Chapter - 3 Social Concerns
Chapter - 3 Social Concerns
SOCIAL CONCERNS
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CHAPTER –3
SOCIAL CONCERNS
R.K. Narayan’s fiction forms the matrix of triumph for Indian creative
literature in English. Narayan’s fifty years of fiction writing earned him immense
reputation both in India and abroad. The most fascinating feature of his personality is
that he is a pure Indian both in thought and spirit despite his preference for English
over his mother language for the expression of his creative urge. His fiction mirrors
the microcosmic India caught in the crucible of tradition and change. M.K. Naik
opines, “R.K. Narayan is the novelist of the individual man, just as Mulk Raj Anand
is the novelist of the social man, and Raja Rao that of metaphysical man.”1
Narayan chooses a central character through whose view-point he looks at the
various aspects of society as a silent onlooker. Mulk Raj Anand is a humanist and,
therefore, to bring out human predicament is his prime concern. Coolie is a study of
village-boy’s sufferings who because of poverty is compelled to work as a servant.
Untouchable throws light on the miserable condition of outcaste people. Two Leaves
and a Bud exposes the exploitation of the peasants by the Assam Tea Estate owners.
Anand’s concern, therefore, is the economic exploitation and class distinction.
The novels, The Village, Across the Black Water and The Sword and the Sickle
are his sharp reaction against the traditional values of village society. The Big Heart
presents an intimate picture of class and caste segmentation to which Anand himself
belongs. The Old Women and the Cow depicts the pitiable condition of peasants in
post independence days. Private Life of an Indian Prince deals with the dying feudal
system in India. We, therefore, see that Anand too, like R.K. Narayan, is sharply
aware of society and its all happenings. Yet there is a remarkable difference between
the two. Mulk Raj Anand looks angrily at the oddities and eccentricities of society
but R.K. Narayan stares patiently and smiles.
Raja Rao is a metaphysical man. All his novels are charged with metaphysical.
His Kanthapura presents the impact of Gandhian philosophy during the days of Non-
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cooperation Movement as well as the glory of Hindu mythology. The Serpent and the
Rope presents symbolical difference between illusion and reality in Indian tradition.
The Cat and Shakespeare deals with some middle class families of Kerala during the
period the Second World War. Raja Rao sees everything in the process of
metaphysics, yet his novels are enriched with social consciousness.
R.K. Narayan is neither angry like Mulk Raj Anand nor philosophical like
Raja Rao. Narayan’s social consciousness is conspicuous in his novels, yet his
awareness is covered with a blanket of irony. He maintains a frontier of norms in his
fictional writing and therefore is free from all partiality. K.R.S. Iyengar explains how
his artistic excellence is maintained under a limitation:
Narayan minutely observes the society and presents the most realistic picture charged
with gentle irony and light humour. His approach to subject matter is always marked
with intellectual inspirations. His artistic excellence lies in his authentic explorations
and straightforward manner.
Narayan’s novels are teemed with social consciousness in human
relationship. K.N. Sinha rightly observes, “R.K. Narayan is keenly aware of the
fundamental irremediable incongruities which life and world are confronting us.”3 He
accepts the reality as it presents before him. He sees the society and its developments
with an ironic detachment and accepts reality ungrudgingly. He sees no point in
attempting to criticize or correct things because, as he remarks in Mr. Sampath, it
seems to him “a futile and presumptuous occupation to analyse, criticize and attempt
to set things right anywhere” (p. 63). Narayan’s central character shows us
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everything that occurs in the every walk of society. R.S. Singh explains Narayan’s art
and object of fiction writings:
Narayan’s male characters are aware of social
and political changes, but they do not take
sides, nor do they commit themselves to any
ideology. Narayan imbues them with social
awareness and sense of responsibility only to
the extent it helps him to bring out their
human qualities.4
He exposes the ills of society, and probes them too, but never for sadistic pleasure or
for scatting disgust in readers. His chief aim is to highlight the hypocrisy of ideals,
ambition and pride and not to guide the society in any particular direction but simply
to make us realize.
Narayan’s early novels are a sociological study of people’s manners and
mentality in pre-independence days. Swami and Friends highlights the existing
manners as well as the impact of National Movement on common folk. The Bachelor
of Arts is a probe into the everyday incidents in a Hindu household in south India and
also the odd traditional norms of society. The Dark Room demonstrates the typical
Indian attitude to family life and exposes the predicament of common housewives.
The heroine Savitri typifies all suffering housewives of our society who are exploited
by all means in their life. The English Teacher tells a tragic love story of the divine
separation of two souls, with an anterior motif of satirizing the fault in existing
education system which “makes us (nothing but) morons, cultural morons, but
efficient clerks for all your business and administrative offices” (p. 206).
The middle novels are Narayan’s exploration into the manners and behavior of
people in post-independence era. The novels highlight the people’s “modern desire
for wealth”5 asserts Graham Greene. Mr. Sampath is a story of a cunning rogue who
without any corresponding ability wants to earn enormous wealth in a very short
while. William Walsh remarks that “The Financial Expert is an exact account of
village usury and city deceit and a controlled probing into the motives of money-
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making.”6 Both Sampath and Margayya represent the modern man who aspires to
touch the sky in a jump and ultimately come back to the same old ground. Waiting
for the Mahatma presents the socio-economic condition in the days of National
Movement. It moreover highlights the impact of Mahatma Gandhi on the different
strata of society. The Guide, the most talked about novel, is appreciated for
“depicting the ironies of modern Indian life”7 says William Walsh.
Narayan’s metaphysical spirit is reflected from his later novels, based mostly
on Indian myths. William Walsh again remarks:
We see that the religious sense of Indian myths
is a part of Narayan’s grip of reality, of his
particular view of human life and his
individual way of placing and ordering human
feeling and experience. What one can say about
Narayan without qualification is that he
embodies the pure spirit of Hinduism.8
Narayan is free from any partiality, which lacks in the case of Raja Rao, in all
his mythical novels. The Man-Eater of Malgudi is based on the Hindu mythological
legend of Bhasmasura. The Vendor of Sweets is based on the Hindu concepts of
cyclical existence and four stages of human life. It simultaneously highlights the
confrontation of tradition and modern in Indian society. The Painter of Signs exploits
with adroitness the story of ancient king Santhanu mentioned in The Mahabharata.
The latest novel A Tiger for Malgudi is chiefly an exploration of philosophical Indian
myths and metaphysical parables of Hindu religion.
Living absorbed in religion and family, Narayan is quite familiar with the
developments within an Indian family. William Walsh rightly observes:
The family is the immediate context in which
his sensibility operates and novels are
remarkably for subtlety and conviction with
family relationship are treated.9
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He highlights the importance of a mother in The Bachelor of Arts and says, “Mother
is a sacred object. It is a commodity whose value we don’t realize as long as it is with
us” (p. 98). He realizes us that if Kailas had been a mother to look him after, he
would have not been spoiled. Narayan in The Dark Room, furthermore, believes that
parents should deal firmly with their children because “only a battered son will grow
into a sound man” (p. 36).
Mr. Sampath too thinks that “boys must be chastised, otherwise (they will)
grow into devils” (p. 34), and hence he advises his son’s tutor, “Any time you see
him getting out of hand, don’t wait for me. Thrash him; thrash him well… no boy
who has not been thrashed has come to any good” (p. 93). Narayan expresses his
dislike of Dowry system and suggests the young celibates in The Bachelor of Arts
that, “If one has to marry one must do it for love, if there is such a thing, or for the
money and comforts. There is no sense in shutting your eyes to the reality of things”
(p. 155).
