Monday, 15 December 2014

GAURI: A FEMALE SUBALTERN WHO CAN SPEAK

The Peasant Woman by Russian poet Nicholai Nekrasov, the story of Sita in Ramayana and the writings of Ali Sardar Jafri inspired Anand to write his tenth novel Gauri. It was first published in 1960 under the title The Old Woman and the Cow and later re-issued by Orient Paper-back in its present name. Anand, who is the creator of memorable male characters, portrays for the first time a woman in her tenderness and resilience. In the author's own words, Gauri is "my offering to the beauty, dignity and devotion of Indian women." The novel fore-grounds the issue of gender, apropos of the rebellious behaviour of a young rustic Punjabi wife, first given in a marriage to a poor and violent villager, then sold off by her mother to an aged merchant and finally rescued by a benevolent medical man.
            This novel, as indeed all Anand's fiction, expresses his indisputable concern for suffering humanity. It forces one to ask a few questions about the Indian character. We do call our woman 'Devi', 'Mata' and 'Luxmi' and claim that our society has always been giving due respect to women. But at the same time, we also beat them, set them ablaze or turn them out of the houses. Gauri eloquently exposes the hypocrisy of our society. It not only voices a strong protest against the ill treatment of women but also explores through the example of a poor and illiterate girl what woman in India should do for her emancipation.
            Gauri is depicted by Anand as a female subaltern, subjected to an inferior status in a male-dominant society. The removal of the disabilities of the Indian woman and her freedom from various forms of oppressions and suppressions has been an unending process. It is true that the law of the land does not admit of inequality on the basis of sex, but old social and psychological habits and reactionary resistance of the orthodox sections of society initiate against the law. The conventions of society create a subordinate status for a woman who is denied the freedom to take decision, even with in a family. Anand's novel presents his deep concern for the subaltern status of women which renders them as slaves "bound and fecund for the service of the hearth."
            Through the pathetic character of Gauri, Anand has shown that suffering is inevitable lot of women like that of any other subaltern. He attempts, in Gauri, to subvert the patriarchal order which perpetrates marginalization of woman. Like a true feminist, the writer opposes sexism and endeavours to arise and transform 'false consciousness' which subjugates women.
            Woman in the Indian society has to play the traditional roles like a submissive wife, procreative agent or an incarnation of sacrifice and so on. Gauri fits into the category of the submissive wife in the beginning of the novel. When Panchi, the bridegroom rides her pony to the wedding place to the accompaniment of Angrezi music, he tries to imagine his would be wife "for there was the prospect of the prize of a girl whom he could fold in his arms at night and kick during the day, who would adorn his house and help him with the work on the land." (p.11) He remembers how his parents- in- law kept up the constant refrain during the negotiation that "Gauri is like a cow, very gentle." (P.11) The metaphor of the cow easily brings to our mind the docility, sublimity,   harmlessness, virtue, holiness and such other properties attached to the animal in Hindu religion. Panchi felt like a holy bull going off to marry the little cow Gauri (P.13).
            The metaphor of "holy bull" and "Cow" easily bring out the contrast between the dominating party and the submissive party respectively. Eventually the wedding between Panchi and Gauri takes place in spite of the incidental problem of dowry hindering the matrimonial procedure. Panchi is able to have the first look at his wife only after the marriage when she is ceremonially received into his family. Gauri begins her matrimonial life as a docile wife. She has, obviously, accepted all the norms of the patriarchal society and therefore, tries to conform to them as far as possible. She nourishes all the rosy dreams about her future and tries to be 'Sita' as her mother advises her.
            But life is not as simple as she thinks. The familial as well as societal environment seems to be very antipathetic to her. After the marriage, Panchi, a chauvinist, rules over her like a master over a slave. He forces her to submit to his impatience and pettiness without protest. Her duties are to cook, to clean, to please her husband's libidinous desires and to submit herself humbly to his male chauvinism and physical violence. He asserts again and again his male prerogative to beat and 'chastise the wife if she goes wrong' in the name of 'Dharma'. There is draught and famine for which Gauri is blamed as she is considered an inauspicious bride. Panchi’s joint family life breaks up. This mishap too, is ascribed to her evil presence.
            Away from the joint family and undisturbed by Kesaro (aunt of her husband), Panchi and Gauri come closer. He slowly begins to understand her love and affection for him.
            But one day the wicked Kesaro visits again and poisons Panchi's mind against Gauri. Hearing the destructive words, Gauri picks up unexpected courage and catches hold of Kesaro by the bum of her hair and pushes her out of their house. After her departure, the idea of Gauri's evil stars injected in him by Kesaro continues to possess Panchi. Above all, Kesaro's accusation of Gauri's liaison with Raj Guru in his absence arouses suspicious in him over her character. Gauri's devotion and ardent love for him makes his mind oscillate between loving and hating her. One morning she tells him shyly: “I am with a child and we shall have another mouth to feed." (P.101) but instead of getting excited by the news, he kicks her shouting: "Go, go, and get out of my sight. Go to your mother, the whore...." She fells at his feet, begged with hand joined before her for head. "Do not send me away."(P.102) But he kicks her left and right.
