B. A. Part-I Optional English All Unit
B. A. Part-I Optional English All Unit
B. A. Part-I Optional English All Unit
1.0 Objectives:
After learning this unit you will be able to:
1.1 Introduction:
The desire to listen to stories is deeply rooted in human civilization world over.
Man, being the social animal, is always interested in other mans life. This feature of
mans mind might have created the art of story-telling.
Short stories date back to oral story-telling traditions which originally produced
epics such as Homers Iliad and Odyssey. Oral narratives were often told in the form
of rhyming or rhythmic verse, often including recurring sections. Such device helped
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to recall the stories easily. Short sections of verse might focus on individual
narratives that could be told at one sitting.
The origin of short story can be traced back to the oral story-telling tradition.
Perhaps the oldest form of the short story is the anecdote which was popular in the
Roman Empire. At the time, the anecdotes functioned as a kind of parables in the
Roman Empire. Anecdote is a brief realistic narrative that embodies a point. The
anecdotes remained popular in Europe well into the 18th century, when the fictional
anecdotal letters of Sir Roger de Coverley were published.
The another form close to the short story is the fable. Fables, concise tales with
an explicit moral were, said by the Greek historian, Herodotus to have been invented
in the 6th century BCE by a Greek slave named Aesop, though other times and
nationalities have also been given for him. These ancient fables are today known as
Aesops fables.
In essence, the short story is a literary genre which presents a single significant
event or a scene involving a limited number of characters. Short stories have no set
length. In terms of word count there is no official boundary between an anecdote, a
short story, and a novel. Rather, the forms limits are given by the rhetorical and
practical context in which a given story is produced and considered, so that what
constitutes a short story may differ between genres, countries, eras, and
commentators.
The short story has been considered both an apprenticeship from preceding more
lengthy works, and a crafted form in its own right, collected together in books of
similar length, price, and distribution as novels.
Definition of Short Story
Deciding what exactly separates a short story from longer fictional formats is
problematic. A classic definition of a short story is that one should be able to read it
in one sitting, the point most notably made in Edgar Allan Poes essay Thomas Le
Moineau (Le Moile) (1846). Interpreting this standard nowadays is problematic,
since the expected length of One sitting may now be briefer than it was in Poes
era. Other definitions place the maximum word count of the short story at anywhere
from 1,000 to 9,000 words. For example, Harris Kings A Solitary Man is around
4,000 words. In contemporary usage, the term short story, most often, refers to a
work of fiction no longer than 20,000 words and no shorter than 1,000 words or 5 to
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20 pages. Stories of fewer than 1,000 words are sometimes referred to as short short
stories or flash fiction.
As a point of reference for the science fiction genre writer, the Science Fiction
and Fantasy Writers of America define short story length for Nebula Awards for
science fiction submission guidelines as having a word count of fewer than 7,500.
Longer stories that cannot be called novels are sometimes considered
novellas, and, like short stories, may be collected into the more marketable form of
collections, often containing previously unpublished stories. For example, after
Shirley Jackson died, a crate of unpublished short stories was discovered in her barn
and collected into a short story collection in her memory. Sometimes, authors who do
not have the time or money to write a novella or novel decide to write short stories
instead, working out a deal with a popular website or magazine to publish them for
profit.
It is reasonable to say that a firm definition of a short story is impossible. No
simple theory can encompass the diverse nature of a genre in which the only constant
feature seems to be the achievement of a narrative purpose in a comparatively brief
space. Each definition emphasizes some aspects and cannot cover all. However, to
get some idea about the form, we can highlight some definitions:
1. A fictional prose tale of no specified length, but too short to be published as a
volume on its own, as novellas sometimes and novels unusually are. A short story
will normally concentrate on a single event with only one or two characters, more
economically than a novels sustained exploration of social background.
Chris Baldick: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms.
2. A short story is a brief work of prose fiction, and most of the terms for
analyzing the component elements, the types, and the narrative techniques of the
novel are applicable to the short story as well.
M. H. Abrams, Geoffrey Galt Harpham: A Handbook of Literary Terms.
3. A prose narrative requiring from half an hour to one or two hours in its
perusal.
Edgar Allan Poe: Review of Nathaniel Hawthornes Twice Told Tales.
2. A short story is a brief work of prose fiction, and most of the terms for
analyzing the component elements, the types, and the narrative techniques of the
novel are applicable to the short story as well.
M. H. Abrams, Geoffrey Galt Harpham:
A Handbook of Literary Terms.
3. A prose narrative requiring from half an hour to one or two hours in its
perusal.
Edgar Allan Poe: Review of Nathaniel Hawthornes Twice Told Tales.
DEVELOPMENT
The short story is a comparatively recent development in English literature. In
Europe, the oral story-telling tradition began to develop into written stories in the
early 14th century with Geoffrey Chaucers Canterbury Tales and Giovanni
Bocaccios Decameron. Both of these books are composed of individual short stories
set within a larger narrative story. At the end of the 16th century, some of the most
popular short stories in Europe were the darkly tragic novella of Matteo Bandello
(especially in their French translation). The mid-17th century in France saw the
development of a refined short novel, the nouvelle by authors like Madam de
Lafayette. In the 1690s, traditional fairy tales began to be published. One of the most
famous collections was by Charles Perrault. The appearance of Antoine Gallands
first modern translation of the Thousand and One Nights or Arabian Nights would
have an enormous influence on the 18th century European short stories of Voltaire,
Diderot and others. For the sake of the convenience of study it is possible to study
the development of the short story by dividing it into periods as follows:
1790 1850
There are early examples of short stories published separately between 1790 and
1810, but the first true collection of short stories appeared between 1810 and 1830 in
several countries around the same period.
The first short stories in the United Kingdom were gothic tales like Richard
Cumberlands remarkable narrative The Poisoner of Montremos (1791). The
Great novelists like Sir Walter Scott and Charles Dickens also wrote some short
stories.
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One of the earliest short stories in the United States was Charles Brockden
Browns Somnambulism. Washington Irving wrote mysterious tales including
Rip van Winkle (1819) and The Legend of Sleepy Hollow (1820). Nathaniel
Hawthorne published the first part of his Twice-Told Tales in 1837. Edgar Allan Poe
wrote his tales of mystery and imagination between 1832 and 1849. Classic stories
are The Fall of the House of Usher, The Tell-Tale Heart, The Cask of
Amontillado, The Pit and the Pendulum, and the first detective story, The
Murders in the Rue Morgue. In The Philosophy of Composition (1846), Poe
argued that a literary work should be short enough for a reader to finish in one
sitting.
In Germany, the first collection of short stories was by Heinrich von Kleist in
1810 and 11. The Brothers Grimm published their first volume of collected fairy
tales is 1812. E. T. A. Hoffmann followed with his own original fantasy tales, of
which The Nutcracker and the Mouse King (1816) is the most famous.
In France Prosper Mrime wrote Mateo Falcone in 1829.
In Russia Alexander Pushkin wrote romantic and mysterious tales, including
The Blizzard (1831) and The Queen of Spades (1834). Nikolai Gogols Nevsky
Prospekt (1835), The Nose (1836) and The Overcoat (1842) are dark humorous
tales about human misery.
1850 1900
In the later 19th century, the growth of print magazines and journals created a
strong demand for the short fiction between 3,000 to 15,000 words. Towards the end
of the 19th century, all branches of literature and the arts became self-conscious.
People began to acknowledge that the short story might be shaped according to its
own principles. With the rapid industrialization people got less time to read the long
pieces of literature. They expected to read something interesting in a short period in a
single sitting. This demand was fulfilled by the short story and soon it became a
popular genre of literature.
In the United Kingdom, Thomas Hardy wrote dozens of short stories, including
The Three Strangers (1883), A Mere Interlude (1885) and Barbara of the House
of Grebe (1890). Rudyard Kipling published the short story collections like Plain
Tales from the Hills (1888) for grown-ups as well as The Jungle Book (1894) for
children. In 1892 Arthur Conan Doyle brought the detective story to a new height
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with The Adventures of Sherlock Homes. H. G. Wells wrote his first science fiction
stories in the 1880s. One of his best known is The Country of the Blind (1904).
In the United States, Herman Melville published his story collection The Piazza
Tales in 1856. The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras Country was the title
story of Mark Twains first book one year later. In 1884, Brander Matthews, the first
American professor of dramatic literature, published The Philosophy of the ShortStory. At the same year, Matthews was the first one to name the emerging genre
short story. Another theorist of narrative fiction was Henry James. James wrote a
lot of short stories himself, including The Real Thing (1892), Maud-Evelyn and
The Beast in the Jungle (1903). In the 1890s Kate Chopin publishes short stories in
several magazines.
The most prolific French author of short stories was Guy de Maupassant. Stories
like Boule de Suif (Ball of Fat 1880) and LInutile Beaut (The Useless
Beauty, 1890) are good examples of French realism.
In Russia, Ivan Turgenev gained recognition with his story collection A
Sportsmans Sketches. Nikolai Leskov created his first short stories in the 1860s.
Late in his life Fyodor Dostoyevski wrote The Meek One (1876) and The Dream
of a Ridiculous Man (1877), two stories with great psychological and philosophical
depth. Leo Tolstoy handled ethical questions in his short stories, for example, in
Ivan the Fool (1885), How Much Land Does a Man Need? (1886) and Alyosha
the Pot (1905). The greatest specialist of the Russian short story however was
Anton Chekhov. Classic examples of his realistic prose are The Bet (1889), Ward
No. 6 (1892), and The Lady with the Dog (1899). Maxim Gorkys a best known
short story is Twenty-six Men and a Girl (1899).
The most prolific Indian author of short stories was Munshi Premchand, who
pioneered the genre in the Hindi-Urdu language writing a substantial body of the
short stories and novel in a style characterized by realism and an unsentimental and
authentic introspection into the complexities of Indian Society. Premchands work
including his over 200 short stories such as the story Lottery and his novel Godaan
remain substantial works. Rabindranath Tagore with his The Beggar Woman
(1877) in Bengali language introduced the genre of the short story.
In Poland, Bolesaw Prus was the most important author of short stories. In 1888
he wrote A Legend of Old Egypt.
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1900 - 1945
In the United Kingdom, periodicals like The Strand Magazine, The Sketch,
Harpers Magazine and Story-Teller contributed to the popularity of the short story.
Hector Huge Munro (1870-1916), also known by his pen name of Saki, wrote
satirical short stories about Edwardian England. W. Somerset Maugham, who wrote
over a hundred short stories, was one of the most popular authors of his time. P. G.
Wodehouse published his first collection of comical stories about butler Jeeves in
1917. Lots of detective stories were written by G. K. Chesterton, Agatha Christie and
Dorothy L. Sayers. Short stories by Virginia Woolf Kew Gardens (1919) and
Solid Objects, are about a politician with mental problems. Graham Greene wrote
his Twenty-One Stories between 1929 and 1954. A specialist of the short story was
V. S. Pritchett, whose first collection appeared in 1932. Arthur C. Clarke published
his first science fiction story, Travel by Wire! in 1937.
In Ireland, James Joyce published his short story collection Dubliners in 1914.
These stories, written in a more accessible style than his later novels, are based on
careful observation of the inhabitants of his birth city.
In the first half of the 20th century, a number of high-profile American
magazines such as The Atlantic Monthly, The New Yorker Scribners, The Saturday
Evening Post, Esquire, and The Bookman published short stories in each issue. The
demand for quality short stories was so great and the money paid for it was so well
that F. Scott Fitzgerald repeatedly turned to short-story writing to pay his numerous
debts. His first collection Flappers and Philosophers appeared in a book form in
1920. William Faulkner wrote over one hundred short stories. Go Down, Moses, a
collection of seven stories, appeared in 1941. Ernest Hemingways concise writing
style was perfectly fit for shorter fiction. Stories like A Clean, Well-Lighted Place
(1926), Hills Like White Elephants (1927) and Dorothy Parkers bittersweet story
Big Blonde saw the light in 1929. A popular science fiction story is Nightfall by
Isaac Asimov.
Katherine Mansfield from New Zealand wrote many of her short stories between
1912 and her death in 1923. The Dolls House (1922) treats the topic of social
inequity.
Two important authors of short stories in the German language were Thomas
Mann and Franz Kafka. In 1922 the latter wrote A Hunger Artist, about a man who
fasts for several days.
Rynosuke Akutagawa (1892-1927) is called the Father of the Japanese short
story.
After 1945: The Post-war Era
The period following World War II saw a great flowering of literary short
fiction in the United States. The New Yorker continued to publish the works of the
forms leading mid-century practitioners, including Shirley Jackson, whose story,
The Lottery published in 1948, elicited the strongest response in the magazines
history to that time. Other frequent contributors during the last 1940s included John
Cheever, John Steinbeck, Jean Stafford and Eudora Welty. J. D. Salingers Nine
Stories (1953) experimented with point of view and voice, while Flannery
OConnors A Good Man is Hard to Find (1955) reinvigorated the Southern
Gothic style. When Life magazine published Ernest Hemingways long short story
(or novella) The Old Man and the Sea in 1952, the issue containing this story sold
5,300,000 copies in only two days.
Cultural and social identity played a considerable role in much of the short
fiction of the 1960s. Philip Roth and Grace Paley cultivated distinctive JewishAmerican voices. Tillie Olsens I Stand Here Ironing adopted a consciously
feminist perspective. James Baldwins Going to Meet the Man told stories of
African-American life. Frank OConnors The Lonely Voice, a classic exploration
of the short story, appeared in 1963. The 1970s saw the rise of the post-modern short
story, in the work of Donald Barthelme and John Barth. The same decade witnessed
the establishment of the Pushcart Press, which, under the leadership of Bill
Henderson, began publishing the best of the independent and small presses.
Stephen King, one of the besteselling novelists of all time, initiated his career by
publishing numerous short stories in mens magazines of the era (1970s) and stated
in an interview with Rich Fahle regarding his short story collection Just After Sunset
that The novel is a quagmire that a lot of young writers stumble into. I started with
short stories and I got comfortable with that format and never wanted to leave it
behind.
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Minimalism gained widespread influence in the 1980s, most notably in the work
of Raymond Carver, Ann Beattie and Bobbi Ann Mason. However, traditionalists
including John Updike and Joyce Carol Oates maintained significant influence on the
form, as did Canadian author Alice Munro. John Gardners seminal reference text,
The Art of Fiction, appeared in 1983.
Many of the American short stories of the 1990s feature magical realism.
Among the leading practitioners in this style were Steven Millhauser and Robert
Olen Butler. Stuart Dybek gained prominence for his depictions of life in Chicagos
Polish neighborhoods and Tim OBriens The Things They Carried tackled the
legacy of the Vietnam War. Louise Erdrich wrote poignantly of Native American
life. T. C. Boyle and David Foster Wallace explored the psychology of popular
culture.
The first years of the 21st century saw the emergence of a new generation of
young writers including Jhumpa Lahiri, Karen Russell, Nathan Englander, Kevin
Brockmeier, George Saunders, German-American bilingual writer Paul-Henri
Campbell and Dan Chaon. Blogs and e-zines joined traditional paper-based literary
journals in showcasing the work of emerging authors.
Thus the development of short story is multi-concerned and distinctive. Its
growth suggests the popularity of this genre.
ELEMENTS OF THE SHORT STORY
The short story is not merely a shortened novel. It shares, of course, the usual
constituent elements of all fiction: plot, character, and setting. These elements cannot
be treated with the same detail as in a novel. Each element is to be reduced for an
overall effect and impression. Hence, plot is confined to the essentials, the characters
to the indispensable, and the setting to a few suggestive hints.
1.
Plot:
Plot is a literary term defined as the events that make up a story, particularly as
they relate to one another in a pattern, in a sequence, through cause and effect, how
the reader views the story, or simply by coincidence. One is generally interested in
how well this pattern of events accomplishes some artistic or emotional effect. An
intricate, complicated plot is called a mess, but even the simplest statements of plot
may include multiple inferences, as in traditional ballads.
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Aristotle on Plot:
In his Poetics, Aristotle considered plot (mythos) the most important element of
drama-more important than character. A plot must have, Aristotle says, a beginning,
a middle, and an end, and the events of the plot must casually relate to one another as
being either necessary or probable.
Of the utmost importance to Aristotle is the plots ability to arouse emotion in
the psyche of the audience. In tragedy, the appropriate emotions are fear and pity,
emotions which he considers in his Rhetoric. (Aristotles work on comedy has not
survived.)
Aristotle goes on to consider whether the tragic character suffers (pathos), and
whether the tragic character commits the error with knowledge of what he is doing.
He illustrates this with the question of a tragic character who is about to kill someone
in his family.
The worst situation (artistically) is when the personage is with full knowledge
on the point of doing the deed, and leaves it undone. It is odious and also (through
the absence of suffering) untragic; hence it is that no one is made to act thus except
in some few instances, e.g., Haemon and Creon in Antigone. Next after this comes
the actual perpetration of the deed meditated. A better situation than that, however, is
for the deed to be done in ignorance, and the relationship discovered afterwards,
since there is nothing odious in it and the discovery will serve to astound us. But the
best of all is the last; what we have in Cresphontes, for example, where Merope, on
the point of slaying her son, recognizes him in time; in Iphigenia, where sister and
brother are in the like position; and in Helle, where the son recognizes his mother,
when on the point of giving her up to her enemy. (Poetics book 14).
FREYTAG ON PLOT
Climax
Exposition
Denouement
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Exposition:
The exposition introduces all of the main characters in the story. It shows how
they relate to one another, what their goals and motivations are, and the kind of
person they are. The audience may have questions about any of these things, which
get settled, but if they do have them they are specific and well-focused questions.
Most importantly, in the exposition, the audience gets to know the main character
(protagonist), and the protagonist gets to know his or her main goal and what is at
stake if he or she fails to attain this goal.
This phase ends, and the next begins, with the introduction of conflict.
Rising action:
Rising action is the second phase in Freytags five-phase structure. It starts with
the death of the characters or a conflict.
Conflict in Freytags discussion must not be confused with conflict in Sir
Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couchs critical apparatus plots into types, e.g. man vs.
society. The difference is that an entire story can be discussed according to QuillerCouchs mode of analysis, while Freytag is talking about the second act in a five-act
play, at a time when all of the major characters have been introduced, their motives
and allegiances have been made clear (at least for the most part), and they now begin
to struggle against one another.
Generally, in this phase the protagonist understands his or her goal and begins to
work toward it. Smaller problems spoil the protagonists initial success, and in this
phase his or her progress is directed primarily against these secondary obstacles. This
phase shows us how he or she overcomes these obstacles.
Climax:
The point of climax is the turning point of the story, where the main character
makes the single big decision that defines the outcome of their story and who they
are as a person. The dramatic phase that Freytag called the climax is the third of
the five phases, which occupies the middle of the story, and that contains the point of
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climax. Thus the climax may refer to the point of climax or to the third phase of
the drama.
The beginning of this is marked by the protagonist finally having cleared away
the preliminary barriers and being ready to engage with the adversary. Usually,
entering this phase, both the protagonist and the antagonist have a plan to win against
the other. Now for the first time we see them going against one another in direct, or
nearly direct, conflict.
This struggle results with neither character completely winning, nor losing,
against the other. Usually, each characters plan is partially successful, and partially
foiled by his or her rival. What is unique about this central struggle between the two
characters is that the protagonist makes a decision which shows us ones moral
quality, and ultimately determines ones fate. In a tragedy, the protagonist here
makes a bad decision, which is ones miscalculation and the appearance of ones
tragic flaw.
The climax often contains much of the action in the story, for example, a
defining battle.
Falling Action:
Freytag called this phase, falling action in the sense that the loose ends are
being tied up. However, it is often the time of greatest overall tension in the play,
because it is the phase in which everything goes most wrong.
In this phase, the villain has the upper hand. It seems that evil will triumph. The
protagonist has never been further from accomplishing the goal. For Freytag, this is
true both in tragedies and comedies, because both of these types of play classically
show good winning over evil. The question is which side the protagonist has put
himself on, and this may not be immediately clear to the audience.
Resolution/ Denouement:
In the final phase of Freytags five phase structure, there is a final confrontation
between the protagonist and antagonist, where one or the other decisively wins. This
phase is the story of that confrontation, of what leads up to it, of why it happens the
way it happens, what it means, and what its long-term consequences are.
In the story The Home-coming the main characters, Phatik and Makhan are
introduced at the beginning of the story. Their relation is also made clear at the
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beginning. The action of the story rises with the incident of pushing of the log and
reaches the climax with Makhans safety with mothers love. The falling action
begins with Phatiks sufferings at his uncles home and it ends with his tragic death.
Other views:
Besides the classical view of plot, there are other ways of looking at it. Plot also
has conflict in it so conflict has something to do with plot.
1950s, During writing instructor, Foster-Harris, said that plot is an emotional
problem caused by two conflicting emotions being felt by the same person (the main
character), and the working-out of that conflict. His system for creating popular
fiction is compatible with, but distinct from, the classical understanding of plot. In
particular, his focus is not on analysis but generation: not how to write criticism
about existing plots, but how to create one.
Plot Devices:
A plot device is a means of advancing the plot in a story, often used to motivate
characters, create urgency or resolve a difficulty. This can be contrasted with moving
a story forward with narrative technique; that is, by making things happen because
characters take action for well-motivated reasons. As an example, when the cavalry
shows up at the last moment and saves the day, that can be argued to be a plot
device; when an adversarial character who has been struggling with himself saves the
day due to a change of heart that is dramatic technique.
Familiar types of plot devices include the Deus ex machine, the MacGuffin, the
red herring and Chekhovs gun. A deus ex machina (god from the machine); is a plot
device whereby a seemingly unsolvable problem is suddenly and abruptly solved
with the contrived and unexpected intervention of some new event, character, ability,
or object. Depending on usage, it can be used to move the story forward when the
writer has painted himself into a corner and sees no other way out, to surprise the
audience, or to bring a happy ending into the tale.
In fiction, a MacGuffin (sometimes McGuffin or maguffin) is a plot device in
the form of some goal, desired object, or other motivator that the protagonist (and
sometimes the antagonist) is willing to do and sacrifice almost anything to pursue,
protect or control, often with little or no narrative explanation as to why it is
considered so important. The specific nature of a MacGuffin may be ambiguous,
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Plot Outline:
generally longer and more detailed than a standard synopsis (1-2 paragraphs), but
shorter and less detailed than a treatment or a step outline. There are different ways
to create these outlines and they vary in length, but are basically the same thing.
In comics, a pencil, often pluralized as pencils, refers to a stage in the
development where the story has been broken down very loosely in a style similar to
storyboarding in film development.
The pencils will be very loose (i.e., the rough sketch), the main goals being to
lay out the flow of panels across a page, to ensure the story successfully builds
suspense and to work out points of view, camera angles and character positions
within panels. This can also be referred to as a plot outline or a layout.
2.
Character:
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historically, often miming shifts in society and its ideas about human individuality,
self-determination, and the social order.
Classical Analysis of Character:
In the earliest surviving work of dramatic theory, Poetic (c. 335 BCE), the
Greek Philosopher Aristotle deduces that character (ethos) is one of six qualitative
parts of Athenian tragedy and one of the three objects that it represents (1450a12).
He understands character not to denote a fictional person, but the quality of the
person acting in the story and reacting to its situations (1450a5). He defines character
as that which reveals decision, of whatever sort (1450b8). It is possible, therefore,
to have tragedies that do not contain characters in Aristotles sense of the word,
since character makes the ethical disposition of those performing the action of the
story clear. Aristotle argues for the primacy of plot (mythos) over character (ethos).
He writes:
But the most important of these is the structure of the incidents. For (i) tragedy
is a representation not of human beings but of action and life. Happiness and
unhappiness lie in action, and the end (of life) is a sort of action, not a quality; people
are of a certain sort according to their characters, but happy or the opposite according
to their actions. So [the actors] do not act in order to represent the characters, but
they include the characters for the sake of their actions. (1450a15-23)
In the Poetics, Aristotle also introduced the influential tripartite division of
characters in superior to the audience, inferior, or at the same level. In the Tractatus
coislinianus (which may or may not be by Aristotle), comedy is defined as involving
three types of characters: the buffon (bmolochus), the ironist (eirn) and the
imposter or boaster (alazn). All three are central to Aristophanes Old Comedy.
By the time the Roman playwright Plautus wrote his plays, the use of characters
to define dramatic genres was well established. His Amphitryon begins with a
prologue in which the speaker Mercury claims that since the play contains kings and
gods, it cannot be a comedy and must be a tragicomedy. Like much Roman comedy,
it is probably translated from an earlier Greek original, most commonly held to be
Philemons Long Night, or Rhinthons Amphitryon, both now lost.
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Types of Characters:
3.
Setting:
The setting of the short story is where the action of the story happens. Setting
includes place, time and culture of where the story happens. The setting of the story
also provides as richness and depth to the story as it can relate to the main message
or idea to get across to your readers. Think of the setting as a scenic background for
which the drama of the tale will take place.
In works of narrative (especially fictional), the setting includes the historical
moment in time and geographic location in which a story takes place, and helps
initiate the main backdrop and mood for a story. Setting has been referred to as story
world or milieu to include a context (especially society) beyond the immediate
surroundings of the story. Elements of setting may include culture, historical period,
geography, and hour. Along with plot, character, theme, and style, setting is
considered one of the fundamental components of fiction.
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Role of Setting:
Setting is a critical component for assisting the plot, as in man vs. nature or man
vs. society stories. In some stories the setting becomes a character itself. The term
setting is often used to refer to the social milieu in which the events of a novel
occur. Novelist and novel-writing instructor Donna Levin has described how this
social milieu shapes the characters values. For young readers in the US, the setting
is often established as the place where the story occurs. As children advance, the
elements of the story setting are expanded to include the passage of time which
might be static in some stories or dynamic in others (e.g. changing seasons, day-andnight, etc.). The passage of time as an element of the setting helps direct the childs
attention to recognize setting elements in more complex stories. Setting is another
way of identifying where a story takes place. Ali Ahmed is one of the writers most
famous for vitalizing the uses of setting by altering perceptions and mental look upon
the time and place of the setting.
Types of Setting:
Settings may take various forms: alternate history, campaign setting, constructed
world, dystopia, fantasy world, fictional city, fictional country, fictional crossover,
fictional location, fictional universe, future history, imaginary world, mythical place,
other world (science fiction), parallel universe, planets in science fiction, simulated
reality, virtual reality, utopia etc.
