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Tuesday 14 January 2014

Rime of the ancient Mariner Plot summary (Wikipedia) + Iron Maiden video


The Rime of the Ancient Mariner relates the experiences of a sailor who has returned from a long sea voyage. The Mariner stops a man who is on the way to a wedding ceremony and begins to narrate a story. The Wedding-Guest's reaction turns from bemusement to impatience to fear to fascination as the Mariner's story progresses, as can be seen in the language style: Coleridge uses narrative techniques such as personification and repetition to create a sense of danger, the supernatural, or serenity, depending on the mood in different parts of the poem.
The Mariner's tale begins with his ship departing on its journey. Despite initial good fortune, the ship is driven south by a storm and eventually reaches Antarctica. An albatross appears and leads them out of the Antarctic, but even as the albatross is praised by the ship's crew, the Mariner shoots the bird ("with my cross-bow / I shot the albatross"). The crew is angry with the Mariner, believing the albatross brought the south wind that led them out of the Antarctic. However, the sailors change their minds when the weather becomes warmer and the mist disappears ("'Twas right, said they, such birds to slay / that bring the fog and mist"). However, they made a grave mistake in supporting this crime, as it arouses the wrath of spirits who then pursue the ship "from the land of mist and snow"; the south wind that had initially led them from the land of ice now sends the ship into uncharted waters, where it is becalmed.
Day after day, day after day,
We stuck, nor breath nor motion;
As idle as a painted ship
Upon a painted ocean.
Water, water, every where,
And all the boards did shrink;
Water, water, every where,
Nor any drop to drink.
Engraving by Gustave DorĂ© for an 1876 edition of the poem. "The Albatross," depicts 17 sailors on the deck of a wooden ship facing an albatross. Icicles hang from the rigging.
The sailors change their minds again and blame the Mariner for the torment of their thirst. In anger, the crew forces the Mariner to wear the dead albatross about his neck, perhaps to illustrate the burden he must suffer from killing it, or perhaps as a sign of regret ("Ah! Well a-day! What evil looks / Had I from old and young! / Instead of the cross, the albatross / About my neck was hung"). Eventually, the ship encounters a ghostly vessel. On board are Death (a skeleton) and the "Night-mare Life-in-Death" (a deathly-pale woman), who are playing dice for the souls of the crew. With a roll of the dice, Death wins the lives of the crew members and Life-in-Death the life of the Mariner, a prize she considers more valuable. Her name is a clue to the Mariner's fate: he will endure a fate worse than death as punishment for his killing of the albatross.
One by one, all of the crew members die, but the Mariner lives on, seeing for seven days and nights the curse in the eyes of the crew's corpses, whose last expressions remain upon their faces. Eventually, this stage of the Mariner's curse is lifted after he appreciates the sea creatures swimming in the water. Despite his cursing them as "slimy things" earlier in the poem ("Yea, slimy things did crawl with legs / upon the slimy sea"), he suddenly sees their true beauty and blesses them ("a spring of love gush'd from my heart and I bless'd them unaware"); suddenly, as he manages to pray, the albatross falls from his neck and his guilt is partially expiated. The bodies of the crew, possessed by good spirits, rise again and steer the ship back home, where it sinks in a whirlpool, leaving only the Mariner behind. A hermit on the mainland had seen the approaching ship and had come to meet it with a pilot and the pilot's boy in a boat. When they pull him from the water, they think he is dead, but when he opens his mouth, the pilot has a fit. The hermit prays, and the Mariner picks up the oars to row. The pilot's boy goes crazy and laughs, thinking the Mariner is the devil, and says, "The Devil knows how to row." As penance for shooting the albatross, the Mariner, driven by guilt, is forced to wander the earth, tell his story, and teach a lesson to those he meets:
He prayeth best, who loveth best
All things both great and small;
For the dear God who loveth us,
He made and loveth all.
After relating the story, the Mariner leaves, and the Wedding Guest returns home, and wakes the next morning "a sadder and a wiser man"



