Context
Plot Overview
Character List
Analysis of Major Characters
Themes, Motifs & Symbols
Book One: The Perforated Sheet, Mercurochrome
Hit-the-Spittoon, Under the Carpet
A Public Announcement, Many-headed Monsters
Methwold, Tick, Tock
Book Two: The Fisherman's Pointing Finger, Snakes and Ladders
Accident in a Washing-chest, All India Radio
Love in Bombay, My Tenth Birthday
At the Pioneer Café, Alpha and Omega
The Kolynos Kid, Commander Sabarmati's Baton
Revelations, Movements Performed by Pepperpots
Drainage and the Desert, Jamila Singer
How Saleem Achieved Purity
Book Three: The Buddha, In the Sundarbans
Sam and the Tiger, The Shadow of the Mosque
A Wedding, Midnight
Abracadabra
Important Quotations Explained
Key Facts
Study Questions & Suggested Essay Topics
Quiz
Suggestions for Further Reading
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Midnight’s Children Salman Rushdie
Book One: The Perforated Sheet, Mercurochrome
Summary: The Perforated Sheet
Saleem Sinai opens the novel by explaining the exact date
and time of his birth: August 15, 1947, at midnight. Saleem's birth
coincides precisely with the moment India officially gains its independence from
Britain. Thus, as Saleem notes, his miraculously timed birth ties
him to the fate of the country. He is thirty-one years old now and feels
that time is running out for him. Saleem's believes his life is
ending and he must tell all of the stories trapped inside of him
before he dies.
Saleem begins the story with his grandfather, Aadam Aziz,
on an early spring morning in Kashmir. Saleem describes Kashmir
as a place of incredible beauty and notes that, in 1915, Kashmir
was still pristine, looking just as it had during the time of the
Mughal Empire. At this point in the story, Kashmir is free of the
soldiers, camouflaged trucks, and military jeeps that will come
to characterize it in later years.
While praying, Aadam bumps his nose against the hard ground, and
three drops of blood fall from his nose. As a result, he vows never
again to bow before man or god, and consequently a hole opens
up inside of him. Aadam has recently returned home from Germany,
after five years of medical study. While Aadam was away, his father
had a stroke, and his mother took over his duties in the family
gem business. As Aadam stands on the edge of a lake, Tai, an old
boatman, comes rowing toward him. Saleem describes Aadam's features,
particularly his prominent nose. Saleem also describes the enigmatic
Tai and the local rumors that surround him.
Tai's boat draws closer. He shouts out to Aadam that the
daughter of Ghani the landowner has fallen ill. Here, Saleem interrupts
his narrative to note that most of what matters in our lives takes
place in our absence, but he reassures us that he has the ability
to see things he didn't actually witness. In this way, he is able
to describe Aadam taking care of his mother, attending to the landowner's
daughter, and being ferried across the lake by Tai, all at the same
time.
At the landowner's opulent house, Aadam realizes that
the old man, Ghani, is blind. While waiting to see the patient,
Aadam gets nervous and considers fleeing, but then he has a vision
of his mother and decides to stay. Aadam is taken in to see the
patient, who is flanked by two extremely muscular women holding
a white bed sheet over her like a curtain. In the center of the
sheet is a hole, approximately seven inches in diameter. Ghani tells
Aadam that, for modesty's sake, he can only examine his daughter
through the seven-inch hole.
Summary: Mercurochrome
Saleem sits at his desk, writing. Padma, described as
a great comfort despite her inability to read, cooks for Saleem
and presses him to eat. Saleem returns to his story, saying that
his grandfather's premonition to run away was well founded, because,
in the ensuing months and years, Aadam fell under the spell of the
perforated cloth. The isolated parts of Naseem's body that Aadam
has seen begin to haunt him, and his mother notes that Ghani is
using the illnesses as a ploy, to arrange a marriage between his
daughter and Aadam. Saleem notes that his grandfather fell in love
through a hole in a sheet and that this love filled in the hole
left by Aadam's renunciation of his faith.
Naseem experiences numerous ailments over the next few
years, and, in each case, Aadam examines her by moving the sheet
so that the hole exposes the affected area. However, as Naseem never
develops pains in her head, Aadam never lays eyes upon her face.
On the day World War I ends, Naseem finally complains of a headache,
and the doctor receives permission to see her face, at which point
he falls even further in love with her. In that same year, Doctor
Aziz's father dies, followed shortly by his mother. Ilse, Aadam's
anarchist friend from Germany, comes to visit him and deliver the
news that their friend Oskar has died. Agra University offers Aadam
a job, and he decides to leave Kashmir and proposes to Naseem. Ilse
drowns herself in the lake that same day, in a spot where, as Tai
once told the young Aadam, foreign women often come to drown themselves without
their knowing why.
