A Sunrise On The Veld Analysis

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The two boys in the short stories have an ego that is inflated and have a high notion of self - importance, eventually leading their optimistic perspectives of themselves to be demolished. In “A Sunrise on the Veld” the death of the buck symbolizes the maturation of the teen boy. The event the boy just witnessed was a significant turning point in his life as it made him realize not everything in life can be modified. When the young teen boy was looking over the buck, after the ants had fed on the buck’s skull near the bush (forest) he felt a feeling which he had not felt before. Reflecting back on what just happened to the buck the young boy says, “ The knowledge of fatality, of what has to be, had gripped him and for the first time in his life; and he …show more content…

Moreover, the narrator in “Araby” transitions from being a young naive innocent boy to being more mature and self-aware. The narrator of “Araby” feels insignificant just like the teen boy from Veld did. Both boys from the short stories lost a part of their innocence through their respective journeys. The boys gained a new sense of awareness. The narrator in “Araby” comes to realize his insignificance after he recognizes that the affection he had for her Mangan's sister was solely one sided. Major event in the narrator's life as the romantic idealistic view he had demolishes by reality. After being late to the Araby market the narrator due to his uncle coming home late the narrator is left feeling foolish because he was unable to get something for Mangan's sister. The narrator says, “ Gazing up into the darkness I saw myself as a creature driven and derided by vanity; and my eyes burned with anguish and anger” (Joyce 5). The narrator feels as if he is blameworthy because he was foolish enough for thinking that somehow is life can be more beautiful and exciting than his current

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