Tuesday, October 11, 2016

Night of the Scorpion

Night of the Scorpion


  1. Why did the villagers pray to God to paralyse the scorpion?
    The villagers prayed to God to paralyse the scorpion because they believed that the movement of the scorpion caused its poison to spread in the poet’s mother’s blood. 
  2. What do you understand about the mother from her utterance in the last two lines?
    The poet’s mother is very loving and devoted to her children. She expresses gratitude that the scorpion bit her and spared her children. She would rather suffer herself than let any harm befall her children.
3.      Why did the peasants in Ezekiel’s poem want to find out the scorpion?
The  peasants believed that with every movement that the scorpion made, its poison also would spread in the mother’s blood; so they wanted to kill the scorpion.
4. What did the father in Ezekiel’s poem do to help the mother?
The father tried many herbs and finally poured some paraffin into the part of  injury and put a match to it.
5.      What did the peasants in “Night of the Scorpion” say about the suffering of the victim?  
The peasants hoped that the mother’s present pain would burn the sins of her previous birth and decrease the misfortunes of her next birth.

  1. Explain the feelings of the mother in the poem "Night of the Scorpion".
Answer:    The poem is presented through an incident in which the poet's mother is bitten by a scorpion on rainy night. The mother suffers the bite of the scorpion. She groans and moans on the mat twisting and turning in pain. The villagers on hearing of this unfortunate event, come to see her, praying to god and giving all kinds of justifications for her suffering. With their prayers and words they try to console the victim. The victim’s husband who is otherwise a sceptic and a rationalist also gives in to every curse and blessing.
The mother bears the pain and suffering for twenty hours, writhing in pain and when she recovers, she is thankful that she was bitten and not her children, bringing out the maternal love of a mother for her children. She epitomizes motherhood and like a typical Indian mother is selfless in her love for her children.
  1.  Narrate all the activities in the poem “Night of the Scorpion”?
Nissim Ezekiel depicts the real picture of the Indian villagers in his poem, “Night of the Scorpion”. Though the Indian villagers are illiterate and superstitious, they are very helpful to one another. On a rainy night a scorpion stung the poet’s mother. Hearing this villagers came in large numbers. They buzzed the name of God a hundred times to dilute the evil power because they believed that the attack of the scorpion was done by the power of devil. They searched for the scorpion with candles and lanterns. They did not find the scorpion. They said that the poison would spread in the mother’s body, with every movement of the scorpion. They consoled her saying that the present pain would reduce the sufferings of her next birth. Some of them remarked that her pain would balance the sum of evil against the sum of good in this unreal world. Some others hoped that her pain would purify her desires of flesh and spirit of ambition. They sat around her consoling her and praying for her. There was peace of understanding on their faces. More people came with candles and lanterns in the rain. The poet sympathizes with the villagers for their ignorance and superstition and at the same time he appreciates their innocence and helpfulness in an emergency situation.
3.      The portrayal of the peasants in “Night of the Scorpion”.
 Nissim Ezekiel’s “Night of the Scorpion” is full of superstition. The narrator’s mother is stung by a scorpion on a rainy night. As soon as the news spreads the peasants in the neighborhood rush to the victim’s house. They are alarmed and ready to do anything to help her. They are uneducated and superstitious and believe that the devil is behind this attack, and so utter the name of God, a hundred times to keep away the devil’s influence. They believe that the scorpion with its poisonous tail is the devil itself. They search for the creature with candles and lanterns so they can kill it. They think that as long as it moves, the poison in the woman’s body will spread and it can be fatal. Then they console the woman saying that her suffering is caused by the sins in her previous birth and if she endures the pain it will burn away her sins and will decrease her suffering in the next birth. Besides, the poison will purify her flesh of all desires, and her spirit of ambition. The sum of good and evil should be balanced in the world and her pain will diminish the sum of evil.

4.      Attempt a critical appreciation of Nissim Ezekiel’s poem Night of the Scorpion.
Ans: Nissim Ezekiel is one of the prominent poets writing in English. His poems contain
incidents which are taken from everyday Indian life. The feelings in many of the poems are personal, but unsentimental, expressed in irony.
The night of the Scorpion is one of his best known poems. It is an example of a common Indian situation made into art. It is presented from the perspective of a child. It is a narrative poem. The speaker describes how once his mother was stung by a scorpion on a rainy night. The poet presents a concrete situation from life in objective terms. The mother stung by the scorpion, the peasant’s swarming like flies, their chanting and ritualistic gestures, and the action of the rationalist father and the final words of the mother – all reveal a typical Indian situation.

The speaker’s mother was stung by a scorpion. It had been raining for nearly ten hours. The scorpion which had remained concealed behind a sack of rice came out and stung the child’s mother. Hearing these peasants came to the boy’s house like swarms of flies and started praying. They were superstitious and they believed that if the scorpion moved; its poison would spread in the mother’s blood. They searched for the scorpion’s shadow on the walls. The peasants were contrasted by the child’s rationalist father. The world of irrationality co-­ exists with the world of science in this poem. The father mixed a powder of herbs and hybrids and even poured paraffin upon the bitten toe. In spite of all the efforts of the father and the peasants, the mother suffered pain for twenty hours, till the pain automatically subsided. The mother’s act of thanking god for sparing her children from what she suffered reveals the selfless love of an Indian mother.

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