English, asked by satakshi7024, 1 year ago

Character sketch of the narrator in the night train at deoli by Ruskin bond

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Answered by adityakjha24
17
The Night Train at Deoli" is a short told in the reflective first person narrative. A college student reflects on his annual visits to his home town of Dehra Dun. He takes the overnight train which stops in the small village of Deoli.

On one trip, the student notices a beautiful girl selling baskets on the street. He fantasizes about meeting her. In subsequent years, he continues to fantasize about her and even has a brief encounter with her, but he never pursues her. It's the story of an unspoken yet powerful attraction and of the student's regret for never having acted on his passion.

Bond uses imagery to blur the line between the girl and her surroundings, contributing to his fantasy-like image of her. The student notes, for example,"her dark, smoldering eyes," not unlike the darkness of the night itself in Deoli. When he does have a brief conversation with the basketgirl, he notes that they shared a feeling of familiarity, "almost like a meeting of old friends." She had become as familiar as the journey itself. She's become more than a peripheral interest of passing landscape. She is central to his trip and to his identity as a man.

Bond uses the literary device of the unnamed narrator to infuse the story with a mystical sense of universality. Because we know very little of the young man's family or circumstances, we can see ourselves in him. We all remember moments of fantasy-like love; feelings of strong attraction toward a person we barely know. We know what it's like to build someone up in our imagination. We know what it's like to be in that place of imagining, of hoping, of wanting.

Ruskin's narrator never moves beyond that place. He never acts, and heis filled with remorse because of it. Because Ruskin's narrator is a kind of "every man," it's easy for readers to empathize with him.




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Answered by harshithprabhakar200
8

Answer:

Ruskin Bond's "The Night Train at Deoli" is a romantic story. Its central geographic location is the small village of Deoli.  The night train at Deoli has such a mesmerizing romance that will lift into a space of love. How a school boy fell in love with a basket selling girl in their first meet, how his first meet, hardly-communicated longing turns into a feverish desperation in love. 'The Eyes have it' a romantic story mixed with suspense which brings it to a height of love at the end of story

The Night Train at Deoli" is a short story told in  first person narrative. A college student reflects on his annual visits to his grandmothers place in Dehra.  He takes the overnight train which stops in the small village of Deoli. In the Night Train of Deoli by Ruskin Bond we have the theme of innocence, memories, love and fear. It is also a story of adolescent infatuation presented with great sensitivity. It expresses the narrator’s love for a poor basket seller whom he encounters at a small station while on his way to Dehra. On one such journey the boy sees a girl at Deoli, selling baskets, and is smitten by her. The stark background makes the girl appear even more beautiful, almost like an angel. On one trip, the student notices a beautiful girl selling baskets on the street. He fantasizes about meeting her. In subsequent years, he continues to fantasize about her and even has a brief encounter with her, but he never pursues her. It's the story of an unspoken yet powerful attraction and of the student's regret for never having acted on his passion.

Ruskin Bond uses imagery to blur the line between the girl and her surroundings, contributing to his fantasy-like image of her. The student notes, for example, “her dark, smouldering eyes," not unlike the darkness of the night itself in Deoli. When he does have a brief conversation with the basket girl, he notes that they shared a feeling of familiarity, "almost like a meeting of old friends." She had become as familiar as the journey itself. She's become more than a peripheral interest of passing landscape. She is central to his trip and to his identity as a man.

Bond uses the literary device of the unnamed narrator to infuse the story with a mystical sense of universality. Because we know very little of the young man's family or circumstances, we can see ourselves in him. We all remember moments of fantasy-like love; feelings of strong attraction toward a person we barely know. We know what it's like to build someone up in our imagination. We know what it's like to be in that place of imagining, of hoping, of wanting.

The narrator is unable to let go of the girl at Deoli despite the passing of time. It is as though he has reserved a place for the girl in his heart. Though some critics might suggest that the narrator has become infatuated with the girl it is more likely that she is his first love and it is for this reason that he has never let go of the girl or forgotten her. It is also somewhat ironic that the narrator tells the reader that nothing happens at Deoli. Yet Deoli is the place where the narrator has fallen in love for the first time. It might also be important that the narrator no longer gets off the train at Deoli as this could suggest that the narrator rather than having to face reality and discover what happened the girl. Prefers instead to hold onto his memories.

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