The
Dead
Characters:
Lily-Kate and Julia Morkan's housemaid.
Kate and Julia Morkan-Grand dames in the world of Dublin music, who throw an annual party at
Christmastime.
Pat Morkan-Brother of Kate and Julia (dead).
Mary Jane Morkan-Church organist and daughter of Pat, thus niece of
Kate and Julia.
Mr. Fulham-Kate and
Julia Morkan's landlord.
Gabriel Conroy-A
professor and part-time book reviewer; Kate and Julia Morkan's
nephew.
Gretta
Conroy-Gabriel's wife.
Freddy Malins A drunken guest at the Morkans'
party.
Ellen Morkin Conroy-Mother of Gabriel (dead).
T.J. Conroy-Member of
the Dublin Port and Docks Board; father of Gabriel
(dead).
Mrs. Malins, Miss Daly, Miss Power, Mr. Browne, Miss Furlong,
Mr. Bergin, Mr. Kerrigan, and Miss O'Callaghan-Guests at the Morkans' party.
Bartell D'Arcy-A
renowned tenor vocalist and a guest at the Morkans'
party.
Constantine Conroy-A
priest; brother of Gabriel.
Molly Ivors-A guest at the Morkans'
party and a colleague of Gabriel's; she is involved in the movement to restore
Irish language and culture to the island.
Patrick Morkan-Owner of a glue or starch mill, and father of Kate
and Julia (dead).
Tom and Eva
Conroy-Children of Gabriel and Gretta.
Michael Furey-Gretta's first lover, who
died for the love of her.
Summary:
(Sisters Julia and
Kate Morkan are hosting their annual holiday party
and anxiously awaiting the arrival of their nephew, Gabriel Conroy, who is the
son of their late sister Ellen. It is after 10 p.m., and so far he has not come. When Gabriel and his
wife, Gretta, arrive, Gabriel tries to engage in
small talk with Lily, the housekeeper, who meets them at the door. He asks
whether he will be going to her wedding with her ''young man,'' and Lily
bitterly replies,'The men that is now is only
all palaver and what they can get out of you.'' Her reply flusters Gabriel, and
he feels that he has made some sort of mistake. In an effort to make up for it,
he gives Lily a coin, saying that it is a Christmas present. She tries to
refuse it, but he is already running up the stairs to where the music and
dancing are taking place.)
Miss Kate Morkan and Miss Julian Morkan,
spinster sisters, are throwing their annual Misses Morkan's
dance. It is the holiday season. Lily, the caretaker's daughter, struggles to
keep up with her many tasks, which include looking after the arriving guests.
The dance is always huge: family, former music pupils, and the members of
Julia's choir fill the house with gaiety and laughter. After the death of their
brother Pate, Kate and Julia have lived in the old house on Usher's Island. Mary Jane, their only niece, lived on with them.
Mary Jane still lives with them, earning money through her music. The three
women are tense. It is past ten pm,
and Gabriel Conroy and his wife have not yet arrived. Freddy Malins might come drunk. Finally, Gabriel and his wife
arrive. As Lily helps Gabriel with his things, he notices her slim body and
pretty looks. He mentions that soon she must be getting ready to get married.
She retorts bitterly about the predatory nature of men, which rattles Gabriel.
He tips her, and though she resists she eventually accepts. He is a stout, tall
young man. He begins nervously to rehearse the speech he will give at dinner.
He fears that everyone will think he is flaunting his education, and that he'll
fail with them as he failed to make himself pleasant to Lily. Aunts Julia and
Kate approach him, and dote on him. He's their favorite
nephew. Tonight, after the party, he and his wife Gretta
will stay at a hotel rather than take a cab all the way home. Everyone makes
light talk. The mood is festive and friendly. Freddy arrives. Aunt Kate asks
Gabriel to check up on him, and to look after him if he's drunk. Guests come
out of the dancing room. Under Kate's direction, Julia sees to Mr. Browne, Miss
Furlong, Miss Daly, and Miss Power. Mr. Browne is old. He goes with the three
young ladies into the back room for some drinks. Everyone compliments Miss Daly
and the waltz she played. Quadrilles (a square dance popular at the time) start,
and Aunt Kate and Mary Jane try to conscript folks for the dancing. Julia
watches Freddy and Gabriel with some concern. Freddy looks quite sloshed.
Freddy greets the old aunts, and then goes over to Mr. Browne to share an
anecdote. Aunt Kate signals to Mr. Browne that Freddy is not to drink anymore.
