РефератыИностранный языкOfOf The Cloth By William Trevor Essay

Of The Cloth By William Trevor Essay

, Research Paper


An Analysis of ?Of the Cloth? William Trevor, ?Of the Cloth,? New York,


New York, The New Yorker, March 09, 1999. ?Of the Cloth? is a contemporary


work of short fiction set in the remote Irish community of Ennismolach County


during the early summer of the year, nineteen hundred and ninety seven. The


greater part of the story takes place in a small, stone rectory nestled among


the green valleys and pasturelands that lie below the Irish mountain slopes. The


author describes solitary hillsides, peaks and valleys, and a remnant of what


once was a town. He describes empty homes, tumbled into weed ridden ruins, as


their former residents chose to leave, pursuing the promise of a more prosperous


life in the city. The author depicts, in detail, long, winding country roads


leading to the three small Protestant churches dotting the countryside,


Hogan?s Grocery, Bar and Petrol Pump, the only store within miles, and to the


Catholic Church of the Holy Assumption, ?solitary and splendid by the


roadside, still seeming new, although it had been there for sixty years.? The


story was dominated by a single character, The Reverend Grattan Fitzmaurice, of


the Ennismolach rectory. He was described as an elderly man, faithful, dutiful,


and devoted to his church. He was settled in his life-long home, ?out of touch


with the times and what was happening in them, out of touch with two generations


of change, with his own country and what it had become.? He was a charitable


man, providing employment, out of his own meager salary, for a disabled man, Con


Tonan, who would later die. He was respected by those who new him; upright Mrs.


Bradshaw who came for visits every Tuesday, Seamus Tonan, Conrad?s son, and


neighboring Catholic parishioners, Father MacPartlan and Curate Leahy. ?Of the


Cloth? concerns, mostly, the pensive reflections of an Irish Protestant


reverend during a few long weeks in 1997. The reader visits the Reverend Grattan


Fitzmaurice, in his home and enters in upon his personal musings and daily


activities. Grattan leads a quiet life; his days are made worthwhile in his


labour for the church. We enter in upon his thoughtful ruminations, broken only


by Mrs. Bradshaw?s occasional visits, as they met ?exchanging scraps of


news.? The reverend frequently referred to his growing displeasure with the


state of the Protestant church in Ireland and the generation that would soon


inherit it. He would regard, suspiciously, the Irish Catholic Church, and look


upon them as rivals to his cause. Grattan?s solitude was broken, early one


summer morning, as a red-haired youth arrived bearing unfortunate tidings.


Grattan recognized the boy, Seamus Tonan, the son of a Catholic gardener


formerly in his employment. Gratten had hired Corad, a disabled man, paying him


out of his own meager salary. Seamus informed the reverend of his father?s


death and that the funeral would

be held on Monday. Grattan was touched by the


boy?s thoughtfulness and offered him every possible courtesy, but Seamus


declined and went quickly on his way. The next morning the reverend was visited


by Mrs. Bradshaw, bearing the same news. They spoke fondly of the deceased


Conrad Tonan and their admiration of the humble man. Later, following Conrad?s


funeral, Grattan was visited by two local Catholic priests, Fathers MacPartlan


and Leahy of the Catholic Church of the Holy Assumption. Although he was


courteous, he appraised them critically, ever suspicious of their motives. He


feared that they had come in a spirit of disguised rivalry rather than good


Christian charity and found himself shrinking away from conversation. As the


afternoon wore on, the two fathers persisted in their attempts to insight a


conversation with the reverend. Eventually, their words began to strike accord.


As the three discussed their concerns for the future, Grattan began to recognize


a mutuality of purpose. He realized that as the Irish population shrank from


faith, each church struggled to keep their spark aglow. He knew now that each


gift of kindness mattered, regardless of the source. The priests had come that


evening to recognize his kindness to Conrad, and in his time of grief, he could


now appreciate their gesture. ?Of the Cloth? was a finely written piece of


short fiction. It was well structured and cohesive, each piece of the story


finely woven together by nearly ethereal threads of thought. The author


approached his subjects truthfully, lending to each character a sincerity


uncommon in contemporary American fiction. Through Grattan?s concerns and


reminiscence, the author affords the reader great insight into the mind of the


story?s central character. Each character is provided a well developed


history, frequently extending even beyond their birth. The images surrounding


the story?s central characters serve to heighten the mood of the story, making


the expressed emotions more real. The desolate pastures and valleys of


Ennismolach mirror the state of the church in Ireland, even the reverend saw his


countenance in the long granite hillsides,? Fitzmaurice had the look of that


gray, unyielding stone, visible even in the pastureland of the valley. Thin and


tall, he belonged to the landscape…? The author employs a homely vocabulary,


well suited to the tone of the story. He writes with a rough pen, devoid of the


sophisticated or florid language that might have been so inappropriate within


the context of the story. The author chose to confine his exposition to the


events surrounding a single week in the life of one man. He chose not to litter


his composition with petty subplots or savvy dialogue but to sincerely express


the essence of a common man. I truly enjoyed William Trevor?s ?Of the


Cloth? and look forward to reading further works by this adept and talented


author.

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