James Joyce's “Araby" is a short story based on an Irish adolescent emerging from boyhood fantasies into the harsh realities of everyday life in his country.
Blind street is one of the themes indicates the street's dead-end location and its dullness. Dublin's North Richmond Street is a dead end in the story and in real life. Joyce suggests with the word "Araby" that the boys playing in the street are going nowhere. They will grow up to live in the same dreary Dublin, with its dreary weather, dreary people, and dreary houses.