Watch the below video when you are taking a break :P

Iron Maiden - Rime of the Ancient Mariner





Just Lather, That’s All- Summary



The short story Just Lather, That’s All, written by Hernando Tellez, is set in a barbershop in a small Colombian town. Captain Torres walks in the barbershop for a shave. The barber began to tremble when he recognized Captain Torres, and secretly Captain Torres is his enemy. The barber doesn’t like Captain because he was against the rebels and he also killed many rebels with pleasure. The barber hates him because of what he did with the rebels since the barber is a rebel himself. The barber struggles with his inner conflict. He is really confused and scared about what he should do and what not. He also thinks about the consequences he will get if he kills the Captain or whether he will become a town hero. As he is shaving the Captain he struggles within himself to decide whether to kill Captain Torres or not. The barber is frustrated with his hatred for the Captain and his values for human life. After all that thought he decides not to kill Caption Torres. He believes he is a professional barber and is here to give him a shave. Once Captain Torres is done shaving he tells the barber “They told me that you’d kill me. I came to find out. But killing isn’t easy. You can take my word for it.” This quote clearly explains that even the Captain finds killing people a hard task and that not all rebels are enemies. The main message of the story is that everyone has their own place in the scheme of things.The definition of a coward is one to show fear, the barber shows he is a coward by being afraid, seconding guessing himself, and showing weakness. When the captain walks into the barber shop he begins to quiver on the spot, therefore showing how fearful his is of the captain. For example “When I recognized him I started to tremble.” The barber without a doubt is showing terror. When you’re brave and courageous you never doubt yourself and stick to your guns, however the barber does not. In other words, when you plan on doing something you should never back down. On the other hand the barber does back down. For instance, “But what would I do with the body? Where would I hide it? I would have to flee…” Here he begins to think about what would happen if he did kill the captain and therefore leading him to not kill. In addition, the barber says “No one deserves to have someone else make the sacrifice of becoming a murderer.” In other words he is trying to say he doesn’t deserve to be the one to kill him and be called a murderer. Finally, the barber gives off vulnerability by thinking of reducing the amount of pain and suffering to the captain. For example, the barber thinks to himself “I'm sure that one solid stroke, one deep incision, would prevent any pain. He wouldn't suffer.” Caring for the enemy and trying to minimize the amount of pain they will have is true acts of a coward. In conclusion being fearful, doubting oneself, and giving off weakness is a sure fire sign of a coward.

"The Student" by Anton Chekhov

This short story by Chekhov concerns a student who reflects on his own life and history and initially sees nothing but despair. As he sits by a fire and recounts the story of St. Peter from the Bible, and how he denied knowing Jesus three times, it seems as if he is a figure who is overtaken by despair and sorrow. However, after recounting the story, he sees that the truth within it provokes an emotional reaction in his audience, the old woman, Vasilisa, and her daughter, and this helps him to recognise that there is a much more optimistic way of looking at life and history, which is summed up in the quote identified in this question: ...he thought that truth and beauty which had guided human life there in the garden and in the yard of the high priest had continued without interruption to this day, and had evidently always been the chief thing in human life and in all earthly life, indeed... He recognises that the emotional reaction in response to this story is a sign of the "truth and beauty" that is present in human life throughout the ages, and this acknowledgement of the continuing existence of that truth and beauty gives him hope for his present and for his future, turning his despair in to optimism.

SummaryOn Good Friday a clerical student is walking home when he encounters two widows warming themselves around a fire. As the cold evening descends, he joins them and tells the story of the Apostle Peter, who the night before Jesus died was so afraid for his own skin that he denied knowing Jesus, not once, but three times. Afterwards, the Gospels say, he was filled with remorse and "went out and wept bitterly."
The two women are deeply moved by this tale; one of them starts to cry. The student suddenly experiences a connection between the story of Peter, 1900 years old, and the women and himself. He is filled with "the inexpressible sweet expectation of happiness, of unknown mysterious happiness . . . and life seemed to him enchanting, marvelous, and full of lofty meaning."
CommentaryThis simple story captures a profound mystical experience. The story tells of betrayal and remorse--a very human sequence but also offers the hope of forgiveness. Peter, after all, becomes one of the greatest of all saints. Human weakness and the need for redemption link us all, past, present, and future.
The student sees that the story touches his listeners--he experiences the power of the word to heal. "Insight" partially captures his experience, because it is a kind of "sight within," but his experience also verges on ecstasy, "a state of overwhelming emotion" or "rapturous delight."

