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Swami and Friends LitChart

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Swami and Friends


schools and struggling for autonomy in the face of domineering
INTR
INTRODUCTION
ODUCTION authority figures. One notable example is Rudyard Kipling’s
story collection Stalky and Co., which Narayan’s friend and
BRIEF BIOGRAPHY OF R. K. NARAYAN
advocate Graham Greene saw as a parallel to Narayan’s early
R.K. Narayan was born into a middle-class family of the Tamil stories about Swami. Finally, Narayan was one of the earliest
Brahmin caste, a notably intellectual and creative group within Indian novelists to write exclusively in English about everyday
India’s system of social castes. He was raised in the city of life in India, thus paving the way for generations of Indian
Madras in South India and was cared for largely by his writers to do the same. These later writers include Arundhati
grandmother, whose stories and friends are said to inspire Roy, a contemporary Indian novelist who gained fame for her
much of Swami and Friends. Although writing was an uncommon novel The God of Small Things
Things, which was based partly on Roy’s
career for Indian men of his time, his family was supportive of childhood in India and won the prestigious Man Booker Prize in
his choice. Narayan also broke with tradition by deciding to 1997.
forgo an arranged marriage and instead choose his own wife,
although she died of typhoid fever in 1939, only five years after
KEY FACTS
their marriage. Narayan raised his one daughter on his own and
never remarried. Swami and Friends was Narayan’s first • Full Title: Swami and Friends
published book and was championed by the English author • When Written: Early 1930s
Graham Greene, Narayan’s friend and mentor. Narayan went • Where Written: South India (uncertain whether Madras or
on to publish 15 novels as well as a memoir and numerous Mysore)
essays and short stories, and he also became an activist for
• When Published: 1935
causes including environmentalism and children’s rights.
• Literary Period: Modernism

HISTORICAL CONTEXT • Genre: Novel, Bildungsroman, Sociocultural Satire


• Setting: The fictional town of Malgudi, in South India
Swami and Friends was written between the first and second
World Wars, a literary period of notable creative • Climax: Swami’s disappearance
experimentation that likely encouraged Narayan in his mission • Antagonist: English colonial rule, oppressive educational
to create a uniquely personal, comedic depiction of his systems
remembered childhood. The historical context of British • Point of View: Third person limited omniscient, mostly
colonial rule over India is also particularly crucial to the story, closely focused on Swami’s point of view but occasionally
as Swami and his friends begin to comprehend the essential touching on the perspectives of other characters
oppression of their country while simultaneously growing up
loving aspects of England, in particular the sport of cricket. EXTRA CREDIT
Britain would continue to rule India until the late 1940s, so Write What You Know. Several of the novel’s events, including
Swami witnesses the stirrings of the independence the pivotal protest for Indian independence, are based on
movement—led by Mahatma Gandhi—that would come to Narayan’s real-life childhood activities.
redefine the nature of India in the coming years.
The Other Side. After his wife’s untimely death, Narayan
RELATED LITERARY WORKS become immersed in trying to communicate with her spirit and
Swami and Friends is the first of Narayan’s many novels set in even based a Malgudi novel, The English Teacher, on his spiritual
the fictional town of Malgudi, all of which deepen and expand experiences.
the themes and locations introduced in this novel. In particular,
this work is often considered the first in a trilogy of Malgudi
coming-of-age novels, the second and third of which are The PL
PLO
OT SUMMARY
Bachelor of Arts and The English Teacher. Although the second
A young boy named Swami wakes up on Monday morning in the
two books in the trilogy concern different characters and do
town of Malgudi in South India. He rushes through his
not extend Swami’s story, they are nonetheless closely linked
homework at his desk in his father’s room and then goes to the
thematically. Swami and Friends also shares characteristics with
Mission School, where he is bored throughout most of his
a wide range of novels about groups of friends attending boys’
classes. Swami gets a bad grade on his mathematics homework

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and then, in his scripture class, gets into an argument with his On another Saturday, Swami excitedly prepares for Rajam to
teacher Mr. Ebenezar, a Christian fanatic. Swami is offended at visit his house. He anxiously orders his father, mother,
his teacher’s dismissal of the value of Hinduism and arrives at grandmother, and cook through various preparations. The visit
school the next day carrying a letter from his father to the goes well, and Rajam even charms Granny with his stories. The
Mission School Headmaster, in which his father complains to next time Swami attends school, he is again faced by his old
the headmaster that the school does not welcome non- friends mocking him, and he slaps both the Pea and Sankar.
Christian boys. Joined by Somu and Mani, the group goes outside, and Swami
Swami tells his four closest friends about the letter. These boys explains to Mani that the other three call him Rajam’s tail. Mani
are Somu, the friendly class monitor; Mani, a powerful but lazy defends Rajam and fights with Somu until the other boys get
bully; Sankar, “the most brilliant boy of the class”; and a small the headmaster to break up the fight.
boy named Samuel, nicknamed “The Pea,” who is not Three weeks later, Swami and Mani go to Rajam’s house again,
remarkable in any way except that he makes Swami laugh more this time because Swami told them he had a surprise for them.
than anyone else. Later in the day, the headmaster scolds When they arrive, they jokingly pretend to be a blind puppy and
Ebenezar but also tells Swami not to report incidents to his a blind kitten to get Rajam to let them in, only to discover when
father in the future, saying that the boys should instead turn to they open their eyes that Somu, Sankar, and the Pea are also
the headmaster with any problems. present. Rajam serves the group food and then lectures them
On the subsequent evening, Swami and Mani sit on the banks all on the value of friendship, offering them each a gift if they
of the Sarayu river, discussing a classmate named Rajam who promise not to be enemies any more. One by one, each boy
Mani wishes to throw into the river. It becomes clear that accepts his gift.
Rajam is known in school as a kind of rival to Mani, due to his At Swami’s home, his mother has been in bed for two days and
fearlessness, intelligence, and wealth. Rajam’s father is also the seems confusingly changed to him. Granny tells him that he is
Police Superintendent. Swami insists that he supports Mani going to have a baby brother, but he is indifferent even when
more than anyone else, and when they return to school Swami the baby is born, telling the Pea that the baby is “hardly
begins acting as a go-between for the two rivals. Eventually, anything.” The Pea assures him that the baby will grow up
they decide to meet for a fight on the banks of the river to see quickly.
who is more powerful. But when the time for the fight comes, In April, Swami and his classmates have only two weeks before
Rajam suggests that they put aside their differences and their school exams. Swami’s father forces him to study
become friends, to which Mani happily agrees. Having always constantly, and all of his friends are also unhappy under the
admired Rajam, Swami is also delighted at this turn of events stress of studying. Swami only feels that his efforts are
and glad to be the friend of both powerful boys. worthwhile when his father compliments his work. Shortly
The reader is introduced to Swami’s grandmother, whom he before the exam, Swami makes a list of supplies that he needs
calls Granny. She lives with Swami’s family in a small and, disappointed that “his wants were so few,” he makes a
passageway, and Swami feels safe and secure in her company. more complicated list and brings it to his father. His father
Swami excitedly describes Rajam to Granny and, although she scolds him and refuses to give him money to buy supplies,
tries to tell him stories of his own grandfather’s similarly instead telling him to take supplies from their desk at home.
impressive accomplishments, Swami refuses to listen. On a At last, Swami’s final exam is over. He worries that he finished
Saturday shortly thereafter, Swami ignores his grandmother’s faster than his friends and did not write enough for one
requests to spend time with him and instead goes with Mani to question, but his worry quickly turns to excitement as the other
Rajam’s house, where they are impressed by his luxurious students finish and form a joyful crowd to celebrate the end of
home, numerous toys, and the delicious food his cook serves. school. The group of boys destroys paper and ink bottles,
Back at school, Swami runs into his three friends Somu, Sankar, creating happy chaos until a school administrator breaks up
and The Pea. However, they are unfriendly to him and make a their celebration.
joke about a “tail.” After school, Swami makes Somu tell him Without school in session, Swami realizes that he is closer
about their joke, which it turns out refers to their calling him friends with Mani and Rajam than with Somu, Sankar, and the
“Rajam’s tail” because they believe Swami now thinks himself Pea. He also wishes to get a hoop to play with, and gives some
too good for his old friends. The rejection by his friends is the money to a coachman who promises to get him one, only to
“first shock” of Swami’s life, and he reflects miserably on how realize that the coachman tricked him. Rajam forms a plan in
quickly people can change. At home, he makes a paper boat and which Mani will kidnap the coachman’s son as revenge, but the
puts an ant on it, then watches as the boat is consumed in a plan goes awry when the boy gets away and his neighbors
flood of water. As the days continue, Swami’s friends continue attack Mani and Swami to chase them away. Sitting on a road
to ignore him, and school becomes an increasingly painful outside town and feeling frustrated, the three friends accost a
experience. young cart boy named Karuppan, frightening him with claims

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that they are the Government Police before eventually letting convince him to let Swami leave school early. Although Swami
him go. protests, he insists, and leads Swami to the headmaster’s office.
Soon thereafter, Swami’s father begins making him study again The headmaster ignores their request and Rajam eventually
even though school is out. Feeling sorry for Swami after a long gives up his effort.
day of work, however, his father also brings him along to visit The M.C.C. schedules a cricket match against another local
his club in the evening. Swami enjoys the visit until he realizes team, but Swami is still not able to get enough practice time.
that the coachman’s son works at the club. He becomes With only a week left before the match, he decides to try and
increasingly fearful that the boy will attack him, not even get a pass from a physician named Dr. Kesavan. Dr. Kesavan
trusting his father to protect him, and cannot relax until they proclaims Swami healthy but agrees to tell his headmaster that
leave. Swami should get to miss drill practice. Delighted, Swami skips
In August, Swami and Mani find themselves in the midst of a drill practice every day to attend cricket, only to find at the end
protest for Indian independence. Moved by the speakers, of the week that the doctor never spoke to the headmaster. The
Swami and Mani swear to support India against England and headmaster threatens to cane Swami, but Swami throws the
boycott English goods, with Swami even burning his cap when cane out the window and runs away. Swami fears that his father
someone suggests that it’s foreign-made. The next day, Swami will be too angry to let him live at home without attending
is nervous about not wearing a cap to school, but finds a crowd school, so he decides to run away. He goes to the Mission
of protesters blocking entrance to his school. The group says School and, after reminiscing about how much he loved being a
that school is canceled due to the imprisonment of an Indian student there, he finds Rajam to say goodbye. However, Rajam
political worker, and Swami gets caught up in breaking windows convinces Swami to run away only briefly before participating
and destroying property at both the Mission School and the in the match and then leaving for good.
nearby Board School. Eventually, the protest moves to a square The narration’s perspective switches to Swami’s father, who
in town, where Swami sees Rajam’s father order his policemen wanders the town alone late at night, looking for Swami. Swami
to violently disperse the crowd, a sight that shocks and has not been seen for hours and his mother and grandmother
frightens Swami. Later, his father expresses sympathy for the are sick with worry, with his father growing anxious as well.
protesters but scolds Swami for losing his cap, saying it was After looking everywhere else he can think of, Swami’s father
made in India all along. The next day in school, the headmaster fearfully peers into the Sarayu to see if Swami has drowned.
punishes all of the students who participated in the protest and Not finding him, he continues to walk along the rail lines.
Swami angrily runs away in the middle of class. The narration returns to Swami, who is wandering on a quiet
Six weeks later, Rajam finds Swami to tell him that he forgives road far from home. He reflects that he was foolish to leave
his political activity and to invite him to form a cricket team. over such a trivial problem and wishes to be back home with his
Swami has transferred to the Board School, while his group of family. He decides to return home but unwittingly goes the
friends back at the Mission School has broken up: Somu was wrong way, becoming more and more lost until he at last begins
held back, Sankar moved away, and the Pea started school late. to hallucinate in despair, thinking that he is being attacked by
Swami agrees to join the cricket team, and he and Rajam call animals. He falls unconscious after a fantasy of winning the
themselves the M.C.C. With Mani, they write a letter to a cricket match. The next morning, a cart man named Ranga finds
sporting goods company ordering supplies. Although the Swami in the road and takes him to the District Forest Office,
company writes back asking for a deposit, the boys continue where an officer named Mr. Nair helps Swami figure out who he
believing that their supplies will arrive and begin practicing is and where he is from. Soon, Swami’s father takes him home
with improvised equipment in the meantime. Swami quickly with the assistance of Rajam’s father, where he is content to
reveals himself to be a good bowler and earns the nickname celebrate among his family until Mani arrives and informs him
Tate, after a famous bowler. that he has missed the cricket match. Having thought that the
Swami discovers that the workload at the Board School is match was the next day, Swami is devastated. Mani also says
heavier than he is used to and also that it requires him to that Rajam is furious, so Swami resolves to speak with Rajam
participate in daily afterschool drill practices. Consequently, the next day and repair their friendship.
Swami leaves school too late to attend cricket practice on time, Ten days later, Swami still has not spoken with Rajam due to
which makes Rajam angry. One evening, Swami is concerned fear of his reaction. However, he has learned that Rajam’s
about his grandmother, whom he ignored earlier in the day father has been transferred and the family is about to move
when she said she didn’t feel well. He is relieved to find that she away. Swami searches his possessions for a going-away present
is well, but she disappoints him when she does not know what for Rajam, settling on a book of fairy tales, and resolves to go
cricket is. However, Swami decides to educate her rather than to the train station in the morning to give it to Rajam. Swami
scolding her. When Swami continues to be late to practice, goes to the station but is again too intimidated to talk to Rajam,
Rajam decides to confront the Board School Headmaster and who gets on the train without saying goodbye. Panicking,

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Swami asks Mani for help and the two boys run alongside the rather than Swami, who takes on the role of Rajam’s best friend.
train, finally giving Rajam the book. Rajam seems to say Mani lives with a frightening uncle, but little else is known
something to Swami, but his words are lost under the noise of about his family or background.
the train. Mani tells Swami that Rajam has his address and will Swami’s Father – Swami’s father, W.T. Srinivasan, is an
write, but Swami is unsure if Mani is telling the truth. imposing figure who works at the courts and is usually strict
with Swami. Swami sometimes feels afraid of his father, but at
other times he turns to him for help and support. Swami’s
CHARA
CHARACTERS
CTERS father encourages Swami to study hard and helps him with
Swami – Swami is the ten-year-old protagonist of the novel. homework and, notably, provides Swami with a study space
Swami is a schoolboy living in 1930, in the fictional town of within his own room. Late in the novel, Swami’s father reveals
Malgudi in the South of India under British colonial rule. At the that his concern for Swami’s wellbeing outweighs his
start of the novel, Swami is a typical child who seems outwardly frustrations with his son, as shown when he searches for Swami
innocent, with only trivial concerns such as homework, all night and welcomes him home without punishment.
impressing his classmates, and avoiding disappointing his Swami’s Mother – Swami’s mother appears in the novel only
father. Swami is considered average among his friends, neither occasionally, usually in the context of providing Swami with
especially clever nor stupid, brave nor cowardly. He is generally something he wants or backing him up in an argument with his
good-natured and gets along well with his peers and family, father. She is presented as a mild woman who is mostly
although he can be arrogant or deceitful at times, and is easily concerned with her family and managing the household. She
swept up in the plans and enthusiasms of others. As the novel loves Swami deeply and also gives birth to a baby boy, Swami’s
progresses, Swami becomes more aware of his own identity brother, who occupies her attention for much of the novel.
and political consciousness and begins to define himself more Swami’s GrGrandmother
andmother / GrGrann
annyy – Swami’s paternal
in terms of his friendships and national identity than his family grandmother, whom he calls Granny, is an old woman who lives
relationships. Swami is also a naturally good cricket bowler and with Swami and his mother and father. Swami views Granny as
prides himself on being nicknamed “Tate,” after a famous cricket ancient and sometimes embarrassing, but she is also a source
player. of comfort and security during times of change, particularly
Rajam – Rajam is the son of the Police Superintendent and one when Swami’s brother is born. Granny sometimes tries to tell
of Swami’s closest friends. Rajam is new to Swami’s school at Swami stories about the family’s past, but he usually refuses to
the start of the novel, and initially Swami and Mani view him as listen, indicating his preoccupation with his own present
an enemy due to his quick wits, fine clothes, and fearless concerns. Swami grows more concerned with Granny’s needs
nature. However, Rajam quickly becomes friends with Rajam over the course of the story, beginning to see himself as a
and Swami and acts as their ringleader for the remainder of the caretaker for her and making more of an effort to meet her
novel. Rajam does well in school and is liked by most of his needs.
classmates, and he draws confidence from his father’s Swami’s Brother – Swami’s unnamed baby brother is born
prominent position (Rajam’s father is the Police midway through the novel. While Swami at first thinks little of
Superintendent), although it also causes him to oppose the his brother, he soon grows fond of him and admires how quickly
political activity that his friends support. Rajam sometimes he learns and grows. Swami’s brother also presents a unique
bullies his friends and acquaintances, but more often he unites challenge to Swami, in that he occupies the family’s attention
them and urges them toward new goals, most notably the and makes it so that Swami is no longer the sole focus of his
formation of a cricket team. Swami loves and admires Rajam parents’ and grandmother’s affection.
but comes into conflict with him, first because Swami supports
Rajam
Rajam’s’s Father – Rajam’s father is the Police Superintendent
political action that opposes Rajam’s father, and later because
and acts as a powerful figure in the community. Swami and
he doesn’t live up to his promise on Rajam’s cricket team. Rajam
Mani are initially very excited to be associated with the Police
is so angry at Swami for missing the cricket match that he stops
Superintendent through their new friend Rajam, and Swami is
speaking to him, and it is unclear at the novel’s end whether the
impressed with the luxury of his household. Later, Rajam’s
two friends have reconciled.
father becomes a symbol of political conflict when Swami
Mani – Known as “the Mighty Good-For-Nothing,” Mani is witnesses him ordering the police force to violently break up
Swami’s other closest friend. Mani is a fearless troublemaker the crowd of protesters. However, Rajam’s father remains kind
who never does his homework, sleeps in class, and frequently in person to Rajam and his friends, and plays an important role
resorts to violence to solve his problems. However, he is also a in rescuing Swami at the novel’s conclusion.
loyal and affectionate friend, and Swami is proud to be allied
Somu – Somu is one of Swami’s friends from the Mission
with him. Mani often plays a supporting role in Swami and
School. He is the class monitor and gets along well with
Rajam’s friendship, though at the end of the novel it is Mani,

