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Throughout the Dubliners stories, windows serve as portals to understanding. For the characters of the early chapters who fall within the category of childhood, windows in their homes look out to their respective streets. These windows allow children to observe their environment and the behavior of their neighbors. For older characters, windows serve as locations that inspire contemplation, and sometimes provide a reflective surface mirroring themselves.
Farrington’s window is a gateway to the pub:
He was now safe in the dark snug of O’Neill’s shop and, filling up the little window that looked into the bar with his inflamed face, the colour of dark wine or dark meat, he called out: ‘Here, Pat, give us a g.p., like a good fellow!’ (72).
The pub’s window is an access point to the realm of adult men in Dublin and gives a glimpse of a world that James Joyce realistically portrays in his depiction emphasizing the theme of Masculinity, Irish Identity, and Pub Culture. Given the bleakness of working-class Irishmen’s domestic and professional lives, escape through alcohol is encouraged. The fact that Farrington knows the bartender at this pub by name serves as further evidence of his familiarity and the normalization of the world of the pub as the center of masculine validation.
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