The setting of the The Home-coming is in the village and the city of Calcutta.
Mr. Know-All is set on the ship. The most of the development of The Lumber
Room takes place in the lumber room. There is the setting of the flood affected
people and their life in The Refugee. The Cherry Tree is set in the garden.
4.
Theme:
The theme means the storys main ideas on the message the writer intends to
communicate. Short stories often have single themes and illustrate a single idea such
as the result of certain actions on behalf of either the protagonist or antagonist.
Theme can be reflected in a variety of ways through the story. Theme can be
incorporated in a story through setting, clothing, musing, sounds, certain smells,
things, things the characters touch or hold, transportation and the occupation,
abilities of the characters etc. For example, in the short story, The Refugee the
20
theme of the aftermath of a natural disaster is developed through the old mans
behaviour and his views.
The theme of the short story is the essential meaning of the tale. Short stories
often have single themes and illustrate a simple idea, such as the result of certain
action on behalf of either the protagonist or antagonist. Theme can be reflected in a
variety of different ways throughout your story.
In contemporary literary studies, a theme is the central topic, subject, or concept
the author is trying to point out, not to be confused with whatever message, moral, or
commentary it may send or be interpreted as sending regarding said concept (i.e., its
inferred thesis). While the term theme was for a period used to reference
message or moral, literary critics now rarely employ it in this fashion, namely
due to the confusion it causes regarding the common denotation of theme: (t)he
subject of discourse, discussion, conversation, meditation, or composition; a topic.
One historic problem with the previous usage was that readers would frequently
conflate subject and theme as similar concepts, a confusion that the new
terminology helps prevent in both scholarship and the classroom. Thus, according to
recent scholarship and pedagogy, identifying a storys theme-for example, deathdoes not inherently involve identifying the storys thesis or claims about deaths
definitions, properties, values, or significance. Like morals or messages, themes
often explore historically common or cross-culturally recognizable ideas and are
almost always implied rather than stated explicitly. Along with plot, character,
setting, and style, theme is considered one of the fundamental components of fiction.
Thematic Patterning:
Thematic patterning means the insertion of a recurring motif in a narrative. For
example, various scenes in John Steinbecks Of Mice and Men are about loneliness.
This technique also dates back to One Thousand and One Nights.
A recurring motif of home occurs in The Home-coming, a motif of refugee
can be noted in Refugee, and the importance of trees is repeatedly emphasized in
the The Cherry Tree by the development of the cherry tree planted by Rakesh.
Various techniques may be used to express themes in the story.
21
5.
Style:
In fiction, style is the codified gestures, in which the author tells the story.
Along with plot, character, theme, and setting, style is considered one of the
fundamental components of fiction.
Components of Style:
Style in fiction includes the use of various literary techniques. A writer of a
short story writes with some aim. His story may be religious, humourous, satire,
comic, tragic or a love story. But the writer has some purpose behind it. If he wants
to say something effectively, he has to use suitable style. The style must suit the story
and its purpose. Style takes into account suitable tone and suitable choice of diction.
6.
The narrator is the teller of the story, the orator, doing the mouthwork, or its inprint equivalent. A writer is faced with many choices regarding the narrator of a
story: first-person narrative, third-person narrative, unreliable narrator, stream-ofconsciousness writing. A narrator may be either obtrusive or unobtrusive, depending
on the authors intended relationship between himself, the narrator, the point-of-view
character, and the reader.
Point of View:
Point of view is from whose consciousness the reader hears, sees, and feels the
story.
The person who tells a story is called the narrator, and the angle from which the
story is told is called its point of view. A story can be told by someone who is a
character in the story or by an outside observer.
First-person point of view
The narrator speaking as I has the advantages of adding immediacy to a story.
But such point of view also has limitation. The reader sees the events from the
vantage point of only one character. The character can reveal his own thoughts but
cant get into the minds of other characters.
22
23
Brevity or Economy
Brevity or economy is the soul of a short story. The short story must present
minimum number of events and character. It means that a short story must cover only
a small chunk of human life. There should be no sub-plot as far as possible.
Unnecessary characters should be avoided. The protagonist must be given weightage.
The Cherry Tree gives a message to love plants through its fine balance of
characters. The Lumber Room expresses the feelings of Nicholas by using the
minimum events and characters.
Language
The language of the short story should be a model of economy. There should be
nothing in the language that does not positively add something to the story. Every
word in it should contribute to its effect. A novel often has passages which could be
scored out without detriment to the plot but there is no room for these in the short
story. It requires the apt word and the telling phrase. Descriptive passages are only
valuable in so far as they contribute towards the total effect. The Cherry Tree gives
a message to love plants through its fine use of perfect words.
Moral
Moral is a characteristic of a short story but it is not compulsory. A writer hopes
to teach or instruct his readers through his writing. In such a case there may be a
moral. Sometimes the moral is clearly stated. At times it is noticeable. But in
majority of cases it is implied and we have to trace it out.
Conflicts
In a short story, there is generally a problem or struggle of some kind called a
conflict. Conflict is the soul of story. It is the most important element in a plot. A
conflict can be external or internal. In a story, there may be a single conflict or there
may be several related conflicts.
End
The end of the short story is vital in its structure. An unexpected shock or
surprise at the end makes the story interesting. A good short story must end in an
impressive way. The Refugee refers to the natural calamity and the human tragedy
and ends in an impressive way. The Cherry Tree ends with the cheerfulness as well
24
2.
b. written
c. legal
d. fast
3.
4.
d.Swedish
b. comic
c.tragic
d.detective
6.
c. Russian
5.
b. French
b. American
c. Canadian
d. Australian
b. Anita Desai
d. Jhumpa Lahiri
25
7.
8.
b. German
c. Russian
d. African
9.
b. G. K. Chesterton
c. Isaac Asimov
d. Graham Greene
10. The oral story-telling tradition began to develop into written stories in the ------ century.
a. 17th
b.14th
c.18th
d. 19th
2.
3.
4.
5.
What is an anecdote?
2.
What is a fable?
3.
What was responsible for giving less time to people to read at the end of the
19th century?
4.
5.
6.
26
1.3 Summary:
A short is a work of fiction, usually written in narrative prose. Emerging from
earlier oral story telling traditions in the 17th century, the short story has become a
popular form of literature in the present time.
A short story has almost all the characteristics and the elements of novel but
they are used in a short story in a different and limited way to bring their good effect.
A short story concentrates on a small group of characters creating a single effect or
mood. It is less complex than the novel. Usually a short story focuses on one
incident; has a single plot, a single setting; and covers a short span of time. Short
stories have no fixed length. The order of exposition, conflict, intensifying action,
crisis, climax, resolution etc. may change from writer to writer. In modern times such
order may or may not be followed by the writers. The form of the short story can be
used by each writer in a different and innovative way.
Plot: A series of events through which the writer reveals what is happening,
to whom, and why.
Point of view: The position of the narrator of the story and what the writer
sees from that point.
Protagonist: Main character.
Resolution: Action after the climax until the end of the story/ the
conclusion of the story.
Rising action: The events in the story become complicated and the conflict
in the story is revealed.
Secondary character: Less important character who interacts with the
main character.
Setting: Tells the readers where and when the story takes place.
a) oral
2) d) Geoffrey Chaucer
5) b) American
8)
2.2 1)
4)
2.3 1)
4) d) detective
2) children
Japanese
5) Ireland
10) b) 14th
3) Rabindranath Tagore
2)
3)
4)
5)
A Greek slave
6)
A periodical in the U. K.
1.6 Exercises:
Write short notes on:
1.
3) c. Russian
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
2.
3.
4.
Web
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
30
Unit-2
The Home Coming
Rabindranath Tagore
Contents
2.0 Objectives
2.1 Introduction
2.2 The text
2.3 Check your progress
2.4 Summary
2.5 Terms to remember
2.6 Answer to check your progress
2.7 Exercise
2.8 Reference for further study
2.0. Objectives:
After studying this unit you will be able to:
Explain: You can be able to explain the importance of home in mans life.
2.1 Introduction:
RABINDRNATH TAGORE (1861-1941), is a modern Indias most celebrated
author. The poet, fiction writer, essayist, playwright, translator, painter and
nationalist leader of great eminence, he received the Nobel Prize in 1913. He wrote
in Bengali but his influence extended over all the regional literatures. He was a
Bengali polymath who reshaped his regions literature and music. Author of
Gitanjali and its profoundly sensitive, fresh and beautiful verse, he became the first
non- European to win the Noble Prize in Literature. His poetry viewed as spiritual
31
and mercurial, his seemingly mesmeric personality, flowing hair and his dress
earned him prophet-like reputation in the west. He is generally regarded as the
outstanding creative artist of modern India. At the age of sixteen, he released his first
poems. His novels, stories, songs, dance-dramas, and essays spoke on the political
and personal topics. Gitanjali, Gora, The home and the world are his best-known
works. His compositions are chosen by two nations as national anthems: India and
Bangladesh.
The Home-Coming describes the life and feelings of a young boy of fourteen.
Phatik is the chief character. By nature he was naughty and given to play. His
widowed mother, however, did not like this aspect of the boys character. She,
therefore, always took side of the younger boy, Makhan. One day, all the boys of
village rolled a log of wood into the river. This was done under the direction of
Phatik. Makhan did not cooperate with the boys and, therefore, he was rolled down
along with the log. Makhan went home and reported to his mother. Phatik was called
and beaten black and blue.
At that very moment, Bishamber, the maternal uncle of Phatik, arrived on the
scene. When his sister complained against Phatik he offered to take Phatik to
Calcutta with him. At Calcutta Phatik felt pain at being neglected. When he went
outside, the busy streets and houses of Calcutta appeared killing. He pined for the
love of the mother and the company of his young friends. He got homesick. The
treatment of the aunt was also very bad. He was taken to task for little things. The
result was that he also remained dull and backward in his lessons at school. The boy
got himself drenched one day and had to be recued by the police. He was taken
seriously ill, and in the course of illness, his mind wandered to his home and to his
mother.
The story shows to us the very great importance of love in the life of a young
boy. When Phatik required love and care, nobody carried for him. As a matter of
fact, a boy at the age of fourteen is always in this miserable condition. He wants love
from others who regard him as a source of trouble. People cannot love him as a baby
nor is he of any use to the parents. He is so-called and rebuked at every step.
Therefore, he loses all his interest in life and begins to get sick of it all.
Phatik did not get the love when his heart hungered for it. He got disregard and
was rebuked for no fault of his. But when he was about, everybody was showing love
32
and care on him. Even his mother grew restless on seeing his condition. She forgot
all her prejudices against the boy. She threw herself on his body and cried out dear
names for him. But Phatik unconsciously reminded her that the holyday had come for
his soul to be free of this bodily existence.
scratched his face and beat him and kicked him, and then went crying home. The first
act of the drama was over.
Phatik wiped his face, and sat down on the edge of a sunken barge on the river
bank, and began to chew a piece of grass. A boat came up to the landing, and a
middle-aged man, with grey hair and dark moustache, stepped on shore. He saw the
boy sitting there doing nothing, and asked him where the Chakravortis lived. Phatik
went on chewing the grass, and said: Over there, but it was quite impossible to tell
where he pointed. The stranger asked him again. He swung his legs to and fro on the
side of the barge, and said; Go and find out, and continued to chew the grass as
before.
But now a servant came down from the house, and told Phatik his mother
wanted him. Phatik refused to move. But the servant was the master on this occasion.
He took Phatik up roughly, and carried him, kicking and struggling in impotent rage.
When Phatik came into the house, his mother saw him. She called out angrily:
So you have been hitting Makhan again?
Phatik answered indignantly: No, I havent; who told you that?
His mother shouted: Dont tell lies! You have.
Phatik said suddenly: I tell you, I havent. You ask Makhan! But Makhan
thought it best to stick to his previous statement. He said: Yes, mother. Phatik did
hit me.
Phatiks patience was already exhausted. He could not bear this injustice. He
rushed at Makban, and hammered him with blows: Take that he cried, and that,
and that, for telling lies.
His mother took Makhans side in a moment, and pulled Phatik away, beating
him with her hands. When Phatik pushed her aside, she shouted out: What! You
little villain! Would you hit your own mother?
It was just at this critical juncture that the grey-haired stranger arrived. He asked
what was the matter. Phatik looked sheepish and ashamed.
But when his mother stepped back and looked at the stranger, her anger was
changed to surprise. For she recognised her brother, and cried: Why, Dada! Where
have you come from?"
34
As she said these words, she bowed to the ground and touched his feet. Her
brother had gone away soon after she had married, and he had started business in
Bombay. His sister had lost her husband while he was in Bombay. Bishamber had
now come back to Calcutta, and had at once made enquiries about his sister. He had
then hastened to see her as soon as he found out where she was.
The next few days were full of rejoicing. The brother asked after the education
of the two boys. He was told by his sister that Phatik was a perpetual nuisance. He
was lazy, disobedient, and wild. But Makhan was as good as gold, as quiet as a lamb,
and very fond of reading. Bishamber kindly offered to take Phatik off his sisters
hands, and educate him with his own children in Calcutta. The widowed mother
readily agreed. When his uncle asked Phatik if he would like to go to Calcutta with
him, his joy knew no bounds, and he said; Oh, yes, uncle! In a way that made it
quite clear that he meant it.
It was an immense relief to the mother to get rid of Phatik. She had a prejudice
against the boy, and no love was lost between the two brothers. She was in daily fear
that he would either drown Makhan some day in the river, or break his head in a
fight, or run him into some danger or other. At the same time she was somewhat
distressed to see Phatiks extreme eagerness to get away.
Phatik, as soon as all was settled, kept asking his uncle every minute when they
were to start. He was on pins and needles all day long with excitement, and lay
awake most of the night. He bequeathed to Makhan, in perpetuity, his fishing-rod, his
big kite and his marbles. Indeed, at this time of departure his generosity towards
Makhan was unbounded.
When they reached Calcutta, Phatik made the acquaintance of his aunt for the
first time. She was by no means pleased with this unnecessary addition to her family.
She found her own three boys quite enough to manage without taking any one else.
And to bring a village lad of fourteen into their midst was terribly upsetting.
Bishamber should really have thought twice before committing such an indiscretion.
In this world of human affairs there is no worse nuisance than a boy at the age of
fourteen. He is neither ornamental, nor useful. It is impossible to shower affection on
him as on a little boy; and he is always getting in the way. If he talks with a childish
lisp he is called a baby, and if he answers in a grown-up way he is called impertinent.
In fact any talk at all from him is resented. Then he is at the unattractive, growing
35
age. He grows out of his clothes with indecent haste; his voice grows hoarse and
breaks and quavers; his face grows suddenly angular and unsightly. It is easy to
excuse the shortcomings of early childhood, but it is hard to tolerate even
unavoidable lapses in a boy of fourteen. The lad himself becomes painfully selfconscious. When he talks with elderly people he is either unduly forward, or else so
unduly shy that he appears ashamed of his very existence.
Yet it is at this very age when in his heart of hearts a young lad most craves for
recognition and love; and he becomes the devoted slave of any one who shows him
consideration. But none dare openly love him, for that would be regarded as undue
indulgence and therefore bad for the boy. So, what with scolding and chiding, he
becomes very much like a stray dog that has lost his master.
For a boy of fourteen his own home is the only Paradise. To live in a strange
house with strange people is little short of torture, while the height of bliss is to
receive the kind looks of women, and never to be slighted by them.
It was anguish to Phatik to be the unwelcome guest in his aunts house, despised
by this elderly woman, and slighted, on every occasion. If she ever asked him to do
anything for her, he would be so overjoyed that he would overdo it; and then she
would tell him not to be so stupid, but to get on with his lessons.
The cramped atmosphere of neglect in his aunts house oppressed Phatik so
much that he felt that he could hardly breathe. He wanted to go out into the open
country and fill his lungs and breathe freely. But there was no open country to go to.
Surrounded on all sides by Calcutta houses and walls, be would dream night after
night of his village home, and long to be back there. He remembered the glorious
meadow where he used to fly his kite all day long; the broad river-banks where he
would wander about the livelong day singing and shouting for joy; the narrow brook
where he could go and dive and swim at any time he liked. He thought of his band of
boy companions over whom he was despot; and, above all, the memory of that tyrant
mother of his, who had such a prejudice against him, occupied him day and night. A
kind of physical love like that of animals; a longing to be in the presence of the one
who is loved; an inexpressible wistfulness during absence; a silent cry of the inmost
heart for the mother, like the lowing of a calf in the twilight;-this love, which was
almost an animal instinct, agitated the shy, nervous, lean, uncouth and ugly boy. No
one could understand it, but it preyed upon his mind continually.
36
There was no more backward boy in the whole school than Phatik. He gaped
and remained silent when the teacher asked him a question, and like an overladen ass
patiently suffered all the blows that came down on his back. When other boys were
out at play, he stood wistfully by the window and gazed at the roofs of the distant
houses. And if by chance he espied children playing on the open terrace of any roof,
his heart would ache with longing.
One day he summoned up all his courage, and asked his uncle: Uncle, when
can I go home?
His uncle answered; Wait till the holidays come.
But his holidays would not come till November, and there was a long time still
to wait.
One day Phatik lost his lesson-book. Even with the help of books he had found
it very difficult indeed to prepare his lesson. Now it was impossible. Day after day
the teacher would cane him unmercifully. His condition became so abjectly
miserable that even his cousins were ashamed to own him. They began to jeer and
insult him more than the other boys. He went to his aunt at last, and told her that he
had lost his book.
His aunt pursed her lips in contempt, and said: You great clumsy, country lout.
How can I afford, with all my family, to buy you new books five times a month?
That night, on his way back from school, Phatik had a bad headache with a fit of
shivering. He felt he was going to have an attack of malarial fever. His one great fear
was that he would be a nuisance to his aunt.
The next morning Phatik was nowhere to be seen. All searches in the
neighbourhood proved futile. The rain had been pouring in torrents all night, and
those who went out in search of the boy got drenched through to the skin. At last
Bisbamber asked help from the police.
At the end of the day a police van stopped at the door before the house. It was
still raining and the streets were all flooded. Two constables brought out Phatik in
their arms and placed him before Bishamber. He was wet through from head to foot,
muddy all over, his face and eyes flushed red with fever, and his limbs all trembling.
Bishamber carried him in his arms, and took him into the inner apartments. When his
37
wife saw him, she exclaimed; What a heap of trouble this boy has given us. Hadnt
you better send him home?
Phatik heard her words, and sobbed out loud: Uncle, I was just going home; but
they dragged me back again.
The fever rose very high, and all that night the boy was delirious. Bishamber
brought in a doctor. Phatik opened his eyes flushed with fever, and looked up to the
ceiling, and said vacantly: Uncle, have the holidays come yet? May I go home?
Bishamber wiped the tears from his own eyes, and took Phatiks lean and
burning hands in his own, and sat by him through the night. The boy began again to
mutter. At last his voice became excited: Mother, he cried, dont beat me like
that! Mother! I am telling the truth!
The next day Phatik became conscious for a short time. He turned his eyes about
the room, as if expecting someone to come. At last, with an air of disappointment, his
head sank back on the pillow. He turned his face to the wall with a deep sigh.
Bishamber knew his thoughts, and, bending down his head, whispered: Phatik,
I have sent for your mother.
The day went by. The doctor said in a troubled voice that the boys condition
was very critical.
Phatik began to cry out; By the mark!-three fathoms. By the mark-four
fathoms. By the mark. He had heard the sailor on the river steamer calling out the
mark on the plumb-line. Now he was himself plumbing an unfathomable sea.
Later in the day Phatiks mother burst into the room like a whirlwind, and began
to toss from side to side and moan and cry in a loud voice.
Bishamber tried to calm her agitation, but she flung herself on the bed, and
cried: Phatik, my darling, my darling.
Phatik stopped his restless movements for a moment. His hands ceased beating
up and down. He said: Eh?
The mother cried again: Phatik, my darling, my darling.
Phatik very slowly turned his head and, without seeing anybody, said: Mother,
the holidays have come.
38
2.
Bishamber b) Makhan
b) Makhan
c) Phatik
Bishamber lived in ..
a) Bombay
5.
d) Mother
4.
d) Pratik
3.
c) Phatik
b) Calcutta
c) Madras
d) Delhi
b) ringleader
c) president
d) member
Section-2
Check your Progress
II. Short answer type questions:
(2)
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
39
2.4 Summary:
The present story deals with the teenage boy Phatik who pines for the love of
widowed mother and the company of his friends. It is a tragedy about Phatik who is
home-sick.
Phatik Chakravarti is the central character in the story, who lived with his
mother and younger brother Makhan. He was the ringleader among the boys, once he
got the mischief of pushing the log lying on the bank of river in the river. With the
help of the boys he started to push the log in the river but Makhan didnt like this
idea so he sat on the log. Neglecting towards Makhan, Phatik ordered to roll the log
with calling 1,2,3 go, log floted into the water with Makhans Philosophy. All
boys shouted with delight but Phatik was frightened, furiously Makhan bate Phatik
and went crying home complaining about Phatik. Pahtik nervously sat on the river
bank and began to chew a piece of grass.
At the same time a middle aged stranger, with grey hair and dark mustache came
by a boat and asked Phatik the address of the Chakravartis. Phatik showed only the
direction which was the man didnt understand and when he asked again Phatik
replied angrily, Go and find out. Phatiks servant came to call Phatik home, but he
refused to come home but the servant carried him home.
His mother scolded Phatik for his mischief, at the same time the stranger came
in the house. By looking at the stranger mother was surprised and cried, Dada.!
and she touched his feet. The stranger was Phatiks maternal uncle, his name was
Bishamber. He had gone to Bombay soon after his sisters marriage. Now he was
staying in Calcutta. When Bishamber was in Bombay, her sister lost her husband.
Bhisambar decided to take Phatik to Calccuta for his further education; by listening
to this Phatik and his mother were very happy.
Phatiks arrival at Calcutta was not welcomed by his aunt. After some days he
became bore in his uncles house; his position was like a stray dog who has lost its
master. His uncles house is a strange house with strange people for Phatik. He
doesnt like busy and fast life in Calcutta. He was silent and dull boy in the school,
there was no any backward boy in the whole school than him. When other students
were out to play he used to stand near the window looking at the roofs of distant
buildings.
40
Phatik was neglected so much that he used to ask his uncle when could he go
back to his village. One day Phatik lost his lesson book so he couldnt prepare the
lessons and his teacher gave him a punishment. Now his cousins were ashamed of
saying him their brother, they started teasing him more than the other children. He
went to his aunty and asked for a new lesson book. Listening this, his aunty replied
that she cant afford a new lesson book.
That night Phatik had a fever and his body was shivering. While coming home
from the school, he thought that he would be attacked by malaria fever. His, another
great fear was that he would become a nuisance to his aunty.
The next morning Phatik was not found anywhere; it had started to rain. All the
people who went to search him would come back home without any result. All the
attempts were proved to be futile. So, at last Bishamber decided to take the help of
police. At the end of the day, a police van stopped in front of the house. Two
constables brought Phatik in the house. He was totally wet and was suffering from
fever. His face had become red and limbs were all trembling. Bhisamber carried him
in his arms and took him in his room. By seeing this, Phatiks aunty asked her
husband to send him to his village. Phatik replied that he was going to his village
when these police took him back home.
The fever rose very high so Bishamber brought a doctor. Pahtik opened his eyes
flushed with fever. Watching towards the ceiling, he asked his uncle when the
holidays would come. Bishamber wiped tears from his eyes and took Phatiks
burning hands in his hands and sat with Pahtik the whole night.
The next day Phatik became conscious for awhile. He was watching towards the
door that someone would come. Looking this, Bhisamber said that he had informed
his mother and she would come now. The day passed. The doctor said that the boys
situation was now more critical. Later, in the day Phatiks mother arrived, and seeing
at Phatik she started crying. Bhisamber tried to calm her but she didnt stop. Phatik
stopped his restless movements for a moment and slowly turned his head and without
seeing toward anybody said Mother, have the holidays come.?.
41
43
most craves for recognition and love: a young boy of fourteen is most desirous
of being loved. He wants his merit and deeds to be respected by others.
little short of torture: when a boy of fourteen does not find love in any quarter,
he becomes sad and downcast. He cannot express these feelings to anybody but he
goes on suffering excessively within himself. The condition of Phatik in the house of
his maternal uncle could be compared to that of a man in a closed room. Phatik felt
most uncomfortable and the whole atmosphere was suffering for him. He could no
longer tolerate the lack of love and consideration.
cramped atmosphere of neglect: a young boy of fourteen is always conscious of
getting love. He wants to be loved and when he does not get the thing he wants, he
grows thoughtful and sad.
physical love: animal instinct just as a young animal clings to its mother for
protection
pwstfulness: delirious
by the mark: when a shallow point comes in sea or in a great river, one of the
sailors throws a piece of string into water nothing the marks on the string and calls
out the depth according to the mark
plumbing : to plumb is to get to the bottom of water. Phatik is pictured as going
deeper into the sea of death, which none can fathom.
holiday : a Bengali word for holiday, meaning also release. It is as through
the boy were saying, My release has come. This cannot be represented in English.
clumsy, country lout- when Phatik told his aunt how he had lost his lesson-book,
she got very angry and called him a vulgar, awkward fellow without manners.
calling out the mark on the lead: Phatik, who used to play on the banks of the
river, had often seen the sailors use an instrument for measuring the depth of the
river. It consists of a plumb-line with a lead at one end so that it sinks in the water.
The sailors pull the string or rope after making it and in this way they measure the
depth in fathoms.
plumbing an unfathomable sea: after being taken ill, Phatik began to talk at
random. He had lost all his senses and he repeated those terms which the sailors used
44
while measuring the depth of the river. Most probably it appeared that he was trying
to find the depth of the unknown world to go after death.
Mother, the holidays have come: the mother addressed Phatik in the most
endearing terms but Phatik did not listen to her. He was not in his senses. He did not
look towards anybody in particular but turning his head, he declared that his last
movement had come when his soul would become absolutely free from this bodily
existence. He had ever looked forward to the holidays so that he might get back to
his village home. But now the real holiday for his spirit had come.
