as mean spirited and hateful, however it is more likely these ideals and his overall behavior stem from his status in the community (Stern 1). As a white man of his time, a certain amount of ignorance is expected to come from our narrator. Carver brings this ignorance to light almost immediately with a few comments about the narrator’s view on blind people, “A blind man in my house was not something I looked forward to (Carver 86).”, our narrator announces shamelessly. Despite the fact that this logic is based solely off of movies to an ignorant person it is truth. Upon hearing about Robert’s late wife, the narrator immediately asks if his wife was a negro (Carver 88). This assumption is most likely based off the prejudice that a white woman would not burden herself with a blind man as a husband (Stern 1). Our narrator then finds himself feeling some sort of empathy for what seems like the first time in the story unfortunately he feels bad because he believes that since Robert could not see his wife with his eyes, “she could never see herself as she was seen in the eyes of her loved one. (Carver 88)” Proving that clearly our narrator does not understand that true love is on the inside and one does not have to see it to experience it. Simply by making her happy, and being sweet to her Robert could have very well been the best husband he could be. Meanwhile despite having vision our narrator is clearly not happy in his own

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