Narayan is critical of caste system in Indian society. He makes us see in The
Vendor of Sweets that if grace fears to come India or Chandran to marry his
sweetheart Malathi - caste or class barrier happens to be the reason. Our society is
ridden with caste and class feelings and hence when Jagan claims, “We don’t believe
in caste these days” (p. 72), or Raju says in The Guide, “there is not caste or class
today” (p. 72), we know pretty well how untrue they are.
Narayan condemns caste or class division in almost every novel uninvolving
yet in The Bachelor of Arts; he fails to maintain his detachment and says, “If India
must go - community, caste, sects, sub-sects, and still further divisions” (p. 56). He
furthermore dislikes the system of child-marriage and appreciates such “rational and
modern, people who abhorred the custom of rushing a young child into marriage,”
(p. 55). There is nothing in his work of the angry reform which informs the fiction of
Mulk Raj Anand. Narayan’s work contains no scalded sense of social injustice, no
artificial anguish, no colonial indignation, and yet Narayan is clearly as Indian as any
other Indian writer.
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R.K. Narayan is not a feminist even then he has shown his sympathy for the
exploited and oppressed class of women in Indian society. The helplessness and
miserable condition of a Hindu housewife is brought to the forefront in Narayan’s
The Dark Room. In an interview Narayan explained, “In The Dark Room I was
concerned with showing the utter dependence of women on man in society. I suppose
I have moved along with the times.”10
By survival, Narayan does not mean continuity of mere physical existence, but
a striving for dignity in the battle with society and circumstances. His protagonist
Savitri is a victim of either man, or of authority, or of a particular social set-up.
Today, a women’s goals are expressively defined, first her indignation against the
oppression and depression by men in patriarchal society, and second, the consequent
quest of her identity. Both the factors go against the socially approved image of the
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passive woman. This study seeks to explain the true voice of endurance in the present
novel.
R.K. Narayan’s The Dark Room shows us a somber atmosphere. The novelist
draws here the poignant picture of a South Indian middle class family, in which the
wife’s life becomes much of a hell, because of the frequent fits of resentment and
annoyance of her capricious and refractory husband, Ramani. In The Dark Room, the
happiness or unhappiness, and quiet and disquiet of the household depend mainly on
the mood and temper of the husband, Ramani. In the house, the servants, children
and even the wife are certainly in a state of extreme fear due to the domineering and
cynical nature of Mr. Ramani. The appointment of Shanta Bai in Ramani’s office
produces more misfortune to the wife, Savitri. Unable to endure any more, Savitri, in
a fit of disappointment and rage leaves the house of her husband one midnight to
drown herself into the river, Saryu.
But a blacksmith burglar, who was prowling there at that time, saved her life.
For a day or so Savitri attempts to get some independent employment for herself. But
soon being fed up with the present state of her life, she comes back to her
contemptuous home to sulk in the dark room sans much effect on her erring husband,
Ramani. It is always an indication and not the description of emotion. Only gesture is
significant as when Savitri returns to her family and takes her place in it by offering
to serve her husband his meal after forgetting all humiliations:
This novel shows the helpless predicament of the Indian woman, Savitri. She
is aware of her mean state in domestic life. Savitri rightly reacts in The Dark Room
and says, “Women don’t possess anything in the world. What possession can a
woman call her own except her body? Everything else that she has is her fathers,
husbands or her son’s” (p. 75). Ramani, an officer in Englandia Insurance Company,
is the complete embodiment of male chauvinistic society that is why he reprimands
and makes light of his wife, “…go and do any work you like in the kitchen, but leave
the training of a grown up boy to me. It is none of a woman’s business” (p. 5). As
K.R.S. Iyengar remarks:
R.K. Narayan shows us as to how the husband is like God in the Indian
household and women have to accept whatever fate has done to them. This is the
cause that the priest, in charge of the temple, gives the advice, “If she won’t let rest,
thrash her that is the way to keep women safe. In these days you fellows are mugs,
and let your women ride you about” (p. 100). Thus, Savitri feels nothing is her own
and even her children are her husband’s absolutely, “You paid the midwife and the
nurse. You pay for their clothes and teachers. You are right. Don’t I say that a
woman owns nothing?” (p. 77)
Savitri, in an effort to assert to her individuality, revolts and leaves home only
to retreat and compromise with the situation. Here the novelist has tried to infuse
confidence and seed of rebellion in Savitri. Savitri represents thousands of other
Indian housewives who are depressed and helpless creatures in the hands of their
husbands. When Savitri prohibits her son to school due to illness, she is humiliated
by her husband, “Mind your own business, do you hear…” (p. 5). Savitri miserable
thinks over the problem of her existence, “How important at home and that after
fifteen years of married life” (p. 8). This is not only the case of Savitri but also the
case of other housewives who lead their life under the complete hegemony of their
husbands. The social status of an Indian housewife is evaluated at the end of the
novel. The condition of women is reflected from Savitri’s voice, “What despicable
creations of God are we that we can’t exist without a support? I am like a bamboo
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pole which cannot stand without a well to support it” (p. 113). R.S. Singh rightly
says:
R.K. Narayan is too much of an artist to think of dealing with problems, much
less offer solution to any problem. The few problems that we can find in his novels
are human problems that refer to some strange situation in which the character
happens to be placed. He betrays some significant observations clear enough to
convey his likes and dislikes and then goes on. Narayan actually dislikes the absurd
custom of comparing the horoscopes of bride and the groom. Similarly he does not
like the present system of soul-killing educational system, but prefers a new type of
‘let-alone’ schools for children. William Walsh remarks:
The woman’s point of view has been totally consigned to oblivion by Marco in
The Guide. A woman is not gadget as evidently revealed in the character of Rosie
who is replete with desires and spirits. And hence, there are breakings in the married
life of Rosie and Marco. Som Dev rightly remarks:
Marco really wants a wife like the servant Joseph who is in his opinion, a
wonderful man. Secondly, for all his outward appearance, he looks down upon
dancing, and misunderstands the art as something below his rank and position:
Rosie belongs to a family dedicated to the temple as dancers, and yet she
obtains an M.A. in Economics. Not only that, she discards the convention and enters
in matrimonial agreement with Marco. But to her utter shock, she discovers that he is
more interested in the sculptured figures on walls and stones in the caves, than in his
wife who is living embodiment of these things. Dead and decaying things have
attracted him, but not things that live and move and swing their heads. Her position
in his company is no better than that of an animal. For Rosie “followed him, day after
day, like a dog-waiting on his grace” (p. 151). In the company of Raju too, she fares
no better. She feels like one of those parrots in a cage taken around village fairs: the
position of a Hindu housewife realistically presented by Narayan. In utter
helplessness she gives vent to her feelings, “it is far better to end one’s life on his
(Marco’s) doorstep” (p. 220).