Padma, who has brought in Saleem's dinner, interrupts
the narrative and demands he read her what he has written. When
Saleem returns to the story, it is August 6, 1919, and Aadam and
Naseem are in the city of Amritsar. Mahatma Gandhi has issued a
call for a day of mourningHartalon August 7, to protest the British
presence. On the day of Hartal, riots break out, and Aadam treats
the wounded with Mercurochrome, which leaves bloodlike red stains on
his clothing. Six days later, a peaceful protest erupts, in violation of
the martial law regulations. The crowd moves into a compound, where
Brigadier R. E. Dyer and his troops eventually surround them. Aadam's
nose begins to itch furiously. As the brigadier issues a command,
Aadam sneezes violently, falling to the ground and thereby missing
a bullet aimed in his direction. The troops continue to fire into
the crowd. Of the 1,650 rounds fired, 1,516 find their mark.
Before concluding the chapter and going to bed, Saleem
discovers a crack in his wrist. He then tells how Tai, the boatman,
died in 1947, protesting India and Pakistan's dispute over Kashmir.
Tai walked to where the troops were stationed, intending to give
them a piece of his mind, and was shot dead.
Analysis
Saleem's account of his grandfather, Aadam Aziz, resembles
the story found in the biblical book of Genesis. Aadam's name suggests the
biblical Adam, the world's first man. Adam and his consort, Eve, lived
in the Garden of Eden, and Aadam's hometown in Kashmir is similarly
described as a lush, beautiful locale. The story of Adam, Eve, and
their eventual expulsion from Eden provides Christians with an inaugural
narrative, from which they can trace the development of the world.
Similarly, the story of Aadam and Naseem in Kashmir provides Saleem
with an original myth that helps shape and give meaning to the rest
of his story. Rushdie's use of the biblical tale demonstrates his
willingness to incorporate and transform various literary traditions
into his own narrative.
Aadam's friend Tai plays an important role in the novel's
early development of certain symbols and themes. Although most of
the local people attribute his seemingly nonsensical statements
to delirium, insanity, or stupidity, Tai ultimately demonstrates
great wisdom. Regarding Aadam's prominent nose, Tai warns the boy
to trust the nose's feelings, as the nose will indicate when something
is wrong. Here, Tai alludes to the important role noses will play
not only in Aadam's life but in future generations of his family.
Tai's comments also introduce the idea that sensory experience and instinctual
behavior are linked entities. Most important, however, Tai's warning
suggests the ways in which personal and public concerns collide,
a dominant theme of the novel.
ThroughoutMidnight's Children, Indian
and global politics resonate in the lives of the characters, often
to an improbable degree. As Saleem's grandparents fall in love,
we witness the first occasion in which a great event in world history
corresponds to a personal event in the lives of Saleem's family:
World War I ends on the same day that Aadam finally sees Naseem's
face. Rushdie links the two events to illustrate the ways in which
humans rely on their individual experiences to make sense of huge,
abstract historical events. Sometimes, public history and private
history relate in parallel but apparently unconnected ways. Aadam
doesn't see Naseem's face because the war has ended,
but the two events seem linked, because each heralds a major transition.
Sometimes, however, public and private histories intersect directly,
as when Aadam participates in the proindependence riots and, miraculously,
manages to avoid being shot. The proindependence riots are significant
for the nation, but they gain an added significance for Saleem's
family, since Aadam's experience there provides one more prominent
example of the important role of noses play in Midnight's
Children.
From the very first passages of Midnight's Children,
Rushdie establishes the novel's unique narrative voice. Saleem narrates
in the first person, often addressing the audience directly and
informally. He also writes in a prose style that feels spontaneous
and improvised, as if he were writing his thoughts down as fast
as he can, without stopping to revise or edit. Midnight's
Children doesn't represent a cool, composed account of
past events, nor does it resemble an objective voice recollecting
events from a distant vantage point. Saleem rambles and veers off,
rephrases and reworks, much as one does in coversation. This prose
style is referred to as stream of consciousness, and, in its immediacy,
it reflects Saleem's desperate, urgent need to finish his tale before
he dies.
The prose style also makes the novel resemble a session
of oral storytelling, a feature highlighted by the presence of Padma,
Saleem's faithful listener and the reader's stand-in within the
pages of Midnight's Children. At times, Padma plays
the role of a passive audience member, while at other moments she
actively interjects, making comments and suggestions and calling
Saleem to task for some of his more excessive flights of fancy.
In this way, acting on our behalf, Padma plays the role of skeptic
and critic. Through Padma, Rushdie can anticipate and acknowledge
the reader's potential frustrations. By preemptively addressing
any doubts and concerns we might have, Rushdie is then free to pursue
the narrative as he sees fit.
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