By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Understand Vaikom Muhammad Basheer and Malayalam literature
  • 2Analyse the frame-narrative structure (story within a story)
  • 3Identify themes of vanity, mortality, and detachment
  • 4Recognise humour as a literary device
  • 5Apply the story's lessons to today's social-media culture
💡
Why this chapter matters
A masterful blend of humour, suspense, and self-discovery from Malayalam's greatest 20th-century writer. Teaches the universal lesson that vanity is fragile and mortality is the greatest teacher.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

The Snake and the Mirror — Class 9 English (Beehive)

"What a fool I was! Saving up all the money to make myself look better — and here I am sitting helpless before a snake!" — The Young Doctor (narrator)

1. About the Chapter

'The Snake and the Mirror' is a delightful, suspenseful, and quietly philosophical autobiographical story by Vaikom Muhammad Basheer — one of the greatest Malayalam writers of the 20th century. The story is told from the first-person perspective of a young homeopathic doctor who, while admiring himself in a mirror, finds a deadly cobra coiled on his shoulder.

Why It's a Memorable Story

  • A perfect blend of humour, suspense, and reflection
  • A satirical look at human vanity
  • A real-life incident, told with literary craft
  • Witty Malayalam-flavoured English
  • A clear, quiet moral without being preachy

Central Themes

  • The vanity of physical appearance
  • A brush with mortality changes perspective
  • Self-mockery as wisdom
  • Nature's reminder of human fragility
  • Detachment from material possessions

2. About the Author — Vaikom Muhammad Basheer

Quick Facts

  • Born: 21 January 1908, Thalayolaparambu, Vaikom, Travancore (now Kerala)
  • Died: 5 July 1994, Beypore, Kozhikode, Kerala (aged 86)
  • Profession: Writer (Malayalam), freedom fighter, journalist
  • Honours: Padma Shri (1982), Sahitya Akademi Fellowship, Vayalar Award
  • Title: 'Beypore Sultan' — affectionate name given by his readers

Why He Matters

  • Pioneer of modern Malayalam literature
  • One of India's most original 20th-century writers
  • Combined humour, simplicity, and depth like few others
  • His works translated into English, Hindi, Tamil, French, German
  • Set in Kerala but with universal themes

Notable Works

  • 'Pathummayude Aadu' (Pathumma's Goat) — comic novel
  • 'Balyakalasakhi' (Childhood Friend) — love story
  • 'Ntuppuppakkoranendarnnu' (My Grandad Had an Elephant!) — comic novel
  • 'Mathilukal' (Walls) — prison love story
  • 'Anuragathinte Dinangal' (Days of Love)
  • 'Shabdangal' (Voices)

Freedom Fighter

  • Joined the Indian freedom movement in his teens
  • Imprisoned multiple times by the British (1930s)
  • Used prison experiences in his writings

Style

  • Witty, conversational, deceptively simple
  • Strong sense of humour
  • Sharp social observation
  • Sympathy for the underdog
  • Use of everyday Kerala settings

3. Setting

  • A small, rented one-room dwelling in a Kerala village
  • It is a hot summer night
  • The room contains: a chair, a desk, a small mirror, books, clothes, a kerosene lamp
  • The roof has rafters (wooden beams) where rats live

The setting is humble — befitting a young, just-graduated doctor barely making a living.


4. Characters

The Young Doctor (narrator / protagonist)

  • Recently qualified homeopathic doctor
  • About 23-24 years old (just out of medical school)
  • Unmarried — lives alone
  • Earns little — patients pay in small change or food
  • Vain about his looks: spends his small income on shaving sets, talcum powder, hair tonic
  • Has dreams: wants to marry a doctor (fat with plenty of money) so they can practise together
  • By the end of the story: utterly changed by his encounter with the snake

The Snake (the Cobra)

  • Slithers down from the rafters
  • A fully grown cobra — deadly venomous
  • Glides silently onto the doctor's shoulder
  • A few moments later, slips down to the table, possibly attracted by the mirror
  • A few minutes later, slides away to safety
  • Not portrayed as a villain — just a snake, doing snake things

Other Characters (brief)

  • The doctor's friend to whom he later tells the story
  • The dream wife the doctor fantasises about (fat doctor with money)

5. Detailed Summary

Part 1 — The Setting

The story begins with the young doctor preparing to tell a story to a friend. He says he is going to share a true incident — something that happened to him a long time ago, which deeply influenced his outlook on life.

