An Old Woman
An Old Woman
An Old Woman
by Arun Kolatkar
Notes:
Comprehension I :
Question 4. The lines, ‘You turn around and face her with an air of finality’ suggest that he
decided to
(a) give her a fifty paise coin and get rid of her.
(b) allow her to take him to the shrine.
(c) end the farce.
Answer: (c) end the farce.
Question 6. ‘You are reduced to so much small change in her hand.’ Here the speaker is
suggesting that
a. one is reduced to an insignificant position.
b. one feels that one is being cheated.
c. one feels a change in one’s personality.
Answer: a. one is reduced to an insignificant position.
Question 1. How is the plight of the old woman depicted in the poem?
Answer:
The poem “‘An old woman” depicts the worst condition of an old woman, who is an old beggar
near the Horseshoe shrine. She holds the sleeves of the passer-by and follows them asking for
a fifty paise coin.Even though by appearance she looks like a beggar, she has her self respect
and in return for a fifty paise coin offers to show the tourists around the Horseshoe shrine. She
laments about her helplessness in those wretched hills to survive.Her physical appearance
evokes sympathy in the passers-by. Phrases like “bullet holes for her eyes, ‘‘cracks that begin
around her eyes spread beyond her skin”, and shatter proof crone describe the pathetic
condition of her miserable existence.
Question 2. The old woman in the poem is a self appointed tourist guide, not a‘ beggar. Do you
agree? Give reasons.
Answer:
The “old woman'' though she is depicted in the worst condition and begs for a fifty paise coin,
never loses her self respect and offers to be a guide to passers by. She never takes anything
free from others, as she never wants to be a beggar. Though her physical appearance is very
bad, her mental condition to work and earn the fifty paise coin, shows that she was a self
appointed tourist guide and not a beggar. She has kept her self-respect by not begging or
expecting any favors.
Comprehension III :
Question 1. “The old woman reduces the self esteem of the speaker’ and makes him feel that
he is nothing more than so much small change”. Comment.
Answer:
The poem ‘An Old Woman’ by Arun Kolatkar depicts the plight of an old woman. She is a
woman who begs around a temple. Whoever passes around the temple, she grabs their sleeves
and sticks to them till she gets a fifty paise coin. In the beginning the passerby was asked for a
fifty paise coin but he did not care for her. But she never left him and was behind him and
tightened her grip on his shirt till he took note of her ,
The poet highlights the traits of old women, how they never leave until they get what they want.
The below lines justify –
“You know how old women are
They stick to you like a burr”.
She also laments that there was no other work in those wretched hills and old woman like her
could do nothing more than showing the tourists the places as a guide. When she is questioned,
the passer-by gazes at the sky through the ‘bullet holes' which are her eyes and is made
uneasy.
Then the speaker observes the cracks under her eyes but he realizes cracks are not only on her
skin but beyond that. Then “the hills crack, the temples crack, the sky falls” these phrases
suggest that his heart moves for her plight and he gets down from his self esteem and has a
changed attitude.
The phrases “Cracks around her eyes” and “the cracking of hills and temples” suggest the old
age of the woman and to become old is natural as hills and it is God’s gift to get cracks. This
alerts us to the fact that everybody will get old and may have to lead a life like that woman in the
poem. By overall view, the poet highlights that the old woman’s self respect is greater than her
begging for a fifty paise coin.
Question 2. What is the speaker trying to convey through the lines ‘And the hills crack, And the
temples crack, And the sky falls’?
Answer:
The speaker is initially irritated by the old woman who holds onto his shirt and does not allow
him to go. She asked for a fifty paise coin and offered to take him to the Horseshoe shrine, but
he had already seen it. She hobbles behind him. So, he now wants to get rid of her. When he
turns towards her, she asks what she was supposed to do to eke out a living in those wretched
hills.
Looking at her bullet hole eyes and cracked face, the speaker doesn’t know what to reply. He
feels that all notions of dignity and respectability seem hollow when such helpless, old people
are left to look for themselves. He feels guilty and ashamed to face her as he is not able to help
her in any substantial manner. All civilization seems to fall apart at the unspoken question of the
old woman.
Question 3. How do you relate the ‘cracks around her eyes’ to the cracking of hills and
temples?
Answer:
The cracks around her eyes are symbolic of the hardships she has been through. The
mountains and temples symbolize the speaker’s strong contentions about the old lady and our
religious belief that giving charity is following dharma, respectively. Cracks around her eyes
extend to the mountains and temples signifies her determination to live a life of dignity and hard
work and not by charity, and this destroys both the beliefs of speakers and religion. This
suggests the old age of the woman and to become old is natural as hills and it is God’s gift to
get cracks. This alerts us to the fact that everybody will get old and may have to lead a life like
that woman in the poem.
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