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everyone, students and teachers, although he does not excel schedule, they find him sleeping, indicating that his strength
academically. Swami thinks of Somu as the “uncle of the class.” may be at least in part a façade. The headmaster is ultimately
When Somu treats Swami unkindly, the experience is one of the responsible for Swami’s second departure from school, when
first times that Swami is forced to admit that the people around he publicly punishes Swami for missing drill practice.
him are more complex than he might have guessed. Later in the The Coachman – The unnamed coachman is an acquaintance
novel, Somu disappears from the group of friends after failing of Swami’s who promises to help him acquire a toy hoop in
an exam, and thus not being promoted to the next grade. exchange for money. He claims to be able to turn copper coins
Sankar – Sankar is one of Swami’s friends from the Mission into silver, but it becomes clear that he is lying to Swami in
School, known as “the most brilliant boy of the class.” Swami order to get his coins. The coachman’s son also becomes a
admires Sankar’s intelligence and relies on him for guidance at menacing presence to Swami after this episode. Swami’s
school. Sankar eventually leaves Malgudi when his father is experiences with the coachman are an early example of his
transferred to a new town, and although he writes to Rajam increasing acquaintance with the evils and dangers of the
and his friends intend to reply, they fall out of touch after world.
realizing that they don’t have Sankar’s new address. The Coachman
Coachman’s ’s Son – The coachman’s son is a young boy who
“The PPea
ea”” – The Pea, whose real name is Samuel, is a small boy begins to taunt and threaten Swami after his father
in Swami’s class at the Mission School. Although Swami successfully scams Swami out of his money. Rajam forms a plan
acknowledges that the Pea is ordinary in most ways, they in which Mani will kidnap the son with Swami’s help, but the
become friends over their shared sense of humor, and Swami plan goes awry when the son tricks Mani and runs away with
can laugh with the Pea in a way that he cannot with his other his toy top. Soon thereafter, Swami discovers during a visit to
friends. Swami is less close with the Pea after changing schools, his father’s club that the coachman’s son works at the club, and
but the Pea still joins the cricket team founded by Rajam. The Swami is overcome with fear that the son will attack him. This
Pea is also Swami’s only Christian friend, although he does not episode is one of the first instances in which Swami feels that
speak up for his Christian beliefs in the conflict between Swami his father is not able to protect him from harm.
and Ebenezar. Karrupan – Karrupan is a young boy who is bullied by Rajam,
Mission School Headmaster – The Mission School Mani, and Swami while out driving his cart. The three friends
Headmaster is a primary antagonist for Swami in the novel’s harass Karrupan and pretend to be government agents,
early chapters. Although he confronts Ebenezar about his frightening the boy before sending him on his way. The
mistreatment of Swami, he also calls Swami foolish for telling behavior of Swami and his friends toward Karrupan
his father what happened in scripture class and asks Swami to demonstrates their internalization of the colonized state’s
rely only on him in the future. Later, the headmaster’s brutal power structures.
intimidating interrogation of the students who participated in Dr
Dr.. K
Kesa
esavan
van – Dr. Kesavan is a physician whom Swami goes to
the protest goads Swami into renouncing the Mission School in an effort to get a medical certificate saying he can miss
and ultimately transferring to the Board School. However, in school drill practice in order to go to cricket. Dr. Kesavan
comparison to the abhorrent Board School Headmaster, Swami laughs at Swami’s self-diagnosis of delirium and pronounces
eventually comes to think of the Mission School Headmaster as him healthy, but says that he will talk to the Board School
dignified and respectable. Headmaster to get Swami excused from drill practice. However,
Mr
Mr.. Ebenezar – Mr. Ebenezar is the fanatical Christian Dr. Kesavan does not talk to the headmaster at all, which leads
scripture teacher at the Mission School. Although Swami and to Swami’s punishment and eventual departure from school.
his friends sometimes finds his classes amusing, he uses his Swami curses Dr. Kesavan for lying, and this episode is another
lectures to degrade Hinduism and argue for the superiority of of Swami’s formative experiences of betrayal.
Christianity. After Swami reports Ebenezar’s behavior, the Ranga – Ranga is the cart man who finds Swami unconscious
Mission School Headmaster scolds the teacher, but ultimately after his night wandering lost in the wilderness. He rescues
it seems that Ebenezar is allowed to carry on teaching as Swami by bringing him to Mr. Nair, thinking himself too simple
before. Later, Ebenezar appears only as a benign figure in the to know what to do. Ranga is one of few peasant characters in
school crowd, one who Swami even comes to view fondly after the novel, and notably, Swami knows little of his role in the
his troubles at the Board School. rescue and does not think to thank him later.
Board School Headmaster – The Board School Headmaster is Mr
Mr.. Nair – Mr. Nair is the District Forest Officer who helps
a strict, wizened old man who Swami thinks of as “owl-like.” He Swami return home after being lost. Swami initially confuses
is an imposing figure and frightens Swami, even preventing him him with his own father, indicating the sense of loss and
from attending the cricket practices he loves. But when Swami disorientation that Swami undergoes as he matures. Later,
and Rajam go to confront the headmaster about Swami’s Swami feels guilty for forgetting to say goodbye to Mr. Nair and

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worries that he did not show appropriate gratitude for his role, without occupying much of his attention.
again drawing a parallel between Mr. Nair and Swami’s actual The budding friendship between Swami, Mani and their new
father. However, Mr. Nair also lies to Swami about the day of classmate Rajam again illustrates the ways that the young boys
the week, presumably to keep him calm, and causes him not to take existing power structures for granted. Although Mani and
realize he is missing the cricket match until it is already over. Rajam at first intend to fight with each other, that animosity
quickly dissolves into mutual admiration, leaving the boys
untroubled by their initial reliance on violent dominance to
THEMES solve their problems. When Swami finds out that Rajam’s father
In LitCharts literature guides, each theme gets its own color- is the Police Superintendent, he is impressed and excited to be
coded icon. These icons make it easy to track where the themes associated with such power, again demonstrating his childish
occur most prominently throughout the work. If you don't have inability to reflect on the value and legitimacy of the powers
a color printer, you can still use the icons to track themes in around him.
black and white. As Swami’s story progresses, however, the political context
around him increasingly intrudes on his contained
THE POLITICAL AND THE PERSONAL understanding of his life. Swami begins to take actions that
appear outwardly political, but he still experiences these events
UNDER BRITISH COLONIAL RULE
in a personal, self-centered way. By blending Swami’s still-
Set in a fictional town in south India circa 1930, childish perspective with large-scale political events, Narayan
Swami and Friends is defined by the pressures and again fuses the personal with the political and illustrates the
complexities of British colonial rule over India. While the book’s impossibility of separating them, particularly within a context of
events revolve around common childhood trials and colonialism. Swami, Mani, and Rajam try out the experience of
tribulations, the personal experiences of the protagonist and being in power themselves by bullying a young boy named
his friends are colored by their political context, even when the Karuppan and saying that they are “the Government Police out
characters themselves have little understanding of it. By to catch humbugs like you.” The three boys make unreasonable
examining British colonial rule through the lens of an ordinary demands and frighten the boy, but seem not to reflect on the
boy’s relatable childhood, R.K. Narayan demonstrates the effects of their actions. It seems, then, that Swami and his
pervasiveness and subtlety of this political structure’s power. friends develop an unconscious tendency to act out the
Swami’s story shows that the impact of colonial rule is present oppression they have experienced. Shortly thereafter, Swami
in every corner of Indian life during this era, and that no and Mani inadvertently participate in a public protest against
individual’s personal life can be truly separate from English oppression of Indian peasants, and become
colonialism’s profound, sometimes contradictory effects. immediately emotionally attached to the cause. Swami
The lighthearted conflicts of the book’s early chapters “resolve[s] to boycott English goods” and burns his own cap
underscore Narayan’s point that that colonialism is present “with a feeling that he was saving the country.” At this point,
even in the innocent misadventures of children, although it may Swami’s emotional reaction to the notion of English oppression
seem entertaining, inconsequential, or even impressive in their becomes clear, but he is not yet able to connect that feeling
eyes. Narayan first addresses the influence of colonialism in the with his own actions more generally. When Swami finds himself
book’s opening chapter, when Swami and his classmates attend caught up in a school boycott the next day, he participates
scripture class with Mr. Ebenezer, their fanatical Christian actively in the increasingly dangerous event but thinks mostly
teacher. Narayan notes that the students sometimes enjoy the of the fun he’s having rather than his behavior’s political
class because of the “stirring pictures” they imagine based on meaning, as when he realizes happily that “there were many
Biblical tales. For Swami and his friends, the Christianity glass panes untouched yet.” It is only when Swami witnesses
imposed on them at the mission school is initially a source of Rajam’s father “grimly ticking off seconds before giving orders
idle entertainment rather than a menace or something to for massacre” that he begins to gain awareness of the political
contemplate deeply. Yet Swami soon perceives the way that tension present in his own life. Narayan notes that Swami “had
Ebenezer’s Christian teachings conflict with his own Hindu unconsciously become defiant” through his new experience of
beliefs, and protests against his teacher. However, the protest. It is this subconscious change that leads Swami to run
consequences of this conflict are trivial; the class enjoys away from the Mission School, for the first time renouncing a
watching their teacher get scolded by the Mission School major aspect of colonial oppression in his own life.
Headmaster and Swami is simply happy to escape punishment. Though Swami and his friends gain some degree of political
Again, even in this direct conflict Swami is primarily occupied by consciousness over the course of the story, their lives continue
childish concerns like impressing his friends and pleasing his to be circumscribed by colonial power in ways that are largely
father, and colonialism remains a backdrop that affects Swami invisible to them. Narayan illustrates this reality especially

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vividly through the boys’ experiences forming a cricket team. a bench in front of the class. After he leaves the Mission School
By highlighting the prominent and complicated role that a and enters the Board School, Swami’s schedule becomes more
quintessentially English activity plays in the friends’ lives, restrictive, and he is required to complete drill practices and
Narayan demonstrates that individuals living under colonialism scout classes after school in addition to a heavy load of
often have no choice but to tolerate—and sometimes even homework. Even though the Board School Headmaster is
embrace—the cultures of their colonizers. eventually revealed to be a frail older man who sleeps on the
Although Swami, Mani, and Rajam are initially excited about job, he still wields absolute power over Swami and will not let
starting a cricket team, they quickly discover that the logistics him leave school early to participate in cricket practice.
are more complicated than they expected, and Swami in Narayan’s descriptions of Swami’s engagement with academic
particular worries about government registration and taxes. work also hint at the way that his schools fail to engage his full
Reflecting on these difficulties, Rajam has “a momentary humanity. Puzzling over a mathematical word problem about
sympathy for Gandhi; no wonder he was dead against the selling mangos, Swami feels “utterly hopeless” without deeper
government.” By equating the boys’ seemingly trivial problems knowledge of who the men in the problem are and how their
with Gandhi’s opposition to the government, Narayan personalities affect the situation. With this example, Narayan
humorously points to the oppressive presence of the hints at the ways that Swami perceives the lack of humanity in
government in every Indian’s life, no matter how slight it might the structures he encounters at school.
seem. However, Swami also derives meaning and a sense of belonging
The formation of the cricket team initially serves as a way for from his schools, even as they cause him pain. The positive
Swami and Rajam to repair their friendship after their conflict aspects of Swami’s educational experiences indicate that
over what Rajam calls Swami’s “political activities,” but because these institutions are so deeply ingrained in Swami’s
eventually, the cricket team is also responsible for the breakup life, he must necessarily learn to derive some satisfaction from
of Swami and Rajam’s friendship, when Rajam is unable to them, just as the Indian people under English rule must carry on
forgive Swami for missing the match. By using the game to both finding meaning in their lives even in unfair circumstances.
unite and divide the story’s protagonists, Narayan indicates the School forms the core of social life for Swami and his friends, as
extent to which the characters may be at the mercy of English indicated when their friend Somu fails an exam and then
influence, even as they devote themselves to an English sport vanishes from the story: “Somu was not promoted, and that
with seeming freedom. Political forces work their way into the meant he was automatically excluded from the group, the law
personal goals and relationships of Swami and his friends even being inexorable in that respect.” Because Swami’s friendships
during their leisure time, again demonstrating that no private are so important to him, and school defines the structure of
life can be truly independent from politics in the context of a those friendships, the school plays a crucial role in developing
colonized state. meaning in his life. Although the Board School causes Swami
more difficulty, it also helps him develop academically. He gains
EDUCATION AND OPPRESSION “rigour and discipline” where before he was unengaged with his
work, which allows him to live up to his father’s high
Difficulty within educational settings is one of
expectations and gain a greater sense of self-efficacy and
Swami’s constant conflicts throughout the novel.
interpersonal connection—even in regard to his old school.
Rather than simply depicting the ordinary
When Swami prepares to run away after leaving the Board
childhood struggles of homework and unfair teachers, Narayan
School, he stops at his old mission school and fondly
uses these familiar obstacles to enact a smaller version of the
remembers his time there, thinking: “All his friends were
colonial oppression that suffuses the book. For Swami, school is
there…happy, dignified, and honored within the walls of the
a place of both growth and restriction, where rigid rules come
august Albert Mission School. He alone was out of it, isolated,
into conflict with Swami’s nuanced inner life. Throughout,
as if he were a leper.” His sense of belonging indicates that he
Narayan’s depictions of Swami’s school days add depth and
considers the school a kind of home and that he is invested in
specificity to the book’s larger points about the intersection of
the idea of its goodness, despite the pain he experienced there.
the personal and the political.
The schools’ dual role as structures of both support and
Many of Swami’s most immediate experiences of oppression
oppression plays out vividly in the way that the school setting
occur within school settings. He encounters violence,
can change quickly from organized to chaotic. This sense of
humiliation, and requirements that quash his imaginative and
instability and potential for confusion again functions as a
sensitive nature. All of these restrictions on Swami’s individual
microcosm of Swami’s broader sociopolitical context, where
life seem to mirror the dehumanizing nature of colonial power
the margin between safety and danger is often small. When the
on India’s larger population. At both of his schools, Swami is
term ends at the Mission School, jubilant celebration rapidly
subject to punishments that cause him pain and
turns into destructive mayhem. As Swami reflects on the rumor
embarrassment, such as being caned or being made to stand on

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that enemies stab each other on the last day of school, Narayan and plan to fight with him. However, once Mani and Rajam face
writes: “Swaminathan had no enemy as far as he could each other to fight, they quickly set aside their differences:
remember. But who could say? The school was a bad place.” Rajam says, “I won’t mind being your friend,” and Mani replies,
This scene exemplifies the uncertainty and sense of amorphous “Nor I.” With that simple exchange, the boys effortlessly create
danger that pervades Swami’s life at school and, as the story a friendship that leaves Swami in a state of “perfect peace.”
progresses, begins to affect him outside of school as well. However, Swami soon loses the respect of his older group of
friends, who begin calling him a “tail” because of his attachment
THE FLUIDITY OF IDENTITY to Rajam. Narayan calls this experience “probably
Swaminathan’s first shock in life,” and describes how it leaves
Although little more than a year passes over the
him wondering whether his friends are the same people they
course of Swami’s story, his identity and those of
used to be. Although the friends soon reconcile, the shocking
his friends change and develop many times
rupture shows how quickly esteemed individuals can become
throughout the novel. By demonstrating how malleable his
untrustworthy, creating danger in social contexts that had
characters’ essential traits and roles are, Narayan casts doubt
previously seemed safe.
on the idea of objectively “true” identity, instead seeming to
argue that even core characteristics like goodness and badness Toward the end of the novel, Swami begins to understand the
can be changed and chosen according to the desires of idea of identity, both his own and those of his friends, as less
individuals and groups. This changeability is often a positive concrete than he has previously thought. Instead of alternating
force in the characters’ lives, but Narayan also uses it to between distinct identities, Swami and his friends begin to take
underscore the inherent instability and ambiguity that Swami on multiple identities at the same time. This shift into greater
and his friends must learn to face. ambiguity adds new depth to Narayan’s examination of the
changeable nature of personhood. When Swami runs away
Swami’s understanding of himself is particularly fluid
following his departure from the Board School, he becomes lost
throughout the novel. He often lies to others about his
and disoriented in an unfamiliar setting. He begins to imagine
behavior or motivations and sometimes fools himself in the
terrible dangers on the dark roads around him, and he even
process, effectively changing himself into a different person to
becomes delusional in his desperation. At the height of this
suit different circumstances. When Swami feels insecure about
crisis, Swami loses his sense of himself almost completely and
writing too little on his exam, he tells his friends that he wrote
perceives around him “a sense of inhumanity.” During this
half a page and “believed it for the moment,” even though he
episode, Swami effectively merges with the frightening night,
only wrote one sentence. Swami is not actually a good student,
demonstrating that even the basic individual identity itself can
but he takes on the identity of one in order to make himself feel
vanish at times.
more confident in his group of friends. Compiling the list of
supplies he needs for that same exam, Swami finds: “The list When Rajam moves away, he has not yet reconciled with Swami
was disappointing. He had never known that his wants were so after their fight over the cricket match. With Mani’s help,
few.” To cope with that disappointment, he creates a more Swami gives Rajam a book of fairy tales as a going-away
detailed list of things he doesn’t particularly need, in order to present, but he is not able to hear Rajam’s reply over the noise
fashion himself into a more important person with more of the train. The book ends with Swami uncertain of whether
substantial wants. When Swami first begins playing cricket, he Rajam considers him a friend or an enemy. Similarly, the
bowls well once and is immediately nicknamed Tate, after a previously straightforward Mani takes on an ambiguous role at
famous cricket player. Although Swami attends few practices the end, refusing to give Swami a clear answer about whether
after that point and ultimately misses the crucial match, his or not Rajam will be in touch. Narayan writes that “for once
friends continue calling him Tate and he brags about the Mani’s face had become inscrutable,” ending Swami’s story in
nickname to his family. Again, Swami’s identity shifts in a uncertainty and confusion. This conclusion—or lack
moment to suit the desires of himself and his friends and make thereof—indicates particularly clearly Narayan’s point that it is
them all feel more confident about their cricket team. impossible to define an individual’s identity with any real
certainty, even when the individual is a close friend or even
The malleable social roles of Swami and his friends also
oneself.
demonstrate the flexibility of each of their individual identities.
Sometimes the friends choose to define each other in positive
ways, but sometimes they choose to exclude and belittle each INNOCENCE, FAMILY, AND GROWING
other. Their group dynamics illustrate how readily “good” UP
characters can become “bad” and vice versa, again emphasizing Just as Swami’s story reveals the somewhat illusory
the relative nature of each of their identities, particularly in the nature of personal identity, so too does it slowly
way they are shaped by the perceptions of others. When Swami strip away conventional notions of childhood innocence. While
and Mani first meet Rajam, they are convinced that he is evil Swami seems at first to embody the quintessential idea of a