Sunday 6 October 2013

9 Jakhoo Hill

9Jakhoo Hill presents Indian socio-economic and political history of 1960s and 1970s which is considered to be the most tumultuous period in the Indian context due to demoralizing Indo- China war . The play set in Shimla during 196 is relevant even today in the 21scentury. Referring to the context of the play The Hindu stated :
The political turmoil and disillusionment of the outside world, Indias demoralizing war with
China, the gradual decline of Nehruvian Ideals and optimism is echoed in the sitting room of 9
Jakhoo Hill’ where once well to  dfamily watches in comprehension as its genteel world
disintegrates in the face of a brash new social climbing middle class.
The play is about two migrant Hindu families from Lahore after the tragic partition of India. The
play investigates the ways of living which governed the attitudes, social norms, the psycho- cultural and socio-cultural behavior patterns of the Simla society .The play is an exposé of changing social order which affected the socio-economic order of the Indian society in the past and is affecting it in the present century as well. The play is a resonant account on the cultural and political history of India.
Gurcharan Das in the Introduction’ to Three English Plays asserted, We are Macaulays
children, not Manus…we have one foot in India , the other in the West, and we belong to neither culture”(18-19).In the 21st century, under the impact of globalization , liberalization our life appears to be fragmented and affected by   rapidly changing social and economical order, societal changes ,intensifying debauchery  The ideals of Universal brotherhood, sorority and
forbearance have been substituted by voracity, profligacy narcissism and corruption resulting in creation of estranged and alienated individuals all over the country. Gurcharan Dass 9 Jakhoo Hill  is a realistic portrayal of this gloomy picture of Indian society in 1960s and also in 2010s. Das reverberates Eltons views that past always determines the present, Those who look upon it have survived it; they are its product and its victors. No wonder, therefore, that men concern themselves with history (Elton 46).
Jawahar Lal Nehru armoured with his idealistic ideals, promoting the policy of non-alignment and  The Panchsheel, dreamt to make India a power. The Chinese incursion, Indian defeat and mortification hurt the Nations consciousness beyond imagination. The result of 1962 Indo- China war woulhave been differenhad Nehru displayed greater  leadership acume and realized Indias military power.
The political hubbub and frustration, Indias disconcerting defeat at the hands of the Chinese,
collapse of Nehrus impractical beliefs,  crass materialistic, apathetic and hostile social attitudes ocharacters  is  reverberated  in  this  play.  9  Jakhoo  Hill  is  not  only  about  the  traumatic experiences  of  partition,  one  individuals  past  but  of  migrant  families  in  particular  and community in general. The play highlighting the  dilemma of contemporary society,  illustrates the impact of Indo-China war on the  Indian society in 1962 that ended an age of innocence and completely devastated Nehruvian ideals.





Gurcharan  Das  ithe  Introduction accentuated  that  sustainable  expansion  is  not  possible without focusing on economic and social development. Maintaing a proper equilibrium between economic and social development, ensuing that this economic development was shared by the whole society  serves the very purpose of this growth. These economic reforms must take into consideration the apprehensions of every segment of the society. Regrettably, Indian Governments structure of socio- economic growth  turned out to be a failure and proved to be a nightmare that  produced , an untrainearmy of underpaiengineers operating without clearcut  criteria, licensing  committee  equally  ignorant  oentrepreneurial  realities  also operating upon.The result was enormous delays-years- with staggering opportunities for corruption( TOI.6).



9JakhooHill is set in the autumn of 1962 in Shimla during Diwali:
The twenty-fourth of October,1962, just before Diwali. The Chinese have invaded India and
every day the papers are full of sad, humiliating news of Indian defeats. It is breaking Nehrus heart. The country hasnt yet realized that it is dangerous to put dreamers in power(144).

