Sunday, 10 February 2013

Vol 2 Issue 7 Jan 2013

Golden Research Thought
                                                                                  Impact Factor:0.1870
SANJAY A.DIWEKAR
Research Scholar
Department of English
CMJ University, Shillong, Meghalaya



Abstract:

This paper is related with the disturbed psyche of Nanda Kaul in the novel 'Fire 
on the Mountain'. It is the  exploration of the deep recesses of human psyche going 
beyond  the skin  into  the  constant struggles raging  the soul  of  Nanda  Kaul  at  the 
conscious and sub-conscious level and describing the atmosphere of the mind. It also 
explores the inner emotional world of Nanda, Ila and Raka-the world is totally disturbed 
world  where  Nanda  is  an  old  widow  leading  a segregated  life  like  a recluse  in  a 
segregated hill hut, Raka-a shy and lovely school girl by nature and instincts and Ila Das 
is suffered at the hands of cruel world around her where she is no more. The present 
paper focuses on disturbed psyche of Nanda Kaul though she is linking with Ila Das and 
Raka who is grand-daughter of Nanda in 'Fire on the Mountain'.

INTRODUCTION

Anita Desai is one of the prominent novelists who added a new dimension to English fiction in 
India by concentrating on the exploration of human disturbed psyche of her protagonists. Anita Desai has 
been recognized as one of the prominent voices among Indian writers in English. Desai is solely concerned 
with the inner weather of the protagonists. Her protagonists are individuals for whom 'aloneness alone' is 
the sole natural condition, and 'aloneness alone'-the treasure worth treasuring. She discusses the problems 
of  temperamental  incompatibility,  conjugal  chaos  and  inharmonious  relationship  between  man  and 
woman. In her novels, most protagonists alienated from the world, society, families, parents and even from 
their own selves, because they are not average people but individuals who are unable to communicate with 
the people around, unable to relate themselves with this setup, they drift into their own sequestered world 
where they spin their dreams, which never materialize. Her main foothold is the exploration of the deep 
recesses of human psyche, going beyond the skin into the constant struggles raging the soul of human 
beings at the conscious and sub conscious level and describing the atmosphere of the mind. The gift of 
modern life in the form of mental tension, strained human relationship, loss of identity, constant quest for 
the  belonging meaning  of life  and soul  are remarkably woven in the fictive fabric  of Desai. All  her 
characters are constantly struggling either against individuals, against social environment or even against 
own inner–selves. Desai is more concerned with the inner reality than the outside world around. She is the 
painter of the moods and wills, desires and dreams and of conflicting choices and inner experiences. 
     Anita Desai's novel 'Fire on the Mountain' (1977) which is the winner of both the Royal Society 
Award and the Sahitya Akademy Award is a study of disturbed psyche of Nanda Kaul. Nanda Kaul, the 
major protagonist of the novel is the linking tie with Ila Das and Raka, not only at the level of conscious self 
but also at the meeting point of infinity time-the past spent, the living present and coming future. The whole 
novel is concerned with the disturbed psyche of Nanda Kaul, Raka and Ila Das. Nanda's life has been just 



