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“Eveline”
Summary
Eveline Hill sits at a window in her home and looks out
onto the street while fondly recalling her childhood, when she played
with other children in a field now developed with new homes. Her thoughts
turn to her sometimes abusive father with whom she lives, and to
the prospect of freeing herself from her hard life juggling jobs as
a shop worker and a nanny to support herself and her father. Eveline
faces a difficult dilemma: remain at home like a dutiful daughter,
or leave Dublin with her lover, Frank, who is a sailor. He wants
her to marry him and live with him in Buenos Aires, and she has
already agreed to leave with him in secret. As Eveline recalls,
Frank’s courtship of her was pleasant until her father began to
voice his disapproval and bicker with Frank. After that, the two
lovers met clandestinely.
As Eveline reviews her decision to embark on a new life,
she holds in her lap two letters, one to her father and one to her
brother Harry. She begins to favor the sunnier memories of her old
family life, when her mother was alive and her brother was living
at home, and notes that she did promise her mother to dedicate herself
to maintaining the home. She reasons that her life at home, cleaning and
cooking, is hard but perhaps not the worst option—her father is not
always mean, after all. The sound of a street organ then reminds her
of her mother’s death, and her thoughts change course. She remembers
her mother’s uneventful, sad life, and passionately embraces her
decision to escape the same fate by leaving with Frank.
At the docks in Dublin, Eveline waits in a crowd to board
the ship with Frank. She appears detached and worried, overwhelmed
by the images around her, and prays to God for direction. Her previous declaration
of intent seems to have never happened. When the boat whistle blows
and Frank pulls on her hand to lead her with him, Eveline resists.
She clutches the barrier as Frank is swept into the throng moving
toward the ship. He continually shouts “Come!” but Eveline remains
fixed to the land, motionless and emotionless.
Analysis
Eveline’s story illustrates the pitfalls of holding onto
the past when facing the future. Hers is the first portrait of a
female in Dubliners, and it reflects the conflicting
pull many women in early twentieth-century Dublin felt between a
domestic life rooted in the past and the possibility of a new married
life abroad. One moment, Eveline feels happy to leave her hard life,
yet at the next moment she worries about fulfilling promises to
her dead mother. She grasps the letters she’s written to her father
and brother, revealing her inability to let go of those family relationships,
despite her father’s cruelty and her brother’s absence.
She clings to the older and more pleasant memories and imagines
what other people want her to do or will do for her. She sees Frank
as a rescuer, saving her from her domestic situation. Eveline suspends
herself between the call of home and the past and the call of new
experiences and the future, unable to make a decision.
The threat of repeating her mother’s life spurs Eveline’s
epiphany that she must leave with Frank and embark on a new phase
in her life, but this realization is short-lived. She hears a street
organ, and when she remembers the street organ that played on the
night before her mother’s death, Eveline resolves not to repeat
her mother’s life of “commonplace sacrifices closing in final craziness,”
but she does exactly that. Like the young boys of “An Encounter”
and “Araby,” she desires escape, but her reliance on routine and
repetition overrides such impulses. On the docks with Frank, away
from the familiarity of home, Eveline seeks guidance in the routine
habit of prayer. Her action is the first sign that she in fact hasn’t
made a decision, but instead remains fixed in a circle of indecision.
She will keep her lips moving in the safe practice of repetitive
prayer rather than join her love on a new and different path. Though
Eveline fears that Frank will drown her in their new life, her reliance
on everyday rituals is what causes Eveline to freeze and not follow
Frank onto the ship.
Eveline’s paralysis within an orbit of repetition leaves
her a “helpless animal,” stripped of human will and emotion. The
story does not suggest that Eveline placidly returns home and continues her
life, but shows her transformation into an automaton that lacks expression.
Eveline, the story suggests, will hover in mindless repetition,
on her own, in Dublin. On the docks with Frank, the possibility
of living a fully realized life left her.
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