The Martyr's Corner A Critique
The Martyr's Corner A Critique
The Martyr's Corner A Critique
danger coming in the form of the health officer and the traffic
constable by giving them an occasional packet of his stuff as bribe.
Life goes on well for Rama until a political riot breaks out on the
spot where he has his business.
The police open fire and many people die in the firing. Rama's
spot is turned into a Martyr's comer as a monument is to be put up in
memory of a so-called political leader who has fallen dead in the
police firing. Rama is left a mute spectator to all the events unfolding
around him.
He is forced to set up his shop on a farther spot that does not
have the vantage point his former place used to have. When he
brings the unsold stuff the next day, his fast-dwindling customers
desert him. That night Rama is able to return only with two annas in
his bag. He decides to wind up his business and lead a life of
retirement.
When his savings are used up, he goes to one Restaurant
Kohinoor seeking a job there. He gets the job of a waiter which
requires much tact and patience. When some rude customers treat
him domineeringly, he asks them to speak to him gently.
The easy-paced narrative remains unaffected by the authorial
observations, which are full of humour, irony, good-humoured banter
and sarcasm. Narayan calls Rama's shop an 'establishment' which is
in reality a makeshift arrangement that exists for a mere two hours
every evening. When he arrives at his spot carrying innumerable
articles, he looks like someone having four arms. This ironically
suggests the god-like status of Rama who has the supreme control of
roadside business. He is a prince among caterers and the man who
does business on his spot before his arrival is only a Pretender to the
throne.
Rama feels like asking a stingy customer, who is getting his
boots polished, to pay an anna more to the boot polish boy. But this
apparent good gesture is only motivated by business considerations.
Rama is not even ready to part with an additional drop of coffee to
the poor boot polish boys.
The health department people, entrusted with the task of
ensuring that only clean and germ-free articles are sold for
consumption, accept Ramas unclean stuff for their own use. Politics,
the normalizing factor, divides people along party lines. The arrival of
the police, the custodians of law, adds another side to fight. The
cinemagoers get the shock of their life when they find reel life
infringing upon real life. The man who is made a martyr is a mere
hooligan. Party workers turn the corner, which helps an individual
earn his livelihood, into a convenient place for collecting money. The
loss of Ramas place of business is followed by the loss of his