Is Mrs. Baroda a respectable woman? Yes,
how? No, how?
Mrs. Baroda is a respectable woman because she
concealed her desire to be close and to enjoy with Gouvernail for the sake of
the family and simply to perform socially defined gender role. She gave
preference to the public self-image of her family to her inner self. Her face-saving
act became active due to her sense of respect. She was in one-sided love with
the outsider, Gouvernail. Her love remained unexpressed and at the end of the
story, she made up her to accept Gouvernail as the sole guest.
Setting of the story
The setting is New Orleans, highly populous city
located on the Mississippi river in the Southeastern region of U.S. state
Louisiana. It is considered an economic and commercial hub for the boarder Gulf
Coast Region of the United Region. The story takes place in a sugar plantation,
farm.
Characters
Mrs. Baroda
The protagonist of the story is Mrs. Baroda. She is
the epitome of woman that her society demands. She became restless when her
husband informed her about his friend Gouvernail’s visit to spend a week or two
on the plantation. She unconsciously formed Gouvernail’s image in her mind. She
pictured him tall, slim, cynical, with eyeglasses, and his hands in his
pockets; and she did not like him. But she liked him when he arrived because he
was quite different from she imagined him to be. She was puzzled by the outsider.
Though she liked the guest she didn’t express her inner feelings to him or her
husband. Instead, she started living alone. One day, she asked her husband when
his friend was going/leaving. She lied her husband saying that the guest
annoyed her. One night Mrs. Baroda went and sat alone upon a bench beneath a
live oak tree at the edge of the gravel walk. Gouvernail went there to talk to
her. He freely talked to her but her mind only vaguely grasped what he was
saying. She wanted to be physically close to him. She concealed her desire to
be close with him for she was a respectable woman. Feeling tired with the
stress, she left her home early in the morning. She didn’t return until the
guest left her house. But, at the end of the story, she asked her husband to
invite his friend Gouvernail again promising that she would behave well to him
that time.
Mrs. Baroda was greatly tempted to tell her husband
about the folly that seized her. She controlled herself to ensure the quality
of a respectable woman. She was a sensible woman who sacrificed her inner self
for the sake of the family. She is determined. She knew there are some battles
in life which a human must fight alone. Her one-sided love to Gouvernail
remained unexpressed.
Gaston
Gaston is Mrs. Baroda’s husband who informed his wife
about the visit of his friend onto their plantation. He is simple minded man who
trust his wife blindly. He is frank and good to his friend. He couldn’t
understand his wife’s opinion about his friend Gouvernail. He tried to
understand the reason of his wife’s dislikes to his friend Gouvernail. On the
day of his wife’s departure, he found his wife had already departed. At the end
of the story, he was surprised and delighted with the propose by his wife to
invite Gouvernail again in summer that followed.
Gouvernail
Gouvernail is Gaston’s college friend and now a journalist
with whom Mrs. Baroda was in one sided love. He visited the Baroda family to
spend a week or two on the sugar plantation. He is slim and receptive. He sat
rather mute. He is hard-working and honest. Feeling tired at the plantation, he
seemed to sit upon the wide portico, smoking his cigar lazily and listening
attentively to Gaston’s experience as a sugar planter. The night when Mrs.
Baroda sat alone under the oak tree, he talked to her freely and intimately in
a low, hesitating voice. He didn’t bother to learn either she was enjoying his
talk or thinking something unimagined. He was a light smoker. For Mrs. Baroda,
he was lovable and inoffensive fellow. His personality puzzled Mrs. Baroda who
is his guest and his friend’s wife too. Mrs. Baroda’s love remained unexpressed
throughout the whole story.
Plot
·
Mrs. Baroda knows that her husband’s
college friend, now a journalist, Gouvernail is visiting them to spend one or
two weeks on the sugar plantation.
·
She had conversations with her husband
Gaston about the outsider/guest, viz Gouvernail.
·
She pictured him tall, slim, cynical; with
eye glasses, and his hands in pockets and she didn’t like him.
·
When the guest arrived, she him quite
different from what she imagined him to be and she liked him. Only similar
thing is he was slim enough.