The setting was his rented room in a Kerala village. He had recently started his homeopathic practice. The room was small, sparsely furnished. He hadn't earned much — patients paid him in eight annas, sometimes a chicken — but he was building his practice slowly.

Part 2 — Vanity Before the Mirror

It was a hot night. The doctor had just had a wash. He was tired but couldn't sleep. He sat at his small desk with the mirror before him, the lamp burning.

He looked at himself and thought:

  • "How handsome I am."
  • "My nose is sharp, my forehead high — a doctor's forehead."
  • "I should improve my looks further."
  • "With a thin moustache, I'll look even more like a doctor."

He took out his shaving kit and decided to shave the next morning. He thought of all the expensive grooming products he had bought: hair tonic, talcum powder, shaving cream.

Suddenly, he had a brilliant idea — he would marry a doctor (a woman). She must be:

  • Fat (because lots of fat = lots of money/contentment in his view)
  • A doctor (so they could practise together)
  • He could rule over her
  • They would have plenty of practice and plenty of money

This shameless self-indulgence is the heart of the story's irony.

Part 3 — The Snake Arrives

While he sat there admiring himself, suddenly he heard a small sound. He looked down and saw a fully grown cobra slithering down from the rafters onto his back, slipping over his shoulder, and resting on the front of his neck!

The doctor was petrified — frozen with fear. The slightest move and the snake might bite him. A bite from a cobra meant almost certain death in those days (no medical access in a Kerala village at night).

For what felt like an eternity, the doctor sat motionless, the snake's body wrapped around his neck and shoulder. He could feel its cold scales against his skin.

Part 4 — The Mirror Saves Him

Then, slowly, the snake's head moved towards the mirror. It seemed to see its own reflection in the mirror. The cobra was fascinated.

The snake slid off the doctor's body and onto the table, gazing at its own reflection in the mirror. It seemed to examine itself, perhaps mistaking the reflection for another snake.

After some moments — which felt like forever to the doctor — the snake decided to leave. It slithered off the table and disappeared into the room, escaping somewhere into a hole.

Part 5 — The Doctor's Realisation

The moment the snake was gone, the doctor leapt up and ran out of the room. He ran to his friend's house and stayed there for the rest of the night.

In the morning, when he returned to his room, he found that EVERYTHING WAS GONE — his clothes, his shaving kit, his money, his books, his medical instruments — EVERYTHING had been stolen by thieves who must have come in through the open door.

Except: He noted with characteristic humour that the thieves had left his medical books alone — because they couldn't read them!

Part 6 — The Moral

The doctor reflects on the experience:

  • Just hours earlier, he had been vain about his looks
  • He had been planning fancy purchases and a wealthy marriage
  • Then the snake came — and showed him how fragile his life was
  • He realised: his vanity was foolish
  • All his material possessions were taken away by thieves
  • What remained: HE was alive, and that was enough

He says:

"I was no more conscious of the things I had lost. I had escaped from the snake. What more could I want?"

This is the moral: A brush with death teaches you what really matters.


6. Themes

1. Vanity vs Reality

The doctor's hours of self-admiration are shattered by the appearance of a snake. Vanity is fragile — it takes only one moment of real danger to expose how foolish self-obsession is.

2. Mortality and Perspective

Facing possible death from a cobra bite teaches the doctor what truly matters. Health and life are the greatest wealth.

3. The Snake as Teacher

The snake is not evil — it is an unexpected teacher. Nature corrects human folly in surprising ways. (Note: the snake itself was vain enough to be entranced by its reflection — a brilliant ironic parallel.)

4. Detachment from Material Possessions

The doctor's clothes, kit, money — all stolen. But he doesn't care, because he is alive. This is a deeply Indian philosophical theme — detachment (vairāgya) born from a brush with mortality.

