Breakfast at Tiffany's Section 6: Difference between revisions

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==Commentary==
==Commentary==
The narrator rescues the birdcage because it is a symbol for home.  To Holly, a home is a place where you are kept or owned, but to the narrator the birdcage is something he must recover.  The narrator is "always drawn back to places where I have lived, the houses and their neighborhoods.(3)" The author was fond of this theme of looking for home and sharing home with someone dear. As a child, Capote was frequently alone in a locked hotel room.  The hotel staff would be instructed not to answer his frightened screams.  He would eventually collapse exhausted on the bed, or in front of the door as he waited for his mother or father to return (Clark 14).
The narrator is both surprised and a little excited to find who and why Doc Golightly was standing outside the brownstone.  The narrator had not been speaking to Holly for quite some time and part of him  wanted a reason to initiate a "truce", but he did not want to admit that he enjoyed Holly's friendship. The other part of him saw this as an opportunity to call her bluff and show everyone that she truly was a fake and a fraud. Perhaps he was also surpised to learn that Holly's real name was Lulamae Barnes, a name that truly did not fit the Holiday Golightly that he knew.
The narrator is both surprised and a little excited to find who and why Doc Golightly was standing outside the brownstone.  The narrator had not been speaking to Holly for quite some time and part of him  wanted a reason to initiate a "truce", but he did not want to admit that he enjoyed Holly's friendship. The other part of him saw this as an opportunity to call her bluff and show everyone that she truly was a fake and a fraud. Perhaps he was also surpised to learn that Holly's real name was Lulamae Barnes, a name that truly did not fit the Holiday Golightly that he knew.


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