Character Sketch of Deven
Character Sketch of Deven
Character Sketch of Deven
He resided at Mirpore and was a Hindi professor at Lala Ram Lal College.
In chapter two, Anita Desai gives the description of Mirpore. It lacked a ‘river’ and
the village had ‘an artificial tank’ with no water but with a layer of ‘bright green
scum’. River represents the flow of life which lacked not only in the village but also
He was a smoker.
1. Through the novel ‘In Custody’, Anita Desai portrays the situation of women
2. Deven had an arrange marriage with Sarla. Like every girl and a bride, she had
aspirations and dreams. She dreamt of stepping out of a car with bag full of
groceries, filling them into a refrigerator and then ringing up her friends from
sympathy to and loving his wife, he did not treat her respectfully.
3. He protested against her disappointments by taking ‘his revenge upon her for
harboring it’ by throwing away dishes that were not cooked to his liking and
4. Deven received two letters. Though he recognized the handwriting of his wife,
he left it unopened and read the letter received from Nur. This shows that he
5. The next morning when he reached home, he saw that his wife has returned.
He asked her why she did not inform him that she was returning that day.
complete control over the family. There was a change in his attitude as he
realized that Sarla too is the victim of the society. Deven wanted to share his
disappointments with Sarla but he thought “how else he could tell her he
shared all her disappointments and woe?” He could not make the move as he
considered himself superior to her and did not want to show his emotions.
Anita Desai writes, “But he could not make that move: it would have
permanently undermined his position of power over her, a position that was as
important to her as to him: if she ceased to believe in it, what would there be
7. Imtiaz Begum, the younger wife of Nur was going to recite poetry on her
birthday. Deven thought that she was not worth listening to and compared her
to a monkey. He felt that women are not meant to recite poetry and are only
8. He thought that she could be barred from the society because of the way she is
dressed.
9. Deven uses animal imagery to describe Imtiaz Begum. He thought that her
hair was hung over her shoulders like ‘two rats’ tails’ and she had ‘reptilian
10. In the last chapter of the novel, Imtiaz wrote a letter to Deven. She mentioned
that the reason he left the mehfil when she was singing her verse was that he
could not tolerate a woman sing and match the gifts of men. Moreover, she
asked him if he was not guilty to assume that a male has a right to ‘brains,
imposed by patriarchal society. She struggled and sent her poems to Deven in
order to show that women too are good poets and writers like men. Like
Deven, many men looked down upon women and treated them disrespectfully.
Deven created many illusions in his mind and tried to live with these illusions until he
1. Deven considered Nur, the famous Urdu poet as his ‘hero’. He thought that Nur
resided at a very good place. But when he was on his journey to his home, he saw
that the place where he lived i.e., Chandni Chowk was like a maze and crowded.
“He knew he could not be near the poet’s residence in this pullulating honeycomb
2. When he was asked by Murad to interview him, he imagined that he was living
“either surrounded by elderly, sage and dignified litterateurs or else entirely alone,
in divine isolation.” (pg. 49) When Deven went to meet him, he saw the reality
wherein the clowns and jugglers were around him or he with them.
3. In his youth, he had the illusion of having ‘free-will’ but he realized that it was a
trap. He thought that marriage, family and job had placed him in a cage.
4. His friendship with Nur gave him an illusion that the door of his trap was opened
and he could escape into a wider world and find freedom. But this wider world
was an illusion too. He felt like trapped animal in a cage who was not able to find
1. In chapter 1, the following line, “lie low and remain invisible”, introduces the
hefty meal, even when he could barely make ends meet on his own salary.
husband to Sarla, a good father to his Manu, or a good Hindi professor. He had to
leave his dream childhood love of learning the Urdu language and take up
teaching in Hindi because the latter served as a better financial investment, plus
3. His life has become a series of self and non-self-imposed limitations, which he
had no choice but to adhere to. He had faced more disappointments than
fulfilments. Due to this, and his estranged marriage with Sarla, Mirpore had
become “a trap” or “a cruel prison” where Deven felt like a “caged animal in the
zoo.” Hence, when Murad offered him to go to Delhi to interview Nur, he agreed
to it. He saw that as a chance of escaping his limitations, finally doing something
for the language he loved so much since his childhood. His quest of interviewing
he puts the people on an illusionary pedestal. Like the characters of Nur, Murad,
or ‘an ideal student’ listening to his class, he prefers to live in his illusions, which
in a way, nurture his existential crisis and make him powerless enough to succumb
5. However, when he begins the interview of Nur, we can see a marked change in his
personality. In chapter 6, through the lines- “he has been allotted a role in his
life”- Deven finally seems to realise his role as a ‘custodian’ of Urdu language. He
starts seeing himself as someone important, on whom the revival and safeguarding
who is impatient at Nur for reciting his poetry for the interviews. He screams at
him and says, “Poets cannot be rushed”, which impresses Murad, thus
7. Even in chapter 11, we can see another existential crisis, when becomes frustrated
as he realises that his efforts have all been in vain. He isn't able to support his wife
and child, or be a good lecturer or even revive the crumbling Urdu department in
with his wife, Sarla, but is unable to do so, because he doesn't want her to think of
8. Out of this sheer frustration and outrage, he goes out for a walk, in the last
chapter, during very late hours of night. The metaphor of him continuing to walk
after he pulls out the thorn from his foot becomes symbolic of his complete
development, where he vows to face every problem in his life head-on, and finally
Language Politics
crumble down. Even Congress leadership had given preference to Hindu over
Deven’s first love has always been Urdu language since childhood, but in order to
3. Hindi is shown as a language with better scopes and areas of recognition in the
novel. Even Nur says that all the awards are given to famous Hindi writers and
poets, while the Urdu writers are side-lined and marginalised. This statement
highlights how the grandeur of Urdu language is losing over time. Even Siddiqui,
Urdu professor says that his haveli would soon turn into dust, just like the Urdu
language itself.
finds himself unable to retaliate because on one hand, Urdu has been the language
which he had loved and enjoyed with his father. It was the reason why he had
such a deep relationship with his father. But on the other hand, Hindi language
was the one providing him with means of sustenance, his livelihood and job. He is
shown to be torn between the language he loves and the language which makes
him earn.
5. Furthermore, on extending the language politics, the same idea can be applied to
Hindi and English language, where English, being a global language has
6. Thus, the languages have been reduced to the means of earning livelihood, instead
To sum up, all through his childhood and youth he had known only one way to deal with life
and that was to ‘lie low and remain invisible’. But by the end of the novel, there is the
development of Deven wherein he was ready to take a stand for himself and follow his own
path. In the initial chapters of the novel, Deven felt like he is stuck in a trap but by the end of
the novel, he finds a purpose to live in his life i.e., to take efforts, face obstacles to preserve