The Narrator In Raymond Carver's Cathedral

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Cathedral Raymond Carver's story "Cathedral" is narrated in the first person by an unnamed husband. In the beginning of the story, the narrator gives a history about the friendship of his wife, and a blind man named Robert. The tone of the narrator's voice sounds more agitated by Robert being blind than his upcoming visit. The narrator does not realize how much the blind man means to his wife and is not excited about his visit, he seems to be bothered by his wife's excitement that he hasn't seen in a long time. The narrator doesn't know what to expect of the blind man other than what he has learned by a society of how a blind man should look, act, walk and talk. When the narrator and Robert meet, the narrator is shocked that Robert looks normal. By the end of the story, Carver writes about how the blind man, Robert, helps the narrator. Robert a blind man, helps remove the roiled blinders that have kept the narrator from seeing beyond the limits he and society have put in front of him. …show more content…

He describes her love for "her officer" as young love, that he has only witnessed but has never felt (315). As the narrator describes his marriage it's unpleasant and without a common routine. "Every night I smoked dope and stayed up as long as I could before I fell asleep. My wife and I hardly ever went to bed at the same time" (320). The narrator seems to be ashamed of who he is compared to the other men in his wife's life, that he refuses to give their first name when he talks about them. This close-mindedness seems to carry a theme in the

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