5. Humour as Wisdom

Basheer never preaches. He uses humour to deliver the moral — making the reader laugh at the doctor's vanity even while learning the lesson.

6. The Universal Lesson

Though set in a Kerala village, the story's lessons are universal — anyone can identify with vanity, fear, and the relief of survival.


7. Literary Devices and Style

Genre

  • Autobiographical short story
  • Humorous fiction
  • Frame narrative (story told to a friend)

Narrative Technique

  • First-person — narrator is the doctor himself
  • Frame narrative — doctor tells the story to a friend (story-within-a-story)
  • Conversational tone

Tone

  • Light, witty, self-mocking
  • Suspenseful in the middle
  • Reflective at the end

Style

  • Simple, accessible English (translated from Malayalam)
  • Heavy use of dialogue and inner monologue
  • Short paragraphs, building suspense

Symbolism

  • The mirror = vanity, self-obsession
  • The snake = mortality, reality, the universe's correction of human folly
  • The shaving kit & hair tonic = the doctor's vanity items
  • The stolen possessions = the futility of materialism
  • The books left behind = ironic commentary (thieves couldn't read = books are 'safe' from thieves)

Humour Techniques

  • Self-mockery — the doctor laughs at his own past vanity
  • Irony — the snake also admires itself in the mirror!
  • Contrast — grand fantasies vs immediate danger
  • Understatement — 'I was a bit alarmed' for being inches from a deadly cobra

Cultural Touches

  • Homeopathy — popular alternative medicine in Kerala
  • Eight annas / a chicken — old Indian currency and rural payment customs
  • Kerala rural setting — rafters, oil lamps, hot summer nights
  • 'Marry a fat doctor' — humorous Indian rural mindset

8. Memorable Lines

"How handsome I am."

"I should marry a doctor — a fat one. With lots of money."

"Suddenly the cold object slithered down... a fully grown cobra."

"The snake was attracted by the mirror. It seemed to enjoy looking at its reflection."

"When I went back in the morning, everything was gone. Everything except the books."

"I was no more conscious of the things I had lost. I had escaped from the snake. What more could I want?"


9. The Story's Hidden Layers

Two Vanities — Doctor and Snake

The story has a wonderful symmetry: the doctor admires himself in the mirror, and then the snake admires itself in the same mirror. The snake's vanity saves the doctor's life. Both are vain creatures — the difference is that the doctor learns the lesson.

Detachment Without Bitterness

The doctor doesn't bemoan his stolen possessions — he simply accepts the loss. There is no self-pity. This is karma yoga / vairāgya in literary form.

The Universal in the Particular

A specific Kerala incident becomes a universal parable. Anyone, anywhere, has been vain. Anyone could be humbled by a sudden encounter with mortality.


10. The Story's Message

  1. Vanity is the most fragile thing in the world — it can be shattered in seconds.
  2. Mortality is the greatest teacher — a brush with death clarifies what matters.
  3. Material possessions are temporary — wealth, looks, status can all be taken away.
  4. Survival itself is a gift — not to be taken for granted.
  5. Humour heals — laughing at oneself is the beginning of wisdom.
  6. Nature humbles us — humans are not the masters they think they are.

11. Why This Story is Still Important

Cultural Significance

  • Basheer's writing brought rural Kerala to the world
  • Modernised Malayalam literature
  • Inspired generations of Indian writers
  • His humour is timeless

Modern Relevance (2026)

  • Today's social media vanity is just the doctor's mirror multiplied a millionfold
  • Influencer culture, selfies, filters — all are forms of self-obsession
  • The story's message is more urgent in the age of Instagram than ever
  • One health scare can rewrite a person's priorities — just like the snake

Indian Philosophical Roots

  • Vairāgya (detachment) — a core Indian concept
  • Echoes of the Bhagavad Gita: do your duty, accept outcomes
  • The Buddha's first noble truth: life involves suffering, vanity is futile

12. Conclusion

'The Snake and the Mirror' is a masterpiece of the short story form — short enough to read in 15 minutes, but deep enough to change how a reader sees themselves. Vaikom Muhammad Basheer, with characteristic Malayalam wit, gives us a young doctor whose vanity is interrupted by a cobra — and whose life is forever changed.

