While I was reading, “The Bureau d’Echange de Maux”, by Lord Dunsany, two emotions vivid emotions I experienced are anger and sadness. I felt these emotions because of how humans tend to not think carefully and end up regretting the choice they made, which is the main theme of this story, and how regret relates to my life.
In the first part of the story, the protagonist goes to the Bureau d’Echange de Maux several times and begins to wonder about the trade of evils and misfortunes in the store and why customers never come back to the store to do business after their first trade. He later is drawn into the mystery of why people never come back after a trade and sets out to solve the mystery himself by trading something slightly evil. “I determined to exchange some very trivial evil for some evil equally slight” (page 63). When he said this sentence he is determined to trade for something small and not take a risk.
By the second part of the story, the protagonist has chosen to trade his fear of sea-sickness, and trades this fear for a fear of elevators with another trader. “He never crossed the sea and I on the other hand could always walk upstairs” (page 64). When saying this, he initially thinks that there would be no consequence as he could walk upstairs and that he knows too much on hydraulics to be worried of something as silly as an elevator breaking.
The third part of the story shows his total regret to the bad decision he had made earlier in the story of exchanging his fear of sea sickness for a fear of elevators. “They asked me if I would go upstairs in the lift, from force of habit I risked it” “I would sooner go up to my room in a balloon. Why? Because if a balloon goes wrong you have a chance, it might spread out into a parachute after it has burst, it may catch in a tree, a hundred and one things may happen but if a lift falls down its shaft, you are done” (page 65). By now he terrified of elevators and even says