·
Gouvernail was rather mute and receptive
who listens a lot and speaks less.
·
The guest worked hard on the plantation
and it looks as if everything was going well.
·
Gouvernail’s personality greatly puzzled
Mrs. Baroda. She wanted to be physically close to him but she concealed her very
desire for the sake of the family. She was sensible enough to a respectable
woman of her society.
·
She asked her husband when his friend
would leave them. She said her husband that the guest annoyed her. She said she
had expected him to be interesting but it went wrong.
·
One night Mrs. Baroda sat on the bench
under the oak tree. Gouvernail went there and started talking freely and
intimately about his old college days with Gaston, and about their blind
ambitions and intentions.
·
Mrs. Baroda only vaguely grasped what he
was saying. Instead, she was thinking of being close with Gouvernail. As a
respectable woman she said nothing to Gouvernail and left him alone.
·
To endure the torture created due to her
desire to be physically close with Gouvernail, she left home and didn’t return
until the guest left for his own home.
·
At the end of the story, unexpected twist
can be marked when Mrs. Baroda suggested her husband to invite Gouvernail again
on the plantation. This shows the concealment of her inner self for ever to
fulfill the duty of a respectable woman in her society.
Understanding the Text
Answer the following
questions
a. Why
was Mrs. Baroda unhappy with the information about Gouvernail’s visit to their
farm?
Mrs.
Baroda was unhappy with the information about Gouvernail’s visit to their farm
because she wanted to enjoy an undisturbed time with her husband on the
plantation. In other words, she was looking forward a grand time to spend with
her husband. They had entertained a good deal during the winter; much of time
had also been passed in New Orleans in various forms of mild dissipation. When
her husband informed her that his college friend Gouvernail would visit them on
the plantation, she became so curious about the guest that she unconsciously
formed an image of him in her mind. She pictured him tall, slim, cynical with
eyeglasses and his hands in pockets; and she didn’t like him.
b. How
was Gouvernail different from Mrs. Baroda’s expectation?
Mrs.
Baroda had heard much about Gouvernail but had never met him before he visited them
to spend one or two weeks on the plantation. As soon as she had learned about
Gouvernail’s visit she imagined him a tall, slim, cynical man with eyeglasses
and his hands in his pockets. She didn’t like Gouvernail as she pictured in her
mind. But she liked him at her first sight. He was slim but he was not very
tall, nor cynical, neither did he wear glasses nor carry his hands in his
pockets.
c. How
does Mrs. Baroda compare Gouvernail with her husband?
Mrs.
Baroda makes a comparison between her husband and the guest Gouvernail. Her
husband Gaston is wordy and open. He talks frankly in an exciting manner.
Unlike her husband, she finds Gouvernail a receptive man with solitary habits.
He sits rather mute. He is the one who listens more to the others and speaks
less.
d. Why
and how did Mrs. Baroda try to change Gouvernail’s solitary habits?
Mrs.
Baroda tries to change Gouvernail’s solitary habits because she finds him different
from what she expects him to be and her husband assures her the traits he
possesses. She expects him to be an interesting person who talks a lot in a
friendly way but he sits rather mute and is receptive before her chatty
eagerness. She tries to change his solitary habits by making him talk in an
exciting and a friendly way. Unlike Gaston, Gouvernail was introvert. Mrs.
Baroda tries to change him into the one who is rather frank and wordy. She
accompanies him in his idle strolls to the mill and walks along the land by
riverside.
e. How
does Gaston disagree with his wife on Gouvernail’ s character?
Gaston
disagrees with his wife regarding her opinion about Gouvernail’s character. She
says that Gouvernail tires her frightfully and she wants his quick departure from
their farm. She warns her husband that she shall leave for her aunt if he
extends his stay with them. Gaston asks his wife not to take his friend seriously
and make a commotion over him. Gouvernail is clever and a man of ideas as he
has informed her earlier but now, he is run down (tired/seems to be sick) by
overwork.
f.
Why is Gaston surprised with his
wife’s expression towards the end of the story?
