Wednesday 28 December 2011

A Slip of the Tongue - F.E.B. Gray summary




Introduction
F.E.B. Gray is a famous English writer.  He has written many short stories.  “A Slip of the Tongue” is a short story from India.

Harisharman’s Wish
Harisharman is a beggar.  He has a family.  He begs daily for his food.  He wishes to become rich so he moves to another town.  In the town, he searches for job.  He becomes a servant in Sthuladatta’s house.  In few days Sthuladatta arranges marriage for his daughter.  Many people come to the marriage.  Sthuladatta does not invite Harisharman to eat in the marriage.  Hari decides to become popular.  He asks his wife to say that her husband is intelligent.

The Horse
Harisharman steals Sthuladatta’s son in law’s horse and ties it away in the forest.  Sthuladatta feel sad that the horse is stolen.  At that time Hari’s wife goes to Sthuladatta and says that her husband can find the horse.  Sthuladatta comes to Hari.  Hari does some actions and says that the horse is inside the forest.  Sthuladatta becomes happy on getting his horse.  He gives money to Hari.

The King’s Treasure
After few days, the king’s treasure were stolen.  The king calls Hari to find the treasure.  Hari is given a room in the palace and asked to find the treasure.  Inside the room, Hari talks to himself.  He scolds his tongue for telling lie.  This was overheard by Jhiva, a servant.  She comes to Hari and says that it is she who is responsible for the theft.  She says the truth because Jhiva means tongue.  Hari asks her to take some treasure and he takes some.  He asks the rest of the treasure to be kept in garden.  He says the king to dig the garden and find the treasure.  The king gives money to Hari for finding the treasure.

The Test
The ministers in the court doubt Hari’s intelligence and calls him for a test.  They keep a big jar and asks Hari to find what is inside it.  Hari scolds himself as a frog, his nick name in the childhood.  The ministers say that frog is inside the pot.  They all praise Hari.  The king gives a palace and few people for Hari.

A Grammarian’s Funeral- Robert Browning summary





Introduction
Robert Browning’s A Grammarian’s Funeral is a dramatic monologue set in shortly after the renaissance in Europe.  It is a mourning poem sung by a disciple of a noble grammarian, who passed away after spending whole of life in learning new things.  The poem is about the life history of the grammarian as seen by the disciple.  It is in the form of a movement from plains to the hilltop, where they plan to burry the grammarian.  They walk in darkness towards the mountain and during the walk the grammarian’s disciple sketches (says) the biography and the achievements of his master.

Choice of Place/The Right Place
            The grammarian’s disciples decide to bury their master’s corpse in the mountain.  They feel that plains are meant for uncouth people.  They wish their master should be buried in the mountain where there is culture and learning.  They mountain here represents greatness and higher thoughts.  It is a place where the sun shines first and later it passes down.  The grammarian is not an ordinary man to be buried along with the ignorant, illiterates.  Therefore, they decide to bury him in the mountain.  As they walk, they find the rest of the village people fast asleep, in the darkness – under ignorance.

            They say that the life of the ordinary people is like night and the grammarian’s life is like morning.  As climb up they see many peaks and the disciple chooses one peak, which has some light at its top.  The light is not a natural one but it comes from a place there.  They decide to bury the grammarian there.  As they walk, the disciple ask others, who carry the grammarian, to lift their heads and chest up, so that the dead grammarian gets due respect before the onlookers.

The Grammarian’s Young Age
            The grammarian spent all his young age reading and gaining knowledge.  He was interested in knowing the mystery of world and human life.  During his young age, he kept reading voraciously so that soon he became old.  On becoming old, he did not get lazy and unenergetic, but he kept reading his books and understanding life.  If it had been other men, they would have said no to their studies, but the grammarian kept reading books.  Even in his old age, he wanted to know the views of poets and other great scholars.
           
As he grew old, his eyes lost its power and his body became very weak.  If it had been an ordinary man, then he would have stopped reading and started enjoying life but the grammarian did not enjoy life.  He believed in enjoying life after death (the eternal life).  He kept reading books, without a stop.  After reading books, he wished to read the commentaries and criticism of some books.  He wished to read until the last minute of his life.

The grammarian saw life not as parts but as a whole.  He believed that life is of parts that give rise to whole.  To explain this, the poet uses the image of constructing a building.  He says that before building a house one has to draw its parts and then only they have to build.  Similarly, the grammarian believed that to live a happy one must strive (work) hard at the early stage or young age.  The grammarian before beginning to live his life planned for his life.  The grammarian fully believed in God and thereby he planned for his happy life, after death.  Ordinary men would say that time keeps moving and they would start enjoying their life but the grammarian believed in life after death and in the concept that soul has no end.  He also says that human beings should prepare for their life after death.  The present life and enjoyment of life is meant for lower animals and not for human beings.  He says that only animals believe in present and enjoying life.