Rosie is portrayed as the representative of a new class of women who have the
opportunity to be released from the conventional confinement to join colleges and
universities. Rosie acquires a Master’s degree in Economics: no mean achievement
in relation to her place in a scheme of castes in Hindu society. On the one hand, her
education has enhanced in her, the awareness of her own individuality. On the other,
it pits her against the society which still has certain well-defined attitudes towards
women. Moreover, the class to which she belongs is looked down upon as a low
community which does not deserve equal status with the higher caste. Despite the
hurdles, she has established her own individuality. Her inner being, it appears, is not
prepared to go on playing the traditional role as a suppressed Indian wife for the rest
of her life.
Rosie has had a bitter experience in the house of Raju whose mother, an old
orthodox woman, refuses to accept her on the ground that she belongs to a different
caste. His uncle’s insulting questions make her lower her head in shame and disgust
“Are you to our caste? No our class? No. Do we know you? No. Do you belong to
this house? No. In that case, why are you here? After all, you are a dancing girl; we
do not admit them in our families” (p. 169). Rosie survives the shocks and shows to
the world that she too has an individual status and aspirations in life, which she tries
to accomplish all her life. However, her guilty conscience makes her restless and in
the end we see her painful longing to die at the threshold of her husband’s house.
are regarded as deity and on the other are bereft of their basic rights. That is why
women in the novels of R.K. Narayan present the true voice of endurance.
Professor C.D. Narasimhaiah points out that R.K. Narayan is “a product of the
Hindu middle class.”18 The whole corpus of his fiction is populated by the Hindu
middle class people of his own province, differing in their attitudes, habits, manners,
customs and conventions from the rest of classes – lower class and upper class.
Narayan deals with the life of this particular class in his fiction, analysing the
tensions and conflicts, stress and strains, in human relations within the domestic
circle of his own experience, and making them the basis of his works.
His early novels are all domestic in tone, presenting psychological studies of
the relationships of husband and wife, parents and sons, brothers and sisters. Even in
his last novels he again returns to domestic relationships exploring and delineating
them to their considerable limit and presenting men more in relation to each other
than in relation to God or some abstract idea of politics.
Narayan is frequently criticized for his exclusive concern with the middle
class and very often called treacherous for not having dealt with the ‘Indian poor and
the dominantly peasant character of the country. But such criticism sounds not only
meaningless but also baseless when his sincere point of view to deal with the class is
taken into consideration. William Walsh is right in his description that “…Narayan
writes chiefly about the Indian middle-class because he is a member of it, and it is the
class he understands best.”19
These members of middle-class figuring in his novels and short stories are
neither too well-off as not to know the rub of financial worry nor too poor to be
brutalized by want and overwhelming hunger. By nature they are religious people,
but seldom credulous like the poor people. They take religion with an easeful
understanding, but they have a tendency towards modernity to the extent of
murmuring their educated speech in older voices – “Lakshmi, the Goddess of Wealth,
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the spouse of God Vishnu, who was the protector of creatures” (p. 78), in the words
of Chandran, the hero of The Financial Expert.
Like various religions of the world, the Hindu religion can also be divided
into two classes – the religion based on sacred ancient scriptures the Vedas, the
Upanishads, the Ramayana and the Mahabharat and the Puranas, and the religion
which results without texts. Narayan himself relying more on the spiritual
understanding of religion, seems to have noted the division of two types of religion
prevailing in his own province and the rest of the country.
The religion based on scriptures has a stronger appeal to the common people
who look askance at every word that comes out to them without the authority of the
sacred text. Common people of India believe in the religious saying that dharma
protects those who protect dharma and it destroys those who try to destroy it. Gods,
demons, ghosts and witches have a believable existence for them. As life is said to be
a perpetual struggle between the forces of good and evil, the people of Narayan’s
fiction also believe in the endless struggle between good and evil.
independent critical existence, they are always tossed in some kind of tension
between this and that as deep source of power to improve their family, as in The
Financial Expert and The Vendor of Sweets.
The joint-family system which was considered Indian legacy in the past has
presumably disappeared at present. In The Financial Expert and The Man-Eater of
Malgudi scenes of family – disputes are drawn in order to evince how the new wave
of western culture has swept away the human relationship in India. Narayan himself
points out:
And Narayan tackles this subject in his The Financial Expert. When
Margayya receives a card from Madres containing the incorrect information
(incorrect as it is subsequently turned out) of Balu’s death, his brother’s family comes
to his help and solace. Seeing them all in his house and realizing the impendency of
their feuds, Margays’ effected mind for a while forgets everything about Balu’s so-
called death and prompts a new chain of thought, “…a ridiculous question (addressed
to his brother) kept coming to his mind. Are we friends now – no longer enemies?
What about out feud? A part of his mind kept wondering how they could live as
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friends but the numerous problems connected with this seemed insoluble. We had got
used to this kind of life. Now I suppose we shall have to visit each other and enquire
and so on…” (p. 121).
Margayya did his best to suppress these thoughts. His brother whispered
among other things, “We will send you the night meal from our house” (p. 128). Such
are the characteristics of middle class people and Narayan is not only well acquainted
with them but also has a personal experience of living under joint-family system from
the outset to this day. In The Man -Eater of Malgudi Natraj’s complaint against his
cousin, “who hates him for staying in their ancestral home is indicatives of this
family feud, brought about by the break in joint- living” (p. 5).
In the past (still to some extent) it was traditional to live together in joint-
family system in India. All the members of a family were supposed to live together
under the same roof, in spite of their minor differences. The old people in the family
were in charge of laying down the policy with the intention of running the family
administration smoothly. But modern culture has started breaking it up not only in the
South but all over India. However, P.S. Sundram rightly says:
Apart from religion and family Narayan focuses his attention on private life,
the ambitions, success and frustration of middle class people. These people try their
best to achieve, in the words of Chandran in The Bachelor of Arts, “a life freed form
distracting illusions and hysterics” (p. 72). There is hardly any double about it that
such distracting illusions are considerably woven in the fabric of Indian tradition.
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In The Dark Room Ramani continues to be the hypocritical husband and the
unmitigated tyrant of the dark room. He is an exception which can also be located in
the real society populated by ultra-modern people uprooted from their old culture.
Sampath, Raju, Natraj, Jagan, Sambu – all are involved in their struggle to maturity to
which they reach at last. The world of Malgudi cannot leave them as they are; it turns
them what they should be. Being a moral analyst and having a penetrative eye to look
into human nature, Narayan is a past master in giving the reader a picture that strikes
him as typical of everyday reality. In this way, he depends on selection and
suggestion. He draws a picture of life in such a convincing way as to bring everyday
reality.
Narayan’s artistic self-control, his broad humanity that enables him to achieve
greatness within the limited range of his chosen field. And in this way, he achieves
greatness.
His early novels present students and teachers, bank managers and domestic
servants, femi-fatale and the doting lovers who achieve maturity in the restricted
limits of their operative zeal. From Swami and Friends to The English Teacher
Narayan remained autobiographical in approach and plumbed the depth of his own
memory. But from The English Teacher onward, K.R. Srinivas Iyengar remarks:
Swami, Chandran, and Krishnan figure in the trilogy- Swami and Friends, The
Bachelor of Arts and The English Teacher. They represent the academic world of
South Indian schools and colleges. In the first novel, we are introduced to a cheerful
world of young school boys – Swami, Mani, Samual and Rajam. These boys are the
students of Albert Mission School. It is through the eyes of the hero Swami that we
also look at the fire eyed Vedanayam and the fanatic Ebenezer boasting too much for
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the merits of Christianity and demerits of Hindu religion. But Swami & his
companions enjoy their juvenile life, with quarrels and compromises, peals of
laughter and quells of sorrow, and the important cricket match between the Malgudi
cricket club and the Young Men’s Union. Swami’s parents and the old granny also
play very important role in consoling him for the sake of going ahead.
