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A Nameless Man In Raymond Carver's Cathedral

Decent Essays

Raymond Carver’s “Cathedral” is a story about a nameless man, who is the narrator, his wife, and his wife’s friend Robert. Robert is a blind man that his wife met many years ago while working in Seattle when she was married to her first husband. In the story “Cathedral”, the narrator doesn’t admit it but he is jealous of the men from his wife’s past, such as her ex-husband and Robert. The narrator is also narrow-minded towards the blind community and towards his wife’s feelings towards her friend’s visit. The narrator can see perfectly, but the absence of his own self-awareness and insight makes him blind in many ways, especially when it comes to his own life and his marriage. The narrator is not welcoming of his wife’s old friend, Robert, to his home. He categorizes Robert as part of his wife’s past, which makes him jealous and bitter towards Robert. He doesn’t care whether this visit is important to his wife, nor what role Robert has played in helping her over-come her suicide attempt and her divorce. The narrator is also jealous of his wife’s ex-husband and in the story “Cathedral” leaves him nameless, “why should he have a name? he was the childhood sweetheart, and what more does he want?” (Carver 436). When the narrator, his wife, and Robert are sitting and conversing, the narrator is expecting his wife to talk to Robert about her “dear husband”; even though every comment he has made to his wife about Robert, and everything he does, seems to irritate and anger her.

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