Here a well-to-do family observes ineffectively its unruffled and genial ambiance collapsing under the impact and influence of the new rising middle class. The writer, through the story of these two immigrant families from Lahore , has tried to depict the impact of  money on mutual human relationship and reliance. The writer, optimistic of the modern societal set up  observed, The most striking feature of contemporary India is the rise of a confident new middle class, which is full of energy and drive and is making things happen(17).
The play probes the lives of two established but displaced families from Lahore during the
partition.  Gurcharan Dass  characters reveals that there are two types of people, one , who hold values dear and those who believe everything relative as long as ones goal is met(The Hindu 14).
The play is a  resounding critique on the families torn apart due to, Partition -that great tearing
apart ,which reduced people to elemental, fearful creatures; desperate to survive, clinging to the vestiges of dignity(143). One of the concerned family is a conventional middle class family consisting of Amrita her brother Karan Chand   alias Mamu and Amrita young daughter Ansuya. The narrator cum actor Karan Chand discloses , Amrita, over there, was born into a distinguished family , into a world of grace , refinement and good taste”(144). Ansuya , twenty six years old is an  impulsive but intelligent girl who , was not born to lead a staid , conventional life. Lonely, withdrawn, but with an almost fierce vitality, she wants to live fully and passionately (144). Amritas husband died during the riots ,they lost all their wealth they had in Lahore and came to Delhi ,where they had a couple of mills and a big sprawling house in the Civil Lines. Due to lack of business acumen in Amrita and Karan Chand they were all at sea. They were forced to sell their mills and their house , as they suffered heavy losses in their business. Finally they moved to Shimla , to their summer residence, 9 Jakhoo Hill. This was all they had been left with, alongwith a paltry income from bonds and shares, too inadequate for their kind of life.
The other  family  comprises,  Deepak,  twenty seveyears old  young  man and  a  successful business executive settled in Bombay. He, is full of energy and ambition.talented and smooth, but is also under the excessive influence of his mother. Having had to come up the hard way, he has cultivated the social graces.He has already done well for himself ,and knows he is





good. He has a composed voice, shinning eyes anda bright smile. He is self-possesed and good- natured(155). His mother, Chitra enduring terrors of partition, moved to Mumbai, where with an obsessive devotion ensured that her son got the best education and then a good job in a good company. Chitra, has a husband, but he doesnt count. …is a survivor: street smart, calculating and unconcerned about her ways (143).
The play is a pragmatic portrait of the ever changing socio-economical and political situation of
Indian society in the 1960s that influence the outlook and ideals of the society in general and individuals in particular.  Economic restructuring prompted by the Indian Government was the main power behind these modifications. The play spotlights on the depiction of positive and negative aspects of socio-economic reforms and their influence on the characters.
The social relevance of the play cannot be negated even in the present century, when Chitra in
Act II tells Amrita about  Deepaks income.
Chitra: He makes one thousand , two hundred and eighty-six rupees per month,Didi!...We rushed here, Didi, because Deepaks company is bidding for a licence, and the big Government uffsar is here, in Simla(158).
This is reflexive of the materialistic approach of a new rising middle class that was affected by
the fiscal reforms during the 1960s.
After the agonizing period of bloody partition and dejected cost-effective modifications ,people,
particularly the ones belonging to the pre-Independence period , were desolate, frustrated and were nostalgic, always clinging to the rich ancestoral past.
Gurcharan Das in his Introduction’ to the Three English Plays stated that the old middle class, consisting of people like his grandfather and father emerged in the nineteenth century with the
spread  oEnglish  education.  This  English  education  created  a  class  of professionals  who, stepped  into  the  shoes  odeparting  English  in  1947(17)  and  for  a  long  period  have monopolized the rewards of   not only 20th  century modern society but are still enjoying the rewards of 21st century as well. But, this conventional middle class feels alienated from the mass of the Indian society and is unsure of its identity , even in the present century. The class was leisurely,tolerant and ambiguous as compared to this new middle class which is , street smart; it has had to fight to rise from the bottom and it has learnt to manoeuvre the system(17).Whereas on the other hand , the new middle class of the 20th century, is based on money, drive and an ability to get things done. whereas the old class was liberal, idealistic and inhibited , the new order is pragmatic and refreshingly free from colonial hang-ups(17).
The old middle class was leisurely,tolerant and ambiguous as compared to this new middle class which is , street smart; it has had to fight to rise from the bottom and it has learnt to manoeuvre the system
Before the industrial revolution the old  middle class boasting about  idealistic, conventional
moral life lost its significance with the coming of new middle class represented by Deepak and
Chitra, as Karan , the narrator comments:
Karan: As you can see,our life had a certain rhythm, a certain quality, even as we were slowly getting poorer. It was this rhythm which was shattered when Deepak and Chitra came into our lives( 153).
The play also explores the conflict between the old, conventional middle class family represented
by Amrita and Ansuya and the new emerging middle class family represented by Deepak and Chitra. Gurcharan Das has portrayed Chitra, as a die-hard money monger fervently against her son Deepaks decision to marry Ansuya because Ansuyas family is berift of all the luxuries and affluences and is almost on the verge of being bankrupt.





