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TWO GALLANTS ARE CALLOUS MEN

'Two Gallants are Callous Men'
Try not to let the title fool you. Two Gallants, written by James Joyce, is a short story
centered around two callous men. One, Corley, is an older man of some rudeness and has a
taste for womanizing. The other is a self-conscience, older man of some weight, named
Lenehan. The story begins with a light approach, description of the evening weather and
the "illumined pearl" lamps of the street. All of Joyce's stories found in the work, The
Dubliners, have a poetic quality that makes the simplest of remarks, beautiful. This
story in particular has the evident use of eloquent and flowing language but, in keeping
with Joyce's style, is used to mask the perverse subject matter. Underneath the language
and examining the adolescent drives in two grown, callous men, is where the real story
lies. 
As told by Joyce, Corley is an entertaining man who gives the reader pause as pertaining
to his adolescent treatment of women. As read by a careful eye, Corley seeks the company
of well-to-do girls as a prize and pay off. Through the beginning of the story, he tells
his companion, Lenehan, about his latest encounter and his eminent one as well. Often
referred to, is the question, as Lenehan puts it, "Corley I suppose you'll be able to
pull it off alright?"(31), this referring to Corley's congress with the girl. Lenehan's
interest stretches to the point where he wishes permission to see the girl up close, by
walking by the two as a stranger, and even follow the two. This voyeurism displays as
evidence of perverse subject matter in the piece. 
The title is meant as an obvious joke because the two characters are as far from gallants
as horses are from dogs. This show of cynicism reflects throughout the story not only the
conversations between the main characters but also in Joyce's prose. Corley begins his
journey as a night walk with his girl, departing from Lenehan who in turn, after
following the two like a spy, makes his way to a bar. Lenehan has spurts of contemplation
in which time he criticizes his own habits, vices and position in life, "He was tired of
knocking about, of pulling the devil by the tail, of shifts and intrigues. He would be
thirty-one in November. Would he never get a good job? Would he never have a home of his
own"(35)? This criticism reflects the need for the "two gallants" to moralize their
dealings with the opposite sex and the world at large. 
When Lenehan is at the spot the two, Corley and himself, had agreed upon to meet, he is
made to wait ten or fifteen minutes. During this short span of time, Lenehan speculates
the reason of his friend's lateness. Ideas so far fetched that Lenehan begins to think
that Corley will abandon the agreed plan and him. This distrust existing in Lenehan's
mind, of his own friend, edifies the presence of immoral drives and values. Although his
paranoid speculation was unwarranted, it still existed as a possibility in Lenehan's
stout mind. 
The last the reader sees of the "two gallants" is outside the girl's house. Here is the
place in the story the reader is lead to the assumption that Corley is paid for his
company. The girl is lead to her home and although she enters, Corley stays outside on
the sidewalk. His waiting is met by the re-emergence of the girl, who now carries in her
hand a gold coin. The two exchanges the gold coin and Corley walks to meet his fellow
"gallant", which waits, watching the two, from across the street. When the question, is
again, put forth by Lenehan, "Did it come off?" Corley's only reply is the raising of the
gold coin.

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