Compare And Contrast Cathedral And Singapore

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The narrative of Carvey’s “Cathedral” and Mary Oliver’s “Singapore” shows the moment of enlightenment for a narrator and lady. Two different reading, yet the encounter of a visit and chance meeting transforms the characters. In “Cathedral”, the narrator is telling a story about a wife who had a friend call name Robert. The narrator, who also is the wife’s husband, meets Robert for the first time. He, judges Robert, because of his blindness. Therefore, the narrator feels superior over Robert. However, when the narrator draws a picture of the cathedral; Robert places his hand over the narrators. The narrator has an epiphany. The same is true for “Singapore.” A lady has a first-time encounter with a cleaning lady in the bathroom. The lady also …show more content…

In Carvey’s “Cathedral” the reader sees the narrator only has humanity towards Robert when he touches his hand. The narrator states “He found my hand, the hand with the pen. He closed his hand over my hand” (Carver 37). The transformation happens when the narrator turns his sight inward and sees Robert as a human being not an object. He remembers “My eyes were still closed. I was in my house. I knew that. But I didn’t feel like I was inside anything. “It’s really something,” I said” (Carver 37). The narrator knew he experienced an appearance. There are believers of Christ that would say he had a manifestation of the lord. For Oliver’s “Singapore” the lady’s heart is touch when she is taken back by the cleaning woman’s smile and usefulness as a beauty object. First the lady compares her to a bird, then a river. The lady reminds herself the cleaning woman is human like herself. The lady states “What kind of nonsense is this? Everybody needs a job” (Oliver 937). First the lady finds the cleaning woman disgusting by doing the work of labors. She said “Disgust argued in my stomach” (Oliver 937). But, like “Cathedral” the lady also has a …show more content…

The reader sees this when the narrator talks about how life must have been for Robert’s wife. He states “It was beyond my understanding. Hearing this, I felt sorry for the blind man for a bit. And then I found myself thinking what a pitiful life this woman must have led. Imagine a woman who could never see herself as she was seen in the eyes of her loved one” (Carver 30). What the narrator did not know is looking with physical vision is not the same as seeing a person. As a human being, we encounter each other every day and never see the real person. The narrator took a look at Robert. Because of blindness he assumes Robert is lacking in his responsibility to his wife. The ironic part is the narrator does not see the lack in his marriage. Robert, who is blind, has more insight than the narrator, and he has a vision. In “Singapore”, the lady is in disgust by the cleaning woman cleaning the ashtrays in the horrid toilet. It is not until she realizes the cleaner is making an honest living. The cleaning woman is in good cheer and never says a word. The cleaning woman’s attitude is surprising to the lady. Both the narrator and the lady’s only concern is how the situation affects them. They both are lacking in self-awareness, and they both reveal they do not know the difference between the art of vision and actual seeing a person’s

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