I)
c) Phatik
2.
c) Phatik
3.
a) Why Dada
4.
b) Calcutta
5.
b) Ringleader
Section-2
II. Short answer type questions:
(A) Answer the following questions in a word /sentence / phrase each.
1.
2.
3.
4.
Bishamber needs the help of police to find Phatik who has left the house.
5.
6.
7.
2.7 Exercises
Write answers of the following questions in four / five sentences each:
1.
What was the reason for quarrel between Phatik and Makhan?
Phatik and Makhan quarrelled always with one another and mother was trying to
stop them, at the same time Pahtiks uncle entered the house. Uncle decided to stay
for few days with his sister, his sister had lost her husband while he was in Bombay.
He asked his sister about the education of the boys then he understood that Phatik
was naughty, lazy, disobedient and wild while Makhan was as good as gold, as quiet
as lamb and very fond of reading. Phatik was a headache to his sister so decided to
take him to Calcutta and Phatik also agreed to this. So Phatik went to Calcutta.
3.
Phatik and Makhan used to quarrel always, Phatik used to beat Makhan and by
seeing this, their mother was in fear. She was in daily fear that Phatik would either
drown Makhan in river some day or break his head in fight or run him in some
danger or other.
4.
Why did Phatik ask about holiday again and again to his uncle?
Phatik was neglected in his uncles house so his physical and mental conditions
had turned worst, as a result he was not performing well in schools. He was always
scolded by his aunty and so lost all the interest in his city life and became home sick.
One day he gathered all his courage and asked his uncle that when could he go to his
46
home in village, his uncle replied that he could go to the village in holidays. After
that day his condition in the city became worset. He would never go to play with the
other boys and only watched them through the window. Once he was suffering from
fever so he thought that he would be nuisance to his aunty. So he decided to go to his
village he was caught by the police at brought back and he would always ask that
when he could go to his home in village.
III. Write short note on the following:
1.
Phatik Chakravarti
Phatik Chakravarti, 14 years old naughty boy is the central character of this
story. He lived with his widowed mother and younger brother Makhan. Phatik was
the ringleader of the boys in village; under his guidance only the boys would do
many mischievous activities but his brother Makhan always opposed him. Phatik to
keep his image in the boys would always remove Makhan from his way. Just for fun
one day all he boys of village rolled a log of wood into the river under the guidance
of Phatik. Because of Phatiks naughtiness his mother decided to send him with his
maternal uncle to Calcutta. Phatik went to Calcutta very happily but he was
neglected by his aunty. This negligence affected Phatik both physically and mentally
due to this he started to hate city life and was eager to go back to his village where he
could play with all his village friends. As a result he became home sick. He had lost
interest in studies; he would watch at all the boys playing out through the window
and never went to play with them. Once he had lost his lesson book so he couldnt
study the lesson so his teacher punished him severely, he told this to his aunty then
she answered that she could not afford the lesson book then. The next day when
Phatik was returning to home from school he realized that he was suffering from
fever, he thought that he would be nuisance to his aunty. So he decided to go back to
his village, his uncle searched him the whole day but he didnt find him anywhere so
he took the help of police. At the end of day police caught Phatik and brought him
home. He was suffering from fever and the doctor said that his condition was very
serious. Phatik would always ask his uncle that when he would be able to go to his
house back.
2.
When Phatik decided to go to his uncles house in Calcutta he was very happy.
But when he went to Calcutta he was unwelcomed by his aunty and was neglected in
47
house. His aunty thought that it was difficult to manage her three children and this
unwanted guest would again be a trouble to her. The age in which a boy should get
love from his family members there Phatik was being neglected. He always hated the
big buildings of the city and the wall around them. For a boy of fourteen his house is
Paradise but for Phatik his uncles house was like hell. If his aunty tells her to do a
work he would do it overjoyed and do something extra for which he would be again
scolded by his aunty. As he was hated in house his condition in school had become
worse, he was poor in studies and so always punished by his teachers. He was the
most backward in the school. His small wish was also not fulfilled in his uncles
house. Once he had lost his lesson book and he told so to his aunty, his aunty
answered that she cant afford it. His cousins teased him more than the other
students. He would always look at the other students playing on the ground through
the window but never went to play with them. Due to such conditions he would
always ask his uncle when he could go to his home in the village, as a result he
became home-sick in his uncles house.
3.
Makhan was younger brother of Phatik. Phatik was naughty, lazy, disobedient
and wild, while Makhan was as good as gold, as quiet as lamb and very fond of
reading. As they both were very different they always quarrelled. Phatik was the
ringleader among the boys of village; he would guide all the boys to do mischievous
activities. Once he got a mischievous idea and he explained the idea to the boys. The
idea was that there was a log on the river bank and they would push the log into the
river and the log would sink in the water. By seeing this, the owner of log would be
angry and they will enjoy the fun. As decided the boys went to the river bank and
started to push the log in the water, at the same time Makhan came and sat on the log
to oppose the boys. The boys tried to push Makhan but he didnt move. Phatik
ordered Makhan to move from their way, Makhan didnt listen so Phatik ordered the
boys to push the log. The boys pushed the log and with the log Makhan also went in
the river and Makhans philosophy was also vanished.
4.
The title is alike a face of the story, which reflects the theme of the story. The
present story entitled The Home Coming is apt and suggestive. The entire story
happens due to Phatik. To Phatik his house in the village was equal to heaven
48
whereas his uncles house equal to hell. Through the present story the writer wants to
tell us the importance of our house where we are born and brought up with
foundness, love and care. Phatik realizes the importance of the house after leaving
the house and becomes very eager to return to his home from his uncles house. In
this way Phatiks journey towards home is the central issue of this story. And leaving
home creates a conflict in his life.
5.
The short story is a minor form of literature which is based on a single incedent.
Even though it is based on single incident it has beginning, middle and end. Well
beginning, better middle and effective ending are the features of a good story. The
ending of the story is also important element because it makes good impact among
the readers or listeners mind. It is meaningful, suggestive and remarkable. It is
indicative of its theme. The proverb All is well that ends well also tells us the
importance of the ending of the story. The ending is quite significant and suggestive
also. You have noted that Phatiks home in the village is a paradise for him. In the
act of going to the uncles house in Calcutta, the young sensitive boy is out of his
paradise. If we remember this and read the ending carefully, we shall notice that
perhaps the writer is moving the meaning of Phatiks pathetic experiences to a higher
level of consciousness. Here the expressions home-coming and holidays take on
almost a spiritual meaning.
2.8 (A) Questions for further study:
1.
Describe in detail the country life versus city life as depicted in the story.
2.
3.
4.
What is the main theme of the story? Say what might happen in the absence
of love?
49
Content
2.0 Objectives
2.1 Introduction
2.2 The text
2.3 Check your progress
2.4 Summary
2.5 Terms to remember
2.6 Answer to check your progress
2.7 Exercise
2.8 Reference for further study
2.0 Objectives:
After studying this unit you will be able to
2.1 Introduction:
Born in Kasauli, Himachal Pradesh in 1934, Ruskin Bond is a well-known
figure on the literary horizon of India. He achieved international recognition by
winning the John Liwewllyn Rhys Memorial Prize in 1957 for The Room on the
Roof written when he was seventeen years old. Since then he has written over a
hundred short stories, essays, novellas and novels which include Vagrants on the
Valley and A Flight of Pigeons. The latter novel has been made into a widely
50
acclaimed film Junoon. He has written more than thirty books for children. He has
also published his two-volume autobiography: Scenes from a Writers Life which
describes his formative years growing up in Anglo-India; and The lamp is Lit a
collection of essays and episodes from his journal. In 1992 he received the Sahitya
Akademi Award for English writing in India. He was awarded PadmaShree in 1999.
His latest book is a collection of ghost stories entitled A Season of Ghosts. It was
published in November 1999 and has done so well that it is being reprinted.
Rakesh plants a cherry seedling in his garden and watches it grow. As seasons
go by, the small tree survives heavy monsoon showers, a hungry goat that eats most
of the leaves and a grass cutter who splits it into two with one sweep. At last, on his
ninth birthday, Rakesh is rewarded with miraculous sight the first pink blossoms of
his precious cherry tree!
51
shaped formation streaming northwards, the calls of the birds carrying clearly
through the thin mountain air.
One morning in the garden he bent to pick up what he thought was a small twig
and found to his surprise that it was well rooted. He stared at it for a moment, then
ran to fetch Grandfather, calling: Dada, come and look, the cherry tree has come
up!
What cherry tree? asked Grandfather, who had forgotten about it.
The seed we planted last year-look, its come up!
Rakesh went down on his haunches, while Grandfather bent almost double and
peered down at the tiny tree. It was about four inches high.
Yes, its a cherry tree, said Grandfather. You should water it now and then.
Rakesh ran indoors and came back with a bucket of water.
Dont drown it! said Grandfather.
Rakesh gave it as prinkling and circled it with pebbles.
What are the pebbles for? asked Grandfather.
For privacy, said Rakesh.
He looked at the tree every morning but it did not seem to be growing very fast.
So he stopped looking at it-except quickly, out of the corner of his eye. And, after a
week or two, when he allowed himself to look at it properly, he found that it had
grown-at least an inch!
That year the monsoon rains came early and Rakesh plodded to and from school
in raincoat and gum-boots. Ferns sprang from the trunk of trees, strange-looking
lilies came up in the long grass, and even when it wasnt raining the trees dripped
and mist came curling up the valley. The cherry tree grew quickly in this season.
It was about two feet high when a goat entered the garden and ate all the leaves.
Only the main stem and two thin branches remained.
Never mind, said Grandfather, seeing that Rakesh was upset. It will grow
again, cherry trees are tough.
53
Towards the end of the rainy season new leaves appeared on the tree. Then a
woman cutting grass scrambled down the hillside, her scythe swishing through the
heavy monsoon foliage. She did try to avoid the tree: one sweep and the cherry tree
was cut in two.
When Grandfather saw what had happened, he went after the woman and
scolded her; but the damage could not be repaired.
May be it will die now, said Rakesh.
May be, said Grandfather.
But the cherry tree had no intention of dying.
By the time summer came round again, it had sent out several new shoots with
tender green leaves. Rakesh had grown taller too. He was eight now, a sturdy boy
with curly black hair and deep black eyes. Blackberry eyes, Grandfather called
them.
That monsoon Rakesh went home to his village, to help his father and mother
with the planting and ploughing and sowing. He was thinner but stronger when he
came back to Grandfathers house at the end of the rains, to find that the cherry tree
had grown another foot. It was now up to his chest.
Even when there was rain, Rakesh would sometimes water the tree. He wanted it
to know that he was there.
One day he found a bright green praying-mantis perched on a branch peering at
him with bulging eyes. Rakesh let it remain there. It was the cherry trees first
visitor.
The next visitor was a hairy caterpillar, who started making a meal of the leaves.
Rakesh removed it quickly and dropped it on a heap of dry leaves.
Come back when youre a butterfly, he said.
Winter came early. The cherry tree bent low with the weight of snow. Fieldmice
sought shelter in the roof of the cottage. The road from the valley was blocked, and
for several days there was no newspaper, and this made Grandfather quite grumpy.
His stories began to have unhappy endings.
54
In February it was Rakeshs birthday. He was nine-and the tree was four, but
almost as tall as Rakesh.
One morning, when the sun came out, Grandfather came into the garden to let
some warmth get into my bones, as he put it. He stopped in front of the cherry tree,
stared at it for a few moments, and then called out: Rakesh! Come and look! Come
quickly before it falls!
Rakesh and Grandfather gazed at the tree as though it had performed a miracle.
There was a pale pink blossom at the end of a branch.
The following year there were more blossoms. And suddenly the tree was taller
than Rakesh, even though it was less than half of his age. And then it was taller than
Grandfather, who was older than some of the oak trees.
But Rakesh had grown too. He could run and jump and climb trees as well as
most boys, and he read a lot of books, although he still liked listening to
Grandfathers tales.
In the cheery tree, bees came to feed on the nectar in the blossoms, and tiny
birds pecked at the blossoms and broke them off. But the tree kept blossoming right
through the spring and there were always more blossoms than birds.
That summer there were small cherries on the tree. Rakesh tasted one and spat it
out.
Its too sour, he said.
Theyll be better next year, said Grandfather.
But the birds liked them-especially the bigger birds, such as the Bulbuls and
Scarlet minivets-and they flitted in and out of the foliage, feasting on the cherries.
On a warm sunny afternoon, when even the bees looked sleepy, Rakesh was
looking for Grandfather without finding him in any of his favourite places around the
house. Then he looked out of bedroom window and saw Grandfather reclining on a
cane chair under the cherry tree.
Theres just the right amount of shade here, said Grandfather. And I like
looking at the leaves.
55
Theyre pretty leaves, said Rakesh. And they are always ready to dance, if
theres a breeze.
After Grandfather had come indoors, Rakesh went into the garden and lay down
on the grass beneath the tree. He gazed up through the leaves at the great blue sky;
and turning on his side, he could see the mountain striding away into the clouds. He
was still lying beneath the tree when the evening shadow crept across the garden.
Grandfather came back and sat down beside Rakesh, and they waited in silence until
the stars came out and nightjar began to call. In the forest below, the crickets and
cicadas began tuning up; and suddenly the trees were full of sound of insects.
There are so many trees in the forest, said Rakesh.
Whats so special about this tree? Why do we like it so much?
We planted it ourselves, said Grandfather. Thats why its special.
Just one small seed, said Rakesh, and he touched the smooth bark of the tree
he had grown. He ran his hand along the trunk of the tree and put his finger to the tip
of a leaf. I wonder, he whispered. Is this what it feels like to be God?
2.
3.
d) May
When Rakesh was nine years old, the tree was ----------.
a) five
4.
c) March
b) four
c) ten
b) a ex-army man
d) a writer
56
d) three
5.
Section- 2
II. Short answer type questions:
(A) Answer the following questions in a word / sentence / phrase each.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
2.4 Summary:
Rakesh was a six years old school boy, who used to live with his Grandfather in
Mussoorie. His parents lived in a small village fifty miles away where there was no
school. So Rakesh lived with his grandfather in mussoorie. Rakeshs Grandfather
was a retired forest ranger. Rakesh had to walk half an hour from his school to reach
his grandfathers cottage. While coming to the cottage, he used to buy a bunch of
cherries for fifty paisa. When he reached home only three cherries were left. He
offered one of the cherries to his Grandfather who was working in the garden.
Grandfather took one of the cherries and ate it and Rakeah ate the remaining
two. Rakesh kept the last seed in his mouth for some time. Later on he took that seed
in his hand and studied it. Rakesh asked his grandfather whether the cherry seeds are
lucky. His Grandfather answered of course they are lucky, but they must be put in
some use. So, Rakesh decided to plant it and started to dig for the plantation in the
shady corner of the garden. Then he took his lunch and ran away to play cricket with
his friends and forgot all about the cherry seed.
57
In the winter Rakesh and Grandfather sat in front of the charcoal fire, where
grandfather used to tell stories to Rakesh; in return Rakesh would read newspaper for
grandfather, as grandfathers eyesight had become weak.
In the spring season Rakesh wake up early in the morning to chop wood and
light fire. At the same time Rakesh saw a V shaped formation streaming northward.
One morning he bent to pick that small towing and was surprised to see that it was a
well rooted cherry tree. He called his grandfather and confirmed it. Grandfather
suggested him to water it regularly.
Rakesh looked at the tree every morning, but he didnt find it growing. So, he
stopped looking at the tree. Then he started to look at the tree weekly and found it
growing one inch. In the mansoon the tree becomes two feet tall. One day a goat
entered the garden and ate the lives of the cherry tree. By seeing this Rakesh became
upset. Grandfather gave confidence to Rakesh. At the end of mansoon the cherry tree
would grow again.
After few days a woman was cutting grass from the garden and at that time she
cut the cherry tree into two parts. By seeing this grandfather scolded her and both
Rakesh and grandfather lost the hope that the tree will grow again.
By the summer the tree grew again and Rakesh had also grown. That mansoon
Rakesh went near his parents to help them in farms. After returning he had become
thin but strong. He found the cherry tree had grown to his chest.
One day a small bird came on the cherry tree and Rakesh let it to sit there. The
next visitor was a caterpillar, who started making the meal of leaves. Rakesh
removed it and threw.
In winter the cherry tree bent with snow. In February it was Rakeshs birthday.
He was nine years old now. One morning, Grandfather came out and was surprised
to see the small blossom on the cherry tree. Both watch it as if it was a miracle.
There were many blossoms that year and tree suddenly became taller, it became
taller than grandfather. But Rakesh had grown too. He had learned to climb the trees
and had read a lot of books. The cherry tree becomes a place for shelter for many
birds.
In summer, there were some small cherries, Rakesh tasted one, it was too sour.
But the birds like them especially the bigger birds.
58
One sunny afternoon, Rakesh was looking for grandfather. He found grandfather
sitting under the cherry tree in his cane chair. Rakesh also led down there, when his
grandfather went in the cottage. He was watching to the sky through the leaves. He
was still lying down until the evening. His grandfather came and both were looking
at stars. Rakesh asked grandfather, What is special about the tree that we like this
tree even though there are so many trees in forest. Grandfather answered, it is
because it is planted by us.
Rakesh whispered, Only one seed turns in to a huge tree, I wonder, Is this what
it feels like to be God.
a) February
2.
3.
b) four
4.
5.
b) his grandfather
Section- 2
II. Short answer type questions:
(A) Answer the following questions in a word / sentence / phrase each.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Rakesh spat out the small cherry because it was too sour
6.
Is this what it feels like to be God? are the last surprising words of
Rakesh.
7.
2.7 Exercises
I.
1.
Ans: Rakesh planted the cherry tree. He planted the cherry seed on the advice of
his grandfather. His grandfather told him how cherry seeds are lucky if we plant it in
a proper place. So, Rakesh planted it in the garden where the earth was soft and
yielding. He didnt have to dig. He pressed the seed into soil with his thumb
properly.
2.
Ans: Rakesh used to live with his grandfather, who was a retired ranger at
Mussoorie. Rakeshs parents were peasants, who lived in a small village. Education
facility is not available in that village. So the parents send him to Mussoorie for his
education. In every monsoon Rakesh went to his village for helping his father and
mother in the farm. He helped to his parents in planting, ploughing and sowing.
II. Write short notes
1)
Rakesh:
Rakesh was a six years old hero of the story The Cherry Tree by Ruskin Bond.
He was a sturdy boy with curly black hair and deep black eyes. He lived with his
grandfather at Mussorrie. He belonged to the poor farmers family. His parents lived
in a small village where there was no school. He liked to eat cherries. So, he spent
fifty paisa for the bunch of cherries, which he ate on the way from school to the
cottage. Once he planted a cherry seed in the shady corner. He used to play cricket
with his friends.
Grandfather told Rakesh the stories and in a return Rakesh readout newspaper to
his grandfather even though he didnt like it. His grandfathers eyesight was weak.
Rakesh was very enthusiastic about the planted cherry tree. One day he saw Vshaped formation streaming northwards and was surprised to see it was well rooted.
As per the advice of his grandfather he used to water it and take care. One day he
found a bunch of cherries on the tree and his happiness knew no bounds. Then he
found some on the tree other visitors like a hairy caterpillar, butterfly and many other
birds.
61
In this way Rakesh was very happy to see the big blossomed tree. He loved that
tree because he had planted it. In this way the small school boy shows us the very
good and great message about the plantation of tree to save environment.
2)
The Grandfather:
Rakeshs grandfather was a retired forest ranger who used to live in a small
cottage on the foothills of the Himalayas, near the forest in Mussoorie. Being a forest
ranger he loved to stay near tree. So he had developed a beautiful garden around his
small cottage. He inculcated many good values in his grandson Rakesh. He used to
tell Rakesh many stories about people who turned into animals and ghosts who lived
in trees. He was also very curious about current affair so he used to read newspaper
daily.
He loved Rakesh very much and guided him in various activities related to
gardening. His advice of planting the cherry tree shows his affection towards the
environment. He used to give confidence to Rakesh in some moments when the
cherry tree had broken. Grandfather sat under the cherry tree in his cane chair and
loved to watch the leaves. So, he is one of the ideal grandfathers who took good care
of his grandson.
3)
The cherry tree plays a vital role in the present story. The story is based on the
plantation, growth, nursing and blossom of the cherry tree. The cherry tree is planted
by the six year old boy Rakesh. Inspite of many hurdles the cherry tree grows and
Rakesh feels happy at last as it blossoms.As seasons go by, the small tree survives
heavy monsoon showers, a hungry goat that eats most of the leaves and a grass cutter
who splits it into two with one sweep. At last, on his ninth birthday, Rakesh is
rewarded with miraculous sight-the first pink blossoms of his precious cherry tree.
Through the story, Bond conveys an important message. There is a kind of similarity
between the growth of the tree and Rakesh. Inspite of the heavy mansoon, and
cutting it by grasscutter into two, the tree survives and blossoms. It also provides a
shelter for many birds. Like the tree man also has to face many obstacles during his
lifetime. The obstacles and problems actually make man mature and his hardcore life
experiences make him to help others. Perhaps this significant message is conveyed
by Ruskin Bond through The Cherry Tree.
62
63
Unit-3
Mr. Know-all
Somerset Maugham
Contents
3.0 Objectives
3.1 Introduction
3.2 The Text
3.2.1
Text-Part I
3.2.2
Text-Part II
3.2.3
Text-Part III
3.2.4
Text-Part IV
3.3 Summary
3.4 Terms to remember
3.5 Answers to questions
3.6 Exercises (Uni. Pattern ques.)
3.7 Reference for further reading
3.0 Objectives
After studying this unit you will be able to
understand how one should not judge a person by his race or looks.
find the description of the time after the First World War.
64
3.1 Introduction
William Somerset Maugham (1874 to 1965) is one of the most popular British
writers. He is a dramatist, novelist and short story writer. He lost his parents at the
age of 10 and was brought up by a paternal uncle. Though he became a doctor and
practiced as a physician for some years, he started writing as early as at the age of 15.
In 1907, he wrote a play Lady Fredrick, a comedy of manners that made him famous
as a writer. Writing was so natural for him that once he said, I took to it as a duck
takes to water. He had a long and very successful career of 65 years as a writer. He
wrote many novels also. His novel Of Human Bondage is considered as a
masterpiece. He took part in World War I and worked in British Secret Service. All
these experiences are reflected in his short stories Ashenden or the British Agent, a
collection of short stories about a gentlemanly, sophisticated, aloof spy. This
character is considered to have influenced Ian Fleming's later series of James Bond
novels.
The present story is an old story. It has been included in many collections of
short stories. Like other stories by Maugham, this also is a sharp story full of irony
and careful observation. The present story is taken from his Collection of Short
Stories Vol. I. There is a narrator who tells the story. So the narration is in the first
person singular I. This is also a story about culture, manners, first impressions,
values and most importantly of all prejudice. Prejudice arises because it is human
nature to stereotype new people we meet based on race or how they look before
getting to know them. The message of the story can perhaps best be summed up in
the English proverb: You should not judge a book by its cover.
Let us now read this interesting story. You can read the story with the help of
the terms given in Terms to remember.
my companion my heart sank. It suggested closed portholes and the night air rigidly
excluded. It was bad enough to share a cabin for fourteen days with anyone (I was
going from San Francisco to Yokohama), but I should have looked upon it with less
dismay if my fellow passengers name had been Smith or Brown.
When I went on board I found Mr. Keladas luggage already below. I did not
like the look of it; there were too many labels on the suitcases, and the wardrobe
trunk was too big. He had unpacked his toilet things, and I observed that he was a
patron of the excellent Monsieur Coty; for I saw on the washing-stand his scent, his
hairwash and his brilliantine.
Mr. Keladas brushes, ebony with his monogram in gold, would have been all
the better for a scrub. I did not at all like Mr. Kelada. I made my way into the
smoking-room. I called for a pack of cards and began to play patience.
I had scarcely started before a man came up to me and asked me if he was right
in thinking my name was so and so.
I am Mr. Kelada, he added, with a smile that showed a row of flashing teeth,
and sat down. Oh, yes, were sharing a cabin, I think.
Bit of luck, I call it. You never know who youre going to be put in with. I was
jolly glad when I heard you were English. Im all for us English sticking together
when were abroad, if you understand what I mean.
I blinked.
Are you English? I asked, perhaps tactlessly.
Rather. You dont think I look like an American, do you? British to the
backbone, thats what I am.
To prove it, Mr. Kelada took out of his pocket a passport and airily waved it
under my nose.
King George has many strange subjects. Mr. Kelada was short and of a sturdy
build, clean-shaven and dark-skinned, with a fleshy, hooked nose and very large
lustrous, and liquid eyes. His long black hair was sleek and curly. He spoke with a
fluency in which there was nothing English and his gestures were exuberant. I felt
pretty sure that a closer inspection of that British passport would have betrayed the
fact that Mr. Kelada was born under a bluer sky than is generally seen in England.
66
2.
5.
d. hate
b. New York
c. Yokohama
d. Tokyo
4.
c. admire
3.
b. like
b. Japanese
c. American
d. Indian.
b.
c.
d.
Though Mr. Kelada spoke.. there was nothing English in his accents.
a. with difficulty b. with a fluency c. hurriedly d. slowly
67
2.
Who was the narrators companion in his cabin on the ocean liner?
3.
4.
5.
3.2.2 Part II
Mr. Kelada was chatty. He talked of New York and of San Francisco. He
discussed plays, pictures, and politics. He was patriotic. The Union Jack is an
impressive piece of drapery, but when it is flourished by a gentleman from
Alexandria or Beirut, I cannot but feel that it loses somewhat in dignity. Mr. Kelada
was familiar. I do not wish to put on airs, but I cannot help feeling that it is seemly in
a total stranger to put mister before my name when he addresses me. Mr. Kelada,
doubtless to set me at my ease, used no such formality. I did not like Mr. Kelada. I
had put aside the cards when he sat down, but now, thinking that for this first
occasion our conversation had lasted long enough, I went on with my game.
The three on the four, said Mr. Kelada.
There is nothing more exasperating when you are playing patience than to be
told where to put the card you have turned up before you have a chance to look for
yourself.
Its coming out, its coming out, he cried. The ten on the knave. With rage
and hatred in my heart I finished.Then he seized the pack. Do you like card tricks?
No, I hate card tricks, I answered.
Well, Ill just show you this one.
He showed me three. Then I said I would go down to the dining-room and get
my seat at the table.
Oh, thats all right, he said, Ive already taken a seat for you. I thought that as
we were in the same state room we might just as well sit at the same table.
I did not like Mr. Kelada.
68
I not only shared a cabin with him and ate three meals a day at the same table,
but I could not walk round the deck without his joining me. It was impossible to snub
him. It never occurred to him that he was not wanted. He was certain that you were
as glad to see him as he was to see you. In your own house you might have kicked
him downstairs and slammed the door in his face without the suspicion dawning on
him that he was not a welcome visitor. He was a good mixer, and in three days knew
everyone on board. He ran everything. He managed the sweeps, conducted the
auctions, collected money for prizes at the sports, got up quoit and golf matches,
organized the concert and arranged the fancy-dress ball. He was everywhere and
always. He was certainly the best hated man in the ship. We called him Mr. KnowAll, even to his face. He took it as a compliment. But it was at mealtimes that he was
most intolerable. For the better part of an hour then he had us at his mercy. He was
hearty, jovial, loquacious and argumentative. He knew everything better than
anybody else, and it was an affront to his overweening vanity that you should
disagree with him. He would not drop a subject, however unimportant, till he had
brought you round to his way of thinking. The possibility that he could be mistaken
never occurred to him. He was the chap who knew. We sat at the doctors table. Mr.
Kelada would certainly have had it all his own way, for the doctor was lazy and I was
indifferent, except for a man called Ramsay who sat there also. He was as dogmatic
as Mr. Kelada and resented bitterly the Levantines cocksureness. The discussions
they had were acrimonious and interminable.
Ramsay was in the American Consular Service and was stationed at Kobe. He
was a great heavy fellow from the Middle West, with loose fat under a tight skin, and
he bulged out of his ready-made clothes. He was on his way back to resume his post,
having been on a flying visit to New York to fetch his wife who had been spending a
year at home. Mrs. Ramsay was a very pretty little thing, with pleasant manners and
a sense of humour. The Consular Service is ill paid, and she was dressed always very
simply; but she knew how to wear her clothes. She achieved an effect of quiet
distinction. I should not have paid any particular attention to her but that she
possessed a quality that may be common enough in women, but nowadays is not
obvious in their demeanour. It shone in her like a flower on a coat.
69
ii.
b. funny
c. chatty
d. foolish
c. admired
d. liked
iii. Mr. Kelada was called Mr. Know-All by fellow passengers and he took it
as a ..
a.
complaint b. comment
c. compliment
d. chance
English
b. Japanese
c. Chinese
d. American
b. one
c. five
d. two
ii.
How many card tricks did Mr. Kelada show to the narrator?
iii.
iv.
Who is a Levantine ?
v.
Kelada vehement and voluble before, but never so voluble and vehement as now. At
last something that Ramsay said stung him; for he thumped the table and shouted.
Well, I ought to know what I am talking about, Im going to Japan just to look
into this Japanese pearl business. Im in the trade and theres not a man in it who
wont tell you that what I say about pearls goes. I know all the best pearls in the
world, and what I dont know about pearls isnt worth knowing.
Here was news for us, for Mr. Kelada, with all his loquacity, had never told
anyone what his business was. We only knew vaguely that he was going to Japan on
some commercial errand. He looked around the table triumphantly.
Theyll never be able to get a cultured pearl that an expert like me cant tell
with half an eye. He pointed to a chain that Mrs. Ramsay wore. You take my word
for it, Mrs. Ramsay, that chain youre wearing will never be worth a cent less than it
is now.
Mrs. Ramsay in her modest way flushed a little and slipped the chain inside her
dress. Ramsay leaned forward. He gave us all a look and a smile flickered in his
eyes.
Thats a pretty chain of Mrs. Ramsays, isnt it?
I noticed it at once, answered Mr. Kelada. Gee, I said to myself, those are
pearls all right.
I didnt buy it myself, of course. Id be interested to know how much you think
it cost.
Oh, in the trade somewhere round fifteen thousand dollars. But if it was bought
on Fifth Avenue I shouldnt be surprised to hear anything up to thirty thousand was
paid for it.
Ramsay smiled grimly.
Youll be surprised to hear that Mrs. Ramsay bought that string at a department
store the day before we left New York, for eighteen dollars.
Mr. Kelada flushed. Rot. Its not only real, but its as fine a string for its size as
Ive ever seen.
Will you bet on it? Ill bet you a hundred dollars its imitation.
71
Done. Oh, Elmer, you cant bet on a certainty, said Mrs. Ramsay.
She had a little smile on her lips and her tone was gently deprecating.
Cant I? If I get a chance of easy money like that I should be all sorts of a fool
not to take it.
But how can it be proved? she continued. Its only my word against Mr.
Keladas.
Let me look at the chain, and if its imitation Ill tell you quickly enough. I can
afford to lose a hundred dollars, said Mr. Kelada.
Take it off, dear. Let the gentleman look at it as much as he wants.
Mrs. Ramsay hesitated a moment. She put her hands to the clasp.
I cant undo it, she said, Mr. Kelada will just have to take my word for it.
I had a sudden suspicion that something unfortunate was about to occur, but I
could think of nothing to say.
Ramsay jumped up. Ill undo it.
He handed the chain to Mr. Kelada. The Levantine took a magnifying glass from
his pocket and closely examined it. A smile of triumph spread over his smooth and
swarthy face. He handed back the chain. He was about to speak. Suddenly he caught
sight of Mrs. Ramsays face. It was so white that she looked as though she were
about to faint. She was staring at him with wide and terrified eyes. They held a
desperate appeal; it was so clear that I wondered why her husband did not see it.
Mr. Kelada stopped with his mouth open. He flushed deeply. You could almost
see the effort he was making over himself.
I was mistaken, he said. Its a very good imitation, but of course as soon as I
looked through my glass I saw that it wasnt real. I think eighteen dollars is just
about as much as the damned things worth.
SECTION III: Check your progress
A. Rewrite the following sentences by choosing the correct alternative.
i.
b. imitation jewellery
72
c. cultured pearls
ii.
d. cultured diamonds
b. imperfect
c. ready
d. good
iv.
a.
Mr. Ramsay
b. Mr. Kelada
c.
The narrator
d. the doctor
The bet about the pearls was between Mr. Kelada and .
a. Mr.Ramsay b. the doctor
v.
c. the narrator
d. Mrs. Ramsay
Mrs. Ramsay when her husband told her to take her pearl chain
off her neck.
a. was happy b. became sad
c. was curious
d. hesitated
73
Next morning I got up and began to shave. Mr. Kelada lay on his bed smoking a
cigarette. Suddenly there was a small scraping sound and I saw a letter pushed under
the door. I opened the door and looked out. There was nobody there. I picked up the
letter and saw it was addressed to Max Kelada. The name was written in block
letters. I handed it to him.
Whos this from? He opened it. Oh!
He took out of the envelope, not a letter, but a hundred-dollar note. He looked at
me and again he reddened. He tore the envelope into little bits and gave them to me.
Do you mind just throwing them out of the port-hole?
I did as he asked, and then I looked at him with a smile.
No one likes being made to look a perfect damned fool, he said.
Were the pearls real?
If I had a pretty little wife I shouldnt let her spend a year in New York while I
stayed at Kobe, said he. At that moment I did not entirely dislike Mr. Kelada. He
reached out for his pocketbook and carefully put in it the hundred-dollar note.
SECTION IV : Check your progress
A. Rewrite the following sentences by choosing the correct alternative.
i.
Mr. Kelada took out his .. to give hundred dollars to Mr. Ramsay.
a. packet
ii.
b. purse
c. handbook
d. wallet
b. legs
c. eyes
d. fingers
iii. When everybody was laughing at Mr. Kelada, Mrs. Ramsay retired to her
room with a..
a. laugh.
b. headache.
c. smile.
d. none.
iv. The next day, there was a pushed under the door.
a. letter
v.
b. paper
c. newspaper
d. card
In the end the narrator says that he did not dislike Mr. Kelada at
that moment.
74
a. generally
b. slowly
c. normally
d. entirely
3.3 Summary
The setting of the story is a shipboard. The time is meant to be about 1919 or
1920, just after the First World War. There is an assortment of travellers cruising
from the US to Japan. Among them is Kaleda, a fellow who boasts that he knows
everything and that he can never be wrong. The narrator dislikes him for his breezy
manners and for his cocksureness.
Mr. Kelada never understands that he is disliked by all the travellers. Because of
his habit of doing so many things on board the ship and always boasting that he
knows everything he is called Mr. Know-All by fellow travellers and he takes it as
a compliment.
During one dinner the conversation turns to pearls. Mr. Kelada, as per his habit,
tells everything that is to be known about pearls. There is a traveller Mr. Ramsay,
who hates Mr. Keladas cocksureness, argues bitterly with him. Kaleda now tells his
fellow travellers that he is in pearl business and ought to know about pearls. Mr.
Ramsay bets that the pearl necklace that his wife is wearing is imitation jewellery.
Mr. Kelada is sure that it is of high quality. He accepts the challenge of Mr. Ramsay
and bets an amount and asks the lady to unfasten and give the necklace for him to
examine. He examines it by his magnifying glass and looked triumphantly to the
people. But when he looks the desperate appeal in the eyes of Mrs. Ramsay, he
suddenly stops. He has to control himself to tell that it is not real. Next day an
envelop is pushed in their room. It contains a hundred dollar note. The narrator
comes to know the humanity of Mr. Kelada.
75
quoits: a ring that is thrown over a small upright post in a game often played on
ships
frigidly: coldly in manner, unfriendly
dogmatic: a person who holds his belief very strongly
resent: to feel anger and dislike about something
cocksure : too self-confident, offensively sure of oneself
overweening : conceited
demeanour: the way one behaves
Levantine: a person born in the countries on the Eastern Mediterranean Sea,
such as Turkey or the Lebanon
acrimonious : sharp, bitter, manner or language
interminable : endless, especially when very uninteresting
Kobe : a city in Japan
resume : to begin again
sense of humour: ability to understand, judge and understand what is funny
drift: a mass of something blown together by wind (snow or sand)
resist: oppose, strive against
have a fling: to make an attempt
vehement: showing strong feelings, forceful
voluble: taiking a lot
errand: a short journey to do get some thing
half an eye: very quickly, without spending time
grim : determined in spite of great difficulty, (grimly: adv.)
deprecating: (normally not used in progressive forms): to express disapproval
of (an action etc.)
about to occur: to take place, especially something unplanned
77
magnifying glass: a piece of glass curved on one or both sides, with a frame
and handle, which magnifies things seen through it
swarthy (face): rather dark coloured
terrified: very much afraid, badly frightened
desperate: some action done as last attempt
appeal: strong request for help or support
flush: become red in the face
put up with: to suffer (something annoying or unpleasant) without complaint
chaff: to make fun of (someone) in a friendly way
to reach out: to stretch out(a hand or arm)
pocket-book: a womans handbag, especially one without a shoulder strap
a. dislike
ii. c. Yokohama
iii. a. British
v. b. with a fluency
The time is just after the First World War, that is, in the year 1919 or 1920.
Mr.Kelada
iv. The narrator was sure that Mr. Kelada was not British. v. Wine
Section II :
A. i.
v.
B. i.
78
Section III :
A. i.
v.
B. i.
c. cultured pearls ii. a. perfect iii. b. Mr. Kelada iv. a. Mr. Ramsay
d. hesitated
Cunning ii. He was in pearl business. iii. Elmer iv. one v. Mr. Kelada
Section IV :
A. i. handbook ii. a. hands iii. b. headache iv. a. letter v. d. entirely
B. i.
ii.
v.
If I had a pretty little wife I shouldnt let her spend her spend a year at
New York while I stayed at Kobe.
3.6 Exercise
Q.1. Write Short Notes
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
2.
3.
4.
79
3.0 Objectives
After studying this unit you will be able to
the world of children and their curiosity in those things which are kept
away from them.
3.1 Introduction
Hector Hugh Munro, better known by the pen name Saki (1870-1916), and also
frequently as H. H. Munro, is a British writer. His witty, mischievous stories satirise
80
Edwardian society and culture. Saki was born in (Burma) Myanmar, where his father
was a member of the Civil Service. However, he had his education in England. He
began his literary career as a political satirist. He wrote in Westminster Gazette in the
beginning. His first book The Rise of the Russian Empire (1900) was a serious one.
However, he turned to the fiction when he found it suitable to his talent. In his fiction
there is humorous and satiric representation of life. He wrote two novels, but his
short stories brought him name and fame. Munro was killed in the First World War.
Reginald (1904) was the title of his first collection of short stories. Other
collections are Reginald in Russia, The Chronicle of Clovis, Beasts and Superbeasts.
Graham Greene, a famous English writer, tells us that Munro had to experience many
miseries in his childhood which affected his mind and writing. The present story is
an example of it. We can easily understand why the author takes the side of
mischievous Nicholas against the petty minded aunt.
The name Saki may be a reference to the cupbearer in the Rubiyt of Omar
Khayyam, a poem mentioned disparagingly by the eponymous character in "Reginald
on Christmas Presents" and alluded to in a few other stories. It may, however, be a
reference to the South American primate of the same name a small, long-tailed
monkey from the Western Hemisphere.
Now read this beautiful story. You can take the help of the Terms to
Remember to understand the meanings of difficult words in the story.
milk was enlarged on at great length, but the fact that stood out clearest in the whole
affair, as it presented itself to the mind of Nicholas, was that the older, wiser, and
better people had been proved to be profoundly in error in matters about which they
had expressed the utmost assurance.
You said there couldnt possibly be a frog in my bread-and-milk; there was a
frog in my bread-and-milk, he repeated, with the insistence of a skilled tactician
who does not intend to shift from favourable ground.
So his boy-cousin and girl-cousin and his quite uninteresting younger brother
were to be taken to Jagborough sands that afternoon and he was to stay at home. His
cousins aunt, who insisted, by an unwarranted stretch of imagination, in styling
herself his aunt also, had hastily invented the Jagborough expedition in order to
impress on Nicholas the delights that he had justly forfeited by his disgraceful
conduct at the breakfast-table. It was her habit, whenever one of the children fell
from grace, to improvise something of a festival nature from which the offender
would be rigorously debarred; if all the children sinned collectively they were
suddenly informed of a circus in a neighbouring town, a circus of unrivalled merit
and uncounted elephants, to which, but for their depravity, they would have been
taken that very day.
A few decent tears were looked for on the part of Nicholas when the moment for
the departure of the expedition arrived. As a matter of fact, however, all the crying
was done by his girl-cousin, who scraped her knee rather painfully against the step of
the carriage as she was scrambling in.
How she did howl, said Nicholas cheerfully, as the party drove off without
any of the elation of high spirits that should have characterised it.
Shell soon get over that, said the SOI-DISANT aunt; it will be a glorious
afternoon for racing about over those beautiful sands. How they will enjoy
themselves!
Bobby wont enjoy himself much, and he wont race much either, said
Nicholas with a grim chuckle; his boots are hurting him. Theyre too tight.
Why didnt he tell me they were hurting? asked the aunt with some asperity.
He told you twice, but you werent listening. You often dont listen when we
tell you important things. You are not to go into the gooseberry garden, said the
82
aunt, changing the subject. Why not? demanded Nicholas.Because you are in
disgrace, said the aunt loftily.
Nicholas did not admit the flawlessness of the reasoning; he felt perfectly
capable of being in disgrace and in a gooseberry garden at the same moment. His
face took on an expression of considerable obstinacy. It was clear to his aunt that he
was determined to get into the gooseberry garden, Only, as she remarked to
herself, because I have told him he is not to.
Now the gooseberry garden had two doors by which it might be entered, and
once a small person like Nicholas could slip in there he could effectually disappear
from view amid the masking growth of artichokes, raspberry canes, and fruit bushes.
The aunt had many other things to do that afternoon, but she spent an hour or two in
trivial gardening operations among flower beds and shrubberies, whence she could
keep a watchful eye on the two doors that led to the forbidden paradise. She was a
woman of few ideas, with immense powers of concentration.
SECTION I: Check your progress
A. Rewrite the following sentences by choosing the correct alternative.
i.
ii.
b. special treat
c. picnic
d. none
Nicholas argued that there was in his wholesome bread and milk.
a. a cockroach
b. an insect
c. a frog
d. an ant
b. sister
c. mother
d. grandmother
iv. Nicholas girl cousin cried because she her knee against the step of
the carriage.
a. slipped
v.
b. dashed
c. touched
d. scraped
Nicholas could neither go to the Jagborough sands nor into the gooseberry
garden because he was in
a. trouble
b. disgrace
c. school
83
d. a room
ii.
3.2.2 Part II
Nicholas made one or two sorties into the front garden, wriggling his way with
obvious stealth of purpose towards one or other of the doors, but never able for a
moment to evade the aunts watchful eye. As a matter of fact, he had no intention of
trying to get into the gooseberry garden, but it was extremely convenient for him that
his aunt should believe that he had; it was a belief that would keep her on selfimposed sentry-duty for the greater part of the afternoon. Having thoroughly
confirmed and fortified her suspicions, Nicholas slipped back into the house and
rapidly put into execution a plan of action that had long germinated in his brain. By
standing on a chair in the library one could reach a shelf on which reposed a fat,
important-looking key. The key was as important as it looked; it was the instrument
which kept the mysteries of the lumber-room secure from unauthorised intrusion,
which opened a way only for aunts and such-like privileged persons. Nicholas had
not had much experience of the art of fitting keys into keyholes and turning locks,
but for some days past he had practised with the key of the schoolroom door; he did
not believe in trusting too much to luck and accident. The key turned stiffly in the
lock, but it turned. The door opened, and Nicholas was in an unknown land,
compared with which the gooseberry garden was a stale delight, a mere material
pleasure.
Often and often Nicholas had pictured to himself what the lumber-room might
be like, that region that was so carefully sealed from youthful eyes and concerning
which no questions were ever answered. It came up to his expectations. In the first
place it was large and dimly lit, one high window opening on to the forbidden garden
being its only source of illumination. In the second place it was a storehouse of
unimagined treasures. The aunt-by-assertion was one of those people who think that
84
things spoil by use and consign them to dust and damp by way of preserving them.
Such parts of the house as Nicholas knew best were rather bare and cheerless, but
here there were wonderful things for the eye to feast on. First and foremost there was
a piece of framed tapestry that was evidently meant to be a fire-screen. To Nicholas it
was a living, breathing story; he sat down on a roll of Indian hangings, glowing in
wonderful colours beneath a layer of dust, and took in all the details of the tapestry
picture. A man, dressed in the hunting costume of some remote period, had just
transfixed a stag with an arrow; it could not have been a difficult shot because the
stag was only one or two paces away from him; in the thickly-growing vegetation
that the picture suggested it would not have been difficult to creep up to a feeding
stag, and the two spotted dogs that were springing forward to join in the chase had
evidently been trained to keep to heel till the arrow was discharged. That part of the
picture was simple, if interesting, but did the huntsman see, what Nicholas saw, that
four galloping wolves were coming in his direction through the wood? There might
be more than four of them hidden behind the trees, and in any case would the man
and his dogs be able to cope with the four wolves if they made an attack? The man
had only two arrows left in his quiver, and he might miss with one or both of them;
all one knew about his skill in shooting was that he could hit a large stag at a
ridiculously short range. Nicholas sat for many golden minutes revolving the
possibilities of the scene; he was inclined to think that there were more than four
wolves and that the man and his dogs were in a tight corner.
But there were other objects of delight and interest claiming his instant
attention; there were quaint twisted candlesticks in the shape of snakes, and a teapot
fashioned like a china duck, out of whose open beak the tea was supposed to come.
How dull and shapeless the nursery teapot seemed in comparison! And there was a
carved sandal-wood box packed tight with aromatic cottonwool, and between the
layers of cottonwool were little brass figures, hump-necked bulls, and peacocks and
goblins, delightful to see and to handle. Less promising in appearance was a large
square book with plain black covers; Nicholas peeped into it, and, behold, it was full
of coloured pictures of birds. And such birds! In the garden, and in the lanes when he
went for a walk, Nicholas came across a few birds, of which the largest were an
occasional magpie or wood-pigeon; here were herons and bustards, kites, toucans,
tiger-bitterns, brush turkeys, ibises, golden pheasants, a whole portrait gallery of
undreamed-of creatures. And as he was admiring the colouring of the mandarin duck
85
and assigning a life-history to it, the voice of his aunt in shrill vociferation of his
name came from the gooseberry garden without. She had grown suspicious at his
long disappearance, and had leapt to the conclusion that he had climbed over the wall
behind the sheltering screen of the lilac bushes; she was now engaged in energetic
and rather hopeless search for him among the artichokes and raspberry canes.
SECTION II: Check your progress
A. Rewrite the following sentences by choosing the correct alternative.
i.
ii.
b. a purpose
c. no intention
d. no interest
c. kind
d. not so kind
b. rack
c. cupboard
d. closet
b. objects
c. toys
d. treasure
ii.
iii. From where did the light come in the lumber room?
iv. What was the tapestry used for ?
v.
place in a corner, and shook some dust from a neighbouring pile of newspapers over
it. Then he crept from the room, locked the door, and replaced the key exactly where
he had found it. His aunt was still calling his name when he sauntered into the front
garden.
Whos calling? he asked.
Me, came the answer from the other side of the wall; didnt you hear me?
Ive been looking for you in the gooseberry garden, and Ive slipped into the rainwater tank. Luckily theres no water in it, but the sides are slippery and I cant get
out. Fetch the little ladder from under the cherry tree-
I was told I wasnt to go into the gooseberry garden, said Nicholas promptly.
I told you not to, and now I tell you that you may, came the voice from the
rain-water tank, rather impatiently.
Your voice doesnt sound like aunts, objected Nicholas; you may be the Evil
One tempting me to be disobedient. Aunt often tells me that the Evil One tempts me
and that I always yield. This time Im not going to yield.
Dont talk nonsense, said the prisoner in the tank; go and fetch the ladder.
Will there be strawberry jam for tea? asked Nicholas innocently. Certainly
there will be, said the aunt, privately resolving that Nicholas should have none of it.
Now I know that you are the Evil One and not aunt, shouted Nicholas
gleefully; when we asked aunt for strawberry jam yesterday she said there wasnt
any. I know there are four jars of it in the store cupboard, because I looked, and of
course you know its there, but she doesnt, because she said there wasnt any. Oh,
Devil, you HAVE sold yourself!
There was an unusual sense of luxury in being able to talk to an aunt as though
one was talking to the Evil One, but Nicholas knew, with childish discernment, that
such luxuries were not to be over-indulged in. He walked noisily away, and it was a
kitchenmaid, in search of parsley, who eventually rescued the aunt from the rainwater tank.
Tea that evening was partaken of in a fearsome silence. The tide had been at its
highest when the children had arrived at Jagborough Cove, so there had been no
sands to play on-a circumstance that the aunt had overlooked in the haste of
87
organising her punitive expedition. The tightness of Bobbys boots had had
disastrous effect on his temper the whole of the afternoon, and altogether the children
could not have been said to have enjoyed themselves. The aunt maintained the frozen
muteness of one who has suffered undignified and unmerited detention in a rainwater tank for thirty-five minutes. As for Nicholas, he, too, was silent, in the
absorption of one who has much to think about; it was just possible, he considered,
that the huntsman would escape with his hounds while the wolves feasted on the
stricken stag.
SECTION III: Check your progress
A. Rewrite the following sentences by choosing the correct alternative.
i.
ii.
b. screaming
c. calling
d. crying
Nicholas was the first in twenty years time who .. in that lumber room.
a. laughed
b. cried
c. shouted
d. talked
b. deep
c. rainwater
d. none
c. a ghost
d. an Evil One
b. a goblin
ii.
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3.3 Summary
Nicholas, a boy, is in disgrace because he has put a frog in his wholesome bread
and milk and then refused to eat it. To feel him guilty, his cousins aunt plans to send
the children to the Jagborough sands and exaggerates the joy they will enjoy there.
Though Nicholas agrees that the reason of his being in disgrace is true, he does not
accept that he cannot enter the gooseberry garden. However it is not his intention to
enter the garden. He only makes the aunt feel it. When the aunt is busy in her selfimposed-sentry-duty, he slips into the library to execute his plan.
He takes the key of the lumber room and opens it. He is very much curious to
see what is there because the elders of the house never permit the children to go there
and never answer their curious questions about the lumber room.
Nicholas finds a tapestry with a painting on it, some old crockery, a roll of
Indian hangings, a book full of the pictures of different coloured birds. He imagines
the picture as a true incident and is involved in the hunter, the stag that he shoots
with his arrow, his dogs and the dangerous wolves. Just then he hears the screaming
of the aunt after him. When he comes out of the lumber room, the voice of the aunt
changes into the call for help. Nicholas enjoys the situation as she is slipped into the
rainwater tank. He pretends not to recognize her voice and that it is the Evil One,
who, according to the aunt, always tempts him.
The children come back. They have not enjoyed the expedition because of full
tide. The aunt has suffered undignified and unmerited detention. It is Nicholas who
enjoys his adventure in the lumber room. When the story ends he is still thinking of
the hunter man, his dogs and the wolves after the stricken stag.
b. special treat
B. i.
Nicholas
iv. d. scraped
v. b. disgrace
Section II:
A. i.
c. no intention
v.
b. China duck
B. i.
ii.
ii. a. privileged
iii. a. shelf
iv. d. treasure
The aunt should believe that he wanted to enter the gooseberry garden.
by standing on a chair in the library.
iii. From a high window opening in the garden. iv. a fire screen
v.
Section III:
A. i.
b. screaming
ii. a. laughed
B. i.
on the shelf
v. a kitchen maid
3.6 Exercises
Q.1 Write short Notes.
i.
Nicholas disgrace
ii.
ii.
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Unit-4
The Refugee
Pearl S. Buck
Content
4.0 Objectives
4.1 Introduction
4.2 The Text
4.3 Check your progress
4.4 Summary
4.5 Terms to remember
4.6 Answers to check your progress
4.7 Exercise
4.8 Suggestions for further study
4.0 Objectives:
After studying this unit you will be able to:
Realize that along with the present, man has to think seriously of his future.
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4.1 Introduction:
Pearl S. Buck was born on June 26, 1892 in Hillsboro, West Virginia. She spent
her youth in China, in Chinkiang on the Yangtse River. Buck published eighty works,
including novels, plays, short story collections, poems, childrens books, and
biographies. She was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1938. She was the
third American to win the Nobel Prize in Literature, following Sinclair Lewis and
Eugene ONeill. Pearl Bucks first novel East Wind: West Wind (1930), received a
great critical recognition. Her next best novel The Good Earth appeared in 1931.
The book gained a wide audience, and was made into a motion picture. She wrote
about the love of Bettina, a farmer slave, and Tom, a Southerner who fought for the
army of the North in The Angry Wife (1949). In The Hidden Flower (1952) she
wrote about a Japanese girl falling in love with an American Soldier. Her Pavilion
of Women appeared in 1946. The Patriot (1939) focussed on the emotional
development of a University student, whose realism is crushed by the brutalities of
war. She wrote a personal story of her own daughter, in The Child Who Never Grew
(1950), whose mental development stopped at the age of four. Bucks famous novel
The Good Earth was filmed in 1937. In 1932 it was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for
fiction. Buck died at the age of eighty in Danby, on March 6, 1973.
The story The Refugee describes to us the flow of the village people who had
been uprooted from their homes by flood and starvation. All their land had been
destroyed. They had eaten up even their seed. Therefore, they were coming to the
town with whatever little remained with them. The city people feared that their food
resources might be reduced. A large number of beggars moved from place to place.
The number of rickshaw pullers also increased. The city became a scene of great
miserable crowds, who moved about begging from door to door or who were
prepared to do any work at very low rates. Naturally the people of the town grew
frightened and in their fear, their outlook towards these refugees became very bitter.
The old man is the main character in the story. His son and his sons wife had
died in the course of the flood. So, he carries in his basket his young grandson, who
is dry and shrivelled because of starvation. The old man is anxious about one thing
only. He wants to save money for new seeds so that he may put them back into the
land and farm it again for the sake of his grandson. When a passerby gives him a
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silver coin, he does not spend it. He spends only a copper coin to feed his little grand
son.
The old man must preserve the life of the grandson but he must also save money
for seeds. Other people cannot understand him. The noodle-seller fails to understand
the mind of old man. He does not like to give him noodles free after he has seen a
silver coin with him. But the old man does not care for all this. He knows that the
people in the city cannot understand because they do not have land. If he does not
put the seeds back into the land, there will be shortage of food grains next year also.
Therefore, by saving money for seeds he is doing the best he can for his grandson.
He knows that even if he died, the land should not be neglected; it has to be farmed.
as many as could be used, because the refugees were trying to earn something thus.
Even the usual pullers of rickshaws, who followed this as their profession, cursed the
refugees because, being starved they would pull for anything given them, as so fares
were low for all, and all suffered. With the city full of refugees, then, begging at
every door, swarming into every unskilled trade and service, lying dead on the streets
at every frozen dawn, why should one look at this fresh horde coming in now at
twilight of winters day?
But these were no common men and women, no riff-raff from some community
always poor and easily starving in a flood time. No, these were men and women of
which any nation might have been proud. It could be seen they were all from one
region, for they wore garments woven out of the same dark blue cotton stuff, plain
and cut in an old fashioned way, the sleeves long and the coats long and full. The
men wore smocked aprons, the smocking done in curious, intricate, beautiful
designs. The women had bands of the same plain blue stuff wrapped like ker-chiefs
about their heads. But men and women were tall and strong in frame, although the
womens feet were bound. There were a few lads in the throng, a few children sitting
in baskets slung upon a pole across the shoulders of their fathers, but there were no
young girls, no young infants. Every man and every lad bore a burden on his
shoulder. This burden was always bedding, quilts made of the blue cotton stuff and
padded. Clothing and bedding were clean and strongly made. On top of every folded
quilt, with a bit of mate between, was an iron cauldron. These cauldrons had
doubtless been taken from the earthen ovens of the villages when the people saw the
time had come when they must move. But in no basket was there a vestige of food,
nor was there a stress of food having been cooked in them recently.
This lack of food was confirmed when one looked closely into the faces of the
people. In the first glance in the twilight they seemed well enough, but when looked
more closely, one saw they were the faces of people starving and moving now in
despair to a last hope. They saw nothing of the strange sights of a new city because
they were too near death to see anything. No new sight could move their curiosity.
They were men and women who had stayed by their land until starvation drove them
forth. Thus, they passed unseeing, silent, aline, as those who know themselves dying
are alien, to the living.
The last one of this long procession of silent men and women was a little
wizened old man. Even he carried a load of a folded quilt, a cauldron. But there was
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only one cauldron. In the other basket it seemed there was but a quilt, extremely
ragged and patched, but clean still. Although the load was light it was too much for
the old man. It was evident that in usual times he would be beyond the age of work,
and was perhaps accustomed to such labour in recent years. His breath whistled as he
staggered along, and he strained his eyes to watch those who were ahead of him lest
he be left behind, and his old wrinkled face was set in a sort of gasping agony.
Suddenly he could go no more. He set his burden with great gentleness, sank
upon the ground, his head sunk between his knees, his eyes closed, panting
desperately. Starved as he was, a little blood rose in the dark patches on his cheeks.
A ragged vendor selling hot noodles set his stand near, and shouted his trade cry, and
the light from the stand fell on the old mans dropping figure. A man passing stopped
and muttered, looking at him:
I swear I can give no more this day if I am to feed my own even nothing but
noodles but here is this old man. Well, I will give him the bit of silver I earned
today against tomorrow and trust to tomorrow again. If my own old father had been
alive, I would have given it to him.
He fumbled in himself and brought out of his ragged girdle a bit of a silver coin,
and after a moments hesitation and muttering, he added to it a copper penny.
There, old father, he said with a sort of bitter heartiness, let me see you eat
noodles.
The old man lifted his head slowly. When he saw the silver he did not put out
his hand. He said:
Sir, I did not beg of you. Sir, we have good land and we have never been starve
like this before, having such good land. But this year the river rose and men starving
even on good land, at such times; Sir, we have no seed left, even. We have eaten our
seed. I told them, we cannot eat the seed. But they were young and hungry and they
ate it.
Take it, said the man and dropped the money into the old mans smocked
apron and went on his way sighing.
The vendor prepared his bowl of noodles and called out:
How many will you eat, old man?
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Then was the old man stirred. He felt eagerly in his apron and when he saw the
two coins there, the one copper and the other silver, he said:
One small bowl is enough.
Can you eat only one small bowl, then? asked the vendor, astonished.
It is not for me, the old man answered.
The vendor started astonished, but being a simple man he said no more but
prepared the bowl, and when it was finished, he called out Here it is. And he
waited to see who would eat it.
Then the old man rose with a great effort and took the bowl between his shaking
hands and he went to the other basket. There, while the vendor watched, the old man
pulled aside the quilt until one could see the shrunken face of a small boy lying with
his eyes fast closed. One would have said the child was dead except that when the
old man lifted his head so his mouth could touch the edge of the little bowl he began
to swallow feebly until the hot mixture was finished. The old man kept murmuring to
him:
There, my heart there, my child.
Your grandson? said the vendor.
Yes, said the old man. The son of my only son. Both my son and his wife
were drowned as they worked on our land when the dikes broke.
He covered the child tenderly and then, squatting on his haunches, he ran his
tongue carefully around the little bowl and removed the last trace of food. Then, as
though he had been fed, he handed the bowl back to the vendor.
But you have the silver bit, cried the ragged vendor, yet more astonished when
he saw the old man ordered no more.
The old man shook his head. That is for seed. He replied. As soon as I saw
it, I knew I would buy seed with it. They ate up all the seed and with what shall the
land be sown again?
If I were not so poor myself, said the vendor, I might even have given you a
bowl, but to give something to a man who has a bit of silver! He shook his head
puzzled.
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I do not ask you, brother, said the old man. Well, I know you cannot
understand. But if you had land you would know, it must be put to seed again or
there will be starvation yet another year. The best I can do for this grandson of mine
is to buy a little seed for the land yes, even though I die, and others must plant it,
the land must be put to seed.
He took up his road again, his old legs trembling, and straining his eyes down
the long straight street, he staggered on.
4.3 Section 1
Check your progress
I.
i)
2.
3.
4.
5.
b) The child
c) The vendor
d) The shopkeeper
b) food
d) noodles
b) purchasing land
c) noodles
d) his grand-son
b) a copper coin
c) a rupee
d) ten rupee
d) of cancer
101
Section 2
Check your progress
II. Short Answer Type Questions.
(A) Answer the following questions in a word / sentence / phrase
each.
8.
9.
10. What makes the people of the city bitter and harsh towards the refugees?
11. Why does the old man want to save money?
12. Who were the refugees?
4.4 Summary:
The short story The Refugee deals with a social problem. It describes the
aftermath of a natural disaster. The story takes place in a city in China.
The flooding of the river has forced the farmers of an unnamed country to leave
their homelands and look for food and shelter in the capital a few hundred miles
away. The city is full of ragged and starving refugees and nobody really knows how
to cope with the problem. They have to live in great camps outside the city wall
trying to find work and food. The situation is causing a lot of bitterness among the
local inhabitants.
One day some new refugees arrive. They are different from the others in that
they are not riff- raff from some community always poor and easily starving in a
flood time. They are all from the same region and are well-built, neatly and cleanly
dressed and obviously take pride in themselves, despite their hopeless situation.
There are, however, no young girls and no infants, which suggest that they must have
perished during the floods. All of them carry bedding and cauldrons, though there is
no trace of food in any of them. The lack of food shows in their faces and their
apathy towards the things around them. An old man, old for the heavy burden he is
carrying, is the last of the procession. He can hardly keep up with others. When he
can no longer go on he sits down near a stand selling hot noodles. A man passing by
takes pity on him and offers him some coins, although he himself does not know
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where his next meal is to come from. The old man is reluctant to take the money. He
does not want to be thought as a beggar and so explains the situation. He says that his
people had good land, but that the river rose and they had no food left. In desperation
they even ate the seeds which had been brought for farming the land. He takes pain
to defend his people, saying that they were too hungry and too inexperienced to think
of the future, although he warned them not to eat the seed.
The passer-by drops a silver coin and a copper penny into the old mans apron
and goes on his way. To the noodle vendors surprise the old man does not spend all
the money on food, but only the copper coin. He gives the noodles to his small
grandson, whom he is carrying in one of his baskets. The boys mother and father
had died in the floods and the old man is now looking after the child. He himself
only eats the few scraps left by the boy. Then he hands the bowl back to the
astonished vendor, who cannot understand why a starving man with a silver coin
does not buy more food for himself. The old man explains that the rest of the money
is for seed. He says that the best thing that he can do for his grandson is to buy seed
to ensure against more starvation on the following year.
who have been taken suddenly and by some etc.: the refugees were those
persons who had been uprooted from their land and home. All of a sudden, some
strange, unforeseen thing had happened. As a result of that, these people had to move
out of their homes. Up to this time they had always thought that their home and their
village was perfectly safe for them. That was their entire world. They had never
thought that they would have to leave it one day. But strange circumstances had
forced them, and uprooted them.
who had been accustomed only to country road and fields: the refugees were
mostly villagers.
the bitterness of fear: the people of the city did not like this flow of refugees.
They thought that if all the food they had was to be shared with these newcomers, the
townsmen would run short of food. This fear of shortage and starvation made them
bitter and harsh towards the refugees.
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bawl out rudely: whenever the refugees went to the small shopkeepers to beg,
they shouted at them in a very cruel and harsh manner.
fresh horde: there were new groups of refugees coming.
twilight: the new group, which contained the old man, entered the city late in the
evening when the sun had set.
no ruff-raff: the people of the new group were not commonplace, good-fornothing, creatures. They were not that useless stuff which is found in every
community.
smocked aprons: the men were wearing long shirt-like overalls which had
embroidery work done over them.
the womens feet were bound: the feet of the women were tied up in iron shoes.
(In China it was a custom to put iron shoes on the feet of young girls so that their feet
did not grow very large.)
a vestige of food: the refugees carried baskets but these baskets did not contain
even the slightest sign of any kind of food.
those who know themselves dying are alien to living: It is common principle in
life that those who are about to die lose all interest in the healthy and living people.
These refugees were in the grip of death due to starvation and, therefore, it appeared
as if it made them strangers to the healthy and lively people of the city. They were
indifferent to them like foreigners.
a little wizened old man: There was an old man in the crowd. He was shotstatured and looked dry and shriveled.
his breath whistled as he staggered along: as this old man walked unsteadily on
the road, he found it difficult to hold his breath to himself. So he went on sending out
sharp shrill sounds as he moved along.
his old wrinkled face was set in a sort of gasping agony: the old mans face was
full of wrinkles as he walked along, he panted hard. It appeared as if he suffered from
a great mental pain.
panting desperately: the old man was not able to hold his breath. He was
gasping hard because of exhaustion and there was sign of hopelessness on his face.
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Section 1
I.
a) The passerby
2.
3.
4.
b) a copper coin
5.
Section 2
2.
3.
The fear of shortage of food and starvation makes the people of the city
bitter and harsh towards the refugees.
4.
The old man wants to save money for new seeds so that he may put them
back into the land and farm it again.
5.
The refugees were the people who had been uprooted from their homes by
flood and starvation.
4.7 Exercises
1.
Why did the small shopkeepers bawl out rudely to the beggars?
The refugees were the village people who had been uprooted from their land and
home. All their land had been destroyed by the flood. They were coming to the town
with whatever little remained with them. The people of the city did not like this flow
of refugees. They thought that if all the food they had was to be shared with these
refugees, the townsmen would run short of food. This fear of shortage of food and
starvation made them bitter and harsh towards the refugees. So, whenever the
refugees went to the small shopkeepers to beg, they shouted at them in a very cruel
and harsh manner.
2.
The city was full of refugees. The refugees were prepared to do any work at very
low rate. They entered in every unskilled trade and service. Naturally the number of
rickshaw pullers also increased. The usual pullers of rickshaw cursed the refugees
because being starving they would pull for anything they were given. The fares too
become low. This made them all to suffer.
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3.
What do you understand by the bitterness of fear? How did the citydwellers suffer from it?
The flooding of the river had forced the farmers of an unnamed country to leave
their homelands and look for food and shelter a few hundred miles away. The city
was full of ragged and starving refugees and nobody knew how to cope with the
problem. They had to live in great camps outside the city wall trying to find work
and food. The city became a scene of miserable crowds, that moved about begging
from door to door. It caused a lot of bitterness among the local inhabitants. They
grew frightened and their outlook towards the refugees became very bitter. Being
starved, refugees were prepared to do work at low rates. The member of rickshaw
puller also increased. A large number of beggars moved from place to place. It made
the shopkeepers ruthless. The usual rickshaw pullers also cursed them. Thus, the
horde of refugees made the city-dwellers suffer a lot.
4.
The refugees were mostly villagers. They had good land and they had never
been starved like this before having good land. But the natural disaster, flood, had
made them to move out of their homes. All their land had been destroyed by the
flood and they had to leave their land.
5.
How did the local inhabitants feel about all the refugees in their city?
After the natural disaster of flood, the refugees found shelter in great camps
outside the city wall. Almost at any hour of the day they could be seen making their
way towards the camps. It made the local inhabitants to think with bitternesswill
there never be an end to them? They feared that their food resources might be
reduced. The small shopkeepers bawled out rudely at many beggars. The rickshaw
pullers cursed the refugees as they made them to suffer a lot. The people of the town
grew frightened and in their fear, their outlook towards the refugees became very
bitter.
6.
How did the refugees feel about the new place? Which words tell the reader
that the place where they come from is very different from where they are
now?
While walking upon the street of the new capital the eyes of the refugees were
the eyes of those who had been taken suddenly and by some unaccountable force
107
from the world they have always known and always thought safe until this time.
They had been accustomed only to country roads and fields. Now they walked along
the proud street of the new capital, their feet treading upon new concrete side-walk.
Although the street was full of things they had never seen before like automobiles
and the things which they had never even heard, still they looked at nothing, but
passed on as in a dream, seeing nothing. The words like the proud street, concrete
side-walk and automobiles tell the reader that the place where they come from is very
different from where they are now.
III. Write short notes on the following.
1.
The Refugees:
The author has given the title The Refugee because it aptly describes the story
of homeless people who are in trouble in a strange city.
The refugees were the people who had been uprooted from their land and home.
All of a sudden, some strange thing had happened. As a result, these people had to
move out of their homes. Up to this time they had always thought that their village
and their homes were perfectly safe for them. That was their entire world. They had
never thought that they would have to leave it one day. But strange circumstances
had forced them, and uprooted them. They were mostly villagers who had been
accustomed only to the country roads and fields. In the new capital they tread upon
the new concrete side-walk as if in a dream. They did not look at anything nor at
anyone. They find shelter in great camps outside the city wall. They were ragged
men and women and a few children; all starved and exhausted.
Having left their villages, they find everything in the city new, strange and
unfriendly. Used to walking on farmlands they now had to walk on concrete sidewalks. They did not have proper accommodation and had to live in camps on the
outskirts of the city. The residents of the city were resentful of these refugees and
would treat them harshly. The refugees had to either beg for a living or had to pull
rickshaws to make a living. Since they did not have proper clothing, many would die
on the streets during the cold winter. They often had nothing to eat and were
therefore in poor health.
While the life of the refugees were harsh, some fine human qualities were
manifested in their suffering. Every refugee carried his own load. From the behavior
of the old man; we can say that the refugees looked after the young people in the
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group. Whatever little food the old man got he gave to his grandson. Even though
they had come to the city after many sufferings and many hardships, they did not
want to beg as far as possible. Even though they were in the city, their intension was
not to stay in the city. They wanted to go back to their villages as soon as possible.
The old man had a silver coin with which he could buy more food. However, he did
not want to spend it for food. He wanted to save the money to buy seeds for sowing
his land.
The refugees did a variety of menial jobs for a living. They would pull
rickshaws for a small sum of money- which was much less than what professional
rickshaw pullers charged. Some of the refugees would go to the shops and beg for
money.
The refugees were not welcome in the city because the residents of the city
thought that the refugees were a burden to the resident of the city. They thought that
in trying to feed the refugees, they themselves would have to starve.
The hope the refugees had for the future was that if they could get some seeds
they could go back to their village and sow for the next crop. They were not
interested in living in an unwelcome environment in the city.
2.
The old man is the symbol of suffering humanity because he undergoes the pain
that million of people undergo everyday. Like the old man, who should not be doing
hard work at his age, there are millions of old people who have to have work to make
ends meet. The old mans son and daughter-in-law have died and he has the burden
of taking care of his grandchild. Again he is the symbol of suffering humanity
because he has to live on money given to him out of pity. The old man does not want
to beg, he does not want anyones money, yet he has no choice but to accept the
money which is given to him so that he can give his grandson some food.
The old man shows that there is light at the end of the tunnel because he puts the
needs of the grandson before his own needs. He feeds the grandson first and then
licks the leftover. He carries his grandson in basket even though he himself has
barely enough strength to walk. He saves the piece of silver that he has for buying
seeds which will ensure that the same calamity does not occur the next year.
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3.
After the flooding of the river the village people leave their homelands and
search for food and shelter in the new capital. They have to live in great camps
outside the city wall. With the city full of ragged and starving refugees, nobody
knows how to cope with the problem. The city becomes a scene of miserable crowds,
that move about begging from door to door. It causes a lot of bitterness among the
local inhabitants. They grow frightened and in their fear, their outlook towards the
refugees become bitter. Whenever the refugees go to small shopkeepers to beg, they
shout at them in a very cruel and harsh manner. The people of the city do not like the
flow of the refugees. They are worried that if all the food they have is to be shared
with these refugees, the townsmen will run short of food. This fear of shortage of
food and starvation makes them bitter and harsh towards the refugees. The refugees
work at low rates. The number of rickshaw pullers also increases. Naturally, the
usual rickshaw pullers curse them. Since the refugees do not have proper clothing,
many would die on the streets, during the cold winter. They often have nothing to eat
and are therefore in poor health. The situation in the city really becomes worse.
A) Questions for further study:
1.
2.
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Unit-5
The Novel as a Form of Literature
Contents:
5.0 Objectives
5.1 Introduction
Check Your Progress I
5. 1.1 Terms to Remember
5.2 Elements of the Novel
5.2.1 Plot
Check Your Progress II
5.2.1.1 Terms to Remember
5.2.2 Characters
Check Your Progress III
5.2.2.1 Terms to Remember
5.2.3 Setting
Check Your Progress IV
5.2.3.1 Terms to Remember
5.2.4 Point of View
Check Your Progress V
5.2.4.1 Terms to Remember
5.3 Types of the novel:
5.3.1. Epistolary Novel
Check Your Progress VI
5.3.1.1 Terms to Remember
5.3.2. Historical Novel
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5.0 Objectives:
After studying this unit you will be able to:
5.1. Introduction:
The novel is a long prose narrative. It depicts the social, political, and personal
realities of life with clarity and in aesthetic terms. Etymologically the novel means
story of something new and the roots of such fictitious or real tales are found in the
heroic and adventurous stories of the medieval period. However, the germs of the
modern English novel are found in Thomas Moores Utopia (1516). During the
Elizabethan era Thomas Nash paved the way of novel while Mrs. Afra Behn laid the
foundation of prose fiction in the seventeenth century. In short, novel writing is not a
new trend in English literature. We get several fictitious tales from the medieval
period to the eighteenth century.
Although there were fictitious stories before the eighteenth century, the novel
as a form of literature emerged in the eighteenth century and developed in the
112
capitalistic society of the nineteenth and twentieth century. The novelists such as
Samuel Richardson, Henry Fielding, Tobias Smollet, and Laurence Stern brought
about maturity to this genre. They made the novel as the glory of England. So they
are called as the founders (four wheels of the novel) of the novel. Besides these
contributors, several social factors such as the spread of education, the rise of the
middle class reading public, the popularity of the periodical essay, democratic spirit
of the day, and the decline of the drama contributed greatly in the rise and the
development of the English novel.
In fact, the novel has a long history and during this long period several novelists
and scholars attempted to explain its nature and features. According to R. J. Rees:
Until the seventeenth century the word novel, if it was used at all, meant a short
story of the kind written and collected by Boccaccio in his Decameron. By about
1700 it had got a precise meaning as given in The Shorter Oxford Dictionary as a
fictitious prose narrative of considerable length in which characters and actions
representative of real life are portrayed in a plot of more or less complexity. In his
History of the English novel E. A. Baker has made a successful attempt to explain the
specific nature of the novel. According to him the novel is a prose story, picturing
real life or something corresponding thereto, and having the unity and coherence due
to plot or scheme of some kind, or to define intention and attitude of mind on the part
of the author. These definitions show that the novel is a fictitious tale in prose based
on real or imaginative incidents. It presents the picture of human life and society. As
the novel has dealt with the different varieties and aspects of life, it has been
categorized into the several types. In order to get the clear idea of the novel as a form
of literature, it is necessary to have a glance on the elements and types of the novel.
Check Your Progress I
A) Complete the following sentences by choosing the correct alternative:
i)
The roots of the novel are found in the heroic and adventurous stories of the
---------- period.
a) medieval b) ancient
c) modern
ii) ----------- laid the foundation of prose fiction in the seventeenth century.
a) Thomas Nash b) Mrs. Afra Behn c) Thomas Moore
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ii) The germs of the modern English novel are found in ---------------------.
C) Answer the following questions in a word/phrase/sentence:
i)
etymological -the study of the origins of words or parts of words and how
they have arrived at their current form and meaning
distinguished- well-known
5.2.1 Plot:
Plot is the artistic arrangement of events or actions in the life of the characters in
the novel. The term action here consists of both the physical and verbal activities of
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the characters. These actions result from some type of conflict, generally between
man and man, man and nature, man and social or religious conventions, or man to
himself. Typically, the conflict is revealed at the exposition, or beginning of the story
and is developed during the complication, which is the longest section. At the
climax, the conflict reaches its turning point, and its solution becomes clear. In the
final part of the story, the resolution, the conflict is settled. In short, the plot is
defined by the conflict, either internal or external and this conflict makes the novel
readable and artistic. So plot is the most important aspect of the novel.
In his Aspects of the Novel E. M. Forster makes the difference between plot and
story. According to him, both plot and story are narratives of events arranged in their
time sequence. However, the basic difference between them is the sense of causality.
For instance, the king died, and then the queen died is a story, but the king died,
and then the queen died in grief is a plot. In both the statements the time-sequence is
preserved but the sense of causality overshadows the second statement. In short, the
story is a bare synopsis of the incidents but the plot is concerned with the emotional
effects of the incidents. So plot is defined as a structure of actions aiming at
emotional and artistic effects.
There are several types of plot. They are-tragic plot, comic plot, romantic plot,
simple plot, complex plot, etc. The tragic plot deals with the suffering of the
characters while the comic plot creates the laughter. In the tragic plot we get the
conflict between two characters or ideologies whereas in the romantic plot we get the
union of characters. W. H. Hudson divides plot into two types- loose plot and organic
plot. According to him, there is neither artistic unity, nor a logical connection
between incidents in a loose plot. The organic plot, on the other hand, has a logical
and organic unity. The characters and episodes are neatly organized with precision in
an organic plot. In short there are several types of the plot but the excellent plot of
the novel is really a complex plot having balance and logical connections between
the incidents.
The plot of the novel is not a mere framework or mechanism. It is the first
principle and the final end of the novel. So it is called as the soul of the novel. It
achieves the intended effect and makes the novel interesting and readable. In the
traditional novel we get the pyramidal shape of the plot consisting the rising action,
climax and falling action. The protagonist of the earlier novel was isolated form
society, living his world of personal joys and sorrows. During the age of capitalism,
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the novelists presented several socio-cultural problems of the day through the organic
plot. However, the life became more and more complex with the passage of time. As
a result the structure of the plot of the novel became more complex. The modern
novelist is not satisfied with a simple story or with a well organized plot and an
objective narration. He is more interested in the inner life or struggle of the
characters. As a result the traditional concept of plot disappeared from the modern
novel. The psychological probing and interior monologue have ousted the well-knit
plot altogether.
It is true that modern psychological novels have rejected the traditional concept
of plot. It doesnt mean that the modern novels are plotless. The fact is that the
concept of the traditional plot is changed. In a nutshell, plot doesnt mean a summary
of the happenings in the novel. It is the synthesis of the elements of action, character
and thought. The novel, which has a structure of actions aiming at emotional and
artistic effects, provides both pleasure and teaching to the readers and the modern
novel is not exception to this. So plot is regarded as the first principle and the final
end of the novel.
Check Your Progress II
A) Complete the following sentences by choosing the correct alternative:
i)
The king died, and then the queen died in grief is an example of -------.
a) setting
b) characterization c) plot
b) an organic
c) a comic
ii) The tragic plot deals with the ------- of the characters in the novel.
C) Answer in a word/phrase/sentence:
i)
What is the difference between the tragic and the comic plot?
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5.2.2 Characters:
The novel is a long prose narrative that presents real or imaginative incidents in
the life of characters in the form of a sequential story. It means that the actions in the
story are carried out by people or by creatures endowed with human characteristics.
These people or creatures are called as the characters in the novel. There are
generally two types of characters. They are the major characters and the minor
characters. The main action of the novel revolves around the major characters while
the minor characters are involved in this action or the conflict. In other words, the
protagonist demonstrates the conflict while the minor characters comment upon the
conflict. The protagonist is a specific individual with a certain physical appearance,
speech, tastes, and actions. At the same time he has universal qualities enabling the
reader to identify with him as he confronts and resolves his conflict. Being an
important aspect of the novel the character plays an important role in making the
novel interesting and readable. The characters in the novel present values and traits
of minds through their actions and behaviour. These actions show the nature and type
of the characters in the novel.
In his Aspects of the Novel E. M. Forster explains two types of characters. They
are: flat characters and round characters. The flat character is a person which is built
around a single quality. We do not get any development in the personality of the flat
characters. They lack individuality or identity. In short, one can easily understand flat
characters. A character which is very complex and difficult to understand is called as
round characters. It is hardly possible to understand the motives of round character
due to its complex personality. We also get the development in the personality or
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identity of the round characters. Such round characters are generally found in heroic
and adventurous novels.
So far as the methods of characterization in the novel are considered, we get two
main methods of characterization--showing and telling. In showing method the
characters themselves talk about their personality and behaviour while in telling
method the narrator describes the qualities of the characters. The showing method is
called as an indirect or dramatic method while the telling method is called as the
direct method. The direct method of characterization is very helpful to the reader
because every detail of the characters such as their nature, hopes, desires, loneliness
and other traits of their personality have been made clear through the narration and
nothing is left to discover on the part of the reader. In dramatic method the novelist
presents the traits of the characters through their actions and development. This
second method of characterization is more favoured because it requires the reader to
use his brain to understand characters. The novelist can use both the methods in a
single work of art. In short, the characters play an important role in the development
of the plot of the novel. As there is a correlation between the plot and
characterization, the character is regarded as an inseparable part of the novel.
Check Your Progress III
A) Complete the following sentences by choosing the correct alternative:
i)
b) flat character
c) protagonist
ii) The telling method of characterization is called as -----------------a) an indirect method b) the direct method c) dramatic method
B) Fill in the blanks:
i)
ii) What is the difference between the round character and the flat character?
5.2.2.1 Terms to Remember
endowed - gifted
traits - qualities
5.2.3 Setting:
The novel is a fictitious story in which the characters perform action to present
the intended purpose of the novelist. The setting of the novel makes this intention
more intelligible to the readers. Here setting means the location or the place and the
background where the action of the characters is performed or happened. In fact,
setting is not just the background of the novel but it is an integral part of the novel. It
is used to explain the period or age of action, and the socio-cultural conditions of the
day. In his Aspects of the Novel E. M. Forster explains that setting provides the
specific idea of the novel. We can understand whether the novel is rural or urban,
social or historical, real or imaginative through its setting or background. We can get
these different settings in a single novel. For instance, the hero of the picaresque
novel wanders from one place to another, so the setting of such picaresque novel
changes frequently.
Setting in a novel is generally of two kinds-social and material. The social
setting consists of the nature of life of the people in the specific area, their language,
and their socio-cultural conditions. For instance, the novel Ice-Candy Man by Bapsi
Sidhwa presents socio-political conditions of India at the time of partition of India.
The material setting of the novel provides the detailed description of the several
places where the action of the novel takes place. In this novel the novelist Bapsi
Sidhwa gives the detailed graphic description of the rural and urban area, and the
socio-political conditions of the day. Besides this social and graphic description,
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setting provides the mood and idea of the writer. Sometimes the setting looks like the
characters in the novel. For instance, in Hemingways The Old Man and the Sea we
get sea as the background of the novel. However, Hemingway here looks upon the
sea as a woman. In short setting is an important aspect of the novel.
Check Your Progress IV
A) Complete the following sentences by choosing the correct alternative:
i)
c) picaresque
ii) The novel Ice-Candy Man is written by ------a) Daniel Defoe b) Bapsi Sidhwa c) E. M. Forster
B) Fill in the blanks:
i)
The setting of the novel makes the intention of the novelist ---------- to the
readers.
ii) The --------- of the novel provides the detailed description of the several
places where the action of the novel takes place.
C) Answer in a word/phrase/sentence:
i)
intention - purpose
intelligible understandable
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I)
When the incidents or events in the novel are presented from the narrators point
of view, it is called as the first person point of view. This mode of narration can not
fully express the feelings and minds of the major characters. The narrator narrates the
life and activities of the others from his/her point of view.
II) The Third Person Point of View:
The third person point of view has no scope for the development of characters.
In the same way, we do not get significance of the third person point of view in the
history of the novel. In such narration the author assumes in getting the story across
the reader. So the third person narration is neither popular nor prevalent in the history
of the English novel.
III) Omniscient Point of View:
In this narration the feelings, ideas and even motives of the characters are
narrated by the narrator. Here the role of the narrator is omniscient. He not only
narrates the story but also comments and evaluates other characters. The novels such
as Tom Jones by Fielding, The Mayor of Casterbridge by Thomas Hardy, etc. belong
to this type of narration.
IV) The Limited Point of View:
In the limited point of view the narrator narrates only about himself. The
incidents in the novel are limited to the feelings of the narrator. The best example of
this point of view is the stream of consciousness novel.
In short, the point of view is regarded as an important aspect of the novel. We
get the narrative skill of the writer through his narrative technique. In fact, the
success of the novel and the fame of the novelist are based upon the point of view or
the mode of narration.
Check Your Progress V
A) Complete the following sentences by choosing the correct alternative:
i)
When the incidents or events in the novel are presented from the narrators
point of view, it is called as-------a) the first person point of view
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b) himself
c)
characters
assume - suppose
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The epistolary novel demonstrates the series of happenings in the life of the
protagonist. The first epistolary novel to expose such happenings is Aphra Behn's
Love-Letters Between a Nobleman and His Sister. It was appeared in three volumes
in 1684, 1685, and 1687. Behn explored a realm of intrigue and complex interaction
with the help of the several letters. During the eighteenth century Samuel Richardson
made a successful attempt of the epistolary novel through Pamela (1740) and
Clarissa (1749). He made the epistolary novel popular in England. Montesquieu in
France and Goethe in Germany also used the epistolary form to a great dramatic
effect and made the epistolary novel a successful genre. The epistolary novel was
very popular in the eighteenth century but it slowly fell out of use in the late
eighteenth century. Although Jane Austen tried her hand at the epistolary in her
novella Lady Susan, she abandoned this structure for her later work. It is thought that
her lost novel First Impressions, which was redrafted to become Pride and
Prejudice, may have been epistolary novel because it contains an unusual number of
letters.
Although epistolary novel was not very popular in the subsequent age, it was
survived by the several nineteenth century novelists. In Balzac's novel Letters of Two
Brides, two women who became friends during their education at a convent
correspond over a 17 year period, exchanging letters describing their lives. Mary
Shelley also employed the epistolary form in her novel Frankenstein (1818). Shelley
presented the story through the letters of a sea captain and scientific explorer
attempting to reach the North Pole who encounters Victor Frankenstein and records
the dying man's narrative and confessions. Published in 1848, Anne Brontes novel
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall is framed as a retrospective letter from a hero to his
friend and brother-in-law. In the late 19th century, Bram Stoker released one of the
most widely recognized and successful epistolary novel, Dracula (1897). It is
compiled entirely of letters, diary entries, newspaper clippings, telegrams, doctor's
notes and ship's logs. In it Stoker skillfully employs to balance believability and
dramatic tension.
There are three types of epistolary novels: monologic, dialogic and polylogic. In
monologue we find that only one character especially the protagonist writes a letter
to express his feelings and emotions. Dialogic epistolary novel is concerned with the
exchange of letters between two characters. In polylogic epistolary novel we get
three or more letter-writing characters. As all these types of epistolary novels tend to
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be rather long and slow moving, it fails to attract the modern readers. However, the
major advantage of the epistolary novel is that it has a lot of space for the exploration
of human mind.
Check Your Progress VI
A) Complete the following sentences by choosing the correct alternative:
i)
b) Latin
c) Roman
ii) Aphra Behn's Love-Letters Between a Nobleman and His Sister appeared in
----- volumes.
a) three
b) two
c) four
demonstrate - show
realm area
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The historical novel takes it origin, characters and events from history, so it
appears as the book of history.
2.
It attempts to convey the spirit, manners, and social conditions of a past age with
realistic details and fidelity to historical fact but its intention is not to provide
the historical facts but to entertain the readers.
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3.
The knowledge of early history of culture and society is made easy and possible
by the historical novel.
4.
The historical novel presents the realistic picture of the important historical
events to glorify or idealize the history.
5.
The historical novel encourages the national spirit and creates love for the nation
and its culture, so it becomes the national novel.
The historical novelists such as Sir Walter Scott, Leo Tolstoy, Charles Dickens
and others made knowledge of history of the nation easy and possible through their
works. The best examples of the historical novels are Ivanhoe, War and Peace, A
Tale of Two Cities. These novels made the historical novel very popular in the
history of English literature. The historical novelists attempted to idealize the
historical events but it did not become very popular due to its negligence of the
contemporary issues. As man is interested in the contemporary socio-cultural issues,
the historical novel remained marginalized in the history of English literature.
However, it has played a significant role in the development of the English novel.
Check Your Progress VII
A) Complete the following sentences by choosing the correct alternative:
i)
b)
c)
b)
c)
The historical novel does not become very popular due to its negligence of
the ---------
C) Answer in a word/phrase/sentence:
i)
Convey- communicate
fidelity - faithfulness
convenient- suitable
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2.
3.
The psychological novel argues that the character is a process and not a
static state.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
The chief aim of the novelist is not to create memorable characters but to
find out exactly what people are like, and to record his discoveries.
9.
c) setting
ii) The psychological novel is mainly concerned with -----------------a) the flaw of human consciousness
b) criticism of life
c) entertainment
C) Answer in a word/phrase/sentence:
i)
medieval
eighteenth.
plot
ii) a loose
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B) i)
The plot
ii) sufferings
C) i)
The tragic plot deals with the suffering of the characters while the
comic plot creates the laughter.
ii) The organic plot has a logical and organic unity. In it the characters
and episodes are neatly organized with precision.
flat character
the round
ii) The flat character lacks individuality or identity while the round
character has complex personality.
picaresque
more intelligible
The setting means the location or the place and the background where
the actions of the characters in the novel are performed or happened.
ii) The social setting consists of the nature of life of the people in the
specific area, their language, and their socio-cultural conditions.
ii) himself
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B) i)
ii) E. M. Forster
Greek
ii) three
B) i)
epistolary
ii)
B) i)
ii)
C) i)
contemporary issues
Leo Tolstoy
The novel which takes it origin, characters and events from history is
called as a historical novel.
plot
stream-of-consciousness technique.
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stream-of-
5.5 Exercises:
I.
2.
3.
4.
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Unit-6
Introduction to Lord of The Flies
Contents:
6.0 Objectives
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Introduction to William Golding: His Life and Work
6.3 Introduction to the novel: A Summary in Brief
6.4 Check your progress
6.5 Terms to Remember
6.6 Answers to check your progress
6.7 Exercises
6.8 References for further reading
6.0 Objectives:
After reading this unit you will be:
6.1 Introduction:
In the previous unit, you are introduced with the novel as a form of literature. In
the unit you came to know about what is the novel? What are the elements of the
novel? And, various types of the novel, viz. the epistolary novel, the historical novel
and the psychological novel are explained in details.
In the present unit, you are introduced with the life and work of William
Golding. You will be acquainted with Goldings novel, Lord of the Flies with the
help of the brief summary of the novel. And the next two units will discuss in detail
134
the chapter-wise-summary, and the critical analysis of the novel respectively. So let
us get introduced with the novelist, William Golding as well as his novel, Lord of the
Flies in this chapter.
135
Goldings literary career started with the publication of a small volume of poetry
named Poems appeared in 1934. And his first significant novel Lord of the Flies was
published in 1954. The second novel The Inheritors and the third Pincher Martin
came out in 1955 and 1956 respectively. All these three novels were the result of his
first-hand experience of war and of his concern for good and evil as well as the future
of human civilization. His next three novelsFree Fall (1960), The Spire (1964) and
The Pyramid (1967)explore his changed approach towards theme and technique.
While the first three novels are generally appreciated as great fables, the next three
are social novels in which Goldings ideas of good and evil are wedded to his social
awareness. Darkness Visible (1979) focuses on good and evil as being in a tussle
with each other. Rights of Passage (1980), The Paper Man (1984), Close Quartets
(1987), Fire Down Below (1989) highlight Goldings preoccupation with guilt and
the inner depravity of man.
Besides the novels, he also published a collection of novellas The Scorpion God
(1971), three short playsThe Brass Butterfly (1958), Miss Palkinhom (1960) and
Break My Heart (1962)and collections of critical essays and non-fiction writings
includingThe Hot Gates (1965), A Moving Target (1982) and An Egyptian Journal
(1985). Golding was made a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1955. He
won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize in 1979, and in 1980 he received the
Booker McConnell Prize for his novel Rights of Passage. But the most recognizable
achievement in his writing career came when he received the Nobel Prize for
literature for the 1983.
Golding used various sources for his novels, which was, sometimes, interpreted
as his lack of originality. But the fact is that, through these sources, he attempted to
search for a literary tradition, and to add a new dimension to them. He was a devoted
student of Greek literature, especially the classics of adventure. He read some Greek
stories in his childhood days which had everlasting influence on his life. He
proclaimed with pride that he took up Greek literature as his literary parentage.
the beginning of the novel. Ralph is among the oldest boys, who is fair-haired,
handsome and confident, while Piggy is the fat, asthmatic boy with glasses.
When they are swimming in a shallow pool inside a lagoon, Ralph finds a
beautiful conch shell. Piggy suggests him to blow the conch so that other boys will
get the signal and collect together. All the boys of ages between six and twelve
appear from the jungle. Among them are identical twins Sam and Eric, the quiet but
strange Roger, thoughtful Simon, and charismatic Jack Merridew, leader of the choir.
Ralph is chosen by other boys as their chief, and he now leads Jack and Simon on an
expedition to explore the island. As they are on deserted island so they decide to find
food for them. The three boys find a wild pig caught in some creeper vines. Jack
prepares to kill the pig with a large knife but he hesitates and the pig escapes.
Ralph uses the conch to call another meeting. It is decided that whoever holds
the conch shell will have the right to speak at the meeting. A small boy with a
mulberry-coloured birthmark obscuring half of his face receives the conch. He tells
the other boys of a beastie that comes in the dark and wants to eat him. Some deny
its existence, but Jack vows to hunt it when he and his hunters hunt pig for meat.
Then, the boys decide that they must make a signal fire on the mountain to attract
ships to rescue them. They gather wood and use Piggys glasses to start the fire. In
their exuberance and inexperience, they allow the fire to rage out of control and it
consumes a large portion of the jungle. The small boy with the mulberry-coloured
birthmark disappears and is never seen again. It is implied he was killed in the fire.
Jack, now, learns the art of hunting, but still hasnt got a pig. While he hunts,
Ralph and Simon build poorly constructed shelters on the beach from palm trunks
and fronds. Jack returns from his unsuccessful hunt. And he and Ralph clash over
the decision to hunt or build the shelters. Simon discovers a secret place in the
jungle. It is a hollow completely obscured by creeper vines. He sits there, away from
the others, and contemplates the beauty of the jungle.
As time passes, the boys begin to resemble less and less the civilized British
school children they used to be. Their uniforms deteriorate and their hair grows long
and ragged. A marked boundary begins to grow between the younger children
(littluns) who play all day, and the older children (biguns) who seem to be growing
divided as to their responsibilities. Ralph, Piggy, Simon, and Sam and Eric see the
need for order and civilization, while Jack and his hunters become obsessed with the
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ideas of finding meat and protecting the littluns from the beast. Jack introduces the
hunters to the notion of camouflaging their features with red and white clay and
black charcoal for hunting. This gradual masking of their identities allows them to
become more ruthless and effective hunters.
The smoke from a ship passing the island is discovered, but Jack and the
hunters, preoccupied with hunting, have let the signal fire they were tending go out.
Jack returns form the hunt, triumphant over killing a pig and slitting its throat
himself, only to be rebuffed by Ralph for neglecting the fire. The boys clash on the
matter, but eventually all share in consuming the meat. Ralph calls another meeting
to deal with the situation involving the signal fire. Another littlun, Phil, speaks of his
dreams of the beast. This again inspires Jack to lobby for the necessity of his
hunters. He and Ralph argue again over the importance of the signal fire versus the
meat. Jack declares his disgust, and he and his hunters leave the meeting. Ralph
considers giving up being chief but Piggy, who fears Jack, tries to convince him not
to.
There is a fight between aircraft ten miles in the sky over the island, which has
not been seen by the boys. A dead parachutist lands on the side of the mountain in a
sitting position. The wind, catching in the parachute, makes the figure rock back and
forth. Now, the boys think that it is the beast and argue over whether or not to
approach it. Ralph leads the boys with an angry Jack in tow to go to the mountainside
to see the beast. Jack sees the natural bridge to the islands outcropping. He decides
that the separate island, joined to the main island by a rock ledge, would make a great
fort. It contains many rocks that could be rolled onto the approach path to kill
enemies. He and Ralph argue again, and Jack verbally denies any further loyalty to
the conch and its power. Their expedition is interrupted when the boys flush a boar.
Ralph wounds it when it charges him. The boar escapes, but they celebrate the
encounter with another primitive blood lust dances in which Robert, pretending to be
the pig, is beaten by the hunters who are overly excited by the dance. Ralphs
bravery in the face of the boars charge is forgotten. As the evening comes, most of
the boys have returned to the shelters, but Ralph, Jack, and Roger have pressed on
and apprehensively approach the figure. The wind causes it to move and the boys
see its decaying face in the darkness. All of them flee from there.
At the next meeting, Jack and Ralph question each others bravery on the
mountain. Jack convinces his hunters to separate themselves from the rest.
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Following Piggys suggestion Ralph, Simon, and Samneric (Sam and Eric) try to
maintain a signal fire down off the mountain, away from Jack and his hunters. Jack
orders his hunters to kill a pig for a feast, hoping that the roasting meat will draw the
others loyalty away from Ralph. They kill a pig and he orders them to mount its
head on a stick as a sacrifice for the beast.
Simon, who had been in his hiding place, contemplates the head of the boar that
the hunters had unknowingly impaled near him. He imagines a conversation with the
head, and begins to see in it the source of evil on the island. He has an epileptic
seizure. He awakens, and the head again reveals itself to him as the symbol of
anarchy on the island. Simon has a second seizure. He then gets up again and climbs
the mountain to view the figure of the dead parachutist that boys believe in the beast.
He discovers that it is harmless, and that the true nature of what the boys should fear,
the real beast, is symbolized by the pigs head. He returns to tell the others about the
reality.
Meanwhile, Jack and his hunters roast the pig, and the others, including Ralph
and Piggy, join the feast. Ralph and Jack argue again and most of the boys take the
side of Jack this time. Ralph tries to convince them that they need shelters, but Jack
distracts them by commanding another blood lust dance. The boys become so swept
up in the dance that Simon, emerging from the forest, is mistaken for the beast. All
the boys, marginally including Ralph and Piggy, beat him to death. The tide sweeps
his body out to sea.
Back at the shelters, Ralph, Piggy, and Samneric discuss about their role in the
Simons death. That night, Jack and his hunters attack them and steal Piggys
glasses for a fire. The next day, Ralph, Samneric, and Piggy approach Castle Rock,
where Jacks tribe has gathered, to demand the return of Piggys glasses. Ralph
wants to re-establish the power of the conch. He and Samneric approach the hunters
while Piggy and the conch stay on the stone bridge. Jack and Ralph argue again
while the hunters take Samneric prisoner. Roger releases a rock they had rigged to
guard the bridge. It falls on Piggy, smashes the conch, and plunges Piggy over the
edge to his death.
Anyhow Ralph escapes and the hunters hunt him. He hides near Castle Rock
but only manages to learn that Roger has tortured Samnric into joining the hunt.
Samneric now fear Roger, the sadist, more than Jack. Eventually, the hunters corner
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Ralph in Simons old hiding place. They flush him from concealment with a fire.
Ralph manages to escape to the beach with the hunters right behind. He, now, comes
face to face with a shocked naval officer. A battle cruiser has docked in the lagoon,
drawn by the smoke from Jacks fire. The officer is appalled at the savage condition
of the children. The naval officer thinks that the boys have only been playing games,
so he scolds them for not behaving in a more organized manner as is the British
custom. Ralph assumes responsibility for what appears to be poor leadership. Jack,
then, emerges onto the beach without his hunting camouflage or weapons. Only
Piggys broken glasses on his belt give any indication of his previous savagery. One
of the littluns even cannot remember his own name. As the boys prepare to leave the
island, Ralph begins to weep for the three dead children and the end of the boys
innocence.
2.
3.
4.
5.
b. Simon
c. Ralph
d. Piggy
b. Samneric
c. Samoric
d. Summeric
b. Jack
c. Phil
d. Eric
b. Simon
c. Sam
d. Roger
b. the glasses
c. a pigs head
d. the rock
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6.
b. the rock
c. the mountain
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Correct Alternatives:
1.
c) Ralph
2.
b) Samneric
3.
b) Jack
4.
a) Piggy
5.
c) Pigs head
6.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Ralph weeps in the end for the death of the three dead boys.
6.7 Exercises :
A. Write answers of the following questions in two to four sentences each.
1.
2.
3.
4.
The hunters
2.
3.
4.
5.
2.
3.
Blook, Harold (ed.). William Goldings Lord of the Flies, New Delhi: Viva
Books, 2010.
2.
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Unit-7
William Golding
LORD OF THE FLIES
Contents
7.0 Objectives
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Chapter-wise summery of Lord of the Flies with comments
7.3 Check your progress
7.4 Answers to check your progress
7.5 Exercises
7.6 References for further reading
7.0 Objectives:
After reading this unit you will be able to:
Understand boyish character the relation between the older boys and the
younger ones.
Realize that good and evil exist side by side in the darkness of mans heart.
Realize that once the restrains of civilization are removed, evil begins to
rule over us.
7.1 Introduction:
The title of the novel may be traced back to the Jewish hierarchy of demons
where Beelzebub is called, Lord of the Flies and the true representative of false
gods. The title is most appropriate as Golding tries to convey the moral that the
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world is not a reasonable place and that all power corrupts and that one has to live
with the darkness of mans heart. Here we should remember one thing that Golding
wrote this novel in the post-war era when there was much misunderstanding and
disbelief among the nations of the world. Lord of the Flies (1954) is a novel of
boyish adventure. But the novel conveys a message which goes beyond the simple
story of boyish adventure. There is much similarity in Ballantynes Coral Island,
published almost a century back in 1857, and Lord of the Flies. But Lord of the Flies
is a deliberate attempt by William Golding to probe deeper than Ballantyne into the
recesses of the human heart. There is another novel Swiss Family Robinson dealing
with the similar story by J.R. Swiss. But the story of Lord of the Flies is never
stereotyped or stale. We become more and more aware of the originality of design as
the story proceeds.
William Golding was born on September 19th, 1911 in Cornwall a small village
in England. His father was a distinguished school master. He did his primary
education at the Marlborough Grammar School and joined the Brasenose College,
Oxford. He took his degree in English literature. Philosophy dominates his writings.
He started his career as a school master at Bishop Wordsworths school in Salisbury.
During the second World War, he joined the Royal Navy. After the war, he resumed
teaching and gave it up in 1962, and become a full-time writer. Lord of the Flies is
his first and the most famous novel. His second novel The Inheritors (1955) is
considered as the best novel about primitive man. Goldings other works include
Pincher Martin (1956), The Spire (1964), and The Scorpion God (1971). The beliefs
behind his work are the fundamental moral or spiritual views of mankind. Gilding is
also described as a novelist of artistic value and in Lord of the Flies he excels as a
portrayer of Nature.
ocean. It crashed in thick jungle on a deserted island. Scattered by the wreck, the
surviving boys lost each other and cannot find the pilot. Piggy is frightened at the
prospect of a life without grown-ups. But Ralph is delighted at the thought of a
realized ambition. Ralph tells Piggy that his father is a commander in the navy and
sure enough he would come to rescue them. But Piggy shatters his belief by
declaring that the crew of their plane as well as the people in the airport are killed in
the nuclear attack. Ralph now realizes the gravity of the unusual situation. Just then
they discover a large pink and cream coloured shell. Piggy immediately says that it
could be used as a trumpet to summon the other boys scattered over the island. Ralph
blows it and hearing the sound, the boys start to assemble onto the beach. The oldest
among them are around twelve; the youngest are around six. Among the group is a
boys choir, dressed in black cloaks and led by an older boy named Jack. The boys
taunt Piggy and mock his appearance and nickname. After the boys are introduced by
Piggy, Ralph tells them that they are holding a meeting. He lifts the conch and says
that they ought to have a chief to decide things. The boys decide to elect a leader.
The choirboys vote for Jack, but all other boys vote for Ralph. Ralph becomes the
chief and naturally Jack feels depressed but soon feels happy when Ralph declares
him as the leader of the Hunters. Now they decide to explore the land and find out
if they are really on an island. Mindful of the need to explore their new environment,
Ralph chooses Jack and a choir member named Simon to explore the island, ignoring
Piggys requests to be picked up. The three explorers leave the meeting place and
eventually they reach the end of the jungle, where high sharp rocks jut toward steep
mountains. The explorers climb up the mountain and feel the thrill. They reach the
summit and find water all around them. From the peak they can see that they are on
an island with no signs of civilization. On their way back, they find a wild pig caught
in the creepers. Jack, the newly appointed hunter draws his knife and steps in to kill
it, but hesitates, unable to bring himself to act. The pig frees itself and runs away to
safety before he could stab it. Jack vows that the next time he will not flinch from the
act of killing. The three boys make a long trek through dense jungle and move
towards the group of boys waiting for them on the beach.
Comments In this introductory chapter we get the background of the novel
through the conversation of Ralph and Piggy. They hint at a nuclear war raging in
Europe. We see that the boys, unsure of how to behave with no adult presence
overseeing them, largely stick to the learned behaviours of civilization and order.
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They attempt to recreate the structures of society on the deserted island. They elect a
leader, establish a division of labour and set about systematically exploring the
island. But even at this early stage, we see the danger that the boys innate instincts
pose to their civilization: the boys cruelly taunt Piggy, and Jack displays a ferocious
desire to be elected the groups leader. The bespectacled Piggy is introduced as a
representative of the scientific and intellectual aspects of civilization. Piggy thinks
critically about the conch shell and determines a productive use of it. The conch shell
represents law, order, and political legitimacy, as it summons the boys from their
scattered positions on the island and grants its holder the right to speak in front of the
group. Finally the exploration provides Golding, a novelist of artistic value, the
opportunity to expand on nature description.
CHAPTER 2 : FIRE ON THE MOUNTAIN
This chapter begins with a meeting in which Ralph explains the result of their
exploration. He tells the boys that they are on an uninhabited island and they shall
have to look after themselves. Jack reminds Ralph of the pig they found trapped in
the creepers and Ralph agrees that they will need hunters to kill animals for meat.
Ralph declares that they need certain rules and regulations to guide them and says at
meetings, the conch shell will be used to determine which boy has the right to speak.
Whoever holds the shell will speak, and others will listen silently until they receive
the shell in their turn. Jack agrees with this idea.
Piggy speaks painfully about the fact that no one knows they have crashed on
the island and that they could be stuck there for a long time. The prospect of being
stranded for a long period is too harrowing for many of the boys, and the entire group
becomes silent and scared. At this moment a small boy with mulberry coloured birth
mark claims that he saw a snakelike beastie the night before. Ralph tries to explain
that snakes are found only in big countries like Africa and India and not in an island
like theirs. But a wave of fear ripples through the group at the idea that a monster
might be prowling the island. The older boys try to reassure the group that there is no
monster. Ralph now tells them that it is imperative for them to think of being
rescued. He proposes that the group build a large signal fire on top of the islands
central mountain, so that any passing ships might see the fire and know that someone
is trapped on the island. No sooner Ralph mentions it than the boys rush to the
mountain under the leadership of Jack, shouting, A fire! Make a fire! Only Ralph
and Piggy lag behind. Piggy doesnt like this show of emotion. He shouts out in
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disgust, Like kids! Acting like a crowd of kids. But even Ralph moves up and
Piggy too follows him. The boys collect a mound of dry wood and use the lenses
from Piggys glasses to focus the sunlight and set the wood on fire. As the heap of
dry wood bursts into flame, the boys dance round it in sheer joy. But the fire soon
dies out and they find it difficult to keep up such a huge fire. Jack volunteers his
group of hunters to be responsible for keeping the signal fire going. In their frenzied,
disorganized efforts to rekindle the fire, the boys set many trees ablaze. Piggy points
out their foolishness and reminds them, Put first things first and act proper. What
they most needed in the circumstances is shelter and not a signal fire. But the boys
only laugh him down. They realize the gravity of his words only when he recollects
that one of them is missing - a small boy with mulberry coloured birth mark. It is the
first death on the island. The boys are crest fallen and shocked, and Ralph is struck
with shame.
Comments In this chapter we find the boys organizing themselves. They still
have recollection of their civilized school life. At school they had plenty of rules and
here too they are willing to accept the rules laid down by their chosen leader, Ralph.
Another important development is the mention of the beast. The beast plays an
important role in the novel. At this point the beast is merely an idea that frightens
some of the boys. But as the novel progresses, the beast comes to represent the
instincts of power, violence and savagery that lurk within each human being. Thirdly
we have the lighting of the fire. The boys act like kids neglecting the priority of
things. They act out of emotion rather than by reason. The fire too plays an important
role in the novel. The fire has a double role the one of purification and salvation
and the other of destruction and death. The signal fire serves as a barometer for the
boys interest in maintaining ties to civilization. As long as it burns, they retain some
hope that they will be rescued and returned to society. When the fire ultimately burns
out, the boys disconnection from the structures of society is complete.
CHAPTER 3 : HUTS ON THE BEACH
In this chapter we find the frustration of both the leaders- Ralph and Jack.
Carrying a stick, Jack trails a pig through the thick jungle, but it evades him.
Irritated, he walks back to the beach, where he finds Ralph and Simon at work
building huts for the younger boys to live in. Everyone was to help building the
shelters except the hunters who went out to hunt pigs. But the bitter experience of
Ralph is that no one seemed to take things seriously. In fact Simon alone remains
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with him. Most of the other boys splash about and play in the lagoon. Ralph says that
all the boys act excited at meetings, but none of them is willing to work to make the
plans successful. He points out that Jacks hunters have failed to catch a single pig.
This makes Jack angry and he asks, Are you accusing? They come to the verge of
open rivalry. Their values are different. Ralph stands for shelter and fire while Jack is
only interested in hunting. Jack claims that although they have so far failed to bring
down a pig, they will soon have more success. Ralph also worries about the smaller
children, many of whom have nightmares and are unable to sleep. He tells Jack about
his concerns but Jack, still trying to think of ways to kill a pig, is not interested in
Ralphs problems. The feeling of rivalry again raises its head and Ralph retorts, All
you can talk about is, Pig, Pig, Pig. Ralph further complains that Jack and the
hunters are using their hunting duties as an excuse to avoid the real work. Jack
responds to Ralphs complaints commenting that the boys want meat. Jack and Ralph
continue to bitter and grow increasingly hostile toward each other. In order to forget
their bitter feelings, they decide to have a swim, but their feelings of mutual dislike
remain and fester. In the meantime Simon goes into the forest to pluck fruits and
enjoy his solitude among the flowers and creepers until dark.
Comments - We find in this chapter boys psychology once more in action.
They never take anything seriously. They are off bathing or eating or playing as they
please. The most important development in this chapter is the beginning of the
personal conflict between Ralph and Jack. The conflict between the two boys starts
as early as the election in chapter 1 but remains hidden beneath the surface, masked
by the feelings of friendship. In this chapter, however, the conflict erupts into verbal
argument for the first time. Where Ralph represents the orderly forces of civilization
and Jack represents the primal, instinctual urges, Simon represents a kind of
goodness that is innate rather than taught by human society. We see Simons kind
and generous nature through his actions: he helps Ralph to build the huts; helps the
little boys reach a high branch of fruit.
CHAPTER 4 : PAINTED FACES AND LONG HAIR
In this chapter the author gives us an idea of the life of the little boys who are
around six year of age. They are given the generic name littluns. Their life on
island soon develops a daily rhythm. They live a distinct life of their own. They eat a
lot of fruits and consequently suffer from constant stomach aches and diarrhoea. The
fear of beast makes them huddle together. Morning is pleasant with cool air and
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sweet smells, and the boys are able to play happily. They are often troubled by some
images. Piggy dismisses these images as mirages caused by sunlight striking the
water. The littluns, who spend most of their days eating fruit and playing with one
another, are particularly troubled by visions and bad dreams. They obey the
summons of the conch and Ralph is for them the link with the adult world. They
generally enjoy the meetings and play together on the beach building castles with
sand. On that particular day Roger and Maurice were on duty at the fire. When they
are relieved from duty, Roger cruelly walks through the castles built by the little
boys. He even throws stones at one of the boys, although he does remain careful
enough to avoid actually hitting the boy with his stones. Jack, obsessed with the idea
of killing a pig, paints his face with clay and charcoal and enters the jungle to hunt.
He thinks the only way to approach close to the pigs is to paint them. He is joined by
several other boys. He compels the twins, too, to join his hunting party. They were
supposed to be on duty at the fire, but Jack compels them. On the beach, Ralph and
Piggy see a ship on the horizon but they also see that the signal fire has gone out.
They hurry to the top of the hill, but it is too late to rekindle the flame. Ralph shouts
in despair, Come back! Come back, but the ship moves farther and farther. Ralph
is furious with Jack, because it was the hunters duty to see that the fire was
maintained. Ralph now notices a procession moving towards them. Jack and the
hunters return from the jungle, covered with blood and chanting a bizarre song. They
carry a dead pig on a stake between them. Furious at the hunters irresponsibility,
Ralph speaks gravely, You let the fire out. Jack could not understand Ralphs
mood and is irritated by the irrelevance of Ralphs words. However, he explains that
even the twins who were supposed to be on duty at the fire, were needed to complete
the ring. When Piggy shrilly complaints about the hunters immaturity, Jack slaps
him hard, breaking one of the lenses of his glasses. Jack taunts Piggy by mimicking
his whining voice. Ralph and Jack have a heated conversation. At last Jack admits
his responsibility in the failure of the signal fire. This puts him in the right and Ralph
obscurely in the wrong. The hunters admire him for his generous apology. Ralph
considers it a dirty verbal trick. Jack never apologizes to Piggy. Ralph goes to Piggy
to use his glasses to light a fire, and at that moment, Jacks friendly feelings toward
Ralph change to resentment. The positive action of gathering fire wood relieves the
tension. The boys roast the pig and the hunters dance wildly around the fire, singing
and reenacting the savagery of the hunt. When the noise dies down, Ralph announces
that he is calling a meeting and walks down the hill toward the beach, all by himself.
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hunt it down and kill it. There follows a heated discussion on the ghost and angry
words are exchanged between Piggy and Jack. Jack torments Piggy and runs away,
and many other boys run after him. Only Ralph, Piggy and Simon are left on the
platform. In the distance, the hunters who have followed Jack dance and chant their
hunting song. Piggy wants Ralph to blow the conch and call them back but Ralph
hesitates. He is not sure they would return. He feels dejected and tells Piggy and
Simon that he might give up the leadership of the group. But they reassure him that
the boys need his guidance and ask him to continue as chief. They think of what the
grown ups would have done in the circumstances. As the group goes back to the
shelters, the sound of someones wail echoes along the beach.
Comments - Ralph wants to hold a serious meeting regarding certain issues the ship passing away and the fire being neglected by the hunters. But like all other
meetings, this meeting also ends up in confusion. Ralph becomes unpopular with his
decision to have only one fire. Jack on the other hand becomes popular. He assures
them that he will hunt down the beast. He leads the boys out in a mock hunting and
Ralph hesitates to summon them back because he is not sure they will return.
Secondly, we find the beast appearing from the sea and it is frightening situation
because they are surrounded by the sea. Ralph finds himself helpless. In despair he
even thinks of giving up the leadership.
CHAPTER 6 : BEAST FROM AIR
In the darkness late that night, Ralph and Simon carry a littlun named Percival
back to the shelter before going to sleep. A sign from the world of grown-ups comes
in the night. At that time there was no child awake to read it. As the boys sleep,
military airplanes batter fiercely above the island. None of the boys sees the
explosions and flashes in the cloud because even the twins Sam and Eric, who were
supposed to watch the signal fire have fallen asleep. An aeroplane catches fire and a
figure drops down beneath a parachute. It lands on the mountain. His chute gets
tangled in some rocks and flaps in the wind, while his shape casts fearful shadows on
the ground. When the wind blows, its head seems to rise; peer across the mountain
and fall. But when the wind drops, the figure bows forward with its head between the
knees. It was the dead body of the pilot but the boys mistake it as the beast form
air. When Sam and Eric wake up, they tend to the fire to make the flames brighter.
Eric happens to see the twisted form of the dead parachutist and mistakes the
shadowy image for the figure of the dreaded beast. They rush back to the camp, wake
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Ralph up and tell him what they have seen. Ralph immediately summons an
assembly at which Sam and Eric describe frightening experience. They also claim
that the monster assaulted them Jack suggests that they should hunt it down. The
boys organize an expedition to search the island for monsters. They set out, armed
with wooden spears, and only Piggy and the littluns remain behind. Ralph allows
Jack to lead the search. The boys soon reach the part of the island that none of them
has explored before. They reach a narrow ledge of rock leading to a peak. The boys
are afraid to go across the ledge. As chief Ralph decides to go and investigate. Soon
Jack too joins him. They see a sort of half-cave but see no sign of the beast there.
They find it an ideal spot for a fort. The boys begin to play games, pushing rocks
into the sea, and many of them forget the purpose of the expedition. Ralph angrily
reminds them that they are looking for the beast and says that they must return to the
other mountain so that they can rebuild the signal fire. The other boys lost in playing
games are displeased by Ralphs commands but unwillingly obey.
Comments - We come to know here that a bloody war is waged elsewhere in
the world. Jack had wished a sign from the world of grown-ups. It comes in the
figure of a dead pilot. As fear about the beast grips the boys, the balance between
civilization and savagery on the island shifts, and Ralphs control over the group
diminishes. Jack alone courageously comes forward with the idea of hunting it down.
Thus he becomes a symbol of courage among the boys. It is true that Ralph takes the
risk and shows his courage at the castle rock. But his insistence to return to the
mountain against the wishes of the majority, makes him unpopular. He is obsessed
with the idea of the fire smoke and rescue.
CHAPTER 7 : SHADOWS AND TALL TREES
The boys return from the castle rock along a pig trail. When they reach the area
of fruit trees, they have their meal of fruit. Sitting on a rock, Ralph thinks of his dirty
clothes, overgrown hair and long finger nails. He gazes at the ocean and muses on
the fact that the boys have become undisciplined. As he looks out at the vast expanse
of the water, he feels that the ocean is like a divider, a barrier blocking any hope the
boys have of escaping the island. Simon, however, lifts Ralphs spirits by reassuring
him that he will get back to home. That afternoon Roger shows the droppings of a
pig and they follow it. Jack suggests they hunt the pig while they continue to search
for pig. Ralph remains alone thinking of home and the joy he had experienced,
watching the snow flakes fall. He thinks of the books he had read. Suddenly he hears
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the rush of the hoofs. He sees a pig running towards him. Excitedly he raises his
spear and hits it. But it runs away to safety. Jack comes up and tells him that he
should have waited a little more. Ralph is now thrilled and joins the hunters.
Although the pig escapes, the boys remain in frenzy in the aftermath of the hunt.
Excited, they reenact the chase among themselves with a boy named Robert playing
the pig. They dance, chant, and jab Robert with their spears. Eventually, they forget
the fact that they are playing a game. Beaten and in danger, Robert tries to drag
himself away. The group nearly kills Robert before they remember themselves.
When Robert suggests that they use a real pig in the game next time, Jack replies that
they should use a littlun instead. After this they decide to move towards the
mountain. It is already late afternoon and Maurice suggests they should get back to
Piggy and the littluns before dark. Only then Ralph thinks of it and feels it is better
that someone go to inform Piggy that they will return only after dark. Simon
volunteers to return to the littluns. Darkness falls, and Ralph proposes that they
should wait until morning to climb the mountain because it will be difficult to hunt
the monster at night. The majority of the boys agree with the idea as by now, they
were completely exhausted. But Jack alone insists that they should go alone. He
challenges Ralph to join the hunt, and Ralph finally agrees to go simply to regain his
position in the eyes of the group. While the two of them go up, the others return to
the camp. Soon Roger too joins the two. Ralph, Roger and Jack start to climb the
mountain, and then Ralph and Roger wait somewhere near the top while Jack climbs
alone to the summit. He returns, breathlessly claiming to have seen the monster.
Ralph and Roger climb up to have a look and see a terrifying specter, a large,
shadowy form with the shape of a giant ape, making a strange flapping sound in the
wind. At the same time the wind blows and the creature raises its head and peers at
them. Terrified, the boys hurry down the mountain to warn the group.
Comments - The pig-hunt and the boys play afterward makes clear one thing the power of human instincts towards savagery. The important development in this
chapter is that the search for the beast ends successfully. The beast spoken of by the
littluns becomes a reality even for the bigger boys. Had the boys climbed the
mountain in the daylight as Ralph wished, they would have seen the dead parachutist.
.As they go at night, however, they see the parachutist distorted by shadows and
believe it to the beast. As the story of the novel progresses it becomes clear that the
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beast is a symbolic manifestation of the boys primitive inner instincts. The beast
dominates the story now onwards.
CHAPTER 8 : GIFT FOR THE DARKNESS
Ralph, Roger and Jack tell the other boys what they have seen on the
mountaintop. Piggy is visibly frightened and asks Ralph if he is sure of the beast and
whether they will be safe down on the beach. Ralph is sure of one thing that they will
not be able to fight a thing of that size. Even Jack and his hunters will be powerless
against it. The hunters are after all Boys armed with sticks. This remark makes
Jack furious and he seizes the conch shell and blows into it clumsily, calling for an
assembly. When the boys gather around the platform, Jack addresses them. He tells
the boys that there is definitely a beast on the mountain and goes on to claim that
Ralph is a coward who should be removed from his leadership role. But no hands go
up to support him. In frustration he announces his decision to break away from
Ralph. He puts down the conch, jumps off the platform and walks away along the
beach, saying that anyone who likes is welcome to join him. Deeply troubled, Ralph
does not know what to do. Piggy meanwhile is thrilled to see Jack go, and Simon
suggests that they all return to the mountain to search for the beast. The other boys
are too afraid to act on his suggestion. Ralph slips into depression. But Piggy cheers
him up with an idea that they should light a fire on the beach rather than on the
mountain. Peggys idea restores Ralphs hope and he admires him. The boys set to
work and build a new fire. Many of the boys sneak away into the night to join Jacks
group. Piggy tries to convince Ralph that they are happier without them. He wants to
celebrate the occasion and goes into the forest with the twins to gather some fruits.
When they sit down to have the feast of fruits, Ralph notices that Simon too is
missing. In the meanwhile Jack too is happy with his small group of hunters. He
announces himself their chief. In a savage frenzy, the hunters kill a sow. Roger
drives his spear forcefully into the sows anus. Jack cuts her throat and they leave it
on a sharpened stick as an offering to the beast. Soon they move away with the meat.
Simon who had wandered off by himself, witnesses the drama of killing the sow and
the gift for darkness. He becomes afraid thinking that perhaps the beast might come
to accept the gift. It is swarmed with flies now. The sight mesmerizes him, and it
even seems as if the head comes to life. The head speaks to Simon in the voice of the
Lord of the Flies, ominously declaring that Simon will never be able to escape
him, for he lies within all human beings. Terrified and troubled by the apparition,
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Simon collapses in a faint. As Piggy and Ralph sit in the old camp thinking of the
fire, some painted creatures rush at their fire and steal burning sticks from the fire on
the beach. Jack stays back to announce that they are having a feast of pork that night.
He tells Ralphs followers that they are welcome to come to his feast that night and
even to join his group. The hungry boys, tempted by the idea of pigs meat, go to the
camp of Jack. Finally even Piggy and Ralph go to join the feast.
Comments - The relations between Ralph and Jack get much worse. Jack
cannot bear the insulting remarks of Ralph about his hunters. He summons an
assembly to remove Ralph from leadership. He organizes his camp. There is no
election of the leader. He simply announces that he is chief. His word is the law and
he takes decisions without inviting opinions from others as Ralph had done through
the assemblies. The democratic way of life is thrown overboard. He offers meat to
draw away more and more boys from Ralphs group. Another important thing in this
chapter is that Jack takes the boys back to the primitive life from civilization. Like
the primitive man Jack tries to appease the beast through offerings. For Jack the beast
becomes a necessity. The boys will stand behind him as long as they fear of the
beast. The most important development in this chapter is the Lord of the Flies scene.
For the first time in the novel there is mention of the Lord of the Flies. It is the
head of the killed sow swarmed with flies. It tells Simon in his fit, There is none to
help you expect me and Im the beast. Thus the beast and Lord of the Flies are
identified with each other. Further it tells, I am part of you. The beast or evil is
within every man and we cannot escape from it. Now it is the rule of Jack, the rule
of dictatorship. The smooth happy life of the boys under the democratic rule of
Ralph has ended. They start the evil by stealing fire.
CHAPTER 9 : A VIEW TO A DEATH
Simon awakens and finds the island darkened by rain clouds. His nose is
bleeding and he staggers towards the mountain in a daze. He crawls up and, in the
failing light, sees the dead pilot with his flapping parachute. Watching the parachute
rise and fall with the wind, Simon realizes that the boys have mistaken this harmless
object for the deadly beast. The parachute strings had given it the life-like
movements. This has plunged their entire group into chaos. When Simon sees the
corpse of the parachutist, he begins to vomit. When he is finished, he entangles the
parachute lines, freeing the parachute from the rocks. Now he wants to tell his
companions the truth. He finds that there is no fire by the platform. He, however,
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notices a fire farther down the beach. He walks down in that direction to tell the other
boys what he has seen. Ralph and Piggy realize that they are alone. Even Bill and
the twins have left for the camp of Jack. There is no point in their staying back alone.
So Piggy suggests that perhaps they should also go. When they reach the place the
feast was almost over. At the feast, the boys are laughing and eating the roasted pig.
They see Jack sitting like a king on a throne, with his face painted like a savage.
There are piles of meat, fruits and coconut shells filled with fresh water. Jack orders
meat for Ralph and Piggy and they too sit down and eat. He wants a drink and Henry
brings him a coconut shell. After the large meal, Jack extends an invitation to all of
Ralphs followers to join his tribe. Most of them accept, despite Ralphs attempt to
dissuade them. The boys one by one declare that they would join the tribe of Jack. At
this moment there starts heavy downpour. Ralph now taunts them about their
shelters. In response, Jack orders his tribe to do its wild hunting dance. The boys
again reenact the hunting of the pig and reach a high pitch of frenzied energy as they
chant and dance. Suddenly, the boys see a shadowy figure creep out on the forest it
is Simon. In their wild state, however, the boys do not recognize him. Shouting that
he is the beast, the boys descend upon Simon and start to tear him apart with their
bare hands and teeth. Simon tries desperately to explain what has happened and to
remind them of who he is. But he trips and plunges over the rocks onto the beach.
The boys fall on him violently and kill him. The storm explodes over the island. In
the whipping rain, the boys run for shelter. At the same time, the wind blows the
body of the parachutist off the side of the mountain and onto the beach. Howling
wind and waves wash Simons corpse into the ocean.
Comments - Simon finds out the mystery of the beast. He reaches the camp,
crawling on all fours. He is mistaken for the beast and is beaten to death. Simons
death exemplifies the power of evil within human soul. With the brutal, animalistic
murder of Simon, the last sign of civilized order on the island comes to an end, and
brutality and chaos takes over. The storm washes away the dead bodies of Simon and
the parachutist, eradicating the proof that the beast does not exist. Jack establishes his
tribe, becomes the chief and disregards the claims of Ralph. The democratic way of
life comes to an end as Jack sets up his dictatorship. He draws away the boys with
the lure of meat and a sense of security. The boys, now, disregard their democratic
civilized life. Jack places himself as the idol for them to adore. He tightens his grip
on the boys in every possible way. Jack is leading them back to barbarism.
157
hold a meeting to discuss their opinions. Ralph blows the conch shell, and the boys
who have not gone to join Jacks tribe assemble on the beach. Ralph once more
repeats his usual words about the fire. Now Jack has made it impossible for them to
keep the signal fire. Piggy wants that they should go to ask Jack to return his glasses.
He might be stronger but has to do it because whats rights right. So they decide
to set out for the camp of Jack, the castle Rock. They go as clean as they could. They
want to show that they are civilized as opposed to the savage life in the camp of Jack.
Ralph takes the conch shell to the castle Rock, hoping that it will remind Jacks
followers of his former authority. When they reach the place, they are challenged by
the guards. Ralph blows the conch shell, but the guards tell them to leave. Robert
tells him that Jack has gone out hunting and they are not to let them in. Suddenly,
Jack and a group of hunters emerge from the forest, dragging a dead pig. Jack
commands Ralph to leave his camp. Ralph demands that he should return Piggys
glasses as he is quite helpless without them. Further he says that there was no need to
steal them because they could have the fire whenever they needed. Jack immediately
becomes furious because he is accused as a thief. He rushes at Ralph with his spear
and they fight. Ralph struggles to make Jack understand the importance of the signal
fire. But the savages burst into laughter. Angrily Ralph calls them a pack of painted
fools. Jack orders his hunters to capture Sam and Eric and tie them. He expects Ralph
to make an attempt to rescue them. This makes Ralph furious and he calls Jack a
beast, a swine and a bloody thief. Ralph and Jack fight for the second time. Holding
the conch, Piggy tells them that they are acting like a crowd of kids. Roger shoves a
massive rock down the mountainside. Ralph hears the rock falling and throws
himself flat on the ground. It strikes Piggy, shatter the conch shell he is holding, and
knocks him off the mountainside to his death. This is the tragic end of Piggy. Now
Jack throws his spear at Ralph, and the other boys quickly join him. Ralph escapes
into the jungle. Roger and Jack begin to torture Sam and Eric, forcing them to submit
to Jacks authority and join his tribe.
Comments - The fight between the two leaders signify the struggle between
democracy and dictatorship. Piggy, the symbol of intelligence and reason is
mercilessly murdered. The conch shell, the symbol of ordered life and democratic
ways, is shattered to a thousand pieces. Now the dictatorship of Jack is firmly
established. Ralph has no choice but run for life.
159
the jungle. Jacks hunters, with their sharpened sticks, reach the beach. The officer
thinks that they are having a game. When he learns what has happened on the island,
the officer is reproachful. He asks how this group and the English boys could have
lost all reverence for the rules of civilization in such a short time. Ralph bursts into
tears and the other boys gather round him. They also weep as if in sympathy. Moved
and embarassed, the naval officer, gives them time to regain their composure before
taking them to the cruiser.
