Untouchable

by

Mulk Raj Anand

Themes and Colors
Inequality, Harm, and Internalization Theme Icon
Coming of Age and Inherited Prejudice Theme Icon
Nature vs. Society Theme Icon
Bodies and Cleanliness  Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Untouchable, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Nature vs. Society Theme Icon

Untouchable, Mulk Raj Anand’s 1935 novel about a family of low-status sweepers in India’s caste system, is set in the verdant hills of the Himalayas. As protagonist Bakha cleans his village’s latrines or plays a game of hockey with his friends Chota and Ram Charan, Anand contrasts the beauty of these mountainous surroundings with the refuse and discomfort of Bakha’s daily village life. And while the higher-caste townspeople accuse Bakha and his family of “polluting” them, the whole community is to blame for the fact that the village brook, once “crystal-clear,” is “now soiled”; the foul-smelling animal dung that piles up along side-streets is, as Bakha points out, attributable not to sweepers but to the farmers and shopkeepers who fail to feed their livestock properly. Rather than being “polluted” by a single group or individual, then, the village is “soiled” by all of the people who live in it.

But while Bakha is worn down by the smells and textures of these cramped streets, he finds solace in the part of his environment not yet molded by human hands. In town, the outcastes are forbidden from using the communal well, but in the hills around the village, everyone has access to lush grass and beautiful flowers, and every person can quench “their thirst from the water that sprang from a natural spring.” Similarly, Bakha frequently rejoices in the sky, untouched by anything but the sun—it gives him strength and a sense of the world beyond this town, allowing him to feel as though there is nothing but “the sun, the sun, the sun, everywhere, in him, on him, before him and behind.” By contrasting the dirtiness and tension of the stratified village with this pristine, equalizing nature, Untouchable thus implies that hierarchy itself is polluting and that a shift toward a more egalitarian society is the only way to return to natural beauty.

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The ThemeTracker below shows where, and to what degree, the theme of Nature vs. Society appears in each chapter of Untouchable. Click or tap on any chapter to read its Summary & Analysis.
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Nature vs. Society Quotes in Untouchable

Below you will find the important quotes in Untouchable related to the theme of Nature vs. Society.
Pages 3–43 Quotes

Where the lane finished, the heat of the sun seemed to spread as from a bonfire out into the empty space of the grounds beyond the outcastes colony. [Bakha] sniffed at the clean, fresh air around the flat stretch of land before him and vaguely sensed a difference between the odorous, smoky world of refuse and the open, radiant world of the sun. He wanted to warm his flesh; we wanted the warmth to get behind the scales of the dry, powdery surface that had formed on his fingers; we wanted the blood in the blue veins that stood out on the back of his hand to melt. He lifted his face to the sun, open eyed for a moment, then with the pupils of his eyes half closed, half open. And he lifted his chin upright.

Related Characters: Bakha
Related Symbols: The Sun
Page Number: 25
Explanation and Analysis:

[Bakha] had wept and cried to be allowed to go to school. But then his father had told him that schools were meant for the babus, not for the lowly sweepers. He hadn’t quite understood the reason for that then. Later at the British barracks he realized why his father had not sent him to school. He was a sweeper’s son and could never be a babu. Later still he realized that there was no school which would admit him because the parents of the other children would not allow their sons to be contaminated by the touch of the low-caste man’s sons. How absurd, he thought, that was, since most of the Hindu children touched him willingly at hockey and wouldn’t mind having him at school with them. […] These old Hindus were cruel. He was a sweeper, he knew, but he could not consciously accept that fact.

Related Characters: Bakha, Lakha
Page Number: 30
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 43–73 Quotes

A superb specimen of humanity [Bakha] seemed whenever he made the high resolve to say something, to go and do something, his fine form rising like a tiger at bay. And yet […] he could not overstep the barriers which the conventions of his superiors had built up to protect their weakness against him. He could not invade the magic circle which protects a priest from attack by anybody, especially by a low-caste man. So, in the highest moment of his strength, the slave in him asserted himself, and he lapsed back, wild with torture, biting his lips, ruminating his grievances […].