In The Bachelor of Arts Narayan takes the reader to the world of Degree
College youths who make a fuss over the problem whether historians should be
slaughtered or not. Chandran, the hero, is a bright student of B.A. class. After
graduation he faces the problem of unemployment. During his aimless rambling on
the bank of Sarayu he comes across the beautiful girl, Malathi, and instantly falls in
love with her.
Narayan also indicates how typical customs of marriage prevail in the middle
class society of South India. With the ironic detachment of a true artist he presents the
world of family in which human relations depend more on adjustment with one
another than showing a sense of revolt. He portrays quite vividly the complex texture
of social and religious custom and traditions, extremely governing a South Indian
Hindu family. Obscured caste divisions, and sub-divisions, class snobberies, absurd
marriage custom, blind superstitions and tyranny of astrological calculations – all are
relentlessly prevalent in South Indian middle society.
The third novel of the trilogy takes the reader to the world of Albert Mission
College in which Krishnan teacher English to notoriously careless students of
undergraduate classes. Krishnan and his wife Sushila is an ideal couple, appearing in
Mr. Sampath as Srinivas and his wife, though placed in different circumstances. In
this novel Narayan attempts to show the immortality of soul in Sushila’s life after
death. Professor Gajapathi, Sri Rangappa, Mr. Gopal, Dr. Menon are Krishnan’s
colleagues in the college staff while principal Brown, the Englishman, continues to
appear again in The English Teacher similarly as he did in The Bachelor of Arts. The
psychic communion with spirit remains to be the important event in the novel.
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The Dark Room introduces Savitri who is the most loveable among Narayan’s
female characters. The poignant picture of a South Indian Middle class family is
drawn realistically to display how the life of an old-fashioned but sincere housewife
becomes much of a hell owing to the frequent fits of anger and irritation of her
whimsical and bully husband Ramani. In this novel Narayan draws a pair of two
opposite human beings who are tied by a matrimonial knot together socially, but they
are unable to cope with each other. Savitri and Ramani are really poles apart in
matters of taste, temper and in their respective assessment of social reality.
From The English Teacher onwards we are introduced into the world of more
crooked and more complex characters. Most of them are imported to Malgudian
world. There are roguish, cunning and worldly wise people like Sampath, Margayya,
Raju, Dr. Pal, Mali and Vasu who refuse to accept anything in a traditional way. In
The Financial Expert we watch Margayya rising from a very humble position to be a
very big banking magnet. Dr. Pal who helps him in accumulating more and more
money by hook and by crook becomes the root cause of Margayya’s downfall. He
plays the role of a villain, spoils Margayya’s son, Balu, spreading the astonishing
news of his impending bankruptcy like wild fire. The result is that Margayya’s clients
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start knocking at his gate to withdraw their deposited money from his so-called bank
and within a twinkling of an eye he is reduced to the state of destitution.
In the entire world of Narayan’s fiction, Vasu (H.Vasu) is the only formidable
man endowed with extraordinary physical strength, firm-determination and a sadistic
outlook in inflicting pain all around. Natraj, the hero of The Man-Eater of Malgudi,
describes Vasu’s huge figure which arouses fear in him and in his happy-go-lucky
companions, “The new visitor had evidently pulled aside the poet before I could open
my mouth, he asked you Natraj? I nodded. He came forward; practically tearing aside
the curtain, an act which violated the sacred traditions of my press… he paid no
attention, but stepped forward, extending his hand. …he gave me a hard grip. My
entire hand disappeared into his fist - he was a large man, about six feet tall. He
looked quite slim, but his bull-neck and hammer-fist revealed his true signature”
(p. 13).
In another encounter when Natraj goes to Vasu to request him to spare the sacred
temple-elephant, he behaves is an aggressively nonchalant way:
Whenever Vasu returns to Natraj’s attic of the press – which he had occupied
not as a tenant but a guest, his jeep is loaded with bloody objects. He keeps a wooden
chest filled with eyes, round ones, small ones, red ones and black circles. William
Walsh rightly observes:
That is why; Vasu takes his place in the Malgudian community as a rakshasa, a
demon, the formidable side of life. It is nothing but his death which brings about
freedom and comfort to Malgudi and its simple, but self-centered community. The
frailest of animals, the mosquito, helps in killing this demon-incarnate. It all shows
how Narayan is a skillful artist in presenting such a self – assertive man as Vasu who
dies by his own hammer-fist hand and the terror-stricken of Malgudi once again
heave a sigh of relief.
Fake saints and real Sannyasi have also attracted Narayan to delineate them in
his novels. Right from his second novel, The Bachelor of Arts he has dealt with the
problem of renunciation with abiding interest. Chandran, the hero of The Bachelor of
Arts goes out of home and becomes a Sannyasi for some time. His conscience
disallows him to deceive the innocent village folks who take him to be a great
Sannyasi. As a result he throws out the ochre – coloured garb and returns home to
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begin with a new life of a normal and hopeful man. This theme of renunciation is
similarly explored in The Dark Room in which Savitri runs away from home and
husband and begins to serve in the village temple as a sweeper. She also returns to
her hateful home and sulks in the dark room creating little effect on her erring
husband.
Narayan introduces the fake sainthood thrust upon Raju in The Guide. The
unscrupulous Raju is overtaken by Nemesis and in the process he finds himself in
prison for a small fraud of forgery. After he soon becomes famous and attracts a
crowd of devotees. The critical circumstances force him to undertake fast for a
number of days during which he is allowed by his conscience to let his mind roam
and touch the depths of morbid and fantastic thought. It is not the compulsive
philosophy of Raju which moulds him into a real saint but the constant service of
Velan and the seething humanity of Mangal which moves his heart to make the
penance a thundering success, “Why not give the poor devil a chance? Raju said to
himself, instead of hankering after food which one could not get anyway. He felt
enraged at the persistence of food thoughts. With a sort of vindictive resolution he
told himself, “I will chase away all thoughts of food. For the next ten days I shall
eradicate all thoughts of tongue and stomach from my mind” (p. 238). This resolution
gives him a peculiar strength and he is able to develop on these lines, “If by avoiding
food I should help the trees bloom, and the grass grow, why not do it thoroughly? For
the first time in his life he was making an earnest effort; for the first time he was
learning the thrill of full application, outside money and love; for the first time he was
doing a thing in which he was not personally interested. He felt suddenly so
enthusiastic that it gave him new strength to go through with the ordeal” (p. 238).
Raju achieves martyrdom at last when a real saint emerges in his heart to
serve the humanity and the universe. It is owing to the transformation of his
character; his personality is relatively passive. Desirelessness is the ultimate outcome
of Indians, and in this way Raju has realized the reality, by renouncing everything. It
will not be an exaggeration to state that it is Narayan who know to transform the
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common man into the exceptional being. Of course, there are no Hamlets and
Othello’s in his fiction, any great intellectuals or statesmen among his characters, but
he is well-acquainted with the glory of Indian saints and seers, He seems to believe
that the self –improvement is the best improvement and here lies his greatness both as
the man and creator of unique personalities.