            Gauri, broken hearted due to unexpected behaviour she gets from her husband, prepares to leave the house because mother in her makes her realize her responsibility of protecting the child in her womb. Nothing can, perhaps, be more pathetic for a woman in our country than to be driven out by her husband, to go back to her parent's house, to be considered an unnecessary burden. Anand portrays this single episode in two ways. In his short story 'Lajwanti', Lajwanti comes to her parents' home after being beaten by his brother- in -law Jaswant .But her father takes her back to her parents- in- law's house and says, "Kill her if you like." The poor Lajwanti has no option but to commit suicide. She jumps in a well but is saved to suffer more humiliations.  In Gauri, the poor Gauri is sold by her parents "in lieu of cash and wiping out of the mortgage on house as well as the cow, Chandari."
            She is bought and brought by force the Hoshiarpur by Seth Jai Ram Das. The Seth tries to win her heart by putting up a garb of religiosity and also by offering her jewellery. Gauri resists his advance through her hysteric fever. Sensing her illness, Jai Ram Das calls doctor for her medical treatment. Jai Ram Das tries again to woo and win her heart with several gifts, but Gauri is very firm in her rejection of him as her husband. She tells him that she could be his servant rather than his wife. As he has bought her he wants to have his money's worth. Although she has been trapped into a dire situation by the contingencies of her life, she  grows very alert about her goal of life. It is her belief in wifely loyalty to Panchi and chastity which enable her to retain her integrity against all the odds of life.
            When her physical illness becomes problematic, she is hospitalized in Col. Mahindra's Nursing Home. The Nursing Home proves a turning point in her life. Dr. Batra, the partner of the nursing home is strongly attracted towards the young and pregnant Gauri. He wants to help Gauri and he also has his own axe to grind. He warns Seth Jai Ram Das, "I hear this girl has been bought by you for cash from her guardians. I shall report this matter to the police" (P.140).The Seth tries to defend himself by clarifying the fact that "I have put ‘chaddar' on the woman and married in that way"(140). With the helps of doctors and by the assertion of Gauri, it is finally arranged that Gauri should be retained in the hospital as an employee. The Seth grows helpless and gives up the idea of possessing Gauri any more.
            But a wife living away from her husband is never safe as she becomes the object of temptation for the lusting men. A sophisticated womanizer, Dr. Batra pursues Gauri systematically. Gauri is not aware of his elaborate plan of seduction. One day, when Dr. Batra is about to seduce Gauri in the hospital room, Miss Young prevents it by bringing it to the notice of Col. Mahindra. Thus, Gauri undergoes a hell of trouble on account of her youth and gender. She like Tess suffers on account of the predatory male attention to her beauty. The admirable quality in Gauri is her sterling integrity.
            Meanwhile, Gauri's husband Panchi repents on having abandoned his wife. He goes to the parents'-in-law's house to bring her back. Laxmi (Gauri’s mother) repents her sin and brings back Gauri from Mahindra's Hospital. But when she comes back to Panchi, he is again torn between his desire for her loving presence and his suspicion of her chastity. Gauri's warmth, however, strengthens him and he is able to give a befitting treatment to the gossip-mongers. But the strength again wanes when he has to face the people of the village who are bent upon making him realize that he has made a mistake by accepting his wife after her being stayed in somebody else's house in Hoshiarpur. His suspicion of the wifely chastity in recognition of the social opinion is easily comparable to the archetypal situation in the Ramayana where Lord Rama has to clarify the washer- man’s doubt about Sita's chastity by abandoning her. Panchi wants to test his wife, he asks her, "Tell me the truth, bitch......What is the proof of your purity." (262) .She says, "I have been true to you." The suspicion in Panchi about her is so strong that he behaves very irrationally. He kicks her saying, "You have cut my nose, bitch from Peplan Kalan! What curse upon my fate prospered in my marriage with you, daughter of a whore?"
            Gauri is so deeply hurt by his irrational accusation that she does not want to be cowed down by it. Her stay in Dr. Mahindra's Hospital has awakened her sense of identity and courage of conviction. The courage born out of her inner purity enables her to defy the irrational husband and the gossip-mongering society. She asserts, “And if you strike me again, I will hit back" (263) When Hoor Banu tries to console her she says, "They are telling him that Ram turned out Sita because everyone doubted her chastity during her stay with Ravna!....I am not Sita that the earth will open up and swallow me. I shall just go out and be forgotten of him..." (264)
            Panchi has behaved like Rama by listening to the loose tongues of the village but Gauri refuses to be like Sita. She has obviously, grown from the stage of docility to that of defiance in spite of being uneducated and rural. "Her face shone from the pressure of her stricken heart, transfigured from the gentle cow's acquiescent visage of the time when she had arrived in Panchi's house, to that of a woman -with a will of her own." (264) She knows that she is carrying the child of Panchi in her womb, but she cannot accept his atrocities any longer. She wants to go to Dr. Mahindra's hospital to deliver her child so that" her child would not be the coward the Panchi was or as weak as she had been." (264)
            Gauri is not presented as a meek and docile woman, as most of the heroines of Tagore are. She shows her real vim in the circumstances when they become seemingly uncongenial. The cow-like gentle Gauri presented in the first chapter, under goes epic transformation mainly through suffering and at the end of the novel, she succeeds in vindicating her right to an independent life free from the Violations and abrasions of male supremacy. Gauri is, definitely, not a ‘revolutionary woman’ but an individual who has convincingly succeed in becoming a human and whole and refuses to be a subaltern.


