Option Two – Cultural context
things a little more slowly. She is disconcerted when, at dinner with his family, Tony says in passing that he expects their children to support the Dodgers baseball team. Although Tony doesn’t notice Eilis’s discomfort, his younger brother does, commenting astutely that Eilis is ‘not laughing’. As Tony walks Eilis home after dinner, he tells her that he loves her but she does not respond in kind. It seems she is still a little uncertain about where she wants this relationship to go. At that time, living together would not have been a socially acceptable option, so Eilis is faced with the prospect of marriage or ending the relationship. A conversation with Sheila, another boarder in Mrs Kehoe’s house, helps her to see that the single life is far from perfect. Sheila’s husband left her for another woman but Sheila would far prefer to marry ‘a bad-tempered fella with hair growing out of his ears’ if it meant she could have her own home. In the world of the text, a woman’s best chance of a comfortable and secure life lies in marriage. Happily for Eilis, Tony is far from bad-tempered and we feel confident that they will have a good future together.
Eilis comes to the same conclusion, possibly spurred on by a sudden fear that she might lose Tony. He is late for their next meeting and it is obvious from Eilis’s anxious face as she scans the street that she believes she has hurt him by not saying she loves him too. Her face falls and she walks slowly and dejectedly down the steps, checks her watch and then begins to walk home. Tony rushes up, to Eilis’s relief, and it turns out that he was merely delayed by a crisis at work and in fact left the job unfinished so he could walk Eilis home. Eilis tells Tony that she feels the same way about him as he feels about her and Tony is ecstatic. He believed they were ‘having a different kind of talk’ and is clearly overcome at the realisation that, far from breaking up with him, Eilis wants to be with him.
Eilis and Tony’s relationship faces a crisis when Eilis’s sister dies. Eilis is heartbroken and Tony knows she will want to go home to see her mother. He shows her the plot of land he and his brothers plan to develop in Long Island and asks Eilis if she will at least think about marrying him and living there. Eilis agrees, but shortly afterwards tells Tony that she is going back to Ireland for a while. Tony pushes her to marry him before she leaves and Eilis asks if her promise to do so would not suffice. Tony is insistent: ‘If you can promise, you can easily do this’.
When Eilis returns to Ireland, we soon see that Tony was right to be worried. She is courted by the charming and eligible Jim Farrell, and her delighted family and friends put pressure on her to settle down with him. As far as they are concerned, marriage is a woman’s best chance of a good life and a wealthy young man is an excellent catch. Eilis’s friend Nancy has recently married George Sheridan and it is undoubtedly a good match in the eyes of the local people. Before she left for America, Eilis was sceptical about Nancy’s interest in George. It seemed to her that her friend could do better and she felt that Nancy was selling herself short by ‘hoping that George Sheridan from the rugby club looks your way’. Nancy claimed to be attracted by George’s ‘beautiful eyes’ but Eilis wondered aloud if the fact that George stood to inherit ‘a beautiful shop in the Market Square’ was not the real attraction. Nancy was not in the least put off by Eilis’s cynicism and it appears that she was right. There is no indication that she and George will be anything but happy in their married life together.
Eilis is faced with a difficult decision, in that she is torn between two kind, loving men. In the end, her hand is forced when the spiteful Miss Kelly reveals that she knows about Eilis’s marriage. However, it is not the thought of being found out that spurs Eilis to return to America; rather, it is the reminder of what small-town life is like and how much she truly loves Tony. We get the impression that Eilis does not feel bound by marriage ties so much as bound by love of her husband. On the ship back to New York, Eilis gives advice to a young girl and her words become the voiceover for her reunion with Tony. She tells the girl that although she will be lonely, she will meet someone who will make her feel that the sun is coming out at last, someone who has no connection with the past and is hers alone. The film ends with Tony catching sight of Eilis leaning against a wall, waiting for him as he comes out of a shop.
Leaving Certificate English 403 Excellence in Texts
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