He contemplated his experience now in the spirit of resignation which he had inherited through the long centuries down through his countless outcaste ancestors, fixed, yet flowing like a wave, confirmed at the beginning of each generation by the discipline of the caste ideal.

Related Characters: Bakha (speaker), Sohini, Pundit Kali Nath
Page Number: 54
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 73–105 Quotes

The hand of nature was stretching itself out towards [Bakha], for the tall grass on the slopes of Bulashah Hills was in sight, and he had opened his heart to it, lifted by the cool breeze that wafted him away from the crowds, the ugliness and the noise of the outcastes’ street. He looked across at the swaying loveliness before him and the little hillocks over which it spread under a sunny sky, so transcendently blue and beautiful that he felt like standing dumb and motionless before it. He listened to the incoherent whistling of the shrubs. They were the voices he knew so well.

Related Characters: Bakha, Chota, Ram Charan
Page Number: 79
Explanation and Analysis:

It was a discord between person and circumstance by which a lion like [Bakha] lay enmeshed in a net while many a common criminal wore a rajah’s crown. His wealth of unconscious experience, however, was extraordinary. It was a kind of crude sense of the world, in the round, such as the peasant has who can do the job while the laboratory agriculturalist is scratching his head, or like the Arab seamen who sails the seas in a small boat and casually determines his direction by the position of the sun, or like the beggar singer who recites an epic from door to door. […]

As he sauntered along a spark of some intuition suddenly set him ablaze. He was fired with a desire to burst out from the shadow of silence and obscurity in which he lay enshrouded.

Related Characters: Bakha
Related Symbols: The Sun
Page Number: 81
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 105–139 Quotes

The beautiful garden bowers planted by the ancient Hindu kings and since then neglected were thoroughly damaged as the mob followed behind Bakha. It was as if the crowd had determined to crush everything, however ancient or beautiful, that lay in the way of their achievement of all that Gandhi stood for. It was as if they knew, by an instinct sure than that of conscious knowledge, that the things of the old civilization must be destroyed in order to make room for those of the new. It seemed as if, in trampling on the blades of green grass, they were deliberately, brutally trampling on a part of themselves which they had begun to abhor, and from which they wanted to escape to Gandhi.

Related Characters: Bakha, Mahatma Gandhi/Mohandas K. Gandhi
Page Number: 120
Explanation and Analysis:

Bakha saw a sallow-faced Englishman, whom he knew to be the District Superintendent of Police, standing by the roadside in a khaki uniform of breaches, polished leather gators and blue-puggareed, khaki sun helmet, not as smart as the military officers’, but, of course, possessing for Bakha all the qualities of the sahibs’ clothes. Somehow, however, at this moment Bakha was not interested in sahibs, probably because in the midst of this enormous crowd of Indians, fired with enthusiasm for their leader, the foreigners seemed out of place, insignificant, the representative of an order which seemed to have nothing to do with the natives.

Related Characters: Bakha, Mahatma Gandhi/Mohandas K. Gandhi
Related Symbols: English Clothes, The Sun
Page Number: 126
Explanation and Analysis:

As the brief Indian twilight came and went, a sudden impulse shot through the transformations of space and time, and gathered all the elements that were dispersed in the stream of [Bakha’s] soul into a tentative decision: ‘I shall go and tell father all that Gandhi said about us,’ he whispered to himself, ‘and all that that poet said. Perhaps I can find the poet some day and ask him about his machine.’ And he proceeded homewards.

Related Characters: Bakha (speaker), Lakha, Mahatma Gandhi/Mohandas K. Gandhi, Iqbal Nath Sarshar
Related Symbols: The Sun
Page Number: 139
Explanation and Analysis: