РефератыИностранный языкCaCathedral Essay Research Paper Blindness creates a

Cathedral Essay Research Paper Blindness creates a

Cathedral Essay, Research Paper


Blindness creates a world of obscurity only to be overcome


with guidance from someone willing to become intimate with the


blind. Equally true, the perceptions of blindness can only be


overcome when the blind allow intimacy with the sighted. Raymond


Carver, with his short story Cathedral, illustrates this point


through the eyes of a man who will be spending an evening with a


blind man, Robert, for the first time. Not only does this man not


know Robert, but his being blind, “bothered” (Carver 98) him.


His, “idea of blindness came from the movies”, where, “…the


blind move slowly and never laughed” (Carver 98). These


misconceptions of blindness form barriers between the blind and


the sighted. Carver breaks down these barriers as he brings the


vastly different lives of these two men together.


Those of us with sight find it difficult to identify with


the blind. This man, like most of us, can only try to imagine


what life is like for Robert. As a result of his inability to


relate with Robert, he thinks his behaviors are odd, and is


unable to understand the relationship he has with his wife. His


wife worked for this blind man many years ago, reading him


reports and case studies, and organizing his “…little office”


(Carver 98) in the county’s social-service department. He remem?


bers a story his wife told about the last day she worked for him.


The blind man asked her if he could touch her face, and she


agreed. She told him that Robert had touched every part of her


face with his fingers, “…her nose-even her neck!” (Carver 98).


His wife wrote poetry whenever something important happened in


her life, and she “…tried” (Carver 98) to write a poem about


this unforgettable experience. He said he didn’t think much of


the poem, (although he didn’t tell her that), reasoning it was


because he didn’t understand poetry. In reality though, the act


of the blind man touching her face is what he didn’t understand.


To him this seemed a bizarre encounter. Some people, like his


wife and myself, are able to realize how meaningful this


experience is. As a child I developed a close relationship with


my blind grandmother, similar to that between his wife and


Robert. My grandmother would often run her fingers over my face,


which would make me feel awkward and uncomfortable at first. As I


became an adult though, I began to realize the importance this


act held for my grandmother, and eventually for myself. Touching,


for the blind, becomes a vital aspect of relating with the world.


To touch something is to see it with your fingers. It was my


grandmother’s way of becoming familiar with me through her hands


instead of her eyes. His wife had experienced this emotional


closeness with Robert, while he could only try to understand it


by hearing and reading about it.


Without personally knowing anyone who is blind, the


imagination takes over and preconceived ideas are formed. This


man had created a picture in his mind of what Robert would look


like, and how he would act. When Robert arrived at his house he


learned that none of his assumptions were correct. Robert didn’t


wear the typical dark glasses, or walk with a cane. Even without


the cane Robert didn’t move slowly like he thought he would. He


had read somewhere that blind people didn’t smoke, but Robert not


only smoked cigarettes, they also enjoyed some laughs together


when he introduced Robert to “dope” (Carver 104). As it turned


out, Robert wasn’t so humorless aft

er all. He was also surprised


to see that Robert wore a full beard and was dressed well, even


looking, “spiffy” (101). When he turned the TV on, to his wife’s


irritation, they both learned that not only did Robert own two


TV’s, but he preferred to watch the color one. When he realized


that his assumptions about Robert were false, and that they


actually shared some things in common, he began to feel more


comfortable with the blind man, even being, “glad for the


company” (Carver 105).


Once the misconceptions of blindness are revealed by knowing


someone personally, a closer relationship can develop. This man


now knows Robert as more than the blind man, and he allows


himself to become vulnerable with him. While this man and Robert


are watching and listening to the TV, a program about cathedrals


comes on. The man was watching closely as the huge buildings and


countryside’s flashed across the screen. The man becomes aware


that, “There were times when the Englishman who was telling the


thing would shut up, would simply let the camera move around over


the cathedrals” (Carver 105-106). The silence in the room became


awkward for him because he realized that has long as the narrator


wasn’t speaking, Robert didn’t know what was happening. Waiting


as long as he could, he felt he had to say something. He began to


portray what was on the screen to Robert. Robert explained that


he only knew what the narrator had said, but wanted him to


describe what they looked like. Robert struggled trying to make


comparisons, and used words like big and tall. He soon gave up


though, realizing that he wasn’t getting through to Robert.


Robert had an idea and asked the man to bring a pen and some


heavy paper. He brought the items and they sat side by side in


front of the couch with the paper on the table. As the man held


the pen, Robert brought his hand over his and told him to draw.


He began with a simple square building then put in windows with


arches. “I drew flying buttresses. I hung doors. I couldn’t stop”


(Carver 108). They continued to draw even after the TV station


went off the air, even after the mans fingers began to ache.


Robert told him to draw people, so he did. “Close your eyes now”


(Carver 108), Robert said, and he did. They continued to draw,


both of them in darkness now. When they were done Robert told him


to take a look, but he left his eyes closed. “I thought I’d keep


them that way a little longer. I thought it was something I ought


to do” (Carver 108), the man said to himself. When they finished


Robert said, “Well? Are you looking?” (Carver 108). With his eyes


still closed, the man replied, “It’s really something” (Carver


108). The man had allowed himself to experience, even if just for


a few minutes, what the blind man experienced every second of his


life. This, with the same man only a few hours ago he didn’t want


in his house.


Overcoming prejudices, fears, and misconceptions is only


possible when you allow yourself to get close to a person these


feelings are directed towards. By becoming close with Robert, the


man in this story experienced what was necessary to gain an


understanding of what life is like for the blind. The man began


to draw the cathedral to try and help Robert visualize what one


looked like. What he didn’t realize at the time was that Robert


was helping him to visualize what blindness felt like.


Bibliography


Carver, Raymond. “Cathedral”. The Story and Its Writer by, Ann Charters. Bedford Press. 1999.

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