In an analysis of "A Little Cloud", Harold Mosher wrote that, in
Dubliners, Joyce uses, and perhaps abuses, both repetition and cliché in order to give the writing a feeling of insignificance. He pointed out there is a legitimate lack of action in many of the stories, certainly in "A Little Cloud", and this "content of lack" is mirrored by the language Joyce used. Mosher believes the talking about nothing, in the way that many Joyce characters do, is actually rather important, and argued that, in terms of the language, this style actually portrays an abundance of creativity and quality, rather than the lack of fresh thought that could be implied by the cliché nature of the writing. Thematically, Mosher said this is important in an ironic way, because, though it shows creativity on the part of Joyce, it shows little on the part of Chandler: he thinks and speaks in this way because, as he says in the end to Annie, he "couldn't... didn't do anything". It’s been remarked that "a central theme" of
Dubliners is expressed in Little Chandler's conclusion that "If you wanted to succeed you had to go away."
Title Thomas O'Grady has argued that the somewhat ambiguous title "A Little Cloud" can be attributed to
William Blake's "
Infant Sorrow". He points out that Blake was an influential artist for Joyce and that Joyce gave a lecture on Blake once. O'Grady believes this connection is logical, because it lends structural and thematic significance to the title. This story is Little Chandler's "
song of experience" according to O'Grady because the "infant hope" carried by Chandler's child is overwhelmed with the sorrow and remorse he feels. Terence Brown, meanwhile, has suggested that the title may be an allusion to the Biblical tale of
Elijah and the prophets of
Baal and, more particularly, to
I Kings 18:44. ==References==