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Write The Summar Of Eveline

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Answered by Anonymous
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“Eveline” is a short story by James Joyce. It is one of 15 stories in Joyce’s short story collection, Dubliners, and it was published in 1914. In the story, a young woman must choose between living in the past or the present. Although there’s nothing controversial about “Eveline,” many publishers refused to print Dubliners for various social and political reasons. Joyce was a distinguished Irish writer best known for his epic novel Ulysses. Critics and literary scholars regard Joyce as one of the most significant 20th-century writers in the English language.

“Eveline” is concerned with what happens when we allow memories to hold us back from moving forward. Memories often prevent us from letting go. They keep us locked in vicious cycles that make us unhappy. Even when we remember something fondly, these memories stop us from living in the present.

The protagonist is a young woman called Eveline living in Dublin, Ireland. She desperately misses her old life and spends most of her time remembering it. When the story opens, the girl sits at her sitting room window, watching the world go by. All she can smell is dust, and it makes her feel tired. This exhaustion, and the dust all around the house, symbolize Eveline’s preoccupation with the past. If she doesn’t stop brooding, Eveline will also gather dust and turn stagnant.

Eveline remembers what the street looked like before builders filled it with houses. She loved playing in the field with her friends. Everyone on the street knew each other. It was a lovely place to grow up. The only problem was Eveline’s father. He was a temperamental man who didn’t like her playing outside so much. He wanted her at home where he could keep an eye on her.

Eveline suggests that her mother kept her father’s temper in check. Now, her mother is dead. Some of her old friends moved away. Others died through illness and hunger. Eveline resents how everyone’s moved on, and she’s stuck at home, remembering. It feels like the world turns without her, and she doesn’t know what to do about it.

Finally, Eveline decides that it’s time to leave home. She knows that she might never return. To cheer herself up, she obsessively dusts all the furniture. She wants to preserve this moment forever, because she knows that, even if she does come home again, everything will look different. If she’s not there to dust and clean the house, it will decay and stagnate.

Midway through the story, Eveline reveals that she’s running away with a young man called Frank. She wants to reinvent herself. She’s sick of her father’s drunken outbursts and she hates giving him all her money. If she moves far away, she can forget her past and be whoever she wants to be. She’s the last of her siblings to leave the house, and her brothers don’t check up on her like they should. She wonders if anyone will care when she leaves, and if her memories will linger on.

Eveline reveals another truth—Frank is a sailor. He’s very handsome, charming, and gregarious. He tells her stories about exotic and far-off lands, and he always tells her how much he fancies her. Eveline’s father warned her to stay away from Frank, because he only wants to sleep with her, but Eveline thinks she loves him.

As the night wears on, Eveline spends more time obsessing over the dust. She inhales it, as if she can take the past with her. She realizes that, if she runs away with Frank, her father will die. Her mother wouldn’t want Eveline to give up on the family. Eveline doesn’t know what to do, because she feels like she deserves a shot at happiness. She wishes someone could make the decision for her.

The more time she spends looking out the window, the more frightened she becomes. She wants to live, but she doesn’t want to disappoint anyone. She worries that, if her mother could see her now, she’d be terribly ashamed. Eveline doesn’t want to ruin the family name, but she doesn’t want to die alone, either. She decides to leave with Frank.

The next morning, she follows Frank though the station and towards the harbor. The whole time, she prays for a divine intervention. She wants God to show her the right choice. It’s not too late to go home and forget the whole thing. If she leaves with Frank now, she can never go home. She knows that, since her father is old and frail, she won’t see him again.

Frank pulls her close to keep her safe from the busy crowd. The action upsets Eveline because now she feels trapped and claustrophobic. She feels like God wants her to stay home, where she belongs. Leaving with Frank means losing her identity, or so she thinks. She doesn’t think she can survive outside Dublin. She lets go of Frank’s hand and watches him leave. She doesn’t even smile at him. There’s a sense that the past finally defeated Eveline, and she’s doomed to fade into dust.

Answered by rishirajjaiswal985
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Answer:

see the attachement figure.....

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