Chitra:Stop it Ma? All these yearsI’ve been teaching you: dont marry beauty; dont marry for love; marry a rich girl!
Deepak: Yes Ma, I heard you,marry money. But on the train up here,you said yourself that you wanted me to think of marrying Ansuya.
Chitra: that was before I found out that they had become poor.(191).

Ansuyas family is evocative about its rich ancestral past, where they lived a serene and luxuriant life during the pre-partition period. They were forced to sell even their house to pay off their debts. Ansuya craves for city life more than anything else. She is uncomfortable at home and is unhappy at her Mamus advances. She feels stifled by her clogged life and the incestuous elite of Simlas  so called affluent society to the extent that despite Deepakss warning , Bombay  can be heartless and indifferent(162), she avers:
Ansuya: Id rather have the indifference than our great hospitality, which suffocates you in the end. You dont have Mrs Kumar (and she mimicks.)I wonder whats wrong with that girl,or Mrs MehraArre, what a fast girl!(162).
She wanted to leave Simla at any cost and felt that to realize her dream, Deepak was the right
person and a true companion. According to Karan Chand , our narrator, Ansuya ,  yearned for the voicelessness of the big city.A great city can be a great solitude. Ansu wanted to disappear in a crowd of strangers. A big city may be squalid,even callous, but it is also more tolerant to our fellow men(164).
Gurcharan Das stresses on the impact and effect of economic changes on the characters and concludes that  social relations were   based traditionally  and conventionally on emotions and fellow  feelings  but  witthe  advent  and  under  the  influence  of rising  avariciousness  these relations suffer and begin disintegrating. This change affected even the pious mother-son relationship. Chitra failed to give Deepak the much needed emotional and affectionate love, although  she  tried  her  best  and  also  succeeded  to  some  extent  in  making  him  a  business executive. Deepaks verbal outburst describes his anger of being bereft of motherly love.
Deepak : Ma, dont you care about what I want?Dont you care about my happiness?(191).
Deepak is infact, a pathetic victim of mother-fixation. Inspite of in love with Ansuya he could not marry her , because of the excessive control of his mother. His pleadings and appeals do not affect the money-monger Chitra.
Deepak: Its my one chance for an honest life. She is fine person, with ideals. Ma.
Chitra: Oh-ho, that girl is only after your position and your job. She has trapped you, you simpleton. Deepak, think of your future.She doesnt have a naya paisa to her name. you re on the way up,son. Your star is going to rise. You need a rich girl to help you climb up. Her family are on the way down. She should be satisfied with a municipal clerk (192).
Chitra is obsessed by her concentrated quest of success an materialistic gains that she desperately forces Deepak tmarry Rai Sahebs niece only because of affluent  dowry and bluntly tells Deepak:
Chitra: Rai Sahebs niece!Look Deepak, you wonfind another match like her. Beta, beta
thande dimag se soch. My guess is the dowry is not going to be under two lakhs.And maybe they will also give a car, a fridge and an air-conditioner. Uff ! Main to khushi se paagal ho rahi hoon!I dont think I shall be able to sleep tonight, Deepak.(192)
Thus,  by persuadinDeepatmarry Rai Sahebs  niece  insteaof Ansuya,  Chitra craves
happiness  at all cost even ignoring Deepaks frantic appeal for love.





