Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Using Behaviors of Proficient Readers

Instructions: Read the passages below taken from Araby by James Joyce. Using the behaviors of proficient readers share your thinking through the use of the comment feature located at the bottom of this blog entry.


1
North Richmond Street, being blind, was a quiet street except at the hour when the Christian Brothers' School set the boys free. An uninhabited house of two storeys stood at the blind end, detached from its neighbours in a square ground. The other houses of the street, conscious of decent lives within them, gazed at one another with brown imperturbable faces.


2 The former tenant of our house, a priest, had died in the back drawing-room. Air, musty from having been long enclosed, hung in all the rooms, and the waste room behind the kitchen was littered with old useless papers. Among these I found a few paper-covered books, the pages of which were curled and damp: The Abbot, by Walter Scott, The Devout Communicant, and The Memoirs of Vidocq. I liked the last best because its leaves were yellow. The wild garden behind the house contained a central apple-tree and a few straggling bushes, under one of which I found the late tenant's rusty bicycle-pump. He had been a very charitable priest; in his will he had left all his money to institutions and the furniture of his house to his sister.

4 comments:

  1. Trevor on paragraph 1:

    I wonder What he means by a street “being blind?”

    ReplyDelete
  2. John :

    Definition #10 of dictionary.com lists “blind” as something that has no outlet.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Kitty: on paragrpah 1:
    The houses seem to become characters in this paragraph with the use of personification "detached from its neigbors" and "consiious of decent lives within them, gazed..."

    ReplyDelete
  4. Sheila on paragraph 1:

    decent lives?? Does this mean that these people are good people who live in these houses?

    ReplyDelete