Critical Appreciation of the short
story ‘An Astrologer’s Day by R.K.Narayan
Book: An Astrologer’s Day and Other Stories (1947)
Author: R.K.Narayan
Genre: Short stories
Story from the Collection: An Astrologer’s Day
Author: R.K.Narayan
Genre: Short stories
Story from the Collection: An Astrologer’s Day
Critical Appreciation of the short story ‘An
Astrologer’s Day’
‘An Astrologer’s Day and other
Stories’ are a collection of short stories written by R.K.Narayan. ‘An
Astrologer’s Day’ is the first story from the collection.
Summary: The story is about an astrologer, who chose to be
one not out of choice but past mysterious situations in life forced him to be
one. So it goes without saying that he was a stranger to the stars as much his
gullible clients, but he did know how to carry out his profession. What baffles
the reader and everyone is how he could correctly read an unusual client’s past
and even known his name? Had he studied the stars and mastered the art,
contrary to the common belief? Did he possess some uncanny powers, which could
be put to good use, when needed?
Plot:
1.Exposition: In
the beginning of the story we are introduced to the astrologer. All others
transacting their business nearby are there to create the right atmosphere and
provide the setting necessary for the development of the plot. The crafty ways
in which the astrologer transcends his work and endeared to his gullible
customers is very well described.
“He was as much a stranger to the
stars as were his innocent customer. But it didn’t seem to matter at all. He
said things which pleased and astonished everyone: that was more a matter of
study, practice and shrewd guesswork”.
The writer paints a perfect picture
of an astrologer- the con men, the likes of whom we come across in the marketplace
and towns. Even though we may harbour doubts about their knowledge of stars, we
do feel tempted to consult them to know what future has in store for us!
2. Complication: A sense of suspense is created about the personal
life or past history of the astrologer. All that we are told in the beginning
of the story is that he had not in the least intended to be an astrologer when
he began life.
He had left his village stealthily
without any previous thought or plan. He had to leave home without telling
anyone and had to cover a safe distance before he could recollect himself and
his life. We are also told that astrology was not his family business. If he
had continued to live in his village, he would have tilled the land and tended
his cornfields like his forefathers. So this creates curiosity in the minds of
the reader as to what had happened in his past that had broken this ancestral
cycle and forced him to leave all of a sudden?
3. Climax: The narration continues at its normal
expected pace until an unusual client appears in the scene to consult the
astrologer when the astrologer was packing up his astrology paraphernalia and
was ready to call it a day. This client was no usual casual client wanting
temporary respite but had specific questions and challenged the astrologer to
provide specific answers.
The
critical scene which drives the plot ahead: As the stranger lit his cheroot, the
astrologer caught a glimpse of his face by the matchlight and for some obscure
reason the astrologer now felt uncomfortable and tried to wriggle out of the
whole thing.
(The
work place setting described in the beginning of the story is very well gelled
in evolving the critical scene of the story).
The stranger won’t let go the
astrologer. “Challenge is challenge”.
What the astrologer says hereafter
takes the client as well as the reader by surprise. He was left for dead, a
knife had passed through him once, he was pushed into a well nearby in the
field. The effect is further heightened when the astrologer even gives out his
correct name. Guru Nayak is completely stumped. When asked about the
whereabouts of the man who stabbed him and left him for dead, the astrologer
confidently tells Guru Nayak to give up the hunt because the assailant had died
four months ago, crushed under a lorry in a far-off town. The astrologer also
advices Guru Nayak to go home and stay up there and never travel southward
again.
This episode leaves us with new-found
admiration for the astrologer. How could he so correctly read the stranger’s past
and even known his name? Had he studied the stars and mastered the art,
contrary to the common belief? Did he possess some uncanny powers, which could
be put to good use, when needed?
4.Denouement: The
story takes another twist when the astrologer reaches home and confides with
his wife the reason why he had run away from home, settled here, and married
her. All these years he had thought that the blood of a man was on his hands.
This past incidence had happened when he was a youngster, got drunk, gambled
and got into a quarrel. But now the man he thought he had killed was alive.
Thus a great load was off his chest.
This is the reason why the astrologer
had to leave his village without any plan or preparation. And this was how he
could so correctly talk of Guru Nayak’s troubled past.
The story thus ends with an
incredible twist: “a murdered man” turns up to consult his “murderer”, who is
now an astrologer, regarding when he will be able to have his revenge; the
“murderer” recognizes him by the matchlight when the former had lit his cheroot
but he cannot recognize his old enemy in his garb as an astrologer. The client
is astonished to be told about his previous history by the astrologer, and
meekly agrees to give up his search for his enemy declared to have been crushed
under a lorry months ago. Thus the astrologer ensured for himself a safe and
secure life hereafter. Convinced that his assailant had been crushed under a
lorry months ago, Guru Nayak would not want to venture out of his village when
it forebode gave risk to his life. Thus all the mystery begins to fall in place
and the loose ends are tied into a unified whole.
Atmosphere: The author, R.K.Narayan, has an eye for detail. He
creates an atmosphere of a perfect work place for the astrologer.
Illustrations:
§ His professional equipment consisted of “a dozen
cowrie shells, a square piece of cloth with obscure mystic charts on it, a
notebook, and a bundle of palmyra writing”.
§ The boughs of the spreading tamarind tree, the
surging crowd moving up and down the narrow road morning till night, the
variety of traders- medicine sellers, sellers of stolen hardware and junk,
magicians, auctioneers of cheap cloth, and vendors of fried groundnut-
vociferously vying with each other to attract the crowd created a remarkable
work place for the astrologer.