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carefree child, his growth over the course of the novel shows middle of the novel, Swami enters into a conflict with the son of
that even children of his young age are burdened by serious a coachman who tricks Swami into giving him money. This
concerns and real-world threats. Narayan demonstrates this episode in particular illustrates the tension between Swami’s
gradual loss of innocence in large part through his portrayal of youthful innocence and his dawning knowledge of the genuine
Swami’s relationships with the members of his immediate danger of the world around him. The episode begins with
family, which grow increasingly complicated and less protective Swami’s intense desire to get a hoop, a childish wish based only
over the course of the story. on a love for simple play. However, that innocent impulse soon
At the start of the novel, Swami is almost wholly dependent on transforms into a violent conflict with the coachman’s son;
his family. He blithely takes them for granted while also calling Mani beats Swami in an attempt to get the boy’s attention and
on them to support his whims and desires, and their firm but then, when they confront him, his neighbors throw rocks and
kind presence grounds the seeming innocence that Swami chase them off with dogs. Most significantly of all, Swami
enjoys in the early chapters. Swami’s mother and father, though encounters the son again while visiting his father’s luxurious
strict at times, offer him safety and resources to pursue his club, but finds that his father is oblivious to the danger. He
academic and social goals. Even when Swami meets Rajam, decides to “seek protection” by telling his father, but quickly
whom he views as a role model, he still requires his father’s reverses his choice, deciding that “his father had better not
room and his mother’s cooking in order to host Swami at his know anything about the coachman’s son, however serious the
home. Thanks to his parents’ help, the visit goes well, and situation might be.” As Swami moves away from his father’s
Swami feels independent in his friendship with Rajam even as protection, Narayan demonstrates more forcefully that
he relies on his family to support it. Swami’s Granny, whom he Swami’s family is not truly the refuge that it initially appears to
considers unsightly and senile but nevertheless loveable, also be.
offers him unquestioning comfort. She affirms Swami’s stories By the novel’s conclusion, Swami has experienced the genuine
even when they are implausible, and although she tells him danger of the world around him and, at the same time, come to
stories from the family’s past, Swami dismisses her words as realize the limitations of his family’s ability to comfort him and
“old unnecessary stories.” Swami views his relationship with his keep him safe. Through this process Narayan shows that Swami
grandmother as simply “snug and safe,” but Narayan makes shares in the universal realities common to all coming-of-age
clear that this perception relies on Swami’s ability to ignore the stories, even within the unique sociopolitical context of India
more complex, challenging stories that his grandmother wishes under English colonial rule.
to tell. In describing the conflict between Swami and his After Swami and his friends form their cricket team, Swami
headmaster at the mission school, Narayan hints again at the discovers that his grandmother does not know what cricket is.
deeper reality that underlies Swami’s outwardly innocent Although he is upset by her “appalling ignorance,” he is
reliance on his family. After Swami brings in his father’s letter nonetheless patient with her because he remembers his recent,
complaining about Ebenezer’s treatment of Swami, the Mission irrational fear that “she was going to die in a few minutes”
School Headmaster scolds Ebenezer but then tells Swami that because he refused to bring her a lemon. Swami’s shift toward
he was “foolish to go to [his] father about this matter.” The caring for his grandmother and her feelings marks a reversal of
headmaster requests that Swami turn to him instead of his his previous belief that his family are the ones responsible for
father about future problems, foreshadowing the novel’s later him. When Swami goes missing, a chapter from his father’s
events in which Swami’s father is powerless to protect him. perspective reveals that he is completely powerless to find
As the novel progresses, Swami’s feeling of security with his Swami and, given that Swami actually ran away, save him from
family begins to erode, as both he and the reader discover himself. His father’s desolation and inability to alter the
evidence that his innocent trust in his own safety may have situation underscores the fact that Swami must now take
been an illusion all along. When Swami’s mother gives birth to responsibility for himself, rather than relying innocently on his
an unnamed baby boy, Swami is initially indifferent to his new family. When Swami is rescued by Mr. Nair, he is initially
brother, calling him “hardly anything.” But as time passes, confused and calls the man Father. He is unable to understand
Swami realizes that the baby is now the center of the his situation, thinking: “Who was this man? Was he Father? If he
household. Although Swami soon comes to love his brother, he was not, why was he there? Even if he was, why was he there?
is also forced to admit that he is no longer the sole focus of his Who was he?” This internal breakdown of Swami’s ability to
parents’ and grandmother’s love and attention. Around the comprehend his father’s role in his life represents a moment of
same time, Swami notices that his father has changed to profound growth in Swami’s self-efficacy and maturity. Later, he
become “fussy and difficult.” His father begins to take a more laments that he forgot to say goodbye to the Officer, hinting at
active role in making Swami study for his exams, and Swami the core truth that one cannot appreciate childhood simplicity
resents the realization that his father’s role is not only to until it is gone. Swami still lives with his family at the novel’s
protect him but also to pressure him toward growth. In the end, but he has lost the illusion that his life there is innocent or

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free of worry. Narayan seems to recognize the unstable and sometimes
dangerous role that even the appealing aspects of colonizing
nations play in the lives of the colonized.
SYMBOLS
Symbols appear in teal text throughout the Summary and THE BOOK OF FAIRY TALES
Analysis sections of this LitChart. Swami’s somewhat surprising choice of a book of
fairy tales by Hans Christian Andersen as a going-
SWAMI’S CAP away present for Rajam acts as a symbol for the crossroads of
maturity at which the two boys find themselves. Swami has
Swami’s cap becomes important to the story as he struggled to enjoy reading through the novel, while Rajam has
begins to develop a political consciousness. Swami excelled at it, so Swami’s sensitivity to the kind of present that
thinks little of his clothes until the night that he and Mani Rajam would appreciate demonstrates the way that he has
stumble on a protest against British oppression, and Swami begun learning to think outside of himself and his own desires.
realizes that some of his clothing may be made by British However, the fact that the book includes fairy tales rather than
manufacturers at the expense of Indian craftspeople. When a true facts indicates that the boys’ reality is still largely shaped
bystander suggests that he is “wearing a foreign cap,” Swami is by fantasy. Even as Swami is forced to face the painful fact that
ashamed and throws the cap into the fire—his first act in Rajam is moving away without repairing his friendship with
support of Indian liberation. However, the cap also comes to Swami, he relies on the power of a book of imagined realities to
symbolize Swami’s naivete about political matters. The next bridge the gap between them. Finally, Swami thinks that the
morning, Swami thinks not of his devotion to Indian book is too full of “unknown, unpronounceable English words”
independence, but of the anger his father will feel when he sees for him to ever understand it himself, again hinting that
that the cap is missing. Then, even after his intense experience mysterious foreign influence is present in every corner of his
at the protest, Swami continues to view his fledging political life, even the parts that concern fantasy rather than reality.
activity through the narrow lens of his own self-interest, telling
his father that the cap was burned by someone else in the
crowd rather than owning up to his own actions. Finally, QUO
QUOTES
TES
Swami’s father informs him that the cap was Indian-made all
along, undermining Swami’s passionate destruction of what he Note: all page numbers for the quotes below refer to the
believed to be a symbol of England. The cap thus underscores University of Chicago Press edition of Swami and Friends
Narayan’s point that Swami’s actions are tied to a political published in 1980.
context even when he is only able to engage with that context
in a childish, haphazard way. Chapter 1 Quotes
Ebenezar attempted to smile. Swaminathan wished to be
CRICKET well out of the whole affair. He felt he would not mind if a
The game of cricket is the story’s most potent hundred Ebenezars said a thousand times worse things about
symbol of the complex way that English the gods.
colonization plays out in the lives of Swami and his friends. As a
quintessentially English activity, cricket is closely tied to Related Characters: Mission School Headmaster, Mr.
England’s presence in India, but instead of rejecting it for its Ebenezar, Swami
oppressive associations, Swami and his friends—particularly
team captain Rajam—embrace the game as a means of gaining Related Themes:
self-determination, dominance over opponents, and
interpersonal connection. This paradoxical pursuit Page Number: 10
demonstrates the ways in which colonized peoples like Swami
Explanation and Analysis
and his friends must necessarily adapt to the influences of the
colonizer, even embracing aspects of the oppressive culture After Swami’s father sent a letter to the Mission School
and subverting them into mechanisms of liberation. However, Headmaster complaining about Ebenezar’s discrimination
the friends’ cricket team has both positive and negative effects against non-Christian boys, the headmaster calls Swami in
in Swami’s life; it initially helps him put aside his political for a meeting about the incident. Here, Swami desires only
differences with Rajam, but it also tears apart their friendship to leave the uncomfortable situation, not caring anymore
when Swami misses the crucial match. Through this symbol, about the religious conflict that arose between him and

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Ebenezar. This quote demonstrates that at the start of the Related Characters: Rajam’s Father, Rajam, Swami’s
book, Swami’s budding political inclinations and Grandmother / Granny
understanding of the world around him are usually
overshadowed by childish, self-centered desires. Related Themes:
It also hints at the extent to which the school environment
Page Number: 20
acts as a microcosm of the broader colonial rule that Swami
faces, in which personal beliefs are subjugated to the Explanation and Analysis
overarching power of the state and individuals like
Just after becoming friends with Rajam, Swami recounts his
Ebenezar are allowed to hold positions of power and even
greatness to his grandmother, eager to impress her with
smile when mildly reprimanded for their misdeeds.
descriptions of his new friend. She attempts to reply with
stories of Swami’s own family’s greatness, but he is
uninterested. This quote shows Swami’s unquestioning
Chapter 2 Quotes submission to the authority figures around him, when he
Swaminathan gasped with astonishment. In spite of his views Rajam’s father’s position as an impressive one. Later,
posing before Mani he admired Rajam intensely, and longed to Swami will come to abhor the police forces that Rajam’s
be his friend. Now this was the happiest conclusion to all the father leads, so his attitude here is particularly notable.
unwanted trouble. He danced with joy. Rajam lowered his gun, Additionally, Swami’s lack of interest in Granny’s stories
and Mani dropped his club. To show his goodwill, Rajam pulled shows his own thoughtless disregard for the past and his
out of this pocket half a dozen biscuits. self-interested focus on his own present concerns. Swami
feels so secure with his family, especially Granny, that he
Related Characters: Mani, Rajam, Swami doesn’t need to reflect on their past or think about how it
might apply to his own life. At this point, Swami is not yet
Related Themes: mature enough to think about his family’s role as his
protector and instead takes the safety of his home for
Page Number: 18 granted.
Explanation and Analysis
Swami reacts with joy after Rajam and Mani decide to be Chapter 4 Quotes
friends instead of fighting. This moment is one of the book’s
This was probably Swaminathan’s first shock in life. It
earliest instances of a rapid change of identity, as Rajam
paralysed all his mental process. When his mind started
goes from being an enemy to a beloved friend in only a
working again, he faintly wondered if he had been dreaming.
matter of minutes. The boys’ reliance on violence and even
The staid Somu, the genial Somu, the uncle Somu, was it the
weapons to settle childish disputes also displays the way
same Somu that had talked to him a few minutes ago? What
that they reenact colonial power structures in their own
was wrong in liking and going about with Rajam? Why did it
relationships, seeking raw dominance as a means of
make them so angry?
controlling their social environment. As the gun and club are
quickly replaced with cookies, Narayan illustrates the fine
line between danger and comfort, hinting that Swami’s Related Characters: Rajam, Somu, Swami
innocent childhood state may mask underlying threats.
Related Themes:

Chapter 3 Quotes Page Number: 31

‘His father is the Police Superintendent. He is the master Explanation and Analysis
of every policeman here.’ Granny was impressed. She said that After hearing his friends calling him a “tail,” Swami gets
it must be a tremendous office indeed. She then recounted the Somu to admit that they call him “Rajam’s tail” because he
day when her husband, Swaminathan’s grandfather, was a acts like he is too good for them now that he’s friends with
powerful submagistrate, in which office he made the police the son of the Police Superintendent. This moment is a
force tremble before him, and the fiercest dacoits of the place pivotal change for Swami in several ways. First, it is his “first
flee. Swaminathan waited impatiently for her to finish the story. shock,” the first time that his safe and predictable world
becomes unexpectedly painful. This small instance of

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emotional danger foreshadows the greater dangers that Related Characters: Mani, “The Pea”, Sankar, Somu, Swami,
Swami experiences later on as he gains more and more Rajam
independence.
Second, his confusion over Somu’s altered character Related Themes:
demonstrates that the fluidity of identity that let Rajam go
Page Number: 46
from friend to enemy can also work the other way. This is
the first time that Swami begins to understand that the Explanation and Analysis
identities of those around him can shift in harmful ways.
After tricking Swami and Mani into coming to his house and
Finally, Swami’s obliviousness to the downside of meeting with Somu, Sankar, and the Pea, Rajam gives a
associating with the Police Superintendent illustrates his lecture on friendship and then offers the other boys gifts in
lack of political awareness and the ease with which he exchange for renouncing enemies. The incident cements
accepts hierarchies of power at this point in the story. Rajam’s place as the leader of the friends, demonstrating
again how his father’s powerful position passes on to the
son and recreates adult hierarchies in the world of children.
Chapter 5 Quotes Additionally, Rajam’s offer of gifts indicates that the
‘You had better prepare something very nice, something abstract value of friendship is not enough to win the boys
fine and sweet. Rajam is coming this afternoon. Don’t make the over; rather, they require material prizes in order to make
sort of coffee that you usually give me. It must be very good and the commitment that Rajam asks for. This contrast between
hot.’ He remembered how in Rajam’s house everything was the mature notion of making peace and the childish desire
brought to the room by the cook. ‘Mother, would you mind if I for toys illustrates the in-between phase of growing up in
don’t come here for coffee and tiffin? Can you send it to my which Swami finds himself at this time.
room?’

Related Characters: Swami (speaker), Rajam, Swami’s


Chapter 7 Quotes
Mother ‘I say, Swami,’ said the Pea, ‘these things grow up soon. I
have seen a baby that was just what your brother is. But you
Related Themes: know, when I saw it again during Michaelmas I could hardly
recognize it.”
Page Number: 36

Explanation and Analysis Related Characters: “The Pea” (speaker), Swami’s Brother,
As Swami prepares to host Rajam for the afternoon, he Swami
enlists the help of everyone in his family to convince Rajam
that his home is luxurious. Ironically, Swami’s attempt to Related Themes:
prove his independence to Rajam depends completely on
Page Number: 49
the actions of others, demonstrating how much Swami is
still reliant on his family even as he tries to form an identity Explanation and Analysis
apart from them. His imperious orders to his mother and
After Swami’s baby brother is born, he tells the Pea that he
the cook also show how little he considers the needs of
thinks little of the baby. The Pea’s reply that the baby will
others in his family. He views them mainly in terms of how
soon grow into something unrecognizable underscores the
they can be of use to him.
theme of constant change within an individual, offering a
concrete example of how quickly and easily a person can
grow from one state of being into something completely
Chapter 6 Quotes different.
The company was greatly impressed. Rajam then invited Additionally, the Pea’s idea that the baby will soon seem
everyone to come forward and say that they would have no much older foreshadows the coming changes in Swami’s life,
more enemies. If Sankar said it, he would get a bound notebook; in which his baby brother will become the center of the
if Swaminathan said it, he would get a clockwork engine; if family’s attention and he, Swami, will begin to strike out on
Somu said it, he would get a belt; and if Mani said it, he would his own.
get a nice pocket-knife; and the Pea would get a marvellous
little pen.

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Chapter 8 Quotes
person, and when the list disappoints him, he recreates it to
Swaminathan reflected: suppose the Pea, Mani, Rajam and match his idea of who he would like to be. This active
Sankar deserted him and occupied Second A? His father was creation of self is one of Swami’s early steps toward self-
right. And then his father drove home the point. ‘Suppose all determination, which will remain an ongoing struggle
your juniors in the Fifth Standard become your class-mates?’ throughout the story.
Swami sat at decimals for half an hour.
Significantly, this moment takes place in the context of
Swami’s preparations for school, showing again how the
Related Characters: Swami’s Father (speaker), Sankar, school environment can promote some forms of growth at
Rajam, Mani, “The Pea”, Swami the same time that it causes stress and discomfort.