His belief in God and life after death made him study book after book, without getting tired.  As he grew older and older, his eyes became dim like a lead.  His physic became weaker and weaker.  His disciples, along with the diseases, would advice him not to keep reading books.  However, the grammarian kept reading with more enthusiasm and energy.  One could not separate learning from the grammarian.  Ordinary man drinks water when he is thirsty.  The grammarian drinks knowledge, like a dragon.  His thirst is said as a mighty thirst, a bigger thirst, a noble thirst.

Like ordinary human beings, the grammarian did not mind about cheap and petty ambitions.  He was not narrow in his thoughts.  He did have small ambitions.  He did not draw a small circle around him.  Only ordinary men would believe in short gains and profits and they would lose the bargain during the Judgment day.  Ordinary people aim for a small profit and they achieve it in their life, but they are miserable failures in their eternal life.  The grammarian looked for life beyond death.  His ambitions are larger than life size.  He aimed at a million.  During his life on earth, he did not fulfill one percent of his ambition, but still he was happy and sure of a better life after death.  For him, death is a preparation of life.  He solely believed upon God.

The grammarian was interested in learning even in his deathbed.  Though his voice was feeble and incoherent he explained his disciples the parts of speech and the correct usage of Greek words like hoti (because), oun (therefore) and right usage of the prefix ‘De-’.  He explained the rules of Greek grammar, even when his body was partly paralyzed.

As they come and reach the hilltop, they choose a place filled with lots of birds like swallows and curfews.  The disciple says that the grammarian flew in the sky like the birds.  The disciple once again says that common people should live in the plains and this place is meant for the grammarian.  He describes the qualities of the highest peak.  He considers it as the place where the sun rises, the stars shoot into the sky, the lightning loosens itself, the clouds form and the birds haunt.  It is a place of grandness that suits the grand man, the grammarian.  Therefore, they all decide to stop (halt) and bury the grammarian there.

Conclusion
            As the funeral procession proceeds, we could see the disciple giving instructions to the persons who come along with him.  He gives them signals about the winding path and the way they should walk to avoid inconveniences.  On the whole, the poem is yet another best dramatic monologue of Robert Browning, expressing his philosophy of life and skill of describing nature at its best.

Wednesday 21 December 2011

A Devoted Son - summary



Introduction
            Anita Desai is a famous Indian writer.  She has written many novels in English.  Almost all her stories talks about ordinary Indian life and characters.  A Devoted Son is a short story about the relationship between a father and a son.

Rakesh’s Achievements
            Rakesh is the protagonist of the story.  His father’s name is Varma.  The story opens announcing Rakesh’s achievement as the first rank holder in medical studies at national level.  His father feels proud of his son.  He shares with others the fact that Rakesh touched his feet as soon as he saw the results in the paper.  The neighbours celebrate this occasion.  Rakesh moves to U.S. and does his higher education there.  He gets back to India to the same old house, situated in a dirty locality.  He comes to India and falls in his father’s feet.  This surprises the father and the neighbours.  Rakesh’s mother feels happy because Rakesh does not come with a white girl.  Rakesh then worked in a city hospital, grew well in the administrative organization and he left the hospital as a director and built his own hospital.  He took his parents to his clinic in a blue ambassador.  His name spread all over the place and he became famous and rich.

Rakesh’s Old Father
            Rakesh’s mother dies peacefully when her son does her an operation.  After her death, Varma becomes lonely and sick.  He acts strangely.  Sometimes he sits erect, sometimes he lays flat without any movements, and suddenly he rises up and spits beetle juice.  In spite of all indifferent activities, Rakesh read newspaper to his father in all mornings took him to the garden in the evenings and made him sleep in the lawn during summer nights.

Treatment Given by Dr. Rakesh
            Varma becomes old and Dr. Rakesh prescribes him more medicines.  He asks his father not to eat halwa and other sweets.  He orders his wife to give him tasteless food.  He wishes his father to live a long life with him.  He takes care of his father.  He is devoted to his father and his health.  He behaves strict to his father in diet.  He cuts almost all food items.  The father becomes much older and then medicines become his only food.  Rakesh takes care of his father to the best possible.

The Reactions of the Old Man
            Varma hates to see his devoted son as a doctor.  He does not like Rakesh ordering and restricting his diet.  He wishes to eat lots or at least eat the food that he loves most.  He persuades his daughter-in-law and his grand children to get him some sweet but Rakesh objects that.  This heightens his anger.  He complains about his son’s behavior of not providing food to his father to his neighbour friends.  Varma feels totally upset with his son’s attitudes towards his diet.  By the end of the story, he dies with a sad soul.  He does not part Rakesh happily as his mother does.

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