like a barren mountain, devoid of all human love and faith. All the three characters have one thing in 
common. They are lone individuals trying to guard their privacy in their own shells, in their own distinct 
manner. They are mentally very close to one another and they are quite distanced from one another in age 
and in their attitude towards the outside reality of life. Nanda is unable to cope with conflicting self, and she 
grows more introvert and finally she withdraws from outside world completely, for her the seclusion is a 
kind of protective shell under the weight of which she grown miserably. After the death of Mr.Kaul, she 
settled down in the secluded surroundings of Carignano in Kasauli hills, to safeguard her privacy, leading 
an isolated life. She has passed a very busy life as a wife of the Vice-Chancellor of the Punjab University 
and as a mother of many children. Nanda's children betrayed her and her husband was also shared by his 
beloved Miss David throughout her life. Hence she wants to live peacefully without being disturbed by her 
relations or anyone else. Even from the Postman she wants to hide herself among the pine trees. She wants 
no one and nothing else. Her inner agony is the expression of it when she says, “I want no more, and I want 
nothing. Can I be not left with nothing?”. Raka, the grand-daughter is emotionally starved child.  Rakas's 
silence and withdrawal is the direct result of a long chain of events. It is the result of her mother's nervous 
breakdown and her grandmother's heartless exuberance. Her parents could not fulfill her emotional needs. 
She cannot face hard realities of life and therefore, she isolates herself from everything and persons. She is 
completely alienated from her family. She wants to visit all alone those places which are completely lonely.
Ila Das's life has been a life of ups and downs. Nanda had helped her in the past. Ila Das was forced 
to relinquish the job with the death of Vice-Chancellor. She is then, a low paid worker, who works against 
child-marriage. In such a process she has earned a good number of enemies. Staying for sometimes with 
Nanda, Ila Das leaves Carignano. Next morning a telephone call came to Nanda informing her about Ila 
Das's murder which made Nanda psychologically disturbed. The seclusion and alienation from society 
leave different impression on all the three souls, who are highly sensitive and emotional. There is a vast 
difference between their inner desires, dreams and the hard outside fact of life. Nanda Kaul grows more and 
introvert and finally she withdraws from the outside world completely. For her the seclusion is a kind of 
protective shell under the weight of which she grown miserably. In her own words in which she pretends to 
live a happy life, full of satisfaction. But that is not real truth of her existence. The shortage of privacy 
always vexed' her and her longing for a peaceful life forced her to withdraw from the outside world. So 
much that she does not want to keep any link either with her past life or with the present world around. In the 
very beginning of the novel when Nanda receives a letter informing her of her grand-daughter Raka's 
arrival in Carignano, she is emotionally disturbed and without any second thought she bursts out and says, 
'Discharge me … I have discharged all my  Duties'. Nanda has reached the stage where she relished the 
sensation of being alone. She does not want to keep any direct or indirect contact with the outside world, 
because she fears it may rip to pieces the calm and piece that she had attained with great effort.
All this is the expressive of the agony that is burning the inner self of Nanda Kaul, which had 
remained suppressed for a long time. She has been driven so much away from the world outside that any 
intrusion, in any form into her private cell is repelled strongly. She simply wants to erase her name from the 
book of life itself. The withdrawal from active social life had different shades of easing for Nanda and Raka. 
Nanda Kaul withdrew the social world because she could not feel at ease and was also disappointed with the 
family and superficial social life around. But Raka's withdrawal was natural and instinctive. She was 
neither attached to her parents emotionally nor had she ever gained any emotional security for her normal 
development.  Nanda  became  more  and  more  talkative  but  Raka  never  felt  at  home  in  this  kind  of 
disagreeable intimacy'. Though distanced by their age and attitude towards the social environment, both 
Nanda and Raka suffered from the sense of alienation. Raka who had never enjoyed any parental love, had 
lived alone, wandered alone and like to be left alone. 
The silence of Nanda is more roaring, thundering than her over busy resounding past. Nanda and 
Ila are childhood friends; under the circumstances they faced loneliness in a different manner. Nanda has 
reached such a stage in her life-old-age, infirmity, resignation, withdrawal, non-involvement-that she felt 
closer to the trees than to any human being. The treatment of women-Nanda, Ila, and Raka highlights the 
mental and physical oppression to which women are subjected and the intense suffering and loneliness are 
portrayed with great effect.  The whole novel reverberates with the agonized cry of Nanda Kaul. Nanda's 
life has been just like a barren mountain devoid of all human love and faith. 'Fire on the Mountain' is thus, a 
remarkable attempt to probe the various facets of disturbed psyche of Nanda Kaul.


REFERENCES

1. Quest for Self-fulfilment in the novels of Anita Desai,Neera Chakravarty,Tarun offset,Delhi.               
2. Psychological Conflicts in the Fiction of Anita Desai  by Ush Rani, Abhishek Publications, Chandigarh.
3.  Fire on the Mountain by Anita Desai.
4.  Anita Desai, Fire on the Mountain, William Heinemann, London
5. R.S Sharma, Anita Desai: Arnold Heinemann, New  Delhi, 1981.