Comments - The boys are finally rescued and their life of loneliness ends. With
the destruction of the pigs skull, their safety comes closer. The fire does its double
function of destruction and salvation. Whatever the circumstance in which a man
finds himself, he should hold up his traditions, civilization and not fall into barbarism
as the boys under Jack does. This is the message that Golding seems to give through
the novel.
2.
4.
c) Piggy
d) Simon
c) Roger
d) Percival
c) Piggy
d) Simon
7.
b) Jack
a) Ralph
6.
d) 1965
are twins.
a) Ralph
5.
c) 1945
3.
b) 1989
b) Jack
c) Simon
d) Percival
c) Simon
9.
d) The beast
c) Fire
d) The beast
b) Jack
c) Simon
d) Piggy
c) Roger
d) Percival
b) Jack
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10. What did Jack and his followers steal from the camp of Ralph?
11. Who is the first boy introduced by Golding in the novel?
165
Chapter 7
scurf (N) flakes on the surface of the skin that form as fresh skin develops
below, occurring especially as dandruff.
brine (N) water saturated or strongly impregnated with salt; seawater.
obtuse (Adj) annoyingly insensitive or slow to understand.
swirl (V) move or cause to move in a twisting or spiraling pattern.
funk(N) - a state of panic or depression
drench (V) - wet thoroughly; soak
daunt (V) cause to feel intimidated or apprehensive
sputter (V) - say in a rapid indistinct way
slither (V) move smoothly over a surface with a twisting motion
bulge (N) a rounded swelling distorting a flat surface
bravado (N) boldness intended to impress or intimidate
nausea (N) a feeling of sickness with an inclination to vomit.
Chapter 8
serenade (N) - a piece of music sung or played in the open air, especially by a
man at night under the window of his beloved.
tremor (N) - a sudden feeling of fear or excitement
babble (V) talk rapidly and continuously in a foolish, excited, or
incomprehensible way.
skewer (N) a long piece of wood or metal used for holding pieces of food
together during cooking.
cynic (N) a person who believes that people are motivated purely by selfinterest.
canyon (N) - a deep gorge, especially a river flowing through it.
obscene (Adj) - offensive or disgusting by accepted standards of morality and
decency.
166
Lord of the Flies (Ph) - in the Jewish hierarchy of demons Beelzebub is called,
Lord of the Flies and he is considered the true representative of false gods.
Chapter 9
corpulent (Adj) (of a person) fat
squirt (V) wet with a jet of liquid
turf (N) grass and the surface layer of earth held together by its roots.
Chapter 10
shrill (Adj) (of a voice or sound ) high-pitched and piercing
diminish (V) make or become less
cram (V) force too many (people or things) into a room or container
spangle (N) a spot of bright colour or light
woebegone (Adj) sad or miserable in appearance
convulsion (N) a sudden, violent, irregular movement of the body caused by
involuntary contraction
exult (V) show or feel triumphant elation.
Chapter 11
myopia (N) short-sightedness
devastate (V) destroy or ruin
propitiate (V) appease
crouch (V) adopt a position where the knees are bent and the upper body is
brought forward and down
shaggy (Adj.) (of hair or fur) long, thick and unkempt.
jeer (V) make rude and mocking remarks at someone
truculent (Adj.) eager or quick or argue to fight
falter (V) loose strength or momentum/ move or speak hesitantly
foliage (N) plant leaves, collectively.
167
Chapter 12
covet (V) yearn to possess
ambush (N) a surprise attack by people lying in wait in a concealed position.
inimical (Adj.) tending to obstruct or harm; hostile
antiphonal (Adj.) (of church music) sung, recited or played alternately by two
groups.
ravenous (Adj.) voraciously hungry
ensconce (V) establish in a comfortable, safe, or secret place
ululate (V) howl or wail, typically to express grief
diaphragm (N) a thin sheet of material forming a partition
excruciate (V) torment physically or mentally
squirm (V) twist the body from side to side, especially due to nervousness or
discomfort
spasms (N) a sudden brief spell of activity or sensation.
Correct Alternatives:
1. c) 1945
2. b) Jack
4. d) Percival
5. c) Piggy
6. c) Simon
7. a) The Conch
8. a) The Conch
9. b) Jack
10. b) Jack
II. 1.
2.
3.
Ralph
4.
Because they mistake Simon for the beast and kill him.
5.
6.
Jack
7.
8.
9.
Roger
7.6 Exercises:
A. Write answers of the following questions in four/five sentences each.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
7.
8.
Ralph
9.
Jack
10. Piggy
C. Essay/ descriptive type questions.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
How does difference of opinion and rivalry between Ralph and Jack
develop?
169
In what sense Goldings Lord of the Flies differs from Ballantynes Coral
Island, since both deal with the adventures of English boys on an island?
170
Unit-8
Critical Analysis of Lord of the Flies
Contents
8.0 Objectives
8.1 Introduction
8.2 Plot Structure and Setting
8.3 Check your progress
8.4 Answers to check your progress
8.5 Exercises
8.6 References for further reading
8.0 Objectives:
The aim of the unit is to give you tools to understand and analyse the prescribed
novel on your own. After going through this unit, you should be able to analyse the
characters, the theme/s, setting, point of view, and the use of symbols and imagery;
in short, you will be able to critically appreciate the novel.
8.1 Introduction:
In the last two units you have already got introduced to the novel Lord of the
Flies, its writer and also studied at some length the plot structure of the novel. In this
Unit, we are going to go a step further and try to understand what the writer is trying
to say through this novel and how this is achieved by use of some tools and
techniques.
Critical Analysis:
Critical analysis explains what a work of literature means, and how it means it.
The ultimate purpose of critical analysis is to get a deeper understanding and a fuller
appreciation of the text to learn to uncover or create richer, denser, more interesting
meanings. As literature uses language, images and symbols, our analysis should
171
address these elements. A literary work is also located in a specific time and place
and hence we should also be aware of the cultural delineations of the work and its
ideological aspects.
A novel is a narrative. It has characters, a setting, is told by a narrator, and is an
attempt to represent 'the world' in some way. So, while analyzing a novel, elements
like plot, character, theme, setting, the plot structure, the narrator, the world-view,
symbols-imagery, etc., have to be analysed. We are going to look at some of these in
the sections below.
Let us start with understanding how Golding structures the plot, creates his
characters and how this characterization and use of symbols, motifs help him to bring
in focus some particular themes or ideas.
The plot is structured round the theme/idea of the innate evil in human nature.
172
8.2.2 Setting:
Setting is when and where the work takes place. Elements of setting include
location, time period, time of day, weather, social atmosphere, and economic
conditions. Setting creates mood or atmosphere. To analyse the setting, make use of
questions like: Does the setting reflect the works theme? How does the setting
impact the characters? Does a change in the setting affect the mood, characters, or
conflict?
The setting of Lord of the Flies is a key aspect to everything that happens in this
novel.
Setting (Time): Near future/ during nuclear war
173
A mountain at one end here the boys decide to keep the signal fire
burning.
2.
At the other end is the castle rock where jack and his tribe create their
fortress.
3.
In between these two, is the forest. In it is Simons secret place and the
clearing used by the boys to impel the Lord of the Flies on a stake as an
offering.
4.
The island is depicted as boat-shaped. This is also symbolic because boat shape
is an ancient symbol of civilization. The island symbolizes isolation too.
b. In 1920
c. In 2020
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
The place where Jack and his tribe create their fortress at the end of the
novel.
b.
c.
d.
Where was the airplane carrying the boys going when it met the crash?
a.
c.
To Germany
d. To America
Circular
b. Triangular
c.
Like a boat
d. Like a rocket
On the Beach
b. on the lagoon
c.
d. On the mountaintop
c.
Rising action
b. Falling action
c.
Climax
d. Conflict
that the evil, the savagery exists within the boys, within him, within human beings.
This knowledge brings complete gloom over him but it also helps him to throw down
the Lord of the Flies.
2. Piggy: Piggy is a fat, asthmatic, bespectacled boy who is physically very
unfit to live in a jungle. He is a whimpering child who is an orphan and lived with his
auntie. His language reveals comes from a lower class than the other boys. He is
physically unattractive. However, he is an intelligent boy. Even if Ralph found the
conch, it is Piggy who told him how to use it. It is his glasses that help to create fire.
He is thoughtful and he does most of the thinking for Ralph and counsels him. He
supports Ralphs democratic parliamentary rule. He cant accept the existence of the
beast as the idea is unscientific.
If Ralph is the public face of civilisation, Piggy is its voice. He is the one who
speaks for the littluns and defends their rights. He tries to create civilization in the
wilderness for he knows civilisation protects the weak and different but the
wilderness doesnt. The wilderness, in fact, as symbolized by Jack, Roger, and their
followers, chooses the weak and different as its first prey. The boys soon make the
connection between the boy Piggy and the animals piggies. Piggy is made into a
favourite victim and his good ideas, in the end, count for nothing. He sounds too
much like a parent making him an outcast. For the most part, Piggy is right; but this
is not enough. Piggy is not beautiful, popular, strong, or charismatic, and so no one
really likes him. And no one wants him to be right. But, when he is found to be right,
they resent him for it. He speaks again and again, and even if what he says is right,
his presentation is weak and done at the wrong time. At the very end, when he says"Which is betterto have rules and agree, or to hunt and kill?" he is again the
voice of civilisation. But, unfortunately, this is said at the wrong time. He has
seriously misjudged the mood of the boys and so his mention of the hunt transforms
practically into an invitation to hunt him.
Piggys role is highly symbolic. Piggys inventiveness frequently leads to
innovation, such as the makeshift sundial that the boys use to tell time. Piggy
represents the scientific, rational side of civilization. His gradual loss of sight and
loss of influence and finally his death shows gradual degeneration of the boys.
3. Jack: Golding depicts Jack Merridew as a thin, tall boy with red hair and
light blue eyes. Jack is Ralph's antagonist in the novel. He represents the instinct for
177
savagery and power within human beings. As Ralph and Piggy represent the
civilizing instinct, he is in constant conflict with them, especially with Piggy. By the
end of the novel, Jack has learned to use the fear in the minds of the boys to control
their behaviour. Golding seems to remind us of how religion and superstition can be
manipulated as instruments of power.
We see him first as the leader of the group of choir boys who are dressed in a
kind of uniform. Jack makes them march in military style. It points to his dictatorial
leadership which, at the end of the novel, becomes increasingly wild, barbaric and
cruel. In the beginning, these features are not so obvious, probably due to yet strong
control of the rules of adult world instilled in him by parents and society. When he
first sees the pig, he is not able to kill it but gradually he gives up himself completely
to bloodlust. Jack represents some worst aspects of human nature when uncontrolled
by society.
When Jack gets to rule, he just unchains the wickedness of human nature. He
starts punishing other children. He is able to increase the frenzy to a level where it
leads to the murder of Simon. The twins are tortured until they accept his authority.
He leads the boys to kill Ralph too, but Ralph is saved at the last moment by the
sudden arrival of the naval officer to rescue the boys.
His red hair and the mask of war paint would seem to make him look almost
devil-like.
4. Simon: Simon is a shy and sensitive boy in the group. He is a small, thin
boy with pointed chin and very bright eyes. His hair is coarse and black and his
forehead is low and broad. He goes barefooted. He was originally a part of the choir
group. He is very helpful in nature. He helps the litlluns and also Ralph to build the
shelters.
Simon represents the innate spiritual goodness in human beings and at the
opposite end of Jacks evil. His goodness doesnt spring from the rules imposed by
the society. So he stands on a very different plane from that of Jack (innate evil) and
Ralph and Piggy (imposed morality of civilisation). While other boys want to act
good because they are conditioned by the rules of the adults, Simon acts moral
because he believes in the value of morality.
As his behaviour is different, he gets isolated from others and is considered
odd by other boys. But he is closely connected to nature and has extraordinary
178
experiences when listening to the sounds on the island. He likes to be alone with
nature and is often walking alone in a dreamy state. He has intuitive intelligence and
shows exceptional bravery too. Simon suffers from frequent fits of fainting and
hallucination. He is asthmatic. He could be epileptic in nature. He is a visionary and
earlier in the novel has predicted to Ralph that Ralph will get back alright implying
that only Ralph (but not Simon) will be saved. He has a hallucination that the Lord
of the Flies (the Sows head left on stick by Jack as an offering to the beast) is
deriding and taunting him. The pig's head tells Simon that the boys themselves
"created" the beast and claims that the real beast is inside them all. After this
hallucination, Simon also discovers that the supposed beast on the mountain is just a
dead parachutist caught on the mountain. He comes to share this knowledge with
other boys, but the boys, ironically, mistake him for the beast and kill him brutally in
their frenzied dance. It is implied that Ralph, Piggy, Sam and Eric also take part in
this killing. In the novel, Simon becomes a Christ figure who tries to bring truth
(salvation) to the boys; but they refuse to hear him and kill him instead. He
represents peace and positivity and his death represents the loss of truth, innocence
and common sense.
5. Roger: Roger is a slight and secretive boy with black hair and low
forehead. He is made lieutenant of his tribe by Jack. Roger is a sadistic boy and
Jack's close companion. As long as he is under the control of civilised laws, he
doesnt hurt anyone (though we see him throwing stones at littluns in the earlier part)
But gradually, he turns completely savage, ignoring all the rules of civilized
behaviour. Piggy gets killed because Roger pushes the boulder at him which was not
thrown in fun to miss. He becomes the executioner and torturer of Jacks tribe. He
makes the twins to join the tribe by torturing them. The fact that he carried a stick
sharpened at both ends in the final hunt for Ralph suggests that he intended to offer
Ralphs head as a sacrifice to the beast. He represents the person who enjoys hurting
others, and is only restrained by the rules of society.
6. Sam and Eric: Sam and Eric, a pair of twins, are always together, are
called Samneric as they are treated as a single entity by the boys. They alternate
sentences when they talk. They are very likeable, irresponsible and fickle boys. They
serve the person who is the current leader and so are with Ralph until Jack takes over
his position. They let the fire go out when they were assigned the duty to look after
it. They are the ones who see the beast (the dead parachutist).
179
The twins represent the unthinking masses of the common people peaceful and
good-natured but easily influenced and convinced to serve any leader.
Check your Progress
A. Select the correct alternative:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
3 to 11
b)
6 to 12
c)
7 to 13
d)
8 to 12
Ralph
b)
Percival
c)
Eric
d)
Simon
A conch shell
b)
A map
c)
A dead parachutist
d)
Remains of a ship
Babies
b)
Hooligans
c)
Littluns
d)
Brats
6.
7.
8.
b)
He is angry that the boys will not vote for a new leader
c)
d)
b)
c)
An underwater cave
d)
His sandcastle
Ralph
b)
Simon
c)
Piggy
d)
Jack
Match the characters on the left with the qualities they represent on the
right.
i. Ralph
a. Civilisation
ii. Piggy
b. Goodness
iii. Simon
c. Rationality
iv. Roger
d. Sadism
v. Jack
e. Masses
vi. Samneric
f. Evil
and plot of the novel are connected to each other. To uncover the theme, look out for
the following:
Allusions
Some of the major themes in Lord of the Flies are discussed here:
1. Human Nature: Golding has said that he wanted to trace so The English
boys left alone on a remote island are as if in an experiment to see what happens
when controls of society are loosened. Golding shows that the civilization that the
boys initially tried to develop in their world collapses not because of any enemy
outside, but due to their innate savagery. Most of the children do not prefer to work
hard or to follow rules. They prefer to have fun and play games. These games
become increasingly menacing and savage. Instead of using logic and reason, they
succumb to fear. This fear is not really of some animal, but of the unknown. Finally,
Golding shows that selfishness, cruelty, will to dominate and have power prove
much more powerful than the attempts to maintain some resemblance to a civilized
society governed by moral and rational rules. Though the boys think the beast lives
in the jungle, Golding makes it clear that it exists within their hearts.
2. Civilisation versus Savagery: Golding depicts civilization as a veil that
through its rules and laws just masks the evil within every individual. Civilisation
doesnt eliminate the beast. The beast lives on beneath this veil. The Lord of the Flies
is about civilization giving way to the savagery within human nature. Ironically,
Golding shows a group of British boys. This is done as the British consider
themselves an extremely supremely civilized society and superior to all other
communities. Even these British children become savages ruled only by fear,
superstition, and desire. Hints of the savage beast within children are shown long
before they succumb to Jacks poser. Piggy's love of food, the way the boys enjoy
when Jack mocks Piggy, their irrational fear of the "beast" are such hints. However,
if the boys on the island give up civilization for savagery, are they rescued when the
adults finally come and stop their savage behavior? Golding depicts that these
supposedly "civilized" adults are engaged in a savage and brutal nuclear world war.
182
So, both are savage; and as such, the boys are not really rescued at the end from
savagery.
3. The Weak/ the strong: This theme is related to the earlier one. Golding delves
into the power dynamics on the island. Boys want to be respected and to belong to
the group. This is not just happening on the island in the novel, but is observed
among all school children. The main way they choose to gain respect is to seem
strong and powerful. In the novel, this leads them to mock the weaker boys, or to
ignore them and finally to physically hurt them. This is a sign of vulnerability as a
boy who feels vulnerable, chooses to target a weaker boy to save himself.
Piggy is aware that he is weak and hence at danger in this set up. And wants to
return to the civilized society of the adults as civilization protects the weak, the
wilderness doesnt.
4. Innate goodness: The boys can be divided into two neat groups those like
Jack who succumb to the violence and savagery and those like Ralph and Piggy
whose love for righteousness is result mainly from fear of rules imposed by the
society. However, Golding also shows through Simon an alternative to civilized
suppression and beastly savagery. While other boys want to act good because they
are conditioned by the rules of the adults, Simon acts moral because he believes in
the value of morality from his heart. He is a real truth-seeker, who is not afraid to
look into his own heart and to accept that there is a beast within, and face it head-on.
5. Loss of Innocence: The novel traces a journey the well-behaved children
waiting for rescue in the beginning of the novel to the violent bloodthirsty savages
with no desire to return to civilization at the end of the novel. The loss of innocence
resulting in their hunting, torturing and killing animals and human beings, is ,
according to Golding, a result of innate savagery within human beings. This is
underlined at the end of the novel when Ralph weeps when he is rescued from the
island and the hunters:
Ralph wept for the end of innocence, the darkness of mans heart, and the fall
through the air of a true, wise friend called Piggy.
6. The universal fascination with power: Lust for power seems to be a universal
feature. It is exhibited even in the play of children who like to take on roles
associated with power father, police officer, king, hero, etc. This tendency is used
by Golding in the novel in many forms. For example, a young child Henry amuses
183
himself on the beach by playing, controlling small sea creatures and experiencing
power over them. This desire for power is the reason for all the strife on the island.
Jack wants to be the leader and forms his own tribe of hunters. Each child tries to
assume power by finding a weaker child and exerting power over him. However,
Golding depicts that this feeling of power and control is just an illusion of mastery.
And so, it is soon lost. Even Jacks power is temporary and is gone the moment
adults arrive to rescue them. Various means of gaining power-physical force,
knowledge, looks, insight, currency (here meat) are tested and proved to be false.
7. The universality of fear: Fear is a fundamental emotion. But like power
struggles, fear, if beyond useful limits, can become a destructive force. Secondly,
people, especially children, when facing sudden changes, create an imaginary danger
if some real danger is not present. The same happens in the novel. The real cause for
fear for the children should be the failure of getting rescued and being returned to the
world of adults. But this fear is mentioned only by Piggy.
2.
Motifs:
Motifs are recurring structures, contrasts, and literary devices that can help to
develop and inform the texts major themes. Golding uses the following in Lord of
the Flies:
3.
Biblical parallels
Natural beauty
Symbols:
Symbols are objects, characters, figures, and colors used to represent abstract
ideas or concepts. Symbols represent something else because they bring about an
association to the mind of the reader. They help the author to show how two
seemingly different things are actually related. Symbols are of two types:
1.
2.
An object that has no particular meaning on its own but that becomes
symbolic only from the way it is used in the work.
184
Sometimes it is not only objects but actions too can be symbolic. The entire structure
of a story can be symbolic on some conceptual idea, as in an allegory.
Golding uses a number of symbols in this novel. Some are discussed here.
1. The Conch Shell: The conch is discovered by Ralph and Piggy on the beach.
Piggy helps Ralph to learn to blow it. Piggy also suggests to Ralph the use it can be
put to- to call the other boys and using it as a symbol of legitimacy and democratic
power. So, conch is a symbol of civilastion. When Piggy dies under the boulder, the
conch is also shattered. This signifies the fall of the civilized instinct among the
stranded boys.
2. Piggys Glasses: Piggy, the most rational and intelligent of the boys wears
glasses. These glasses are used to create fire. The glasses represent the power of
science and intellectual efforts.
3. The Signal Fire: Keeping the signal fire burning is essential to ensure that
elders are able to locate the lost boys and rescue them. So, the signal fire signifies the
degree to which the children are connected with the adult civilized world. As long as
the boys are fixed on being rescued, the fire is kept burning. But when it goes out, it
indicates the boys have strayed away from their desire to be rescued. However, at the
end of the novel, not the signal fire but the huge fire resulting from the hunters
savage behavior attracts the attention of the adults, and brings a ship to rescue them.
4. The Beast: The beast is a symbol used for the savage urges within human
mind. This beast is kept in control by civilization. Civilisation compels people to act
in a rational and moral way. In the novel, Ralph and Piggy do this. When civilization
loses its control, the beast is released, as in the case of Jack and his tribe. The beast
grows in the same proportion as the belief in the beast grows. It grows so much that
in the later part of the novel, the boys are treating it as a totemic god and offering it
sacrifices.
5. The Lord of the Flies: The Lord of the Flies is actually the cut head of the sow
hunted by Jacks tribe and left as an offering impaled on a stake at the forest glade.
This is a complicated symbol. Covered with flies, the head is seen by Simon when he
goes to his favourite place the forest glade, which symbolised the paradise earlier.
Simon hallucinates that the head speaks to him and tells him the truth that evil lies
with every human being. When the head says it will have some fun with Simon, it
foreshadows Simons death. So, the head/ Lord of the Flies is a physical sign of the
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beast and also a kind of Satan figure who stirs up the beast in every person. So, if
Simon is linked with Jesus, Lord of the Flies is related to devil. Secondly, Lord of
the Flies is literal translation of the biblical name Beelsebub, a powerful demon in
hell or the devil himself.
6. Ralph, Piggy, Jack, Simon, and Roger: Many characters in the novel signify
some important ideas/themes. For example, Ralph Order, Leadership; Piggy
Scientific/intellectual and rational aspect of civilization; Simon natural human
goodness; Jack- innate savagery in human heart; Roger- brutality and sadism; Eric
and Sam Masses; Littluns common people; the big boys ruling class;
Other symbols: Knife, Huts, the boys, the island, etc.
The novel has a lot of references to the book Coral Island, written in 19th
century by R.M Ballantyne. The Coral Island story was about three boys named,
Ralph, Peterkin, and Jack landing on an island.
4.
Point of View:
The narrator speaks in the third person, primarily focusing on Ralphs point of
view but following Jack and Simon in certain episodes. The narrator is omniscient
and gives us access to the characters inner thoughts.
2.
What powers does Jack says the beast has after Simons murder?
a.
b.
c.
d.
b.
c.
d.
3.
4.
5.
Piggy
b.
Simon
c.
Clark
d.
A littlun
Where does the beast go during the day, according to one littlun?
a.
b.
c.
d.
Match the symbol on the left with what it stands for on the right.
i. Conch shell
ii. Glasses
iii. Huts
c. Violence
iv. Knife
d. Power of democracy
v. Boys
e. Intellectual efforts
8.4 Summary:
In this unit you have read how to critically appreciate a novel by analyzing its
plot, structure, themes, characters, symbols, motifs and point of view.
Antagonist: The entity that acts to frustrate the goals of the protagonist. The
antagonist is usually another character but may also be a non-human force.
Plot: The arrangement of the events in a story, including the sequence in which
they are told, the relative emphasis they are given, and the causal connections
between events.
Conflict: The central struggle that moves the plot forward. The conflict can be
the protagonists struggle against fate, nature, society, or another person.
Climax: The moment of greatest intensity in a text or the major turning point in
the plot.
Setting: The location of a narrative in time and space. Setting creates mood or
atmosphere.
Theme: A fundamental and universal idea explored in a literary work.
Symbol: An object, character, figure, or color that is used to represent an
abstract idea or concept.
Motif: A recurring idea, structure, contrast, or device that develops or informs
the major themes of a work of literature.
Point of View: The perspective that a narrative takes toward the events it
describes.
Plot: The arrangement of the events in a story, including the sequence in which
they are told, the relative emphasis they are given, and the causal connections
between events.
8.8 Exercises
Q. 1
Discuss the following questions with your friends and write down in short
what you think :
A.
1.
Why does Golding show at the end of the novel Lord of the Flies that the
boys are rescued? How does this affect the total meaning of the text? What
other endings can you think of? What will be the effect of these endings on
the meaning of the total work?
2.
In Chapter One, we meet all the boys. How do the various introductions of
each boy set up the story that follows?
3.
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B. 1.
Charact
er
Family
backgrou
nd
Princip Princip
al
al
Actions Emotio
ns
At
At
the
the
begin end
ning
Symboliz
es/ Type
Ralph
Piggy
Jack
Merride
w
Simon
Roger
SamEric
2.
Before we are told the names of the boys, the author uses labels such as "the fair
boy," and "the fat boy". Why do you think the author does this? This is a
characterization tool. What is the effect of using it?
3.
4.
C.
1.
The story is about a group of boys waiting for rescue on an isolataed island.
What would adults do if they are caught in a similar situation?
2.
3.
What role do fear and struggle for power play in Lord of the Flies?
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4.
Lord of the Flies was published in 1954. How far is its message relevant today?
5.
We hear just one female voice- that of Piggys aunt that too indirectly through
Piggy. Would this story have been different in any important ways if it were a
group of girls stranded on the island? Is this a story about the capacity of human
beings for violence, or is it a story about the male capacity for violence?
Piggy
2.
Simon
3.
4.
5.
2.
Bring out the plot structure of the novel Lord of the Flies.
3.
Write a detailed note on the use made of images, symbols and motifs in the
novel Lord of the Flies.
4.
What, according to you, is the major theme of the novel Lord of the Flies?
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