Mr. Browne gives Freddy some lemonade. Later, Gabriel has trouble listening to
Mary Jane's rather professional-sounding piece. He thinks about his mother, the
only sister who'd had no musical talent. He remembers how his mother opposed
his marriage to Gretta; but later, when his mother
was dying, Gretta was the one who tended to her.
After Mary Jane's piece ends, Gabriel ends up dancing with Miss Ivors. Gabriel writes a literary column for The Daily
Express, a conservative paper with Unionist leanings. The column is published
under his initials. Miss Ivors figured out that
Gabriel was the author, so now she teases him as they dance. The paper's
politics are detestable, but Gabriel was well-paid and loved the new books he
received. He does not take her teasing well. She tries to smooth things over,
inviting Gabriel and his wife out to the Aran Isles for a group vacation she's
putting together. Gabriel says he cannot. He has already planned a cycling trip
on the continent with some friends of his. She asks why he vacations in foreign
countries before he's seen more of his own land; he speaks of keeping in touch
with languages. She tells him he has his own language to keep up with: Irish
(Gaelic, but called Irish by the Irish to emphasize its rightful place as the
national tongue). He says it's not his language. Miss Ivors
continues with her difficult questions, irritating him. He's nervous about how
he answers; people are listening. They continue dancing, and Miss Ivors teasingly calls him a West Briton (an Anglo-Irishman
who favors Ireland remaining a colony). After
the dance, Gabriel goes to chat with Mrs. Malins'
mother. He tries to banish the incident with Miss Ivors
from his mind. He feels she has tried to make him look like a fool. His wife
tells him that Aunt Kate has asked if he'll carve the goose. He confirms that
he will. Mrs. Conroy asks what he was talking about with Miss Ivors, and he says that she invited them to vacation west
of Ireland.
Mrs. Conroy is delighted by the idea, but Gabriel tells her coldly that she can
go alone if she likes. Mrs. Malins keeps talking to
Gabriel, but he is busy thinking about his impending speech. The incident with
Miss Ivors continues to nag at him. Mr. Browne
escorts Aunt Julia to the piano. Mary Jane plays and Aunt Julia sings Arrayed
for the Bridal. Her voice is beautiful, surprisingly strong. Afterward, Freddy Malins accosts Aunt Julia to tell her that he has never
heard her voice so beautiful. Mr. Browne comes forward too, praising the song
lightly with jokes that no one laughs at as loudly as he himself. Aunt Kate
starts talking about how Julia's voice was wasted in the Church choir. Aunt
Julia worked hard hours, rising early, to sing in the Church choir. Her work
came to naught when Pope Pius X issued an order banning women from church
choirs. Aunt Kate goes from saying that she doesn't question the pope, who must
be right (since Aunt Kate is only a stupid old woman) to saying that there's
such a thing as simple gratitude and decency (which, we can infer, the pope's
order set aside). Mary Jane interrupts her diplomatically, saying that everyone
is quarrelsome because they've had nothing to eat. Outside the drawing room
Gabriel comes across his wife and Mary Jane trying to convince Miss Ivors to stay for dinner. Gabriel also tries to convince
her, but she insists that she must go. She departs in good spirits, though
Gabriel cannot help but wonder if she has left because he was so unpleasant.
Aunt Kate comes in out of the supper-room, asking Gabriel to carve the goose.
Gabriel gets to work with great gusto; he is a skilled carver. Folks at the
table talk about the current opera company at the Theatre Royal. Mr. Bartell D'Arcy, a tenor, is among those discussing the
current singers. Freddy makes some rather strange conversation (still drunk).
When some of the guests disparage the current singers in favor
of the singers of yesteryear, Mr. Bartell D'Arcy says
that the singers now are as good as ever. It's just that all talent goes to the
continent, and there are foreign singers who at least equal the Irish singers
from back in the day. Mr. Browne, somewhat ridiculously, says he doubts it.
Aunt Kate mentions her favorite tenor of all time,
whom no one has heard of. Her memory might be skewed, but one of the men
confirms the name. Still, he may have done so to make Aunt Kate feel better.