§ The light and smoke of the crackling flare above
the groundnut heap, enchantment of the place created by lack of lighting,
hissing gaslights and bewildering criss-cross of light rays and moving shadows
created the right setting for an astrologer.
Characterization:
The method of characterization
adopted by the author is a combination of expository and dramatic.
There are three characters in the
story:
1. The
Astrologer :
The protagonist is an astrologer. The
astrologer’s name is never mentioned and it doesn’t really matter that the
reader knows it. He is a ‘round character’ with various facets of the
personality being revealed and the character evolved with the development of
the plot.
The appearance of the astrologer is
very well described by the author.
§ “His forehead was resplendent with sacred ash and
vermilion and his eyes sparkled with a sharp abnormal gleam” which his simple
clients took to be prophetic light and felt comforted.
§ “Half-wit’s eyes would sparkle in such a setting”.
§ “To crown the effect he wound a saffron-coloured
turban around his head. This colour scheme never failed. People were attracted
to him as bees are attracted to cosmos or dahlia stalks”.
The only thing the astrologer didn’t
know anything about was ‘Astrology’ but he was intelligent and had his crafty
ways to go about his profession. He had a working analysis of mankind’s
troubles and told the person before him, gazing at his palm:
§ “In many ways you are not getting the fullest
results of your efforts”.
§ “Most of your troubles are due to your
nature……Saturn……You have an impetuous nature and a rough exterior”.
These talks endeared to almost
everyone’s hearts immediately.
Clever as he was, he never opened for
atleast ten minutes which provided him enough stuff for “a dozen answers and
advices”.
2. A
prospective client of the Astrologer: The
prospective client happened to be the person the astrologer had stabbed and
left for being dead when they were youngsters. Therefore he was restless,
furious and was searching for his assailant to take revenge. The astrologer
recognized him but the he could not recognize his assailant in the garb of an
astrologer. His name, ‘Guru Nayak’, is revealed when the astrologer was
unraveling his past. He plays a pivotal role in the development and climax of
the plot.
3. Astrologer’s wife: Though a minuscule role, the astrologer’s wife
plays an important part in the denouement of the story, helping the astrologer
take the great load off his chest.
Is this character absolutely required
in the story? The author could have eliminated this role altogether and allowed
the astrologer heave a sigh of relief by talking to his conscience but
confiding and sharing his relief with his wife brings the characters to life.
Narrative
Techniques:
The story builds up certain suspense
in the mind of the readers regarding the circumstances that had compelled the
protagonist to leave his village all of a sudden without any plan or
preparation and take to astrology to eke out a living in the town. The
revelation unties many knots merely hinted at earlier and weaves the parts into
a unified whole. It is a logical climax reached dramatically.
Figurative
Language:
Irony: The author uses ironic comment on the astrologer’s
crafty ways of carrying out his profession and the gullible people who came to
him for solutions and finding respite:
§ “He knew no more of what was going to happen to
others than he knew what was going to happen to himself next minute”.
§ “He was as much a stranger to the stars as were his
innocent customers”.
§ “…his eyes sparkled with a sharp abnormal gleam
which was really an outcome of a continual searching look for customers, which
his simple clients took to be a prophetic light and felt comforted”.
Simile: The appearance of the astrologer wearing a
saffron-coloured turban is described as:
“To crown the effect he wound a
saffron-coloured turban around his head. This colour scheme never failed.
People were attracted to him as bees are attracted to cosmos or dahlia stalks”.
The astrologer had left his home
under mysterious circumstances and did not rest till he covered a couple of
hundred miles. This enormous distance covered is emphasized as:
“To a villager it is a great deal, as
if an ocean flowed between”.
Catchy
Phrases: The work place setting is buzzing
with activities consisting different traders. I personally liked the way the
groundnut seller uses catchy phrases to transact business:
“He gave a fancy name each day,
calling it ‘Bombay Ice-Cream’ one day, and on the next ‘Delhi Almond’ on the
next, and ‘Raja’s Delicacy’”.
Innovative catch phrases are commonly
used by many street vendors in the towns of India to lure customers. This
vibrant marketing style has been very vividly captured by the author.
My
Point of View:
Societal
Satire: I have heard many quotes
dealing with the past “Past being History and Future being Mystery…” and so and
so forth. This story goes on to show how past can actually affect the present
and future of one’s life.
The astrologer had committed a folly
by getting into a quarrel when he was a drunk youngster, the result of which
changed his entire path of life. If not for the past incidence he would have
continued to live in that village carried on the work of his forefathers
namely, tilling the land, living, marrying, and ripening in his cornfield and
ancestral home. But now he had to leave his village stealthily and take up the
profession of an astrologer which he least intended to in a far away village.
There is an element of social satire
in the story: What happened in the past and how it affected the lives
henceforth is for all of us to see.
Astrology
as a profession: The author uses irony to show
how the science of astrology has been misused by these conmen in the society
thereby creating distrust in the people about astrology and astrologers. Though
the author uses ironic comment on the astrologer’s crafty ways of carrying out
his profession and the gullible people who came to him for solutions and
finding respite but he has never been judgmental and undermined astrology as a
profession.
Illustration: “He was as much a stranger to the stars as
were his innocent customer. Yet he said things which pleased and astonished
everyone: that was more a matter of study, practice, and shrewd guesswork. All
the same, it was as much an honest man’s labour as any other, and he deserved
the wages he carried home at the end of a day”.
What makes the story impressive is
the interesting plot, element of suspense, logical climax, figurative language,
importance to details, and the underlying meaning behind the story. These
elements have been artistically interwoven in the story by the author, making
it an interesting read.
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