Related Themes:
Chapter 9 Quotes
Page Number: 51
At the end of the prayer the storm burst. With the loudest,
Explanation and Analysis lustiest cries, the gathering flooded out of the hall in one body.
As Swami prepares for his school exams, his father All through this vigorous confusion and disorder, Swaminathan
motivates him to study by suggesting that he’ll be left kept close to Mani. For there was a general belief in the school
behind by his friends if he fails. The immediate emotional that enemies stabbed each other on the last day. Swaminathan
effect of this idea on Swami shows that as much as school is had no enemy as far as he could remember. But who could say?
unpleasant for him, it also provides him with the friendships The school was a bad place.
that form the core of his day-to-day life. This is an early
example of the recurring theme of finding supportive, Related Characters: Mani
positive facets of oppressive systems.
This quote also shows a shift, driven in this case by Swami’s Related Themes:
father, toward Swami’s understanding of the importance of
his friends in his life. As Swami slowly starts to leave Page Number: 65
childhood and moves out of his family’s orbit, his friends Explanation and Analysis
take on a greater role, and this quote hints that Swami’s
father himself is aware of and preparing for that upcoming After the Mission School exams end, the entire school
change. community celebrates the arrival of vacation. This quote
demonstrates how quickly the ordered setting of the school
can transform into a chaotic, even frightening place.
Swami’s nameless fear of the enemies who might harm him
He nibbled his pencil and reread the list. The list was is one of the book’s most vivid examples of the menacing
disappointing. He had never known that his wants were so nature of the school. Only by associating with the violent
few. When he first sat down to draw the list he had hoped to fill Mani can Swami make himself feel safe. With the school
two or three imposing pages. But now the cold lines on the standing in for India under British rule, this quote shows the
paper numbered only five. extent to which vaguely-defined danger lurks beneath even
everyday facets of life.
Related Characters: Swami

Related Themes: Chapter 10 Quotes


Swaminathan stood before the gods and with great piety
Page Number: 56
informed them of the box and its contents, how he expected
Explanation and Analysis them to convert the two pebbles in to two three-paise coins,
and why he needed money so urgently. He promised that if the
Preparing for his exams, Swami writes a list of all the
gods helped him, he would give up biting his thumb.
supplies he needs to buy and finds that the list is much
shorter than he expected. This quote represents the first
instance in which Swami consciously realizes that his own Related Characters: Swami
identity, like those of the individuals around him, is not
completely fixed. He expects himself to be a more complex

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himself subject to new dangers far from the safety of his


Related Themes:
family, again suggesting that his innocence is necessarily
impermanent and even illusory.
Page Number: 69

Explanation and Analysis


When the coachman tells Swami that he can help him get a Chapter 11 Quotes
hoop, Swami begins a desperate search for the six paises ‘Whom do you address as “boys”?’ asked Rajam
that he needs to pay the coachman, turning at last to an menacingly. ‘Don’t you know who we are?’
attempt to turn pebbles into coins by praying to the gods. ‘We are the Government Police out to catch humbugs like you,’
Swami’s cavalier use of religion simply to find a way to get a added Swaminathan.
toy is another instance of his essential immaturity at this
‘I shall shoot you if you say a word,’ said Rajam to the young
point in the story. Additionally, his prayer takes the form of
driver. Though the driver was incredulous, he felt that there
the kind of Christian prayer that Ebenezar teaches in
must be something in what they said.
scripture class, even though Swami spends little time
reflecting on this fact. This easy integration of a religion that
he recently rejected shows how unthinkingly Swami falls Related Characters: Swami, Rajam (speaker), Mani,
back on the systems imposed on him by colonialism, even Karrupan
when he does not mean to do so.
Related Themes:

Page Number: 80-81


Swaminathan began to cry. Mani attempted to strangle
him. A motley crowd gathered round them, urchins with Explanation and Analysis
prodigious bellies, women of dark aspect, and their men. Scurvy While lazing by a road outside of Malgudi, Swami and his
chickens cackled and ran hither and thither. The sun was friends Rajam and Mani encounter a young boy, Karuppan,
unsparing. Two or three mongrels lay in the shade of a tree and driving a cart and force him to stop. Their aggressive,
snored. A general malodour of hencoop and unwashed clothes seemingly thoughtless words here offer the novel’s most
pervaded the place. explicit enactment of government aggression in the boys’
own lives. They effortlessly recreate the fear that they have
Related Characters: The Coachman’s Son, The Coachman, felt from outside danger and transfer it onto the smaller
Mani, Swami boy, perfectly demonstrating the pervasive effects of harsh
government control.
Related Themes: Furthermore, their words display their own ability to
transform into aggressive version of themselves, seemingly
Page Number: 75
without thought or comment. This is one of the more
Explanation and Analysis troubling transformations that Swami’s identity undergoes
over the course of the novel, and one that he seems to have
After the coachman steals Swami’s money, Mani and Swami
no conscious awareness of.
go to his house to kidnap his son, acting on a plan invented
by Rajam. Mani decides without warning Swami to pretend
that Swami is an urchin, and he attacks him to draw a crowd.
This quote is notable in part because Mani, who usually When they came to the car, Swaminathan got in first and
protects Swami, becomes instead an attacker without occupied the centre of the back seat. He was still in
warning. Even though Mani will later claim to have only suspense. Father’s friend was taking time to start the car.
been pretending, the attack feels real to Swami and serves Swaminathan was sitting all alone in the back seat, very far
as an especially painful example of a character’s role in his behind Father and his friend. Even now, the coachman’s son
life changing quickly and surprisingly. and his gang could easily pull him out and finish him.
Additionally, the detailed description of the coachman’s
unpleasant neighborhood highlights how far Swami has Related Characters: The Coachman’s Son, Swami’s Father,
come from his comfortable, well-ordered home. Even in his Swami
pursuit of something so childish as a hoop, Swami finds

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recurs throughout the sequence of Swami’s political actions.


Related Themes:
Here, Swami’s impulsive behavior burning the cap and his
simplistic belief that doing so has saved the country shows
Page Number: 92-93
that his childish habits of thought persist even as he enters
Explanation and Analysis the more adult pursuit of political engagement.
After discovering that the coachman’s son works at his
father’s club, Swami fears that he might be killed even in his
father’s company. This quote marks the first time that When he turned his head Swaminathan saw to his horror
Swami feels beyond his father’s ability to protect him. Even that it was Rajam’s father! Swaminathan could not help
though no incident occurs with the coachman’s son, Swami’s feeling sorry that it should be Rajam’s father. Rajam’s father!
genuine terror shows that his independent pursuits have Rajam’s father to be at the head of those traitors!
now begun to lead him into dangers that he must cope with The Deputy Superintendent of Police fixed his eyes on his
himself. Narayan’s emphasis on Swami’s being “alone” in the wrist-watch and said, ‘I declare this assembly unlawful. I give it
back seat and “very far” from his father underscores the five minutes to disperse.’ At the end of five minutes he looked
thematic weight of this moment and expresses the symbolic up and uttered in a hollow voice the word, ‘Charge.’
distance that has entered their relationship, even though
they are still physically very close together.
Related Characters: Rajam’s Father (speaker), Swami

Related Themes:
Chapter 12 Quotes
Swaminathan was watching the scene with little shivers of Page Number: 101-102
joy going down his spine. Somebody asked him: ‘Young man, do
you want our country to remain in eternal slavery?’ Explanation and Analysis
‘No, no,’ Swaminathan replied. Following the protest at his school through town, Swami
finds himself in a public square where police have gathered
‘But you are wearing a foreign cap.’
to break up the protest. There, he realizes that Rajam’s
Swaminathan quailed with shame. ‘Oh, I didn’t notice,’ he said, father is the leader of the police. Although he has often
and removing his cap flung it into the fire with a feeling that he bragged in the past about his association with the powerful
was saving the country. Deputy Superintendent of Police, this passage marks the
first time that Swami actually sees what that title means in
Related Characters: Swami (speaker) real life. In an instant, his horror shows him the terrible
truth that, like anyone else, Rajam’s impressive father also
Related Themes: has a dark side.
Swami’s understanding of authority figures and government
Related Symbols: power also changes in this moment as he witnesses the
brutality of the police treatment of the protestors. Rather
Page Number: 96-97 than being figures to admire, Swami now intuitively grasps
that those in positions of power may in fact be more traitor
Explanation and Analysis
than hero.
Swami and Mani stumble upon a protest for Indian
independence happening at the Sarayu river, and both boys
eagerly join in, swearing to boycott English goods. The joy Chapter 13 Quotes
that Swami feels watching the protest speaks to his innate
Rajam realized at this point that the starting of a cricket
excitement at his first true act of political engagement,
team was the most complicated problem on earth. He had
though he does not yet have a deep understanding of the
simply expected to gather a dozen fellows on the maidan next
issues at hand. Narayan suggests that even for a relatively
to his compound and play, and challenge the world. But here
naïve young boy, the wish for independence rings true and
were endless troubles, starting with the name that must be
inspires action.
unique, Government taxes, and so on. The Government did not
These lines also introduce the symbol of the cap, which seem to know where it ought to interfere and where not. He
had a momentary sympathy for Gandhi; no wonder he was
dead against the Government.

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Related Characters: Rajam, Swami vulnerable essence beneath the imposing exterior. Although
the headmaster continues to maintain control over Swami’s
Related Themes: schedule, Narayan seems to say that his power is hollow
rather than legitimate, a notion that also undercuts the
Related Symbols: validity of the broader power structures the book deals
with. Through the vivid descriptions of the dusty, stuffy
Page Number: 113-114 room, Narayan also hints that this kind of absolute power is
outdated and growing obsolete.
Explanation and Analysis
After agreeing to form a cricket team together, Swami and
Rajam discover how complicated the process will be, in Chapter 15 Quotes
large part because of the role that they imagine the
Another moment and that vicious snake-like cane,
government will play in regulating their activity. Rajam’s
quivering as if with life, would have descended on
simple, reasonable idea of forming a casual team becomes
Swaminathan’s palm. A flood of emotion swept him off his feet,
immediately overcomplicated, demonstrating both the
a mixture of fear, resentment, and rage. He hardly knew what
extent to which the government inserts itself into the
he was doing. His arm shot out, plucked the cane from the
private lives of citizens and the extent to which the boys
headmaster’s hand, and flung it out of the window. The he
fear this intervention, even when it is not actually happening
dashed to his desk, snatched his books, and ran out of the room.
in the moment.
This passage also introduces the game of cricket as a symbol
for British colonial power and its complicated effects on the Related Characters: Mission School Headmaster, Swami
lives on the colonized. Here, the game brings camaraderie at
Related Themes:
the same time that it causes stress and strife, suggesting
that these effects are a scaled-down version of the broader
Page Number: 146-147
national impact of colonial rule.
Explanation and Analysis
After Dr. Kesavan lies to Swami about getting him
Chapter 14 Quotes permission to leave school early, Swami misses several drill
The headmaster was sleeping with his head between his practices and is confronted in his classroom by the
hands and his elbows resting on the table. It was a small stuffy headmaster. The headmaster seeks to demonstrate his
room with only one window opening on the weather-beaten power by caning Swami, but when Swami throws the cane
side wall of a shop; it was cluttered with dust-laden rolls of out the window, he robs the powerful figure of both his
maps, globes, and geometrical squares. The headmaster’s white weapon and his physical support. Swami’s ability to wrest
cane lay on the table across two ink-bottles and some pads. The some small measure of power away from the oppressive
sun came in a hot dusty beam and fell on the headmaster’s nose school environment highlights the potential of small acts of
and the table. He was gently snoring. This was a possibility that rebellion and also marks a new level of self-determination
Rajam had not thought of. for Swami.
Notably, Swami begins to feel his sense of self slip away
Related Characters: Mission School Headmaster, Rajam, even as he takes this action, as he “hardly [knows] what he
Swami [is] doing.” By tying those two experiences together,
Narayan indicates that growth and maturity may
Related Themes: necessarily go hand in hand with an ability to take on new
and confusing identities.
Page Number: 135

Explanation and Analysis


When Swami continues to miss cricket practice due to his
school schedule, Rajam takes Swami to confront the
headmaster and ask permission to leave school early. The
two boys have prepared themselves for a confrontation but
they find the headmaster sleeping, revealing the frail,

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Chapter 16 Quotes
he has already wandered far away. Swami’s wish that he had
He had walked rather briskly up Hospital Road, but had taken the punishment from the Board School headmaster
turned back after staring at the tall iron gates of the hospital. illustrates the difficulty and danger of rebelling against the
He told himself that it was unnecessary to enter the hospital, ingrained power structures at school. Simultaneously,
but in fact knew that he lacked the courage. That very window Swami’s desire to have been able to rely on his father shows
in which a soft dim light appeared might have behind it the cot his wish to return to a previous phase of immaturity, one
containing Swaminathan all pulped and bandaged. that he has partly lost as he moves out of childhood.
The phrasing that Swami “marvelled at himself” is also
Related Characters: Swami, Swami’s Father significant, as it indicates that Swami continues to be
somewhat unsure of who exactly he is and what motivates
Related Themes: him. This thought foreshadows the more complete
breakdown of identity that occurs soon thereafter.
Page Number: 157

Explanation and Analysis


While out searching for Swami after his disappearance, his The demons lifted him by his ears, plucked every hair on
father admits to himself that he is not brave enough to face his head, and peeled off his skin from head to foot. Now
the prospect of seeing Swami injured. This passage adds what was this, coiling round his legs, cold and slimy? He shrank
depth and complication to the character of Swami’s father, in horror from a scorpion that was advancing with its sting in
who had previously been a somewhat straightforward the air. No, this was no place for a human being.
authority figure, and furthers the novel’s central idea that
no one person has a fixed or simple identity. Related Characters: Swami
Although it illuminates the emotional bond between Swami
and his father, this moment also shows just how far Swami Related Themes:
has gone in moving out of his father’s sphere of protection.
Despite his best efforts, Swami’s father is now totally Page Number: 165
unable to care for his son, leaving Swami to face the dangers Explanation and Analysis
of the night on his own.
Wandering lost in the night, Swami succumbs to the
imagined beasts that he perceives menacing him. This
Chapter 17 Quotes passage represents the moment in which Swami’s identity,
which has become more and more fluid over the course of
The only important thing now was home, and all the rest his story, at last breaks down into a state where he cannot
seemed trivial beside it. The Board School affair appeared tell himself from the outside world. Again, it seems that the
inconsequent. He marvelled at himself for having taken it concept of a coherent, discrete self turns out to be an
seriously and rushed into all this trouble. What a fool he had illusion.
been! He wished with all his heard that he had held out his
The intensity of the demons that Swami faces straying only
hand when the headmaster raised his cane. Even if he had not
a relatively short distance from the safety of Malgudi also
done it, he wished he had gone home and told his father
points to the reality that the broader country of India is, at
everything.
the time of Swami’s life, full of abstract menaces. Narayan
seems to say that the country itself is “no place for a human
Related Characters: Mission School Headmaster, Swami’s being,” given the hidden demons that imperil every citizen.
Father, Swami

Related Themes:
Swaminathan was considerably weakened by the number
Page Number: 160 of problems that beset him: Who was this man? Was he
Father? If he was not, why was he there? Even if he was, why
Explanation and Analysis was he there? Who was he? What was he saying? Why could he
Almost immediately after running away from home, Swami not utter his words louder and clearer?
regrets his actions and wishes to be at home again, though
Related Characters: Swami (speaker), Mr. Nair, Swami’s

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Father false: the thing that Swami fears the most—missing the
cricket match—actually has happened and he just doesn’t
Related Themes: know it yet, although the reader does. By juxtaposing this
happy scene with the reader’s knowledge of the upset to
Page Number: 168 come, Narayan undercuts Swami’s simple innocence and
Explanation and Analysis demonstrates more forcefully before that it can never truly
last.
After being rescued by Ranga, Swami wakes up in the
company of Mr. Nair, the District Forest Officer and initially
thinks that the man is his father. The repetition of the Chapter 19 Quotes
question “Who was he?” highlights the depth of Swami’s
confusion and his inability to understand what role his Mani ran along the platform with the train and shouted
father now plays in his life. Swami begins to see what the over the noise of the train: ‘Goodbye, Rajam. Swami gives you
reader learned in Chapter 16: Swami’s father’s identity is as this book.’ Rajam held out his hand for the book, and took it, and
complicated and subject to change as anyone else’s. As he waved a farewell. Swaminathan waved back frantically.
works through this realization and attempts to process Swaminathan and Mani stood as if glued where they were, and
what it means for his own life, Swami is rendered unable to watched the train. The small red lamp of the last van could be
speak clearly, showing the intensity of the shock that Swami seen for a long time, it diminished in size every minute, and
undergoes. disappeared around a bend. All the jarring, rattling, clinking,
spurting, and hissing of the moving train softened in the
distance into something that was half a sob and half a sigh.
Chapter 18 Quotes
Swaminathan had a sense of supreme well-being and Related Characters: Mani (speaker), Rajam, Swami
security. He was flattered by the number of visitors that were
coming to see him. His granny and mother were hovering round Related Themes:
him ceaselessly, and it was with a sneaking satisfaction that he
saw his little brother crowing unheeded in the cradle, for once Related Symbols:
overlooked and abandoned by everybody.
Page Number: 184
Related Characters: Swami’s Brother, Swami’s Explanation and Analysis
Grandmother / Granny, Swami’s Mother, Swami
After being too intimidated to approach Rajam on his own,
Swami enlists Mani’s help to give Rajam the book of fairy
Related Themes:
tales as a going away present. After the novel’s seemingly
endless shifts in the characters of Swami and his friends,
Related Symbols:
from bad to good and back again, this moment stands apart
for its utter ambiguity. Swami gives Rajam the book but
Page Number: 173
does not get the resolution he hopes for; at the same time,
Explanation and Analysis he does not get rejection, either. It is unclear, at the end,
After returning home from his ordeal, Swami enjoys a brief how Rajam feels about Swami and whether he is ultimately
period of happiness at home with his family before a friend or an enemy. Nowhere in the book is this sense of
discovering that he has missed the cricket match and fallen uncertain identity as strong.
out with Rajam. This passage is notable mainly for its vivid The lack of motion from Swami and Mani as they watch the
depiction of the kind of simple satisfaction that Swami train depart also indicates a new maturity and ability to
enjoyed at the beginning of the novel; even the permanent tolerate and even accept the uncertainty of their situation.
addition of Swami’s baby brother is symbolically reversed Rather than taking rash action to solve his problems as he
here, as the family ignores the baby in favor of celebrating has done throughout, Swami stands still, alongside a friend
Swami’s return. rather than a family member, and at last begins to take on
However, while this comfort was thorough and genuine in his own more complicated, less innocent identity as well.
the book’s early chapters, here it is quickly revealed to be

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SUMMARY AND ANAL


ANALYSIS
YSIS
The color-coded icons under each analysis entry make it easy to track where the themes occur most prominently throughout the
work. Each icon corresponds to one of the themes explained in the Themes section of this LitChart.