They also talk about a monastery on Mount
Melleray
where monks allow parishioners to stay. The monks sleep in coffins, assert the
guests; Mary Jane explains that it is to remind them of their mortality. After
dessert and more drinks all around, it is at last time for Gabriel's speech. It
is earnest and sentimental, and brings many tears to his aunts' eyes, even
though poor Aunt Kate can barely hear a word. All sing 'For they are jolly
gay fellows' for their beloved hostesses. Later, the last of the guests
are trying to get home. As the front door opens and closes, frigid early
morning winter air comes into the house. Somehow someone brings up an old family
joke about Old Johnny, the horse of Gabriel's grandfather. He begins to tell a skillfully exaggerated version of the tale to Mr. Browne.
One day Gabriel's grandfather was in the center of Dublin, with his carriage
hitched up to Old Johnny, and the old horse kept circling the statue of King
William II. The story is interrupted by Freddy Malins
coming back in from the cold, announcing he only found one cab. Freddy Malins, Mrs. Malins, and Mr.
Browne take it. Gabriel sees his wife standing near the top of the first flight
of stairs, in shadows. She seems to be the symbol of something, but he cannot
tell what. When Gretta comes down, she asks Mr.
D'Arcy the name of the song he was singing. The song is 'The Lass of Aughrim.' Gabriel and Gretta
eventually get out the door, along with Mr. Bartell
D'Arcy and a young woman named Miss O'Callaghan, saying their goodbyes to Mary
Jane and Aunt Julia and Aunt Kate. As they walk to a place where they can find
a cab, Gabriel looks at his wife, who is walking up ahead of him with Mr. Bartell D'Arcy. Gabriel remembers their many happy times
together, and tender feelings flood through him. In the cab, he continues to
look at his wife with great feeling. When they cross O'Donnell bridge, Miss
O'Callaghan repeats the saying that one can never cross the bridge without
seeing a white horse. Gabriel says that instead he sees a white man, referring
to a statue covered in snow. At the hotel, Gabriel pays the whole fare and sees
off Miss O'Callaghan and Mr. D'Arcy. The porter brings them to their room. The
electric lights are not working, so the porter leads them by candlelight.
Gabriel says to take the candle away with him; they have enough light from the
windows. Gabriel is still full of amorous feelings for her, but she seems upset
about something. He tries to make conversation with her, but her mind is
clearly elsewhere. Finally, she breaks down and weeps. She cannot stop thinking
of the 'The Lass of Aughrim.' A boy she
once knew used to sing that song. Gabriel is angry, but tries to hide it. He
asks if she was in love with him, and she admits that they courted. Gabriel
asks if that's why she was keen on accepting Miss Ivors
invitation to go to Galway, so that she might
see him. Gretta says that the boy is dead. His name
was Michael Furey, and he worked in the gasworks,
though he was delicate. Gabriel is quite upset. While he was remembering their
life together, she was comparing him in her mind to a teenage boy. Gabriel sees
himself as a 'ludicrous figure, acting as a pennyboy
for his aunts, a nervous well-meaning sentimentalist, orating to vulgarians, and idealizing his own clownish lusts, the
pitiable fatuous fellow he had caught a glimpse of in the mirror' (221).
He asks how the boy died, and she tells the story after getting control of
herself. It was winter; she was going to leave her grandmother's and go to the
convent for schooling. The boy's health was bad, and he wasn't being let out or
allowed to see visitors. She wrote him a letter saying that she would be back
in the summer and hoped to see him then. The rainy night before she left, she
heard gravel against her window. He was there, in her garden in the cold,
shivering. She told him to go home, fearful for his health, but the boy said he
did not want to live. He did go back home, but a week after Gretta
went to the convent the boy died. As Gretta finishes
her story, she breaks down into uncontrollable sobs. Later, Gabriel watches her
sleep. He feels insignificant in her life; a man died for her love. He knows
also that they have aged. The face she has now is not 'the face for which
Michael Furey had braved death' (223). He thinks
about mortality, and his two lovely old aunts. Soon, he'll return to that house
for their funerals. He feels the power of Furey's
passion; he has never felt something like that for a woman. He feels the shadow
of mortality on all of them. Outside, it snows. As it blankets all things
without discrimination, it reminds Gabriel of mortality: 'His soul swooned
slowly as he heard the snow falling faintly through the universe and faintly
falling, like the descent of their last end, upon all the living and the
dead' (225).