Deepak:( Barking) To hell with my promotion, Ma . I want Ansuya Its my one chance for an honest life. She is a fine person, with ideals Ma. (192)
But, Chitra is obstinate to be moved an inch by these emotional hiccups/obstacles. She bemoans her starved life at Lahore in the pre-partition days and now is frantic to lead a contented life .
Chitra: Oh-oh, we always need more money. Theres never enough. Oh, tu kya jaanta hai, What it  is like to grow up poor. What do you know what it was like to be the tenants of these people in
Lahore? Kisi ke tukdon par palna, tu kya jaanta hai ? After Partition, what do you know what it was like to be a petty kiranawallas wife in Ghatkopar?(191)
GurcharaDas  through  Chitra  has  shown  that  aspiration  for  money  exceeds  the  ethical boundaries as well. Here profligacy is not a bane rather a boon,passport for success. Chitra,in
order to get the much cherished licence for her son Deepaks company and get him married to
Rai sahibs niece willfully agrees/consents for sexual relations with Rai sahib.
Chitra:( Her eyes light up ) Son , it is done .Your future is pucca, and your licence meri muuti mein hai!... Rai Saheb ke saath gai zaroor thi. But not the club. To his house. Ek ghanta unke saath bita kar aa rahi hoon! Samjhe?(193)
Thus decrepitude of societal behavior is reflected i Rai Sahib trivial and immoral talks
about Khannas ayah, who was made pregnant by Khanna sahib and he makes fun of this.
In 9Jakhoo Hill  Gurcharan Das shows how intricate it is for a company to get a licence, due to
rising corruption and redtapism rampant in the administrative system of India. Through Rai Saheb  he exposes the Government bureaucracy where officers exploit people socially,sexually as well as economically. Karan Chand , correctly accuses Rai Saheb.

Mamu: Tell us, Deepak, will your company have to bribe him for the licence?(158).
The upcoming new middle class hardworking people is quick to learn and ready to imbibe the
positive impact of economic reforms. In portraying Deepak as a successful business executive with brain Das presents the positive impact of economic reforms in 1960sand 1970s .
Deepak : Sir, I am proud of what I do and the company I work for. You may think what you like, but I believe we care more about our people than many academics do for their students.
The most striking feature about the modern economy is that it enthuses optimistic spirit and courage in youth, as evident from  Deepaks plan for 9 Jakhoo Hill to convert it into a hotel so
that they can make best use of it in their critical financial condition by enabling Ansuya to be confident and self-reliant. He tells Ansuya:
Deepak : ( Speaking like a professional manager). Why not convert it into an exclusive season hotel?...Give it to a professional company to manage it.And , I tell you, in two years , you
could pay back all your debts and keep the house , too.(161).
Ansuya ,  taking note of to his advice  is able to restart and lead a comfortable life.
According to Jaibir S. Hooda :
The rise of the new middle class with its own values prevails upon the older middle class and its
different set of values. The possibility of survival of this old middle class is only through an appropriation of the drive of entrepreneurship and singularity of focus for attainment of personal fulfillment. Ansuya, finally, plans to lead a dignified life and facilitate the well-being of her family by appropriating the economical and financial strategy of converting 9 Jakhoo Hill into an exclusive Jakhoo Hotel. The strategy is Deepaks brain-child.


The transition in the thinking of the people and especially in the new progressive generation gave
impetus to bring about change in the living condition of the people.   There is an increasing dynamism and a desire to change the economic structure in Ansuya from her present state of stagnation echoing the sentiments of the new generation that  was rather is  progressive ,full of enthusiasm and vigour to build up a new optimistic atmosphere in the country.
Thus , 9 Jakhoo Hill  is a well set play. It emphasizes to maintain a  critical balance between economic upliftment and maintaining social and moral order. The play was relevant in 1962,
when it was written, in 1996 when it was staged for the first time and is relevant even today in the 21st century as well.

Dass aim in his play was to shock audience out of their conventional views and attitudes and to encourage  them  to  think  rationally  and  critically,  about    all  aspects  of  their  society,and particularly about its inequalities and injustices. Das shifted the focus of attention in Drama from conventionally well-made plots to the dynamic inter-relations between character, speech action and ideas. Indian English Drama has emerged as a fine blend of the East and West. Das has taken care to focus on the contemporary problems confronting the Indian social milieu. The themes taken up by  him are no more limited to India alone but are universal in nature and hence have attracted worldwide attention.