CHAPTER 1
A schoolboy named Swami wakes up on Monday morning, The opening scene establishes Swami’s character as youthful and
reluctant to get out of bed. He dreads facing his school, self-centered, with only childish concerns like finishing his
teacher, and the Mission School’s Headmaster, especially since homework on time. This small travail sets the stage for Swami to
he has left all of his homework to do in the two hours before develop a much greater sense of responsibility and awareness of the
school starts. He settles into his desk in a corner of his father’s world around him.
dressing room and begins to work.

Swami sits in his classroom, bored throughout the first few Swami’s boredom during most of the school day introduces
hours of school. He can only stand to be at school at all because Narayan’s skepticism of the value of conventional education
he enjoys watching the toddlers in the nearby Infant Standards settings. Rather than wise authority figures, the teachers appear as
classroom. His teacher, Vedanayagam, appears very ugly to him comic caricatures, frightening demons like Vedanayagam, or
and pinches his hand when he finds that Swami’s math loveable buffoons like D. Pillai.
homework is incorrect. Swami enjoys his next class more,
because it is a history class taught by a kind man named D. Pillai
who tells stories of great battles in history rather than
following any “canon of education.”

The final class of the morning is scripture class, taught by Mr. Ebenezar’s fanaticism is the novel’s first example of an oppressive
Ebenezar, a religious fanatic. Swami and his classmates colonizing force in Swami’s life. Although he does not yet know
sometimes enjoy the colorful Bible stories they learn there, about the movement for Indian independence from England, Swami
despite the fact that Mr. Ebenezar insults the beliefs of the intuits that Ebenezar’s forceful rejection of Hinduism constitutes an
non-Christian students. Mr. Ebenezar launches into a rant offensive threat to Swami and his values. Swami is physically
about the failings of the Hindu god Krishna in comparison to punished for speaking up, an early example of the way that
Jesus, which causes Swami to stand up and argue against his colonialism’s violence manifests in every corner of even a seemingly
teacher. Mr. Ebenezar twists Swami’s ear as punishment. carefree Indian life.

Swami arrives at school the following day, feeling guilty about a Swami’s father’s intervention from a more mature perspective
letter that he carries in his pocket. He thinks that he is an idiot clarifies the point that Swami’s school acts as a microcosm of
for telling his father about the trouble with Mr. Ebenezar. colonial oppression of Indian life. The letter also demonstrates that,
Swami delivers the letter to the Mission School Headmaster, at at this point in Swami’s life, his father acts as his trustworthy
which point the reader learns that Swami’s father has protector. This initial relationship is important because Swami’s
complained to the headmaster about discrimination against ability to rely on his family, especially his father, changes
non-Christian students. The letter states that the school should substantially over the course of the story.
be more tolerant of students of other religions and requests
that the headmaster inform Swami’s father if Hindu boys are
not welcome at the school, so that he can send Swami to school
elsewhere.

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When Swami exits the Mission School Headmaster’s room, his The introduction of Swami’s friends as simple characters with clear
classmates crowd around to find out what happened. However, defining traits shows that, at this early stage, Swami views identity
Swami refuses to tell anyone but his four best friends, who are as fixed and straightforward. This perspective is essentially childish
introduced one by one. The first friend is Somu, the class and will be increasingly challenged in later interactions with these
monitor, who is a mediocre student but relaxed and well-liked same friends.
by everyone, including the teachers. The next friend is Mani,
described as “the Mighty Good-For-Nothing.” Mani is a
powerful bully who never does his homework but is never
punished. Swami is especially proud to be Mani’s friend. The
third friend is Sankar, known as the smartest boy in class, and
whom Swami greatly admires. Swami’s final close friend is
Samuel, who is known as “the Pea” because he is small and
unremarkable. The Pea has “no outstanding virtue” but gets
along well with Swami because they have similar senses of
humor.

Swami tells his friends about his father’s letter and all four of Like Swami, most of his friends are comfortable with the idea of
them approve of his telling his father about Ebenezar’s relying on their fathers for support. Only Mani, who is noted for
behavior, although Mani wishes he could have attacked the making trouble, would consider handling the situation himself, again
teacher himself. The Pea feels embarrassed because he himself showing that Swami and his friends have not yet achieved much of
is a Christian and agrees with Ebenezar, but he does not say so a sense of autonomy.
to his friends. The day’s scripture class proceeds normally at
first, with Ebenezar vigorously denouncing Hinduism, but then
the Mission School Headmaster enters the class and criticizes
Ebenezar’s teaching, embarrassing the teacher.

At the end of the day, Swami is called to see the Mission School Despite the headmaster’s scolding of Ebenezar, Swami discovers in
Headmaster, who has Ebenezar waiting in his office. Swami is this conversation that the oppressive force of the school is still
uncomfortable talking with Ebenezar present and wishes to essentially intact. Furthermore, the headmaster’s request that
leave, but the headmaster keeps him in the office long enough Swami not turn to his father with problems is the story’s first
to tell him that, in the future, Swami should trust the indication that Swami will have to learn to grow into the ability to
headmaster and come to him with complaints instead of telling face issues on his own. However, he runs away after this
his father. The headmaster gives Swami a letter to give his conversation without reflecting much on its meaning, simply happy
father and Swami runs home, relieved. to have escaped punishment. This reaction further illustrates
Swami’s relatively innocent perspective at this point in the story.

CHAPTER 2
Swami and his friend Mani are sitting on the banks of the River Mani’s reaction to the threat of Rajam is an early instance of the
Sarayu, a pleasant area near the center of their town, Malgudi. ways in which Swami and his friends re-create their conflicted
Mani tells Swami that he wants to throw Rajam, a new student political context within their own relationships. Mani relies on
at their school, into the river. Rajam dresses well, speaks good violence to express dominance, while Swami perceptively notes that
English, gets good grades, and has impressed the class enough having a powerful father makes Rajam less vulnerable. Swami’s
to be a rival to the powerful Mani. Swami points out that eagerness to please Mani also hints at the slowly increasing
Rajam’s father is the Police Superintendant, but Mani says that importance of Swami’s friendships, which will begin to overshadow
he doesn’t care and hints that he might beat up Swami if Swami his family connections over the course of the novel.
gets too friendly with Rajam. Swami protests that he hates
Rajam, convincing Mani that he, Swami, is on Mani’s side.

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As the conflict between Mani and Rajam grows in the following Swami’s continued experiences of humiliating punishment at school
days, Swami acts as their go-between, passing notes full of furthers Narayan’s depiction of it as an oppressive, harmful place.
insults and challenges from one to the other. During class, Meanwhile, Rajam’s father’s stature continues to cast a shadow
Swami is forced to stand on a bench as punishment for getting over the conflict between the boys, with even brave Mani expressing
a question wrong. At the end of the day, Swami, Mani, and nervousness that the powerful Police Superintendent might find out
Rajam gather and Mani and Rajam challenge each other to a about his misdeeds.
fight at the river the following evening. Mani asks Rajam to
promise not to tell Rajam’s father about the fight and Rajam
agrees.

The next evening, Mani arrives at the river carrying a club, By bringing weapons to a fight between children, both Mani and
ready to fight Rajam, and Rajam himself arrives with an air gun. Rajam demonstrate that they have internalized the necessity of
The two talk awkwardly for a few minutes and then Rajam asks using violence to solve problems, which they likely learned from the
Mani what he has done to offend him. Mani answers that he political environment in which they’ve grown up. However, their
had heard Rajam had called him a sneak behind his back, but awkward conversation and reluctance to use the weapons shows
Rajam denies doing so and says that he wouldn’t mind being that they are essentially still children, unsure of what to do with the
friends. Mani agrees that he would also be glad to be friends, tools of their society. Rajam’s rapid transformation from enemy into
and the two drop their weapons. Swami, having secretly friend also underscores the central theme of fluidity of identity,
admired Rajam, is delighted at the turn of events, and the new showing that an objectively “true” identity of good or evil may be an
friends sit by the river eating cookies that Rajam brought to illusion.
share.

CHAPTER 3
The reader learns about Swami’s grandmother, who lives with This first scene featuring Swami’s grandmother shows again how
him in a passageway of his parents’ house and whom he calls reliant Swami is in these early chapters on the unfailing comfort of
Granny. Swami spends time with his grandmother after eating his home and family. Still self-centered, Swami seems barely aware
dinner, feeling warm and safe with her. He tells his of his grandmother’s personhood but nevertheless derives security
grandmother about his new friend Rajam and how wonderful from her presence. Swami’s enthusiasm for befriending the son of
he is, and he expresses particular excitement that Rajam’s the Police Superintendent shows that he is not yet skeptical of those
father is the Police Superintendent. Swami goes on to list all of in power.
Rajam’s good qualities, often cutting his grandmother off
rudely when she tries to speak. She tells him about his brilliant
grandfather, but Swami ignores her and continues talking about
Rajam.

Swami becomes suspicious that his grandmother is not By falling asleep during his grandmother’s story of the past, Swami
listening to him and that she does not believe how wonderful again shows that he has little conscious understanding of history’s
Rajam is, but she emphasizes her approval of Rajam and Swami influence on his own life.
is comforted. She begins to tell him a story that Rajam
reminded her of, but Swami falls asleep halfway through her
telling.

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Swami sits at home studying at his father’s orders, trying to Unable to leave home without his father’s permission, Swami is at
understand the meaning of a poem. His mother brings him a this point still defined by his role within his family. He remains
snack and then, finally, his father leaves for work at the court. disrespectful of his grandmother, taking her love for granted. Mani
As soon as his father is gone, Swami runs out of the house to and Swami’s slight nervousness upon meeting the policeman
visit his friends, ignoring Granny when she calls to him. He goes outside Rajam’s house also shows that they are beginning to sense
first to Mani’s house and then, together, they go on to Rajam’s the first inklings of threat from the powerful enforcers of their
house. Although they are nervous at first, the policeman community.
outside Rajam’s house is polite to them and takes them inside
to see Rajam.

Swami and Mani are impressed by Rajam’s house, which is large This encounter seems to cement the close friendship between
and tidy. Rajam comes to meet them and shows off his amazing Swami, Mani, and Rajam, setting them on the path that will lead
collection of toys. Then, Rajam orders his cook to bring in a Swami away from the safety of his family and into a more complex
plate of snacks. Rajam bullies the cook in order to impress his understanding of the world. Rajam’s desire to impress his friends
new friends, but the cook talks back to Rajam, at which point with acts of violence again illustrates the boys’ enmeshment in their
Rajam brings the snacks in himself while telling his friends that society’s notions of power and importance.
he left the cook lying unconscious in the kitchen.

CHAPTER 4
Between classes on a Wednesday, Swami is unable to find his Swami’s contempt for the younger children is an ironic
friends and wanders alone around his school. He stops to look foreshadowing of his own vanishing childhood; soon, he will come to
at the younger children in the Infant Standards area, feeling view himself as he does these children. The quick transformation of
“filled with contempt” at how small and unintelligent they are. Somu, Sankar, and the Pea into people who are cruel to Swami
Eventually he happily runs into Sankar, Somu, and the Pea, who rather than kind furthers the idea of identity and social roles as
he had thought were not at school. However, his three friends constantly changing. Instead of steadfast friends, Swami finds
barely acknowledge Swami and refuse to let him join their himself facing people who seem to be strangers, all because he
game. They call Swami a “tail,” saying that it means “a long thing unwittingly allied himself with a symbol of power by befriending
that attaches itself to an ass or a dog.” Swami doesn’t know Rajam.
what this means but he feels upset and embarrassed. On his
way home, he catches up to Somu, who tells Swami that they
now call him Rajam’s Tail, because he acts like he is too good for
his old friends now that he spends time with the police
superintendent’s son.

This experience is Swami’s “first shock in life.” In particular, he This upsetting experience is a key turning point for Swami. By facing
feels unsure of who his friends are and confused that someone the reality that even someone as kind as Somu can quickly become
as nice as Somu could be so angry with him. Swami returns cruel, Swami begins to lose his belief that his friends play static roles
home and watches water and debris rush through a gutter by in his life. By encountering a painful problem that no one in his
his house. He builds a paper boat and places an ant inside it, family can help him solve, Swami is also forced to face the reality of
then launches the boat into the water. Swami watches in his own autonomous life for the first time.
excitement as the boat progresses, recovering from several
dangerous turns. Finally, however, a leaf falls onto the boat and
overturns it, and Swami is unable to find the boat or the ant. He
pinches some dirt in the gutter and says a prayer “for the soul
of the ant.”

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Over the next few days, Swami gets used to being cast out by Unsure of whether his friends might be considering treating him
his friends but still finds himself wishing to talk to them. At nicely again, Swami grows unable to tolerate their ambiguous role in
times, he thinks that they might be looking at him in a friendly his life, literally running away rather than facing them. Because
way, but at other times he sees them reject him and feels self- Swami’s ability to tolerate such ambiguity plays an important role
conscious walking near them. He walks behind them leaving later on, this early inability is particularly important.
school, but he reflects on how frightening they have become to
him and wishes to get away. Swami finally pretends to have left
his notebook at school and runs away from his former friends.

CHAPTER 5
On Saturday, Swami prepares excitedly to host Rajam, who has Swami’s decision to use his father’s room to host Rajam and pretend
promised to come to his house that afternoon. Swami wonders it is his own demonstrates that, although he wishes to appear
where to host Rajam and realizes that, because his father will independent, his ability to do what he wants still depends on his
be out at court, he can host Rajam in his father’s room, father’s resources.
pretending that the room is Swami’s own. Swami’s
grandmother is also excited about the visit and asks Swami to
bring Rajam to see her, but he refuses, telling her not to
interact with Rajam because she is “too old.”

Swami continues to prepare for Rajam’s visit, demanding that Again, Swami’s preparations for Rajam’s visit keenly illustrate how
his mother make good coffee and something “fine and sweet” Swami is stuck between childish reliance on his family and a desire
for the afternoon snack. He also tells the cook to change into to impress Rajam with his maturity. He does everything he can to
clean clothes and asks him to bring the food directly to him and make a good impression, but he requires help from everyone in his
Rajam. Finally, Swami asks his father if he can use his room to family to do so. Swami’s father’s submission to the importance of
host Rajam, and his father agrees when he hears that Rajam’s the Police Superintendent is also a reminder that imperial power
father is the Police Superintendent. structures remain influential even within Swami’s home.

To Swami’s surprise, Rajam’s visit goes well, with all of Swami’s Swami’s embarrassment at Rajam’s finding out that the room and
demands met except for the fact that the cook does not change books do not belong to him underscores his desire to be impressive
his clothes. Rajam and Swami talk happily for hours, until Rajam in and of himself, rather than relying on his family. However, Rajam’s
notices Swami’s father’s large books and asks Swami if he reads enthusiasm for meeting Swami’s grandmother repairs the situation,
them. Embarrassed that Rajam has discovered the room is not though Swami is surprised to find Granny acting as a social asset
his own, Swami admits that the table belongs to his father and, when he expected her to be an embarrassment. This moment again
in order to distract Rajam from asking about his own develops the idea of quickly changing identities and continues
possessions, he mentions his grandmother. Rajam says that he Swami’s journey toward valuing his grandmother as a person rather
would love to meet her and Swami runs to see Granny, hoping than a simple comfort in his life.
that she is asleep. Swami is disappointed to find her awake, but
she is delighted to meet Rajam and impressed with the
luxurious details of his life.

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On a subsequent school day, Swami enters class to find that The fight between Swami and his friends acts as the culmination of
“TAIL” is written on the blackboard. Swami’s whole class giggles their increasingly antagonistic relationships. Though they wish to
at him and Swami slaps the Pea and Sankar in anger. The three resolve the tension through violence, they are ultimately unable to,
begin to fight in earnest and they only stop when Somu and requiring the intervention of an authority figure. This scene hints at
Mani enter the classroom and separate them. Swami, Mani, the futility of attempting to gain power within an oppressive setting,
Somu, Sankar, and the Pea all go outside the school, where even in interpersonal relationships.
Mani accuses Swami’s former friends of writing the word on
the board. They all deny it and Swami, crying, explains to Mani
that “tail” refers to him being Rajam’s tail. Mani angrily defends
Rajam and Somu tells Mani that he thinks too much of himself.
The two begin to punch and kick each other, at which point
Swami, Sankar, and the Pea run in panic to get the Mission
School Headmaster, who breaks up the fight.

CHAPTER 6
Three weeks later, Swami and Mani are on their way to Rajam’s Swami and Mani’s humorous transformation into baby animals is
house. Rajam has invited them to his house, telling them that he one of the more comedic instances of fluid identity. Their joking
has a surprise waiting for them. On the way, Mani muses about willingness to give up their true identities allows them to enter a
the ways that he’d like to inflict violence on Somu, Sankar, and situation where their friendships will be repaired, showing that
the Pea. When they arrive at Rajam’s house, Rajam peeks out changing identities can function in positive ways as well as negative
but then closes the door again. To get him to let them in, Swami ones.
pretends to be a blind kitten and Mani and blind puppy, mews
and barking at the door. Rajam opens the door and the two
enter, still pretending to be animals with their eyes closed,
while Rajam barks and mews in response.

When Swami and Mani open their eyes, they discover that Rajam’s eloquent defense of friendship, drawn from a classic Indian
Somu, Sankar, and the Pea are in the room with Rajam. Swami is text, is an example of the boys’ growing maturity and attempts to
embarrassed at his behavior and Mani becomes angry at relate to each other in ways not defined by Britain’s influence on
Rajam, threatening to leave. Rajam comforts both and their country. However, Rajam’s authority still derives in part from
convinces them to stay, offering everyone a snack. After they all his father’s powerful position, which complicates his pacifistic
eat, Rajam gives a long lecture on the value of friendship and all request.
the terrible things that the Vedas say will happen to a person
who makes enemies. At the end of his lecture, Rajam asks the
other five boys to swear that they won’t have enemies any
more, and offers them each a gift if they do so.

The Pea is the first to accept his gift and the other four boys The boys’ acceptance of gifts from Rajam adds an ironic spin to
soon do the same. The Pea receives a fountain pen, Somu gets a Rajam’s convincing lecture. Perhaps the boys have matured enough
new belt, Mani gets a new knife, Sankar receives a bound to take his argument seriously, but perhaps they simply want the
notebook, and Swami gets a green clockwork engine. gifts. Again, Swami and his friends are stuck between childish
desires and newfound maturity.

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CHAPTER 7
Swami’s mother has been in bed for two days and he misses the Swami’s confusion at his mother’s changed appearance highlights
attention that she usually pays to him. He sees her lying in bed the fact that he cannot yet tolerate the truth of his family’s
looking unwell and speaks to her coldly, thinking that she complicated identities. His indifference at the news of his brother
“seemed to be a different Mother.” His Granny tells Swami that also shows a lingering self-centered immaturity.
he will soon have a baby brother, but he is not excited about
this news.

Swami sleeps in Granny’s room, listening to people moving Despite the change occurring all around him, Swami does not think
around throughout the night and seeing a female doctor to feel fear or anxiety. His ability to feel completely safe with Granny
entering his mother’s room. Although Granny asks, they get no stands in contrast to his later realization that his family cannot
news of what is happening. Swami feels safe and comfortable necessarily keep him safe.
with Granny and does not worry about what is happening to his
mother.

In school the next day, the class grows restless during a boring Although Swami cannot yet comprehend the role that his brother
lesson. Swami sits next to the Pea and tells him about the birth will play in his life, the Pea’s words underscore the fact that, again,
of his new brother early that morning. Swami tells the Pea that identity is far from constant. His emphasis on the speedy passage of
the baby is “hardly anything” and “such a funny-looking time also foreshadows how quickly life will change for Swami in the
creature.” The Pea laughs and tells Swami that the baby will following chapters.
grow up quickly.

CHAPTER 8
Two weeks before his April school exams, Swami notices that In this chapter, Swami’s father becomes a more antagonistic
his father is becoming more strict about making him study. He presence as the pressure of Swami’s schoolwork increases. His
pesters Swami frequently, eventually pointing out that Swami convincing point that Swami needs school to maintain his
will have to be in a different class from his friends if he fails the friendships also illustrates the paradoxical truth that school, while
exam. At that point Swami listens to his father and begins to often harmful to Swami, also fosters some of the most important
study harder. parts of his life.

All of Swami’s classmates and friends are overwhelmed by the Mani’s foolish attempt to cheat at the exam points to the
pressure of the upcoming exams. Mani is particularly worried impossibility of true success in the boys’ academic environment.
and attempts to get information about the exam questions Even an important school administrator does not know how to
from the school clerk, who is rumored to know everything. He achieve success, and talking to him only gives Mani false hope.
bribes the clerk with food and although the clerk is pleased, he
tells Mani that he doesn’t know anything about the test
questions. Mani persists, and eventually the clerk gives him
advice about what to study, despite not actually knowing what
will be on the exam. Mani is pleased with the information he
gets from the clerk and shares his knowledge with Swami.

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Swami arrives home feeling bored and is disappointed that his Swami’s growing affection for his brother proves the Pea’s claim
Granny doesn’t feel like talking to him. He goes to look at his that the baby and Swami’s feelings for him would change rapidly.
brother, who is now six months old. Swami now finds his Swami’s ability to feel comforted by his father’s acceptance here
brother charming and “love[s] every inch of him.” However, the shows again how reliant he is on his family’s support. At the same
baby is asleep and Swami, even more bored, wishes that his time, his dreamy analysis of the European map demonstrates his
father would let him go out to play with Mani. Swami tries to budding, if uninformed, interest in the ways that power is controlled
study a map of Europe and wonders about the people who live and shaped in different countries.
there, and about how the people who make maps know the
shapes of countries. He thinks that perhaps they look down
from a high place to see the shape. He eventually finishes his
map and his father comes home to compliment him on his work,
which Swami feels is “worth all his suffering.”

Two days before the exam, Swami makes a list of everything he Swami’s surprise at learning something about himself through
will need for the exam and is disappointed that he can only making the list is an early example of his fluid identity. Swami’s
think of five things, thinking that he had “never known that his discovery that he does not know himself as well as he expected
wants were so few.” Swami makes his list longer and more leads him to fashion a new, more admirable self through the
complicated and then brings it to his father, who is busy creation of a new list. However, his father undermines this initial
working. Swami tries to go away and not interrupt him, but his effort of self-determination, effectively bringing Swami back under
father hears him at the door and calls him in, demanding to see his control and constraining him within the family system. All of this
the paper he’s holding. Swami’s father calls his list plays out through an academic task, again showing the dual role of
“preposterous” and tells Swami to take supplies from his desk support and restriction that school plays in Swami’s life.
instead. Although Swami gets most of what he needs, he is sad
not to be able to go and buy everything on his list. As he leaves
his father’s office, his father asks him to move the baby out of
the hall so that his father won’t have to hear the baby crying.

CHAPTER 9
Swami exits his classroom after taking his final examination. He Swami’s simplistic interpretation of the story’s moral again shows
waits outside, worrying because he turned in his exam 20 his childish view of the world, in which facts seldom hide deeper
minutes early while most of the other students were still meaning. His eagerness to leave school also shows that he feels freer
working. He reflects on the exam questions and feels especially outside its walls, even when he perceives that he should stay longer
confident about the last question, which involved explaining the as the other students do.
moral of a story about a man who is fooled by a tiger offering
him a gold bangle. Swami wrote a simple, single-line answer:
“Love of gold bangle cost one one’s life.” Then, he sat restlessly
pretending to revise his work until he saw a few other boys
leaving, at which point he did the same.

The exam ends and the rest of Swami’s class comes outside. Swami’s unease as he discovers his classmates’ answers to the last
Swami asks a classmate what he wrote for the last question, exam question indicates that, although he does not yet understand
and the classmate reveals that he wrote a full page. Swami tells why, he is beginning to become aware of the more complicated
Rajam and Sankar about the classmate and they reply that they meaning of outwardly simple events. Swami’s easy lie, with which he
wrote only half or three-quarters of a page for the last deceives even himself, also demonstrates his growing ability to
question. Swami tells them that he also wrote half a page, shape his own identity at will, which he began to exercise when
fooling even himself into thinking he actually did so. making the list of supplies before the exam.

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The rest of Swami’s friends arrive and they discuss their The most notable aspect of this scene is the jollity of the teachers
feelings about the exam and their excitement that school is now and headmaster, who are also happy to leave school. Narayan hints
over for the time being. Fifteen minutes later, the whole school that even those in positions of power, both at the school and
goes back into the hall, where everyone is laughing and joking, perhaps in more complicated political structures beyond it, are in
even the teachers. The Mission School Headmaster announces some way limited by rigid, hierarchical social systems.
that the school will be closed until the nineteenth of June and
tells the students that he hopes they will continue to read over
the vacation. The assembly ends with a short prayer.

At the end of the prayer, the boys begin tearing up paper, As the students’ excitement grows, the school transforms from a
smashing ink bottles, and destroying whatever they can find. place of boredom and routine into one of ecstasy and chaos. Swami
Swami sticks close to Mani at first, afraid of the rumor that is initially unsettled by this change but he quickly embraces it,
enemies stab each other on the last day of school, even though demonstrating how easily individual identity may be influenced by
he doesn’t think he has any enemies. Then as the excitement the emotions of a group, adding nuance to the idea that identity is
builds, Swami joins in the destruction and even pours his ink never truly individual.
bottle over his own head. Mani calls jokingly to a policeman to
arrest the rowdy boys and then threatens to steal the turban of
the school peon and dye it with ink. The peon breaks up the
crowd of boys.

CHAPTER 10
Swami realizes that his friendships with Somu, Sankar, and the In this section, Swami gains a new understanding of how important
Pea are not meaningful to him outside of school. His social context is in determining the roles that people play in one
friendships with Mani and Rajam are “more human” and the another’s lives, as he sees that some of his close friends no longer
three spend nearly all of their time together with school out. feel important outside of school. His intense desire for a hoop—an
Without school to worry about, Swami wants a hoop to play essentially useless plaything—reinforces the image of Swami as
with more than anything and thinks constantly about getting childish, but at the same time his methods for getting the hoop
one. He tells a coachman about his wish and the coachman quickly become somewhat adult, illustrating the ongoing change in
claims that he can get Swami a hoop quickly in exchange for five Swami’s maturity.
rupees. Swami can barely imagine having that much money, but
the coachman says that he has a way of converting copper
coins into silver, so all Swami needs to do is bring him six paise
(a smaller denomination) to start the process.

Swami is convinced of the coachman’s plan and immediately After his family’s refusal to help him, Swami turns almost
begins trying to find six paise, which the coachman says he thoughtlessly to the kind of Christian practice that he earlier
needs within six hours. He asks his Granny first, but she has no opposed in Ebenezar’s class, showing that his burgeoning political
money to give him, even though she wants to. Swami’s mother awareness is still rather self-serving. Somewhat irrationally, Swami
and father also refuse his request. Unable to find any coins in still fears the gods’ anger after they too fail to give him what he
his house, he remembers that Ebenezar claimed that God wants. This disjointed view of reality illustrates the growing pains of
would help those who pray to him and wonders if he might be Swami’s increasingly complex understanding of the world around
able to perform magic. He gathers six pebbles and puts them in him.
a box with sand, then prays over them in the room where his
family keeps images of gods and idols. He decides to wait for
half an hour but only lasts ten minutes before opening the box.
He is at first enraged to find pebbles instead of coins, but then
he becomes afraid that the gods will punish him for his anger
and instead buries the box reverently.

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Swami departs for Mani’s house and arrives to find a large, Interestingly, Swami does not reveal how he ultimately obtained
imposing man at the door who initially frightens him but turns enough money to pay the coachman. Through this omission,
out to be Mani’s uncle. Swami asks Mani to lend him six paise, Narayan hints that Swami may be beginning to solve problems on
but Mani has no money and refuses to look through his uncle’s his own, rather than relying on his family or even his friends to help
possessions. Two weeks later, Swami goes to Rajam and asks to him get what he wants. However, his request to his powerful friend
borrow a policeman, saying that the coachman robbed him. Rajam to “borrow” a policeman demonstrates that he continues to
Rajam suggests attacking the man but Swami says that he is rely on the force of existing power structures even as he seems to
frightened to confront him. Swami then confesses to Rajam become more independent.
that he ended up giving the coachman twelve paise after being
told that six was not enough. Finally, he mentions that the
coachman’s young son makes faces and threatens him
whenever he tries to go to the coachman’s house.

The next day, Swami and Mani go to the coachman’s house. Despite his fears, Swami puts himself almost completely at the
Rajam has made a plan for Mani to befriend and then kidnap mercy of Rajam and Mani in this section, going along with their plan
the coachman’s son, with Swami going along to point out the even though he is clearly anxious about it. Swami wishes to appease
correct house. On the way, Swami gets frightened and tells the and impress his friends even more than he wishes to get his money
Mani that the coachman returned the money, but Mani doesn’t back, and his earlier goal of getting a hoop is essentially forgotten.
believe him and insists on continuing with the plan. Swami Now, Swami’s concerns are somewhat more adult, focusing on his
points out the house and Mani decides at the last minute that relationships with Rajam and Mani, the two most powerful figures
Swami should come to the door with him. in his immediate surroundings.

Outside the house, Mani hits Swami and yells at him until a The final phase of this confrontation vividly shows the transition
crowd gathers, including the coachman’s son. Mani tells the from Swami’s childish wish for the hoop to his involvement in a
crowd that Swami is a stranger who has demanded money from clearly dangerous situation. This dual meaning indicates that
him, and the coachman’s son says that Swami should be sent to Swami’s seeming innocence may have been something of an illusion
jail. Swami turns and confronts the son about his missing all along, if something so simple as wanting a hoop can lead so
money that the coachman took, but Mani interrupts by offering easily to a violent confrontation. Swami is also forced to accept that
the boy a toy top and promising him a bigger one if he leaves his strong friend Mani is not all-powerful, again complicating his
with them. The boy agrees but then runs back into his house understanding of his friends’ identities.
with the top. Mani knocks on the door until the coachman’s
neighbors violently drive Swami and Mani from the
neighborhood, throwing rocks and chasing them with dogs.

CHAPTER 11
Although many people view Swami’s hometown of Malgudi as This scene again underscores the way that even a good friend like
intolerably hot in the summer, Swami, Mani, and Rajam enjoy Mani can behave in ways that are clearly harmful to Swami.
going out together in the summer afternoons and barely notice Learning to accept this kind of complexity is key to Swami’s
the heat. They sit together just outside town and discuss the development over the course of the story. At the same time, the
ways that their plan with the coachman’s son went wrong, with boys’ tolerance of the heat despite the adults’ hatred of it reveals
Mani admitting that he was wrong to give the boy the top so their continued separation from the fully adult world.
quickly. Swami complains that his neck still hurts where Mani
attacked him, but Mani says that he only pretended to attack
Swami.

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A young boy driving a cart pulled by a bull comes down the road Perhaps more than any other, this scene illustrates the ways in
toward the boys, and Rajam yells at him to stop the cart. The which Swami and his friends recreate the brutality imposed on them
boy pleads that he has to leave, but Swami and his friends make by English colonial rule. Without even discussing it with each other,
him stay, saying that they are the Government Police and the boys effortlessly take on the role of police and inflict their own
threatening to arrest him. The continue to harass the boy, fear and oppression onto Karuppan, a smaller, weaker boy than
whose name is Karuppan, before finally writing him a fake pass they. This incident passes without comment or consequence,
and allowing him to pass. showing that the boys’ internalized sense of the workings of power
is both casual and pervasive.

As the summer continues, Swami’s father stays home on Swami’s father’s unexpected insistence that Swami continue
vacation from his job at the courts. On his third day at home, studying shows how Swami’s old ties to his family come into
Swami’s father tells Swami that he cannot go out to meet Mani increasing conflict with his newer ties to his friends. Swami’s
and Rajam but instead must stay at home and study. Swami interpretation of the math problem also shows his sensitive,
protests that he should not have to read when school is out, but imaginative nature and how poorly suited that kind of thinking is for
his father disagrees and makes him sit down with his books. conventional academic work. Again, Narayan suggests that the
Asked to find a cloth to clean off his dusty books, Swami grabs a school environment does not educate Swami so much as suppress
cloth from under his baby brother, causing his mother to scold his naturally positive attributes.
him. His father sits with him while he attempts to solve a math
problem involving two men selling mangos. Swami is unable to
understand the problem and gets distracted thinking about the
characters of the two men in the problem, frustrating his father,
who calls him an “extraordinary idiot.” Swami’s father walks him
through the problem step by step, and Swami bursts into tears
when he finally gets the correct answer half an hour later.

Later that evening, Swami’s father feels sorry for making Swami Again, an object of childish happiness—visiting the club with his
study all afternoon and invites Swami to join him at his club. father—becomes a cause for fear and danger as Swami discovers
Swami changes his clothes and gets in the car with his father. the coachman’s armed son at the club. This surprise shows that
Swami is “elated” to go to the club and wishes his friends could Swami’s powerful friends were truly unable to help him solve the
see him traveling in the car. When they arrive at the club, problem of the coachman’s son.
Swami happily watches his father play tennis, but his mood
changes when he discovers that the coachman’s son works at
the club as a ball boy. The boy sees Swami and turns to smile at
him, holding up a pen knife. Swami is terrified and sticks close
to his father as they leave the tennis courts.

Swami feels safe again when he is inside with his father in the This episode marks a crucial shift in the relationship between
card room, but it is dark outside by the time they leave the club Swami and his father. Whereas before his father could keep him safe
and Swami becomes afraid again. He begins to imagine that the from anything, now Swami feels that his father can do nothing to
coachman’s son has a gang waiting to attack him and almost protect him from the coachman’s son. This scene completes the
tells his father about his fears, before changing his mind and thematic development begun in the previous chapter, as Swami’s
staying silent. Swami sits in the back of the car, feeling very far childish pursuit of the hoop transforms fully into a more adult
from his father and his father’s friend in the front seat, and he situation that feels genuinely dangerous to Swami.
cannot relax until they pass through the gates of the club.

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CHAPTER 12
While sitting on the bank of the Sarayu one August evening, This chapter sets in motion the clear turning point in Swami’s
Swami and Mani encounter a large group of people protesting changing understanding of the world around him. For the first time,
the arrest of a political worker. They listen to an activist saying he takes to heart the impact that English colonization has on his
that the people of India are slaves and should remember their country, and he eagerly allies himself with the independence
own value and power. He asks the crowd to defy England and movement even without really understanding what he’s doing. His
its rule, a speech that Swami and Mani find very moving. They sense of agency remains shallow, as he feels that he has saved the
get upset about Indian peasants and vow to boycott English country just by burning his cap, but his emotional commitment is
goods, especially certain kinds of cloth made by particularly genuine and meaningful, showing a new maturity in Swami’s
despicable Englishmen. Mani tells Swami that he is wearing a development as an autonomous individual.
coat made of that English cloth, which makes Swami feel
ashamed. A bonfire is lit and the crowd begins to throw articles
of clothing into it, and when someone points out that Swami is
wearing a foreign cap, he throws it into the fire “with a feeling
that he was saving the country.”

The next day Swami wakes up feeling anxious and remembers As before, Swami’s commitment to a cause larger than himself
that he has no cap to wear for school. He leaves for school quickly turns back to self-interest, as he worries what to do without
anyway and is happily surprised to find a crowd blocking the his cap. When the school is closed, Swami is excited not because he
gate of the school. A student tells Swami that the school is believes in the protest, but because he is happy he won’t get in
closed due to the jailing of the political worker, and Swami is trouble for missing the cap. Through this dichotomy, Narayan shows
relieved that he won’t get in trouble for not wearing his cap. He how deeply entwined Swami’s political awakening is with his
sees the Mission School Headmaster and some of the teachers ongoing youthful self-centeredness. This scene also establishes the
standing on the school veranda, calling for the students to go to school as a clear microcosm of political activity, as has been hinted
their classes and threatening punishment. at throughout.

The self-appointed leaders of the crowd of students yell that it Again, Swami is profoundly caught up in the emotions of others,
is a “day of mourning” and should be observed in silence. thoughtlessly losing his identity to that of the crowd and
However, other students are throwing rocks at the windows of experiencing again how easily his sense of self can change. Further,
the school. Swami joins in and he is excited to be able to break Swami continues to engage in the protest with a childish mindset,
the ventilator in the Mission School Headmaster’s room, enjoying breaking windows most of all.
finding the experience of being in the crowd “thrilling.”

Someone runs into the crowd and announces that classes are Swami continues his enmeshment with the crowd, even going so far
happening at the Board High School, so the crowd, including as to menace younger children. This moment is an extension of the
Swami, moves to that school. A representative from the crowd scorn he felt for the young children in Chapter 4, demonstrating
asks the Board School Headmaster to close the school, but the how easily emotional violence can transform into actual, physical
headmaster refuses and threatens to call the police. The crowd violence, even for someone as relatively innocent as Swami.
angrily begins to vandalize the Board School, joined by many of
its own students. Swami enthusiastically joins in the shouting
and destruction, feeling happy at how much glass there is left to
break. He even threatens the children in the school’s Infant
Standards and stomps on the cap of one small child.

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The crowd moves on to the square in the center of town, where Witnessing the cruelty of Rajam’s father is a crucial moment of
a large group of police is waiting. Swami realizes that Rajam’s understanding for Swami. Because he admired Rajam’s father so
father is leading these menacing men, a fact which horrifies deeply before this experience, gaining the knowledge of his capacity
him. Swami watches as Rajam’s father orders the crowd to for evil is especially painful for Swami. Unlike any previous moment,
disperse and, when it doesn't, orders the troops to charge. The this one causes Swami to realize how nuanced personal identity can
policeman run into the crowd, “pushing and beating everybody,” be and forces him to accept that no one person can be completely
and Swami begs them to leave him alone because he knows good or completely evil.
nothing. The policemen taunt Swami but let him run away.

Swami plans to keep his experiences in the riot secret from his Even after his momentous—and very dangerous—experience at the
father, but upon arriving home his father immediately begins protest, Swami returns again to thinking about his cap and whether
talking about how Rajam’s father is “a butcher,” which Swami he will get in trouble for losing it. This turn shows how deeply Swami
finds himself agreeing with as he remembers his brutal is caught between innocence and understanding, childish concerns
behavior. Swami’s father asks him if he was involved in the riot, and adult dangers. Furthermore, his father’s claim that the cap was
in which many people were injured and a few may have died. Indian anyway undercuts the value of Swami’s political act and
Swami realizes that he now has an excuse for losing his cap and demonstrates afresh how tied to his father Swami still is.
tells his father that someone tore it off in the crowd because it
was made of foreign material. His father tells him that it was
made in India and that he would never buy his son something
made abroad. Swami lies in bed thinking about all the injuries
he got during the day, and is especially angry at the policemen
for hitting him and calling him a monkey.

At school the next day, the Mission School Headmaster enters Swami’s confused reply to the headmaster’s questions clearly shows
Swami’s class and reads a list of all the students who were just how ill-equipped he is to understand and explain his role in
missing the day before, forcing them to stand on their benches society and the actions he takes. Again, Swami’s feelings are real,
as punishment. One by one, he asks them to explain why they but he does not yet know how to transmute them into meaningful
weren’t in school the previous day, with each giving a different behavior. As before, his school does not help him ease his confusion
excuse. The headmaster punishes each boy in turn, rejecting but rather punishes him for it, leading to Swami’s most drastic act of
their excuses. Swami gets more and more nervous, and when self-determination yet.
the headmaster gets to him, he gives a confused, muddled
answer using pieces of his experiences at the recent protests.
The headmaster hits Swami with his cane as punishment for
not speaking clearly and says that he saw him breaking the
ventilator in his office. The headmaster hits Swami several
more times until Swami grows desperate and runs out of the
school, saying to the headmaster: “I don’t care for your dirty
school.”

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CHAPTER 13
Six weeks pass, after which Rajam comes to Swami’s house to Rajam’s casual acknowledgement of the way that political
tell him that he forgives him for everything, from his political differences separate him and Swami underscores the theme that
activities to his new status as a student at the Board School. the pressure of English colonization appears everywhere, even in
The reader learns that Swami refused to return to the Mission close boyhood friendships. The sudden disappearance of Sankar
School and that his father sent him instead to the Board School. and Somu also shows how easily a person can go from close friend
Swami quickly found himself happily the center of attention at to distant memory, again challenging Swami to accept the changing
his new school, though he does not yet have close friends there. identities of those around him.
Back at the Mission School, Somu was left behind after failing
an exam, Sankar moved away after his father was transferred,
and the Pea began school months late due to mysterious
causes. Swami still sees Mani every day but had not seen Rajam
since leaving the Mission School.

Rajam finds Swami trying to build a camera, and Swami explains Just as Swami’s friends earlier accused Swami of thinking he was
that a boy in his new class had done so. Rajam criticizes Swami too good for them by hanging out with Rajam, so too does Rajam
for thinking that his new school is superior and Swami, wanting accuse Swami of thinking he is superior. That even the powerful
to win Rajam over, agrees that he does not like the Board Rajam would make this accusation shows the depth to which
School but says that he had no choice in leaving the Mission external ideas of power structures are embedded in the boys’ lives.
School. Rajam tells Swami that he should have stayed away Swami’s desire to please Rajam wins out over his political
from politics in the first place, and Swami agrees. Rajam is convictions, again showing the confusion that Swami feels as he
convinced by Swami’s consent and tells him that they should go attempts to take charge of his own priorities.
back to being good friends.

Rajam suggests forming a cricket team, and although Swami Rajam and Swami’s plan to form a cricket team introduces the
initially feels that he’s not good enough to play, Rajam novel’s most important symbol, the English game of cricket. The
convinces him to try. Rajam says that the team will be called the boys do not discuss the fact that cricket comes from the country of
M.C.C. but Swami worries that they could get into legal trouble, their colonizers; rather, they simply embrace it as a way to enjoy
since there is already a professional cricket team using that themselves and legitimize their pursuits outside of their families.
name. Swami suggests some other names for the team and they However, with his concerns about government regulations, Swami
make a list of all the possibilities, choosing Victory Union intuits that even in this harmless pastime, the effect of political
Eleven as an additional name. Swami brings up the idea that structures will still be present. By somewhat ironically equating the
they might need to pay a tax to the government, concerned cricket team with Gandhi’s fight for Indian independence, Narayan
that their name will not be reserved unless they do so. shows the inextricability of the political from personal life.
Considering all of the Swami’s points, Rajam reflects that
starting a cricket team is “the most complicated problem on
earth” and feels sympathetic toward Gandhi’s opposition to the
government.

Swami and Rajam go to Mani’s house to choose cricket The act of choosing equipment and writing to the company serves
equipment from a sporting goods catalogue. Mani insists that a as an important act of self-determination for the boys. They are
certain kind of bat, the Junior Willard Bat, is the best kind and excited to have chance to choose their own name and do not feel
that their team must order them. The three friends choose the concern about the team’s ties to British culture. This lack of worry
goods they need from the catalogue, arguing good-naturedly illustrates the paradoxical point that colonized people like Swami
about how many bats they need, and then settle down to write and his friends can and sometimes must adapt to the culture of the
a letter ordering the supplies. Swami at first agrees to write the colonizer and even embrace aspects of it in order to lead normal,
letter but becomes overwhelmed by the task, at which point enjoyable lives.
Rajam takes over, writing a letter from both M.C.C. and Victory
Union Eleven. They complete the letter and agree to mail it.

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The postman arrives with a card for Rajam, which turns out to Here Swami and his friends demonstrate both deep affection for
be from Sankar, who says that he is also playing cricket now. their friend Sankar and, ultimately, a lack of concern for him when
The three friends are excited to hear from Sankar and they give up on writing back. With this, Sankar’s identity in their
immediately write letters in return, only to realize that they do lives slips fully from friend to memory, never to be mentioned again.
not have an address to mail them to. This moment shows how the actions of others can define a person’s
identity, even when those actions are careless or out of line with the
actor’s true feelings.

Soon thereafter, Rajam receives a reply from the sporting While the friends are excited that an adult organization like the
goods company addressed to the captain of the M.C.C. The sporting goods company has recognized their team as legitimate,
friends are delighted to have their team recognized by the they are not able to respond to the company’s request, showing how
company and the postal service. The letter from the company far they are from becoming truly autonomous. Their irrational belief
asks for a 25% payment, which confuses them and leaves them that the letter was a mistake also shows the persistence of childish
unsure how to respond. Eventually, they conclude that the magical thinking in their lives.
letter was sent to them by mistake, even though Swami points
out that it is addressed to the captain of their team. They write
back to the company returning the letter and asking that their
cricket supplies be sent quickly.

Swami, Rajam, and Mani continue to believe that the cricket Swami and his friends remain intent on playing even without ideal
supplies will arrive soon, and that perhaps the company is even equipment, perhaps symbolizing the way that the citizens of India
making them especially for their team. In the meantime, they must make do with lesser versions of the cultural artifacts brought
make bats from a wooden box and get used tennis balls from to them by the English. The boys also end up needing help from
Rajam’s father’s club and begin practicing without their Rajam’s father, demonstrating another way that their families of
complete supplies. The Pea joins their team, along with a few origin are still crucial to their pursuits.
boys that Rajam chooses from his class.

The team assembles for its first practice. The Pea arrives late Swami’s sudden transformation, after a very short time playing, into
without the stumps he promised to bring, but says that he will the cricket star Tate indicates that not only is identity fluid, but it
bring them to the next practice. Rajam and the others are at can also change based on scant evidence or even happenstance.
first upset not to have the supplies they need to play a full game Over the course of the rest of the novel, Swami is a continual
of cricket, but they manage to continue when someone disappointment to his cricket team, so it is noteworthy that he keeps
suggests using the wall as a temporary wicket. As practice the nickname Tate nonetheless.
starts, Swami bowls very well and is immediately given the
nickname Tate, after a famous bowler.

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CHAPTER 14
Swami discovers that the workload and pressure of his new Swami is unhappy to find that, like the Mission School, the rules at
school are much greater than those he experienced at the Board School run contrary to what he believes are his best interests,
Mission School. Swami is also obligated to attend mandatory in this case arriving on time for cricket practice. This time, however,
drill practices and scout classes after school, and the the restrictions force Swami to become a better student and help
punishments for missing a class are harsh. Swami’s days are him develop his individual academic skills even as it keeps him away
now full of rigor and work, and he is a more attentive student from his team. Again, Narayan points to the kernels of positivity
than he had been previously. After his after-school obligations, that still exist within oppressive systems.
he runs home to drop off his supplies and then arrives at the
cricket field by evening. Though he tries his best to get there
quickly, Swami is often disappointed to find that the practice is
concluding by the time he arrives and Rajam is annoyed at him
for arriving late.

One day, Swami’s grandmother calls to him during the brief This encounter shows Swami’s inner conflict between following his
time that he is at home between school and cricket practice. self-interested impulses as he is used to doing or instead supporting
He feels sorry for how often she is ignored and goes to see someone else whose needs are counter to his own.
what she wants. She asks him to go and get her a lemon to
soothe her stomach pain and offers to let him keep three paise
for himself, but when she gives him a time limit, he gets
annoyed and runs out to practice.

Later that evening, Swami arrives home feeling guilty for Swami’s genuine concern for his grandmother’s health marks a new
abandoning his grandmother earlier. He goes to see her, facet of their relationship, in which he begins to see himself as her
worrying that she might die because of his neglect, but she tells caretaker rather than the other way around. Even when she upsets
him that his mother gave her a lemon and she is feeling better. him by failing to understand his new identity as Tate, he remains
Swami is joyful and relieved to find her doing well, and in his patient and loving, for once setting aside his own wishes in favor of
excitement he tells her about being nicknamed Tate. However, caring for her. It is similarly significant that Swami’s father remarks
he is dismayed to find that she does not know who Tate is and, on the baby’s growing role in the family, pointing to the fact that
furthermore, she does not know what cricket is. He lectures Swami is no longer the center of his family’s attention and will soon
her on the basics of cricket and explains how well Rajam leads have to make way for the growing needs—and intelligence—of his
his team. Swami’s father enters, carrying Swami’s baby brother, younger brother.
and remarks that soon it will be the baby teaching everyone
about the world.

Rajam warns Swami that he cannot keep being late to cricket At this point, it becomes clear that rather than simply bringing
practice. Swami tells Rajam that the Board School schedule Rajam and Swami together, the cricket team is beginning to burden
keeps him from arriving on time, so Rajam suggests asking the their friendship. As their political disagreements did before, the
Board School Headmaster to let him leave early until after their team—symbolically standing in for British oppression—creates an
match. Swami tells Rajam that he is afraid of the headmaster, so excuse for conflict that Rajam attempts to solve through
Rajam announces that he will speak to the headmaster himself straightforward dominance.
at Swami’s school the next day. Swami begs Rajam not to go to
the school, but Rajam insists on doing so.

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To avoid seeing Rajam at his school, Swami pretends to be sick Again, Swami relies on the support of his family, this time his mother
the next morning. His father thinks that he is well enough to go and grandmother, to get what he wants. However, in this case he is
to school, but his Granny and mother support him and convince not able to fully accept their protection, eventually leaving for
his father to let him stay home, even though he does not have a school even though he has permission to stay home. While Swami is
fever. Halfway through the day, Swami becomes anxious and frightened of both the headmaster and his friends’ behavior, he feels
tells his mother that he feels better and wants to go to school, compelled to return to school nonetheless.
thinking that Mani will already have gone. On the way there, he
runs into Rajam and Mani, who tell him that they went to his
school but left when they found he wasn’t there. Mani is
carrying a club, which makes Swami afraid of what his friends
might try to do to the Board School Headmaster.

Rajam leads Swami back to school and tells Mani to wait It surprises Swami to see his imposing headmaster asleep and
outside while they speak to the Board School Headmaster. powerless, but he soon learns that the man’s authority is
Rajam and Swami enter the headmaster’s office and find him nonetheless absolute. Even though he is old and weak, strong young
sleeping. They wait for ten minutes and then make noise to Rajam and Mani are unable to defy him. In this situation, the
wake him up. The headmaster asks what they’re doing there wizened headmaster seems to stand in for the idea of the
and Rajam explains that Swami, the best bowler on the team, oppressing culture which, old and outdated though it may be,
needs to leave school early to get to cricket practice on time. nevertheless wields power over the people of India.
The headmaster listens and then orders them to leave the
office without granting Swami permission to leave school early.
Mani gets tired of waiting outside and enters the office with his
club, but the headmaster is not intimidated. Rajam tells the
headmaster that Rajam’s father is the Police Superintendent,
but even that fails to convince the headmaster. Rajam leads his
friends out of the office in disgust.

CHAPTER 15
The M.C.C. has scheduled a cricket match against a team called The M.C.C.’s irrational insistence on threatening their opponents
Young Men’s Union. The match is friendly in name, but in fact shows the senseless conflict inherent in their game, and the extent
the M.C.C. sends a complicated list of demands and threats to which their desire to win may stem from a wish for dominance
along with their invitation, including asking the other team to rather than excellence.
bring their own supplies and telling them that they will have to
pay for anything damaged in the course of the match. The
match is scheduled for a Sunday two weeks in the future.

As the team’s captain, Rajam throws himself into ensuring that While Swami wants to please Rajam, he is not willing to outwardly
his team beats the Y.M.U. Rajam believes that they are capable defy his school rules and so seeks permission from the very
of doing so but he is very worried about Swami, who continues institution that oppresses him. Even though he is ridiculed and
to arrive late to practice. With only a week to go until the granted only a small reprieve, Swami is happy for even this reward,
cricket match, Swami realizes that he has to find a way to get again showing the psychological necessity of gaining small victories
extra practice and goes to tell his after-school drill master that within oppressive systems.
he is not feeling well. The master asks what is wrong and Swami
tells him that he is delirious and has been unable to sleep.
Though he angrily accuses him of lying, the drill master lets
Swami leave early and Rajam is very pleased to see Swami at
practice on time.

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The next morning, Swami sneaks out of his house and goes to By sneaking out to see the doctor without his parents’ knowledge,
visit a physician named Dr. Kesavan before school. He explains Swami takes another step toward trying to solve his own problems
that he needs to get a certificate that will allow him to leave independent of his family. However, Swami’s belief that Dr. Kesavan
school early to practice for the cricket match. The doctor can convince the headmaster to let him leave early shows that
appears concerned, but laughs at Swami when Swami says that Swami still ascribes significant power to the group of older male
he has delirium and that it is “some kind of stomachache.” The authority figures that surround him.
doctor examines Swami and says that because he is well, he
cannot get a certificate. However, the doctor offers to talk to
the Board School Headmaster for him and ask that Swami be
allowed to leave school in time for practice.

Swami leaves school early and attends practice on time for the Swami’s punishment at the hands of the Board School Headmaster
next several days, making Rajam and the rest of the team very mirrors the earlier scene of humiliation at the hands of the Mission
happy. On Friday, however the Board School Headmaster School Headmaster, which indicates that, to some extent, all
comes to Swami’s class and confronts him in front of the class schools are the same in their harsh oppression of students like
about missing drill practice all week. Swami protests that Dr. Swami. This time, Swami rebels even more forcefully, physically
Kesavan had said he would “die if [he] attended drill” and that robbing the headmaster of his strength by taking his cane. With this
the doctor should have talked to the headmaster. The action, Swami moves still farther on his journey to self-
headmaster dismisses Swami’s defense and Swami realizes that actualization, haphazard though it may be.
the doctor betrayed him. The headmaster prepares to cane
Swami, but without thinking Swami grabs the cane, throws it
out the window, and runs away from school.

Swami sits under a tree to think through his situation. He In this moment, Swami’s father is not only powerless to help Swami,
realizes that there are no more schools in Malgudi, and that his but he transforms into something of threat to Swami’s well-being.
behavior might mean that even schools in other cities wouldn’t Facing this new reality, Swami chooses uncertainty rather than this
accept him. He thinks that he might have to get a job, and new version of his formerly protective father.
although he would enjoy having money, he knows that his
father won’t let him live at home without going to school.
Swami decides that he cannot face his father, and chooses to
leave the city on his own.