The grandmothers and aunts are also portrayed with a realistic touch as in
Swami & Friends Waiting for the Mahatama and The Painter of Signs. Sambu’s
mother in Second Opinion thought standing as a pole apart from her son in the matter
of marriage is really Indian mother. There is another variety of women-Shanta Bai in
The Dark Room, Rosie in The Guide and Rangi in The Man-Eater of Malgudi – who
belong to the seductive or butterfly-type of women. Shanta Bai belongs to the species
of artful and cunning flirts, whose only vocation lies in satisfying their own whims
and caprices. She is able to tempt Ramani in her seductive grip. Being a professional
dancer Rangi is crude and seldom feels ashamed of her alluring designs, acts and
ways of life. Rosie too is obsessive and does not come up to the mark of a domestic
woman.
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Narayan’s novels and short stories breathe an aroma of the typical Indian life.
This Indianness is reflected in a content and form so identical as to guarantee the
artistry of the whole. The value system and point of view emerge in a different kind
of narrative, plot structure, dialogue and characterization. The middle class people
who populate his canvas mark his works as Indian from within and outside all the
way.
Here in lays the clue to Narayan’s Indianness. His characters are bewildered
by the problems of existence and they get happiness and freedom only when the
mundane world appears to them infect ultimately insignificant. For them the real
world is the eternal static world of absolute being, when they have been confirmed
fully about the irrationality of the worldly existence of human beings. It is then they
come to realize that the man of wisdom, the sage is capable of viewing the turmoil of
existence with serenity, detachment and tolerant amused, faintly, pitying curiosity,
Narayan tries to fictionalize the permanent and transitional values through the comic
and ironic mode of fiction.
In this way, his fiction mirrors modern India deep-rooted in ancient traditions
and caught up in the crucible of change. The Sarayu River, the Mempi hills, the
Mempi forest, the caves and temples are depicted not just to compose the texture of
the external landscape; they signify the elements of consciousness and deep-rooted,
affirmative Indian vision. The typical Indian protagonist of Narayan’s novel begins as
a fallen angel having a marked potential or unconquerable will for the quest of truth.
He evolves gradually the necessary vision. That is why, his characters move from
experience to innocence. Raju in The Guide, Margayya in The Financial Expert,
Jagan in The Vendor of Sweets, move from innocence to wisdom, symbolized by the
still point, the calm of mind, the placidity in attitude with all passions spent.
Narayan does not depict the horrors of the partition days in his novels and in
this way his India is free from the problem of communalism. He depicts the struggle
for independence under the leadership of Mahatama Gandhi only in Waiting for the
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Mahatama but his concern is little with the proper movement. The portrayal of
Mahatama Gandhi signifies only in the matter of untouchability. In this way,
Narayan’s India is not very much different from the real India.
Since Malgudi is populated by the lower middle class people lost in the
problems of their own lives, on the surface it appears to be the partial depiction of
India having no place for the down-trodden and the sophisticated people of upper
class society. But Narayan is one of the few writers who do not overstep their self-
imposed boundaries of creative endeavour. Politics, war, sex, crime, topical problems
and the like which a novelist generally exploits to keep pace with the moving wheel
of time have little temptation for him. To him war seems to be the negation of life. It
has little place in his positive acceptance of life. Incidental descriptions of sex in
accordance with the requirement of the themes occur in The Guide, Waiting for the
Mahatama and The Painter of Sings. The Man-Eater Vasu in The Man-Eater of
Malgudi and Kailas in The Bachelor of Arts are shown to have criminal passion in
themselves.
But they appear to be exaggerated as their actions are limited to their personal
whims. Kailas is a drunkard and debauch and Vasu is not a man-eater in the real
sense of the term as he is referred to by Sastri time and again. He is an embodiment
of a perverted modern man who has little sense of Indian morality rooted in the
ancient culture of the Ramayana and the Mahabharat. The world of Narayan’s fiction
is populous with the example of buffoons, prostitutes, adulterers, pick-pockets,
money-grubbers, drunkards and would be gangsters, but there is no dearth of virtuous
people in it. There is the astrologer who said things that pleased and astonished
everyone because his mystical psychology is based on sagacity and shrewd guess
work with a matter-of-fact realization that, “Mankind’s troubles’ could be analysed in
terms of marriage, money and the tangles of human ties.”27 The postman who is
acquainted with everyone’s business and is as, “…a part and parcel of their existence,
their hopes, aspirations and activities.”28
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Swaminathan’s Granny who, when her: grandson disappears, prays to the God
of the Thirupathi Hill’s for his safe return, and on his reappearance prepares to make
offerings to the God “to whom alone she owed the safe return of the child.”30 There is
Savitri in The Dark Room who rebels against Ramani’s bullying and indifference by
running away from home and pre-maturely attempting to enter the third stage of
Hindu life. Her cook who always has a perennial excuse for being late for work
because ‘No two clocks agree.’ “If she wants him to be punctual, she should buy him
a watch” (p. 8). All such happenings are usual in India and in this way the whole
atmosphere of Malgudi is charged with the aroma of the typical Indian life.
The departure of the British has brought about greater changes in Malgudi.
These changes are symbolized by the new challenges occurring in the placid pools of
the town. The old generation continues to act as if nothing has happened the new
generation of their grown-up children is too aware of a world outside India. The
Validity of horoscopes is interrogated in The Bachelor of Arts. However, the marriage
is permissible within castes. The young quarrels with the old, go away from Malgudi
to England, America, eat beef and marry foreigners. They return sometimes to vex
and haunt and disturb the uneventful atmosphere of the town. The inward glance of
Malgudi is related to India which is being disturbed by new changes.
With the rapid growth of the town, industry arrives. The revolt of the
generation marks the arrival of the twentieth century. It is no longer the same old
Malgudi of pious people whose love had got no bounds. It is crowded by adventurers,
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film stars, pimps and prostitutes. On the one hand, they pollute the atmosphere of the
town and corrupt the simple and common Malgudi mans, on the other hand they
evoke pessimism through their activities and affect the natives with a number of
problems. But as the spirits of Malgudi protects its citizens, the outsiders are
overpowered and reduced to nothing as Vasu is killed mysteriously by his own ego
and the deeply-hidden seeds of self-destruction in his overbearing personality. In this
way, Narayan seems to emphasize time and again in a series of novels and a number
of short-stories that those who are uprooted from their own indigenous culture and
are led to revolt against the well-established social order have to face unaccountable
trials and tribulations.
This happens almost to all outsiders - Rosie in The Guide is left by her
husband Marco for treachery she has committed along with Raju, Dr. Pal in The
Financial Expert is belabored by Margayya when he is caught with Balu and
undignified women of the town, Grace in The Vendor of Sweets finds herself nowhere
when Mali is apprehended by the police for having gone against the riles of excise.
Shanty, the butterfly-actress in Mr. Sampath is also led to frustration at last. It is only
Shanta Bai in The Dark Room who remains unaffected and unpunished by the spirit
of the place. But she is an exception. And exceptions are everywhere. Archer
Rosanne aptly points out how Malgudi brings alive the India of foreigners’ dreams:
Narayan portrays the contemporary India in Waiting for the Mahatama which
revives the memory of the days of Indian struggle for freedom. In Swami and Friends
the children echo the vociferous slogans of their elders and ponder over the problem
of slavery under the British. But as the author shows little sympathy for the agitators
or what they agitated for, his interest is kindled by the brave talk of the youngsters,
whom he ought to have seen during his schooldays, collection in street corners and
echoing the hyperbolic words of their elders.
Popular superstitions, rituals and beliefs in gods, demons and ghosts, much
that is fantastic and imaginary, provide a glimpse of the rural India as depicted in The
Guide and The Bachelor of Arts and The Painter of Signs communication with the
spirit of the dead and fasting to the extent of propitiating the rain-god and the
credulous faith of Indians in Sadhus, Sannyasis are still prevalent in Indian society,
more particularly in South Indian where people are religious first and anything else
thereafter. Such beliefs are unmistakably woven into the fabric of Narayan’s novels,
which recognizes little logic. Frequent references to Indian myths and legends, the
exploitation of such motifs as cobras and dancing girls, as devadasis, the Indian wild
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life as in The Man-Eater of Malgudi and A Tiger For Malgudi, river, lotuses of
different colors are symbolical and continue to dominate the atmosphere of Narayan’s
hypothetical world of Malgudi.
But it is evident that they are depicted, more by way of indelicacy then by
way of advocacy. Individual feelings, emotions and actions, explorations of hidden
human conflicts, human relations within the limits if the family tends to kindle
Narayan’s imagination vigorously.
Beliefs and superstitions are universal but India with its deep religious
background and age-old customs and traditions abounds in them. R.K. Narayan
worked as the Editor and Publisher of a journal, Indian Thought. He had a great
design in his mind, “to phrase our culture properly to utilize the English language as
medium for presenting our cultural heritage.”32 Beliefs and superstitions are part of
Indian culture. So a novelist like R.K. Narayan cannot write a novel without them.
Beliefs may be classified in two types: religious and secular. R.K. Narayan’s
characters believe in God, fate, various physical forms of God as enunciated in Hindu
mythology and his human incarnations. Such beliefs have been classified as religious
beliefs. The concept of God the supreme force behind the creation and regulation of
the universe is best expressed by the Town Hall professor in R.K. Narayan’s The
painter of Signs. Raman meets the Town Hall professor sitting cross-legged on the
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parapet delivering a spiritual message to the small circle of listeners. He says, “So
why worry about anything. God is in all this. He is one and indivisible. He is
yesterday, tomorrow and today. If you think it over properly, you will never sigh for
anything coming or going (p. 25).
Although this professor is called eccentric, as often philosophers are called, his
message given to Raman proves much helpful to him. The God, these professor talks
about, is the God worshipped in the Vedas: the God without a shape, the spirit of all
living and non living things. The same concept of God is help by the master of the
Tiger in A Tiger for Malgudi. The Tiger, with the help of the great spiritual strength
of his master, was also able to form his own concept as he says, “He described God in
his own term as the creator, the Great Spirit pervading every creature, every rock and
tree and the sky and the stars, a source of power and strength. Later when my master
questioned me about it I said that God must be an enormous tiger, spanning the earth
and the sky, with a tail capable of encircling the globe, claws that could hook on the
clouds and teeth that could grind the mountain, and possessing, of course,
immeasurable strength to match” (pp. 157-58). Most of R.K. Narayan’s characters
believe in many gods following the common practice in the Hindu society. These
gods are worshipped in their physical forms: human and non-human. The idol
worship or worshipping the picture of gods is the result of such beliefs.
Characters of R.K Narayan’s novels also believe in sacred things and sacred
places. Raman’s aunt and Sriram’s granny go to Benares in their last days to end their
life. There is double benefit in staying at Benares. They take a bath in the holy river
Ganges thrice a day and pray to God in the temple. It is believed that taking a bath in
the river Ganges dissolves their sins and hence smoothes out their passage to heaven
after their death. Raman’s aunt says in The Painter of Signs, “It is ambition of my
generation to conclude this existence at Kasi to be dissolved finally at the Ganges.
That is the most auspicious end of one’s life” (p. 152).
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Vasu, in The Man Eater of Malgudi exploits man’s belief in a sacred bird like
Garuda which is believed to be the messenger of God Vishnu. People stop on the road
to salute it when it circles in the sky. Keeping in mind such a belief of the people, he
stuffs this bird and sells them at about fifty rupees each. Similarly people, a sacred
tree is generally associated with the divine that is why people worship it. It is found
generally in the village that some stones are put under the tree and people worship
them as gods. Whenever there is a temple or shrine or any other religious spot,
Peepal tree is sure to be found, possibly due to its shade giving capacity.
In Narayan’s The Guide there is a large platform under a peepal tree at whose
root a number of stone figures are embedded, which is often anointed with oil and
worshipped. It is shady, cool and spacious so it is a town hall platform for Mangala.
Jagan’s Gayatri temple is also surrounded by peepal and other trees.
Srinivas in Mr. Sampath worships a small image of Nataraj which was given
to him by his grandmother when he was a boy. He never starts his day’s work without
spending a few minutes before this image, “He often sat before it, contemplated its
proportion and addressed it thus: ‘oh, God! You are trampling a demon under your
foot and you show us a rhythm, though you appear to be still I grasp the symbol but
vaguely, you hold a flare in your hand. May a ray of that light illumine my mind?”
(pp. 18-19)
It is several times in almost every novel of Narayan that prayers are offered by
different characters. But such prayers are offered for material purposes. The most
interesting is Swami’s prayer offered to God when his paper boat and its cargo
wrecked in the gutter, either for saving the life of ant or if dead, for the smooth
passage to heaven. Again be prays to God for getting six pies which he requires for
purchasing a hoop. He believes that through prayer pebbles will be converted into
coins. When it does not, he is about to abuse God but only for fear that he will send
disaster to him, he changes his mind. Further he prays to God and promises offering
to him for his safe escape from the forest at night when he was found conscious next
morning by the forester. Although such prayers coming from the depth of our heart
does not seem to fulfill our wish in the way we like but purpose is generally served.
Although Swami did not get six pies from pebbles but got a loop. His prayer was
responded in the forest at right and he was saved.
But Ponni’s desire in R.K. Narayan’s The Dark Room for getting a child was
not fulfilled even after she prayed and promised offerings to gods. But solution of her
husband’s problem of getting a job for Savitri was solved through initiation of
Goddess of wealth and had got his only son Balu after praying for twelve years and
going to Tirupati. Natraj’s deep prayer which exhorted his whole being for saving the
elephant, Kumar was responded. Jagan also offers coconuts to Lord Ganesha when he
receives a letter from his son Mali who had gone to America for getting a training of
the novel producing machine. All the lady characters of Narayan’s novels with a few
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exceptions have staunch faith in the prayer to God. They pray and promise offerings
to gods whatever they face any problem and their prayer is generally responded.
Most of Narayan’s characters including all the heroes in his novels believe in
fate. They are called unheroic heroes. Whatever they achieve in their life is only due
to fate. It is only fate which makes Raju a martyr in The Guide. He confesses it to
Velan, “He drew his finger across his brow and said whatever is written here will
happen. How can we ever help it?” (p. 20)
In The Dark Room, Mari thinks that he should have left Savitri to her fate.
Even if he had not saved her from being downed, she would have been saved if fate
had wished so. These are a few examples, but the supremacy of fate is woven in the
every texture of R.K. Narayan’s novels. There are some beliefs which are called
Brahminic because Brahmins are the first to believe in these beliefs. Most of the main
characters are vegetarian in Narayan’s novels. As a Brahmin boy it is unconceivable
to Swaminathan that God should be non-vegetarian.
That is why when Ebenezer criticizes Lord Krishna of stealing butter and
dancing with girl, he criticizes Jesus of being non-vegetarian. A Brahmin’s whole
body wrenches with disgust at the very thought of non-vegetarian diet like Sriram’s
in Waiting for the Mahatma, “Sriram wrenched at the mention of chicken. He made a
wry face: ‘Chicken! Chicken! I cannot stand the thought of it,’ he said, his face
twisting with disgust, I do not eat those things! He cried that I have not even eaten
cakes because they contain eggs” (p. 132).
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The old man, Srinivasa’s landlord in Mr. Sampath, calls himself a true
Sannyasi and says that a true Sannyasi has no need to live on anything more than the
leavings of God. His statement is ironical because he is not a true Sannyasi. He leads
a simple life only for saving money. He spends his money on his relatives and feels
pleasure in depositing the whole amount he collects as the rent in Saryu street post-
office bank. But what this old man tells is true in case of a true Sannyasi. They
believe in prayer, and penance and complexities in life may prove obstruction in their
spiritual development.
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Sannyasi are so highly esteemed is the society that even a fake Sannyasi like
Raju is revered and worshipped though he does not allow Velan and other villagers to
prostrate themselves at his feet, because he does not want to usurp God’s right.
Villagers respect for Raju is increased due to his high mindedness. Gradually
people’s faith in Swami becomes so strong that they gather in crowds around him for
seeking cure to their diseases. Raju prescribes them herbs, and presses their belly and
they are cured even by the mere touch of his hands. Later on people’s faith in Swami
gets so much established that they press him to take a fast for rain and their faith in
Raju proves right. He had himself narrated earlier about the importance of such
penance in causing rain. Not only have that villagers believed that he would travel to
the Himalayas just by a thought because of his strange yogic powers.
In The Painter of Signs, people assess the quarrelsome priest of the temple,
who helps the innocent woman in getting a child, though in an ironical sense, in high
esteem. He is believed to talk to forest animals and birds and command spirit. R.K.
Narayan, like other novelists, also believes in the basic philosophy – the survival of
the good and the defeat of the evil. This belief gets full expression in The Man-Eater
of Malgudi Vasu, the modern Bhasmasura, is ultimately destroyed by himself and the
temple elephant, Kumar is saved from being killed by him. The whole Malgudi town
is waiting for his distraction especially Srinivas who gives him shelter but whom, in
return, he tortures in different ways, Sastri aptly says that if the world is to survive,
every person, possessing evil powers is to be destroyed and the supremacy of the
good is to be established. Even the minor characters seem to believe that God cannot
help the wrong doers.
Beliefs of this sort prevail among characters of Narayan’s novels which might
still be called beliefs in the modern world with a completely changed situation. But
there are beliefs which have completely lost their rational ground and are treated as
superstition.
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R.K. Narayan himself believes in astrology, when he was young, he did not
believe much in such things. William Walsh explains that is why at the time of
marriage, “he married the girl of his choice even when astrologers forbade him to
marry because the position of Mars in his horoscope was not suitable for marriage.”34
Mars in the seventh house of the horoscope kills the life partner, if the other partner’s
horoscope also does not suffer from the same flaw. And the result was obvious, his
wife died only after a few years of their marriage.
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that he might have come to extort some money by telling his fortune. Chandran has to
convince him that he does not know astrology and has come with some other purpose.
Although such pseudo-astrologers help reduce the value of astrology but even
for a great scholar of this science, it is a science with equivocal meaning, it cannot tell
anything with certainty. This is the reason why it is not treated as science in the
modern age in which everything is predicted exactly as it is and there is no change of
equivocation in the modern science. So nowadays astrology has become superstition.
There was a time when ghosts, devils, evil spirits and evil eyes had got
sanction in the society but nowadays these are treated as superstitions. There may be
some such places on the earth where the light of modern civilization has not yet been
able to reach but such places are very rare. Especially in the medieval age when a
person fell sick, it was thought that he had become a victim of some evil spirit and
was treated accordingly.
In modern India there are some people who believe in ghosts, devils etc. But
the India in which R.K. Narayan was brought up was rampant with such beliefs. So
supernatural beings figure in the early novels of Narayan. In Swami and Friends,
Narayan’s youngest hero an experience of devil or ghost at ghostly hour at night
when he was caught in the forest after disappearing from his school. He went and the
night fell suddenly. Different shapes started to appear in the darkness of night. His
nerve quivered with strain. Narayan has described how ghosts and devils are purely
psychic creations. While considering the definition of superstition Jahoda Gustav
rightly points out:
In The Dark Room Mari, when he is returning from one of his nocturnal visits
with a few withered betel leaves, saw an apparition. He thought it might be Mohini,
the temptress Devil, who way laid lonely wayfarers and sucked their blood. He
watched it with fascination and horror and presently Mohini rose and walked into the
river. He further says, “Ah, the Devil can walk on water; at what inauspicious
moment did I leave home today? She has not seen me yet. I dare not move. By this
time the apparition was in deep water and let out a cry. No, no, I cannot die, I must go
back home… And then there was silence. Mari had by now got over his first fright,
and said to himself the Devil cannot talk and the Devil cannot draw. He ran down the
strips” (p. 132). And he rescued Savitri who was making an attempt to commit
suicide.
In The Financial Expert the night watchman notices that the ghost of the
Registrar of the co-operative society, who had spent all his money in the construction
of the co-operative bank has been watching everything going on in the bank in a sad
mood from within a teak frame suspended on the central landing. It was but natural
for the ghost of the Registrar to feel sad and frustrated because all the principles of
cooperation for which he had scarified his life were dissolving under his eyes.
In The Man-Eater of Malgudi people believe that dogs bark at night because
ghosts are visible to them. But neither Nataraj nor Vasu has seen a ghost. In A Tiger
for Malgudi, villagers believe that the Devil takes away animals and are even
prepared to perform propitiatory ceremonies in their village. When the fact was that
the man-eater was reducing the number of their cattle’s.
In The English Teacher when Susila fell sick, which, ultimately caused her
death, her mother was convinced that evil eye had fallen on her. She was definite that
if Sushila had not been allowed to go into the lavatory, she would not have fallen
sick. She invited a man to exercise the effect of evil eye. He uttered some mantras
with closed eyes, took a pinch of sacred ash and rubbed it on her forehead, and tied to
her arm a talisman strung in yellow thread. The doctor came and saw the goings no
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but he did not want to frustrate the old lady by giving the adverse remark about these
people. When Swamiji left, he uttered “May God helps you to see the end of your
anxieties” (p. 72). The end of the anxieties was not the recovery of the patient from
her illness but the end of her life itself.
Such types of equivocations are very common in occult matters and hence
they are treated as superstitions. In Mr. Sampath Ravi’s mother calls a group of men
to exorcize her son’s madness. These men claim that they know all about ghosts that
haunt this house the people talk about and one of them has got into Ravi, so they will
rest only after driving him out.
