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Duane-Mulvey Non-Spoiler Diagram
1 2016-03-28T18:50:09-07:00 Madison Luke 381cb333ab91c34f5999f9ae0c725bc8171b9cd2 8220 1 plain 2016-03-28T18:50:09-07:00 Madison Luke 381cb333ab91c34f5999f9ae0c725bc8171b9cd2This page is referenced by:
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Mary Duane (Non-Spoiler)
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Mary Duane initially doesn’t seem to be a very important character - she’s presented as David Merridith’s maid and nanny to his children. However, as the book progresses, she emerges as one of the main and central characters around whom the plot revolves.
Since Mary's mother, Margaret, basically reared both David and Mary from infancy, we discover that the two grew up together and were very close. Mary and David are childhood sweethearts whose romance is quickly cut off when it is discovered.
She eventually meets another central character, Pius Mulvey and the two begin a relationship. He leaves her pregnant and wanders around Ireland and the United Kingdom, and Mary is thrown out of her house. Pius’s brother Nicholas hears of this and leaves the seminary to marry her and save her from shame. Following the loss of her first love, Mary endures many other losses: children, husband, and home. Finally, she makes her way to Dublin, living rough until she is hired by David as a nanny to his children (O'Connor 260).
Her life has been marked by hardship, yet will she exercise revenge or forgiveness?
While on the ship, she eventually crosses paths with Pius Mulvey again and is not terribly thrilled to see him.And it was just at that moment that the girl came in.
She stood very still in the doorway, as motionless as plaster madonna. . . .
It was as though the sight of the cripple had profoundly shocked her. As for the cripple, he looked similarly aghast. . . .
'Oh Mulvey. I don't know if you've met my children's nanny. Miss Duane.'
'It's yourself, Mary,' the mick said very quietly.
Kingscourt appeared mildly confused. 'You know each other?'
Again nobody said anything for a considerable period.
'You've knocked into each other going about the ship, I suppose?'
Very meekly the hopfoot said: 'Miss Duane and myself, sir, we knew each other when we were young people, sir. Our families was friends one time. Back in Galway I mean.' (O'Connor 290-291)Mary is one of the most forgiving characters in the novel. She shows mercy where absolutely none is deserved. There is room on a lifeboat off the ship that's stuck in the harbor for one person, and Mulvey begs for a place with Mary, since families were being kept together and he's her brother-in-law. Despite the fact that Pius left her pregnant and alone and has done nothing but harm to her and her family, she lets him on the boat, admitting that they are related. (O'Connor 364).
She was asked by the old Galwayman if what Mulvey was saying was correct. Was he indeed related to her? She must speak the truth. To deny one of your own family was a dreadful thing to do. Far too many in Ireland had done it before. So many had turned against their own blood now. He was not blaming anyone; it was just so cruel what had happened to the people. It would break your heart to see it happen. Neighbour against Neighbour. Family against family. For a man to turn his back on his brother was the blackest sin. (O'Connor 364).
At the end of the novel, Mary disappears into the shadows, and no matter how hard Dixon searches for her, he can never pin her down.
Characters Home
Work Cited
O’Connor, Joseph. Star of the Sea. Florida: Harcourt Books, 2002. Print.
Researcher/Writer: Michaila Gerlach
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Pius Mulvey (Non-Spoiler)
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Pius Mulvey, an Irishman, is one of the central characters in Star of the Sea. He begins life as a farmer in Galway, a character who could embody any of the thousands of Irishmen from the time. His traditional farming lifestyle is challenged by adversities raised by both the influence of the potato blight and of the oppressive English rule of Ireland. He has a brother named Nicholas whom he lives with. Pius adapts to the variety of situations he finds himself in while pursuing his ensured well-being by whatever means necessary. Mulvey's character is crafted in a way that encourages a feeling of ambiguity in origin- he could be any countryside farmer twisted by the realities of life in Ireland at the time. Erin Conley described this as Pius being "a man whose descent into personal hell seems to mirror Ireland’s disintegration" (8). To entirely understand the importance of Pius Mulvey and his growth in Star of the Sea, it's important to keep this broader context in the back of one's mind.
Works Cited
O'Connor, Joseph. Star of the Sea. Orlando: Harcourt, 2002. Print.
Conley, Erin B. "Famine as a Function of Empire in Arrow of God and Star of the Sea." KU Scholar Works. University of Kansas, 22 May 2010. Web. 18 Mar. 2016.
Researcher/Writer: Ben Deetz
Web Designers: Madison Luke and Andrew Olsen