Swami continues onward to his old school, the Mission School. Swami’s sudden fond feelings toward the Mission School indicate
He feels full of nostalgia and misses everything about it, from that, as much as it caused him pain while he was there, the school
his friends to his teachers to the Mission School Headmaster, acts as a kind of home in Swami’s life. This change in Swami’s
whom he now finds dignified. He feels as if he is an outcast and feelings offers a new perspective on the school as site of colonialism;
has no choice but to leave Malgudi. He wishes to talk to Rajam just as Swami ends up feeling comfortable in the familiarity of a
and Mani before going, so Swami goes behind the school and place that oppressed him, so too must the Indian people learn to call
waits for a young boy to come outside to blow his nose. He calls their colonized nation home.
the boy over and offers him an almond peppermint in exchange
for going and getting Rajam from his class. The boy agrees and
returns with Rajam. Swami gives the boy a three-paise coin
rather than the promised peppermint, which disappoints the
boy, but he goes back to his class nonetheless.

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Swami then explains his situation to Rajam, who criticizes him Rajam’s critical reaction to Swami’s behavior subtly highlights the
for always getting in trouble. Rajam tells Swami that he has political differences between the two: Rajam essentially supports
seen their cricket opponents practicing and that Swami must following the rules, while Swami repeatedly finds himself acting out
not miss the match. On the spot, Swami decides not to tell against his schools. But as before, the lure of succeeding at cricket
Rajam that he is running away but instead plans to leave for and pleasing his friend outweighs Swami’s immediate desire to
two days without telling anyone and return for the match. rebel, and he changes his plans to fit the social structure that brings
Then, he will leave Malgudi for good after the match. Rajam meaning to his life.
goes back to class, reminding Swami to come early to practice.

CHAPTER 16
Swami’s father walks through town, ashamed of himself as he The sudden shift to Swami’s father’s perspective marks one of the
moves toward the Sarayu river. He is planning to look for only times that the narrative strays from a close focus on Swami
Swami’s body in the water and feels ridiculous doing so, but he himself. This section is particularly notable because it shows the
also feels unable to return home without finding news of his humanity of Swami’s father in a newly immediate way, letting the
missing son. Swami’s mother and grandmother are at home, reader see the emotional, vulnerable side of his character that had
“dazed and demented” with worry about Swami. previously been hidden.

Swami’s father thinks back to earlier in the evening, when he Swami’s father’s confusion over the role that he himself might have
had not yet been worried about Swami and had only gone played in Swami’s disappearance points to a key moment in the
looking for him to “please his wife and mother.” He checked changing relationship between Swami and his family. At this point,
Swami’s school, as well as Rajam’s house, and was unable to it’s unclear even to Swami’s father whether or not he is his son’s
find Mani’s house. He returned home after an hour without protector. As Swami moves beyond the reach of his family’s safety in
news, which made Swami’s mother and grandmother even the book’s final section, his father’s sense of his own identity
more nervous. Eventually, their worry began to rub off on him becomes as fragile as Swami’s.
and he became convinced that something had happened to
Swami. Granny seemed to blame him for Swami’s
disappearance, but he thought back over his actions during the
day and couldn’t think of anything that would have driven
Swami away. He went out again, leaving his wife crying at home.

Swami’s father considers checking the hospital, but thinks that The final phase of this chapter highlights Swami’s father weakened
he is not brave enough to see Swami injured if he is indeed state, as he finds his own bravery lacking. Furthermore, his sincere
inside. Instead he goes toward the river, praying and wondering fear that he may find his son drowned or dead on the train tracks
what he will do if he does find Swami’s body in the water. illuminates just how dangerous Swami’s world has become; he is
However, he sees nothing but shadows on the water and still a child in some ways, but he is now fully subject to all of life’s
proceeds to the railway station. He walks along the rails for dangers, as well.
about a mile and finds nothing, stopping once to see whether a
wet patch is blood. When he finds that it is water, he thanks
God.

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CHAPTER 17
Swami walks alone on a road branching off the familiar trunk Even before realizing he is lost, Swami misses home intensely and
road of Malgudi. He walks for a mile and finds the road quiet, regrets his decision to leave school, already finding his reasons for
deserted, and unfamiliar. He wishes to be back on the trunk fleeing trivial. In this sense, the self that Swami was only a few hours
road, and realizes that he has been walking for hours. Swami before has already become a stranger to him, demonstrating the
misses home, imagining all of the food the cook makes and depth of the instability of his identity during this sequence. But as
thinking of eating with his mother. As the sun begins to set, much as he wishes to be at home, he remains in unfamiliar
Swami rests and then decides to go home. He thinks that his geographic territory, again illustrating his half-independent, half-
troubles at school don’t matter after all and he is surprised that childish state.
he ever thought he needed to run away. Swami regrets not
telling his father what happened and is especially sorry to miss
cricket practice leading up to the match.

Swami walks toward home, thinking of the excuses he will give Swami continues to think of excuses to tell his parents even as he
his parents. After some time, he feels that he should have finds himself far from their influence, demonstrating the difficulty of
reached the trunk road but still seems to be far away on an separating from his family’s sphere. This section also marks the
unfamiliar road. Night falls and Swami becomes nervous, beginning of Swami’s temporary dissolution of identity, as he feels
realizing that he might still be far from home. He begins to walk the barriers between himself and the rest of the world grow thinner
faster and is unnerved by the “uncanny ghostly quality” of birds and perceives his own name coming from outside himself. Swami
fluttering in the quiet trees. As Swami continues, he wishes to has frequently redefined his identity throughout the story, but at
run but is afraid of making noise. He feels that his senses this point, he begins to reach a state of barely having an identity at
become more keen, hearing small noises that he cannot identify all.
or understand. Eventually, Swami even hears his name
whispered through the night and thinks that he sees a monster
crouching in the shadows, though it turns out to be a group of
trees.

Swami looks forward to reaching the trunk road soon and feels This moment of false hope adds emphasis to the idea that Swami
“a momentary ecstasy” when he comes into a clearing that may not ultimately have control over his circumstances or sense of
looks like the trunk road and he is able to see the stars self. Though he goes forward confidently, he remains lost
overhead. He decides to go forward without resting but quickly nonetheless, showing the extent to which his life is circumscribed by
realizes that the road he is on lacks some of the signs of the outside forces even at this moment of unprecedented autonomy.
trunk road and is probably a different location. Beginning to
walk anyway, he soon finds himself lost in tall grass and has to
turn back the way he came.

Pausing, Swami is forced to accept that he is far from home late As the barrier between Swami’s inner life and the threats of the
at night, and that he does not know how to get back. He outside world breaks down at last, he loses all sense of himself as a
becomes “faint with fear” and is barely able to continue coherent individual. In this moment of complete disorientation,
walking, and he feels the dark world around him closing in with Swami falls back on a fantasy that illustrates the essential
“a sense of inhumanity.” Swami falls to the ground and cries scaffolding of his life. Associated with both the supportive power of
aloud, praying for someone to rescue him. With his imagination Swami’s friends and the oppressive power of British rule, cricket’s
running wild, Swami thinks he sees a succession of deadly appearance at this crucial moment symbolizes the paradoxical but
creatures—elephants, tigers, cobras, even demons—attacking nevertheless powerful forces that shape Swami’s existence.
him. Soon, he falls into a fantasy that he is playing cricket in the
coming match, playing well and watching his team win, with the
odd addition that the Board School Headmaster is playing for
the opposing team. He collapses with exhaustion, imagining
that he is still on the cricket field.

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Ranga, a man who drives a cart, is out on an early morning Ranga is one of the few named characters who could be said to be
journey when his bull stops unexpectedly. Ranga is surprised to an Indian peasant, the group that Swami pledges to protect at the
find Swami sleeping in the road in front of his cart and at first protest on the Sarayu. Ranga’s role here is crucial to Swami’s rescue,
thinks he is dead, but soon realizes that Swami is a living boy but later the more powerful Mr. Nair is the one who receives all the
from the town. Unable to imagine how Swami got there, Ranga credit. Swami never seems to be aware of Ranga’s existence, and
decides to take Swami to the office of the nearby District even Ranga views himself as too simple to be of help. Ranga’s
Forest Officer, who will know what to do with him. unsung but pivotal role hints at the status of peasants throughout
India under British rule.

Swami regains consciousness and does not understand where When Swami awakens in an unfamiliar place, his sense of self
he is. At first he thinks he is at home, but then begins to remains diffuse, and he attempts to regain it by talking to the man
remember his recent ordeal and looks around him in confusion, he perceives to be his father. However, it quickly becomes clear that
unable to see clearly. He sees and hears a man talking to him this source of comfort and stability is an empty one; Swami does not
and wonders why his father is there with him. The man says know whether the man is his father or what his purpose is.
that his father will arrive soon, which makes Swami even more Regaining consciousness after his ordeal, Swami finds himself still
confused; he wonders whether the man is his father and, without a clear identity and severed from his family connections in
whether or not he is, what he is doing there. an unprecedented way.

The man turns out to be Mr. Nair, the District Forest Officer. As in Swami’s fantasy, cricket is the first thing to ground him in
He recalls helping to revive Swami and notes that Swami was reality as he regains his composure, again showing how crucial its
not at first able to explain who he is, where he is from, or what dual meaning is in supporting Swami’s sense of self. In this case, the
happened to him. Now, he finds Swami outside, practicing issues of the cricket match allow Swami to return to himself enough
cricket bowling with a tree and some rocks. Swami thanks Mr. to explain who he is and get Mr. Nair to help him return home.
Nair for helping him and says how eager he is to get back in
time for his match. He asks what day it is and Mr. Nair tells him
it is Sunday. Swami is horrified at this news because the match
is on Sunday, but Nair quickly amends what he said and tells
Swami that it is Saturday. He promises to get Swami home by
evening if he can explain who he is.

CHAPTER 18
On Sunday afternoon, the cricket match between M.C.C. and Without Swami present, the reader gains advance knowledge of the
Y.M.U. is underway. The M.C.C. is losing and Rajam is furious, in fissure that is forming between Rajam and Swami as a result of the
particular regretting that his team does not have a good cricket match. While cricket helped Swami return home safely in the
bowler. Rajam’s father interrupts the game to give him a letter previous chapter, in this one it causes a painful break between him
about Swami, from which Rajam learns that Swami is safe. and his closest friend, again showing the complex effects of this
Rajam’s father plans to leave and give the letter to Swami’s symbol of British power. This chapter also marks the most
father and asks Rajam if he would like to come. Rajam declines, significant transformation in Rajam’s character, as he goes from
saying that he doesn’t care about Swami and wants to stay at being an encouraging leader to a cold former friend. An extension of
the match. Rajam begins to tell Mani that Swami is safe, but the changes of social roles that Swami witnessed earlier in the book,
then remembers that he has resolved not to care about Swami this instance is perhaps the most extreme example of the fluidity of
and stops talking before giving Mani the news. individual identity, as Rajam actively chooses to stop caring about
Swami.

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Back at home, Swami is content at the attention and concern Swami’s comfort at home represents a temporary stabilization of
that his family and other visitors feel for him. In addition to his his sense of self, in which he is able to return briefly to the childish
delighted mother and grandmother, Swami is surrounded by security he felt at the start of the book. However, his concern over
friends of his family, all of whom are glad to see him home forgetting to thank Mr. Nair hints at the difficulty of appreciating
safely. In the midst of the celebration, Swami remembers Mr. such safety in the moment and seems to foreshadow a future in
Nair and feels guilty for not saying goodbye to him, after he which Swami’s own father will also be a semi-forgotten figure of the
rescued him and treated him well. He is also touched at the past.
memory of how kind Rajam’s father and his own father were,
and he remembers with happiness how everyone laughed
when he told the story of his conflict at school.

Mani arrives to visit Swami and the two friends go into the The start of this scene with Mani indicates Swami’s continued
backyard to talk. Mani has heard the story of Swami’s naivete, as he assumes that his friendships will continue in the same
disappearance from Rajam and calls him a fool for running away comfortable pattern he is used to. This moment marks the last time
from the Board School Headmaster, but he also expresses that Swami is able to feel confident in his connection with Mani and
concern for Swami and asks where he was when he went Rajam, although the reader already knows that this connection has
missing. Swami tells Mani the whole story of his terrifying been strained by the results of the cricket match.
night, being picked up by Ranga, and then being rescued by Mr.
Nair and forgetting to say goodbye. Mani recommends that
Swami write him a letter of thanks and Swami agrees, saying
how grateful he is that Mr. Nair returned him in time for the
cricket match.

Mani explains, to Swami’s dismay, that the cricket match has With the revelation that he has missed the cricket match, Swami is
already happened earlier that day, Sunday. He tells the story of forced to accept that his plan has failed and that his close
the team’s defeat and the ways in which it was Swami’s fault for relationships will be altered as a result. Swami attempts to evade
being absent. Swami is devastated and changes his mind about responsibility by blaming Mr. Nair, a surrogate father figure, but the
writing to Mr. Nair, who told him that it was only Saturday. consequences of Swami’s actions remain unchanged. Furthermore,
Mani also tells Swami that Rajam is furious with Swami and will Swami admits that he must return to the Board School, indicating
never speak to him again. Swami begs Mani to help him that as much as Swami has changed, he must still operate largely
reconcile with Rajam, but Mani says there is nothing he can do. within the structures that have always constrained his life.
Swami plans to see Rajam the following morning, and also
informs Mani that he will be returning to the Board School the
following week.

CHAPTER 19
Ten days later, Swami gets up early in order to get to the train Although Swami has returned to the safety of his family’s home, his
station, from which Rajam is about to leave. Rajam’s father is new knowledge of the world’s dangers and the true instability of
being transferred to a new city, which Swami learned the individual identity has left him irrevocably changed. Despairing at
previous evening from Mani. Swami feels desolate knowing the loss of Rajam, Swami no longer has a clear sense of himself and
that Rajam will soon be gone, unable to imagine life without his place in the world.
him. In particular, Swami is ashamed because he has not found
the courage to go and see Rajam since missing the cricket
match. When Swami heard the news from Mani, he asked Mani
to come to his house early the next morning to go to the station
with him, but Mani said he could not because he would be
sleeping at Rajam’s house. Knowing that he is missing their final
night together fills Swami with despair and jealousy.

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After Mani leaves to go to Rajam’s house, Swami looks through By choosing a book for Rajam, Swami takes the first step toward
his possessions for something to give Rajam as a going away rebuilding some sense of agency in his life and restoring his
present. He considers giving Rajam back the green clockwork relationships. The fact that it is a book of fairy tales points to the
engine Rajam gave him the previous year, but worries that potential healing power of imagination, but at the same time,
Rajam might take it as a sign that Swami no longer wishes to be Swami’s memory of its mystifying English words shows that colonial
friends. Eventually, Swami settles on giving Rajam a book of influence still crops up even in sites of fantasy. The gift encapsulates
fairy tales given to him by his father years before. Swami both the hope that Swami can gain increasing agency and the
recalls that he has never been able to read the whole thing reality that external context will always constrain him.
because of all the “unknown, unpronounceable English words
in it” and thinks that Rajam will be able to read it. He inscribes it
to his “dearest friend.”

Swami arrives at the station in the dark early morning, holding Even at the last, Swami discovers that the presence of Rajam’s
the book of fairy tales. He sees Rajam and Mani get out of a powerful family and their police guard comes between himself and
car, along with Rajam’s family. He sees how tidy and refined his friend. Despite his newfound maturity and knowledge of the
Rajam looks and loses his courage, hiding in the shadows rather world, Swami is still subject to conventional power structures and
than going to speak to him. Rajam remains surrounded by his needs to ask his stronger friend Mani for help.
family and a group of policemen, and Swami is unable to find a
gap in which to speak to Rajam. The train arrives and Rajam’s
mother gets in as the policemen say goodbye to Rajam and
Rajam’s father. Swami finds Mani and asks if Rajam will speak to
him, and Mani says that he will.

Rajam gets onto the train and Swami asks for Mani’s help giving The uncertainty of this moment leaves Rajam’s final role in Swami’s
him the book. Mani runs to the window and calls to Rajam that life undetermined as he departs. At this point, the book’s theme of
Swami is there to say goodbye, but Rajam replies only by saying fluid identity comes to a head, as Rajam appears to be neither good
goodbye to Mani. Mani points out Swami again, and Swami calls nor bad but rather a mystery.
out to Rajam in despair. After looking at Swami for a moment,
Rajam says something but his words are drowned out by the
noise of the train. The train begins to move.

Swami hands the book of fairy tales to Mani in panic, and Mani Swami succeeds in his effort at repairing the friendship by passing
runs alongside the train to give it to Rajam. Rajam takes the the book off to Rajam with Mani’s help. However, neither he nor the
book and waves goodbye as the train departs. Swami waves reader knows if the attempt is successful, and Rajam and Swami’s
back, watching as the train vanishes from sight. Swami tells relationship to each other remains far from clear. At the end, even
Mani that he is glad he got to say goodbye and Mani tells Swami the previously simple Mani becomes impossible to interpret, and
that Rajam will write to him. Swami is surprised but Mani claims Swami has no choice but to acknowledge and accept the ambiguity
that he gave Rajam Swami’s address. Swami accuses Mani of of his words. This tolerance for uncertainty marks a new phase of
lying and asks him what the address is; Mani is unable to say. maturity for Swami as he continues to contend with the new
Still, he insists that he did give the address to Rajam. Swami confusions and complexities of his changed life.
looks at Mani and is ultimately unable to tell whether or not he
is joking or sincere.

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To cite any of the quotes from Swami and Friends covered in the
HOW T
TO
O CITE Quotes section of this LitChart:
To cite this LitChart: MLA
MLA Narayan, R. K.. Swami and Friends. University of Chicago Press.
1980.
Sheldon-Dean, Hannah. "Swami and Friends." LitCharts. LitCharts
LLC, 23 Jul 2018. Web. 21 Apr 2020. CHICA
CHICAGO
GO MANU
MANUAL
AL
CHICA
CHICAGO
GO MANU
MANUAL
AL Narayan, R. K.. Swami and Friends. Chicago: University of Chicago
Press. 1980.
Sheldon-Dean, Hannah. "Swami and Friends." LitCharts LLC, July
23, 2018. Retrieved April 21, 2020. https://www.litcharts.com/lit/
swami-and-friends.

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