                                                                             


                                                           REFERENCES
   Anand, Mulk Raj.   Gauri.  New Delhi: Arnold-Heinemann; 1981

                    

Monday, 17 February 2014

Shakespeare's Top Love Quotes



Love is the greatest of dreams, yet the worst of nightmares.” 
― William Shakespeare

“Who could refrain that had a heart to love and in that heart courage to make love known?” 
― William Shakespeare

“I had rather hear my dog bark at a crow, than a man swear he loves me.” 
― William Shakespeare, Much Ado About Nothing

The course of true love never did run smooth.”
― William Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night's Dream

“Did my heart love till now? forswear it, sight! For I ne'er saw true beauty till this night.”
― William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet

Don't waste your love on somebody, who doesn't value it.”
― William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet

Love me or hate me, both are in my favor…If you love me, I'll always be in your heart…If you hate me, I'll always be in your mind.”
― William Shakespeare

“Love is heavy and light, bright and dark, hot and cold, sick and healthy, asleep and awake- its everything except what it is! (Act 1, scene 1)”
― William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet

Some Cupid kills with arrows, some with traps. ”
― William
Shakespeare, Much Ado About Nothing

“Love is a smoke made with the fume of sighs.”
― William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet

“I love thee, I love thee with a love that shall not die. Till the sun grows cold and the stars grow old.”
― William Shakespeare

“Love comforteth like sunshine after rain.”
― William Shakespeare

“love is blind
and lovers cannot see
the pretty follies
that themselves commit”
― William Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice

“Journeys end in lovers meeting.”
― William Shakespeare, Twelfth Night

“Love is merely a madness.”
― William Shakespeare, As You Like It

Sunday, 12 January 2014

Kali The Mother

    A poem by Swami Vivekanand written in Kashmir, on a houseboat on Dal Lake. After visiting the Kshir Bhavani Temple


The stars are blotted out, 
The clouds are covering clouds. 
It is darkness vibrant, sonant.   
In the roaring, whirling wind 
Are the souls of a million lunatics 
Just loosed from the prison-house, 
Wrenching trees by the roots, 
Sweeping all from the path. 
The sea has joined the fray, 
And swirled up mountain-waves, 
To reach the pitchy sky. 
The flash of lurid light 
Reveals on every side 
A thousand, thousand shades 
Of Death begrimed and black- 
Scattering plagues and sorrows, 
Dancing mad with joy, 
Come, Mother, come! 
For terror is Thy name, 
Death is in thy breath, 
And every shaking step 
Destroys a world for e'er. 
Thou Time, the All-destroyer! 
Come, O Mother, come! 
Who dares misery love, 
And hug the form of Death, 
Dance in destruction's dance 
To him the Mother comes.