Analysis:
'The Dead'
is the most famous story in Dubliners, and is widely recognized as one of the
finest short stories in the English language. Joyce conferred on it the honor of the final position, and made it three times as
long as the average Dubliners tale. His fine range, acute psychological
insights, and perfect control of his art are all on display here. Many of the
main themes are touched on. We see glimpses of poverty, in the character of
Lily, whose family is achingly poor. We see the political divisions in Ireland in the
conversation between Miss Ivors and Gabriel. We also
have criticism of the church, as Aunt Kate speaks bitterly of the decision of
Pope Pius X to exclude women from all church choirs; Aunt Julia had dedicated a
great deal of her life to working in the choir, and her thanks for it is the
Pope's appallingly sexist decision. Aunt Kate says repeatedly that of course the
Pope must be right about everything, but she cannot help but think it was
ungrateful. We see in her the inability to reconcile what she knows to be wrong
with the indoctrinated Catholic conviction that the Pope cannot be wrong.
Central themes are mortality and isolation. But 'The Dead' is a story
with much joy in it. The scene here is far from bleak; poverty has little place
in this story, and many financially comfortable characters are celebrating in
the midst of the holiday season. As is appropriate for this time of year, we
see loving interaction between friends and family, and people of different
generations. Mortality is a key part of the story, beginning with its title.
The tale is set in winter, which is both holiday season and the season of death.
The two old aunts in their old house become symbols for the onslaught of time;
Aunt Kate can't even hear Gabriel's speech. Gabriel knows that one day, in the
not-too-distant future, he will return to the house for his aunts' funerals.
And of course, there is the dead boy Gretta remembers
because of a song. Much has been made of the fact that Dubliners is framed by
two stories dealing with death. The two stories, in fact, could easily switch
their titles. But while 'The Sisters' maintains one note and holds it
well, 'The Dead' is a far richer tale, mixing the joy of the occasion
with somber reflection and several small but
significant incidents, the importance of which is recognized gradually by the
reader. Joyce's ability to write a party scene is at full strength in this
tale. Most of the conversation in the story is small talk, or short moments of
family drama (Aunt Kate and Julia worried about Freddy making a scene in his
drunkenness, for example). There are also key moments of heartfelt emotion and
connection between loved ones, such as Gabriel's moving speech, which brings
his dear old aunties to tears. But the evening is punctuated by small
disturbances that linger in the reader's mind. The first is Gabriel's talk with
Lily. Without meaning to, he condescends to the young girl, saying with
sweetness that she'll be having her own wedding soon. Lily's response:
'The men that is now is only all palaver and what they can get out of
you' (178). Her words are scathing, all the more so because we know that
Gabriel did, in fact, notice the girl's physical beauty. The incident disturbs
Gabriel deeply, and it is the first failure of communication in the story. What
should have been pleasant became quickly unpleasant, and Gabriel begins to
worry that his speech will sound too lofty to his audience's ears: 'They
would think that he was airing his superior education. He would fail with them
just as he had failed with the girl in the pantry' (179). The
miscommunication continues. When he chats with Miss Ivors,
he takes her light chiding very personally. Irish politics come up yet again:
she accuses him lightly of being less than loyal to Ireland. Although such sentiments
often come from unsavory characters in Joyce's works,
Miss Ivors is actually quite appealing, apparently
intelligent, well-educated, and without malice. Their conversation emphasizes
that an Irish party would not be Irish without reference to Irish politics:
note that Gabriel looks around with concern, lest anyone should hear his
opinions. At the end of the conversation, he feels that Miss Ivors has made a fool of him, but her lightness and good
spirit would seem to suggest that her intentions were innocent. But the theme
of isolation and miscommunication really comes out in full force after the
party. Gabriel spends the journey home thinking of his wife and their many
happy moments together. But he soon learns that she has been thinking of a love
she had in her girlhood. Though married, they spent the ride home in completely
different worlds. Gabriel's thoughts were only his own, and he and his wife
could not have been farther apart. He had hoped for a tender night, but their
evening ends with Gretta sleeping and Gabriel
admitting that he has never felt so strongly for a woman that he would die for
her, as Michael Furey did. The separation of death
becomes a metaphor for the separation between the living. Joyce joins the
themes of isolation and mortality. Gabriel feels himself becoming one of the
deceased: 'His soul had approached that region where dwell the vast hosts
of the dead' (224). The snow, falling upon 'all the living and the
dead' becomes a metaphor for isolation, the inability to know others, even
those with whom we are intimate. Ironically, the snow also functions as a
symbol for the death that comes indiscriminately. Opaque where it lies
'thickly drifted' over objects in cities and distant graveyards, it
masks all behind a shield of white, isolating each thing, while also reminding
Gabriel that the same mortality awaits all beings.