The study of all the ghosts and devils in Narayan’s novels reveals that he also
believes in the emotional element in such fears. These are purely psychological things
and have got no concrete existence as such. Hence they are aptly being treated as
superstitions. The human mind created heaven or hell because it was essential for
establishing order in the society. Such concepts helped people refraining from any
such act which is not morally sanctioned by the society. In Swami and Friends Rajan
narrates a hair-raising account of the torture in hell if one fosters enmity among
friends, “He would be made to stand mark naked, on a pedestal of red-hot iron. There
were bee-hives all around with bees as big as lemons. If the sinner stepped down from
the pedestal, he would have to put his foot on immense scorpions and centipedes that
crawled about in the room in hundreds – (A shudder went through the company) –
The sinner would have to stand thus for a month, without food or sleep. At the end of
month he would be transferred to another place, a very narrow bridge over a lake of
boiling oil. The bridge was so narrow that he would be able to keep only one food on
it a time. Even on the narrow bridge there was plenty of wasp nests and cactus, and he
would be goaded from behind to move on. He would have to balance on one foot, and
then on another for ages and ages, to keep himself from failing into a steaming lake
below, and move on indefinitely. . . ” (p. 46). This is the exact situation which had
given rise to the creation of heaven or hell.
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Raman in The Painter of Signs thinks that Daisy, in her previous birth, must
have been Queen Victoria or in a still earlier incarnation, Rani Jhansi, the warrior
Queen of Indian history. This concept was also supported by Lord Budhha, so it is not
just to classify it as a superstition. I think this concept would have come into being
when human mind had lost control over his situation and had given away him to fate.
There are some other superstitions which may be called the beliefs of the
Medieval Age. The coachman in Swami and Friends tells Swaminathan that with the
help of some special metal pot and some special herbs, he is able to convert copper
coin into silver. He could even convert copper into gold but it is difficult to find out
herbs required for this purpose. Alchemy was the common practice in the Middle Age
but nowadays it has become superstition.
In The Dark Room, Kamala and Sumati don’t dare to look into cook’s eye
because the belief was that a person who looked into the cook’s eye at certain
moment would be turned into stone. They are told that for many furlongs and miles
stones were once human beings who had dared to look into cook’s eye. Later on the
Government people chiseled them into shape and carved miles and furlongs on them.
There is also superstition regarding omen. While starting on a journey, if one meets a
man bearing the pot of foaming today it is the sign of good omen. Sastrigal in The
Bachelor of Arts has an experience of such omen when he is coming to match the
horoscope of Chandran and Malathi. But his belief deceives him. Malathi’s and
Chandran’s horoscopes did not match. Raman in The Painter of Signs regards number
three as the sign a bad omen. He justifies his belief by giving example of three
witches of Macbeth. So three women workers who came to meet Daisy is shattered.
It is quite clear that only a child can believe in the superstitions mentioned
above. Such beliefs have got no rational basis in the modern world and hence they are
treated as superstitions. In addition to this, a few rituals and practices are also found
in R.K. Narayan’s novels and most of them are kept in the category of superstitions.
Among such practices and rituals, caste system and untouchability gets frequent
142
mention in his novels. Ponni, in The Dark Room tries to guess Savitri’s mind that a
Brahmin would not stay with her or touch her food because she belongs to lower
caste. Ponni says, “Or stay in our house. I will clear a part for you and never come
there. I will buy a new post for you, and rice, and you can cook your own food. I will
never come that way. I will never cook anything in our house which may be repulsive
to you. Please come with me” (p. 137).
Narayan’s male characters Raman and Sriram, are ready to marry a girl of the
other caste even without making enquiries about such things. Raman becomes rather
frustrated when Daisy changed her mind at the eleventh hour not to marry. If Bharti
had not consented to marry Sriram, he would have met the same fate as Chandran had
met after he was not married to Malthi. As in the Indian society, Narayan’s male
characters are less superstitious than their female counterparts. The reason is obvious.
The females are more emotional than males. Indian women follow their respective
husbands like shadows and it is reflected in Narayan’s novels.
In The Dark Room Savitri is a devoted wife. She tolerates all sorts of
misconducts of her husband. Even when she attempts to commit suicide and fails in
her attempt. She has to return home with no alternative left. Almost all the women
characters of Narayan’s novels with the exception of Rosie, Daisy, Bharti and
commandant Sarasa are devoted wives. Although commandant Sarasa also behaves as
an Indian wife, she is assertive as she should be in accordance with her profession.
Among other practices the idol worship is the most important and figures in
almost all the novels of R.K. Narayan. The annual function of Radha -Krishna temple
is celebrated with great pomp in The Man-Eater of Malgudi Muthu, tea shop owner in
the Memphi Hill has helped in the reconstruction of shrine and has installed a four
armed goddess who protects people of that area and does not allow any accident of
vehicle to happen. Raju in The Guide finds many stones under peepal tree in the
Mangala Village whom people worship with great devotion.
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Rituals are also elaborately described in Narayan’s novels. These rituals may
be related with marriage, cremation, inauguration etc. The trunk of banana tree and
the strings of mango leaves are commonly used on auspicious occasions. The mango,
plantains, peepal etc. are the primeval trees. Hence they are of immense significance
for the celebration of any auspicious occasion.
1. Naik, M.K. The Ironic Vision: A Study of the Fiction of R.K. Narayan. New
Delhi: Sterling Publishers Pvt. Ltd., 1983. p. 1.
4. Singh, R.S. Indian Novel in English. New Delhi: Arnold Heinemann, 1977.
p. 57.
7. Ibid., p. 114.
8. Ibid., pp.166-67.
10. Krishnan, S. A Day with R.K. Narayan. Spam, April, 1975: 42.
11. Narayan, R.K. The Dark Room. New Delhi: Orient Paperbacks, 1978.
p. 154.
12. Iyengar, K.R.S. Indian Writing in English, New Delhi: Sterling Publishers
Pvt. Ltd., 1996. p. 371.
13. Singh, R.S. The Indian Novel in English. Arnold Heinemann: New Delhi,
1977. p. 62.
145
15. Narayan, R.K. My Days. New Delhi: Orient Paperbacks, 1986. p. 119.
16. Dev, Som. The Guide: A Critical Appreciation. Bareilly: Prakas Books
Depot, 1982. p. 115.
17. Krishna, S. A Day with Narayan. Span: Literary Criterion, Vol. IV. 1961.
18. Narasimhaiah, C.D. The Swan and the Eagle. Simla: Indian Institute of
Advanced Study, 1969. p. 136.
21. Sundaram, P.S. R.K. Narayan. New Delhi: Arnold Heinemann, 1973.
p.138.
22. Iyengar, K.R.S. Indian Writing in English. New Delhi: Sterling Publishers
Pvt. Ltd., 1996. p. 383.
23. Narayan R.K., The Man-Eater of Malgudi, New Delhi: Orient Paperbacks,
1983. p. 17.
27. Narayan R.K. An Astrologer’s Day & Other Stories. Mysore: Indian
Thought Publications, 1983. p. 3.
146
28. Ibid., p. 9.
29. Narayan, R.K. Swami and Friends. Mysore: Indian Thought Publications,
1974. pp. 53-54.
31. Rosanne, Archer. A Painter with a Brilliant Palette. New York Post
(N. York), Section II, p.11.
32. Narayan, R.K. My Days (Mysore, 1974), p. 53. All the References to R.K.
Narayan’s novels are from Indian Thought Publications. Page Numbers
have been recorded in parentheses.
33. J. Abbot, Keys of Power: A Study of Indian Ritual and Belief. London:
Methuen of Company Ltd., 1932. p. 251.