An Analysis Of Bay Manucci

918 Words2 Pages

Another psychological disorder faced bay Daru was that the development of desire in him to over powering on others. To show his relatively higher social status he becomes very rude towards his servant boy called Mauncci. He narrates: “I don’t like it when low-class types forget their place and try to become too frank with you” (p. ). Daru’s own attitude to Manucci is nothing more than outrageous, but on the contrary he himself feels bitter at the way the elite class treats him. So it is a social chain reaction of exploitation and counter-exploitation in which the elites drag the middle classes into mud, which in turn treat the lower middle classes scandalously; and the lower middle class people humiliate the poorest of the societyan it goes on generation to generation. Daru’s bad treatment of Manucci has been described by Ozi who states that “Daru would beat Mannucci; he would humiliate him and would not pay him for months” (p. 234). Once when Manucci asks for his salary, Daru prepares to give him some dreadful beating but Manucci runs off in time. And Daru thinks “… I did the right thing. Servants have to be kept in line” (p. …show more content…

Because he was madly involved in drugs, easy money, crimes and sex out of marriage. He is completely trapped in the web of criminal living and is unable to make wise choices. Despite his education and intellect, he stands misfit everywhere. Daru loses everything. He faced utter destruction through illegitimate affair, using and selling of drugs. He is under pressure of circumstances and loses the ability to secure or regain his of career. He is confused, fall in complex and he is facing psychological challenges. The story of Daru Ozi and Mumtaz is filled with omni-receptive concerns like passion for money, jealously in relations, rivalry among friends, adultery outside marriage, de-stability of economy, desperation of future and lust for

Open Document