

When his hour had struck when the work day had ended. On the London Press in the world of British journalism. Techniques such as these lend the volume coherence. Again, Joyce conceived Dubliners as an integral work of fiction, not merely a collection of stories.

This was hinted at in "After the Race" (in which, after all, Jimmy has "studied" abroad), but it is truly dramatized here, in the insufferable, obnoxious figure of Gallaher.įinally, the conclusion of "A Little Cloud," in which Little Chandler returns dissatisfied to his family and shouts at his crying child, will be brutally reiterated in the ending of the next story, "Counterparts." This binds the two stories together, as "The Sisters," "An Encounter," and "Araby" are bound by their interchangeable protagonists. "A Little Cloud" is a turning point in the collection, because it implies that, contrary to what so many of the book's characters believe, flight from Ireland is not necessarily the solution to their problems. Despite having seen London and Paris and heard talk of Berlin, he is shallow, boorish, and alone.

And yet Gallaher, who got away, has succeeded in only the most superficial sense. do not happen to people who remain at home: they must be sought abroad"). "If you wanted to succeed you had to get away," Little Chandler thinks, echoing the thoughts of the narrator in "An Encounter" ("real adventures. At the same time, parallels exist between Little Chandler/Gallaher and Lenehan/Corley from "Two Gallants." The first member of each set is so misguided that he admires and hopes to emulate the second - though Gallaher, like Corley, is spiritually dead.Ī new twist, not seen in other Dubliners tales, is the notion that escape from Ireland does not necessarily equal salvation. It also resembles "After the Race" in that Little Chandler quests like Jimmy for European sophistication and winds up as provincial as ever.

This story reiterates the dynamic of "An Encounter," "Araby," and "Eveline," as Little Chandler sets out seeking Gallaher and all he represents, only to return home defeated. At the restaurant, Gallaher tells Little Chandler about his adventures abroad afterward, Little Chandler returns home to his wife (Annie) and baby son, where he fantasizes further about success as a poet, loses his temper with the child, and then feels remorseful. On the way, Little Chandler fantasizes about succeeding himself, as a writer of poetry. Gallaher left Dublin eight years earlier and has made a success of himself as a journalist in London. One evening, a fussy, conservative Dublin clerk known as Little Chandler sets out to meet his old friend Gallaher at a restaurant called Corless's.
