express the spread of nationalist movement which back then was spread through songs at streets and pubs. Wells, Walter, '"John Updike's "A & P": A Return to Araby"', Studies in Short Fiction, Vol.30, No.2, Spring 1993, Christopher Wang, "The Constant Vanity in Araby. The girl will be away on a retreat when the bazaar is held and therefore unable to attend. However, in the end, she persuades the narrator’s uncle to allow him to visit the bazaar. The very Araby bazaar to which the narrator desperately wanted to visit, contradicts his mistaken beliefs. The boy promises that if he goes he will bring her something from Araby.

Web. One day, the girl finally speaks to the narrator. Similarly, he also tries not to give money to the narrator but eventually, he gives him relentlessly.

When he gets on the train everything seems moving at snail’s pace to him due to his impatience. The color brown is used multiple times in the story. He seems perturbed regarding the concept of love. At first, the narrator got astray from the path. This highlights the nationalist movement which brings civil war in the country in order to get rid of British colonialism. The narrator has used exaggerated language to emphasize his excitement.

The narrator imagines her every time no matter where he is. In 1894 John Joyce moved the 12 Joyces into 17 North Richmond Street, a The narrator portrays her as a “chalice”.

In his belongings, there is also something else included.

She suggests to him that going that late isn’t a good idea. However, the narrator’s journey towards self-realization suggests his return to religion. It symbolizes the narrator’s naïveté and isolation.

Moreover, the narrator has religious imagery to draw the picture of Mangan’s sister before readers. Joyce arranged his collection of stories according to a sequence from childhood through adolescence and maturity, culminating in stories about participation in Ireland's public and social life. Why does the narrator want to go to the bazaar? Moreover, one can find religious allusions in the description of Mangan’s sister. This provides the glimpses of nationalism and political tumult.

However, she doesn’t pay any particular attention to the narrator. Mandel, Jerome. The narrator says “An uninhabited house of two storeys stood at the blind end, detached from its neighbours in a square ground”. Also, he experiences the epiphany of his romantic ideas, his false concepts of the religious sense in terms of love and budding sexuality. “Missing Pieces in Joyce’s Dubliners. Moreover, these books also exhibit the priest’s life that he is indulged after church in works which are non-religious.

“. Mostly, Joyce has used religious allusions in the text.

The boy can think of little but the girl, … He witnessed a flirtatious woman which also contradicts his ideals of romance.

In the middle of the market and hustle and bustle, he conjures up her image. Also, the narrator lives with his aunt and uncle, although his uncle appears to be a portrait of Joyce's father, and may be seen as a prototype for Simon Dedalus of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man and Ulysses. It not just literally depicts the coldness but also highlights the degradation of society as an upheaval in the country. "Araby" is a short story by James Joyce published in his 1914 collection Dubliners. They were sent to the Earth as a result of eating a forbidden fruit commonly known as an apple.