Albert Camus's "Between Yes and No" has a strong sense of overhanging gloom about it that is accompanied with a sense of content reflection. He thanks his mother for her devotion in a simple way that shows his appreciation. His choice of accepting of life is also evident due to his implied content state.
A Moorish cafe is the setting for Camus's reveries. The room he is in is empty and the wallpaper is dull and monotonous. The owner is huddled in a corner full of self-pity while a stove in the center gives off a flame the heats Camus's face. Outside is the bay. A foghorn blows and a lighthouse turns on and begins to rotate to guide the ship to its final destination.
As Camus begins to get comfortable he begins to recollect past events that have a major impact on his life. His neighborhood is a poor one
and his apartment building is very small. He has walked up the stairs so many times that he has memorized them to a point where he could navigate them with his eyes closed. Many nights of his childhood that he spends outside with his mother gazing at the sky while a drunk on the corner sings his melody. His mother thinks of nothing and sits blankly. Previously his mother lived with her husband until he died in combat. She was forced to accept the humiliation of having to move back in with her mother in her old house.
During Camus's first reverie he says something that sheds some light on his perspective of the world. He says, "There is a solitude in poverty, but it is a solitude that gives everything back its value". He accepts poverty and tries to look at it as non-corrupting and wholesome. He makes himself feel better about his situation by saying that poor peop
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