Gaston
is surprised with his wife’s expression showing an unexpected twist on her
opinion towards Gouvernail at the end of the story. She has informed her
husband that she is terribly annoyed by Gouvernail’s receptive and solitary
habits. She never agrees with her husband’s idea of inviting Gouvernail again.
However, before the year end, she proposes wholly from herself, to have
Gouvernail visit them again. Her idea of inviting Gouvernail again greatly
surprises and delights Gaston.
Reference to the context
a. What
is the cause of conflict in Mrs. Baroda’s mind? What role does Mrs. Baroda
‘being a respectable woman’ play in the story?
The
main cause of Mrs. Baroda’s inner conflict is her attraction to her husband’s
friend named Gouvernail. She is greatly impressed by Gouvernail’s personality. But
her socially and culturally defined gender role doesn’t allow her to express
her feelings towards Gouvernail. She concealed her feelings for the sake of the
family. Her determination to hide her attraction towards Gouvernail makes her
go through a turmoil.
Being
a respectable woman, Mrs. Baroda becomes successful to be presented herself as a
role model of a respectable woman in her culture and society. Her society
doesn’t expect a woman to be attracted to an outsider like Gouvernail. No woman
is expected to have a physical relation with a man except her husband. Only a
faithful woman to her husband is a respectable one in her culture. She plays
the role of the exact woman as required by her community. She saves her public self-image
and her husband face by killing her own inner self.
b. Sketch
the character of Gouvernail and contrast it with Gaston.
Gouvernail
is Gaston’s college friend and now a journalist. He visits Gaston’s farm and
spends a week or two on the plantation. He is receptive and longed for
solitude. On the contrary, Gaston is frank and wordy. Gouvernail is introvert
whereas Gaston is extrovert. Gouvernail is straight-minded for he doesn’t know
what Mrs. Baroda is thinking about him. He remains unaware of Mrs. Baroda’s
inner feelings. Sitting beside Mrs. Baroda on the night when she sat under the
oak tree, his silence melted, so started talking freely and intimately about
his college life with Gaston. He doesn’t care what she is thinking about at that
time.
c. Why
does Mrs. Baroda not disclose her feelings towards Gouvernail to her husband?
Mrs.
Baroda doesn’t disclose her feelings towards Gouvernail to her husband to
protect her so-called title of a respectable woman. Besides being a respectable
woman Mrs. Baroda was very sensible one, so she determines to fight the folly
alone. She is aware of the fact that there are some battles that have to be
fought alone. If one seeks help or advice from the husband that can have a
negative effect. Inner conflict of an individual can be turned into an
unimagined disaster which can end one’s marital relation. She conceals her
feelings towards Gouvernail to save his family life and her own public
self-image.
d. The
last three sentences of the story bring a kind of twist. After reading these
three sentences, how do you analyze Mrs. Baroda’s attitude towards Gouvernail?
The
last three sentences of the story bring an unexpected twist. Mrs. Baroda
informs her husband that she has overcome her dislikes for Gouvernail. She
assures her husband that she shall be very nice to Gouvernail in case he visits
them again. This twist reveals her positive attitude towards Gouvernail. She is
always nice to Gouvernail but her sudden attraction to him causes her inner
conflict. Whatever she does against Gouvernail’s character is not due to her
dislikes to him. It is a mere disguise to hide her likes towards him. Her last
decision to have Gouvernail visit them again reveals her recovery of her
turmoil and her determination to save her public self-image as a respectable
woman.
Dramatic
Action in the story
Exposition:
Mrs. Baroda is informed that her husband’s friend Gouvernail is visiting them to spend a week or two on the
plantation. They entertained a good deal in the winter and Mrs. Baroda planned
to enjoy with her husband.
Rising
Actions:
·
Mrs. Baroda is attracted to Gouvernail
·
She tries to change Gouvernail’s solitary
habits but her attempt is completely ignored.
·
She started choosing loneliness.
·
She informs her husband she is annoyed by
the guest.
Climax:
She left home taking early morning train
Falling
Actions: She returned home.
Resolution: She suggests her husband to
have Gouvernail visit them again stating that she has overcome her dislikes to him.
2 Comments
Not gonna lie "this summary is really nice to read"good job on writting this summary
ReplyDeleteSure. Amazing
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