The lesson is not that we must be ashamed of caring about our looks — but that we must keep PERSPECTIVE. Life, health, and the moment we are alive are the real wealth. Mirrors and kits and fantasy marriages are decoration on top.

For Class 9 students, this story is an introduction to Malayalam literature, to the art of humour-as-wisdom, and to one of the gentlest, deepest lessons that literature can teach: be humble; you might meet a snake.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Author
Vaikom Muhammad Basheer (21 Jan 1908 – 5 Jul 1994)
Greatest Malayalam writer of 20th century; 'Beypore Sultan'
Birthplace
Thalayolaparambu, Vaikom, Travancore (now Kerala)
Honours
Padma Shri (1982); Sahitya Akademi Fellowship; Vayalar Award
Genre
Autobiographical short story (frame narrative)
Doctor tells story to a friend
Protagonist
Young homeopathic doctor (autobiographical, narrator)
About 23-24 years old, just out of medical school
Setting
Hot summer night, small rented one-room dwelling, Kerala village
Antagonist
A fully grown cobra (snake) — non-villainous, just doing snake things
Slithers from rafters, coils on doctor's shoulder
Symbolic objects
Mirror (vanity); shaving kit (vanity); books (irony — thieves couldn't read)
Famous works of Basheer
Pathummayude Aadu; Balyakalasakhi; Ntuppuppakkoranendarnnu; Mathilukal
Freedom-fighter background
Imprisoned multiple times by British in 1930s for nationalist activities
Central insight
Both doctor AND snake admire themselves in the mirror — symmetry of vanity
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Saying the snake bit the doctor
The snake DID NOT BITE the doctor. It coiled on his shoulder, then slid to the mirror to admire itself, then slithered away unharmed. The doctor was spared.
WATCH OUT
Saying he was an MBBS doctor
He was a HOMEOPATHIC doctor — a different system of medicine, popular in Kerala and India. He had just completed his homeopathy course.
WATCH OUT
Forgetting what happened to his possessions
After he ran out and stayed at his friend's house, THIEVES came and STOLE EVERYTHING from his room — except his medical books (which they couldn't read).
WATCH OUT
Confusing the year or place
Set in a Kerala village in pre-independence India (around 1930s-40s based on Basheer's age). Specific time not given in story.
WATCH OUT
Saying he became poor and bitter
On the contrary — the doctor felt LIBERATED. He said: 'I was no more conscious of the things I had lost. I had escaped from the snake. What more could I want?'

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Author
Who wrote 'The Snake and the Mirror' and in what language did he originally write?
Show solution
✦ Answer: Vaikom Muhammad Basheer (1908-1994) — one of the greatest 20th-century Malayalam writers, known as the 'Beypore Sultan'. He originally wrote in Malayalam; the story has been translated into English.
Q2EASY· Plot
Why did the snake not bite the doctor?
Show solution
✦ Answer: The snake was attracted by its own reflection in the mirror on the doctor's table. It slid off the doctor's shoulder onto the table to gaze at itself, and after some time, slithered away without harming the doctor.
Q3MEDIUM· Character
Describe the doctor's vanity before the snake's appearance.
Show solution
Step 1 — Self-admiration before the mirror. The doctor sat at his desk on a hot night, looking at himself in the mirror. He thought he was 'handsome' — admiring his sharp nose and high forehead. Step 2 — Grooming obsession. He had spent his small income on expensive grooming items — hair tonic, talcum powder, shaving cream, expensive shaving kit. He planned to grow a 'thin moustache' to look more like a doctor. Step 3 — Fantasy marriage. He fantasised about marrying a FAT, RICH FEMALE DOCTOR — so they could practise together and earn lots of money. He imagined ruling over her and having a comfortable life. Step 4 — Self-image as 'doctor'. He repeatedly thought of his 'doctor's forehead', his future success, his appearance. He was obsessed with how he looked and how he would be perceived. Step 5 — Irony. All this VANITY was based on superficial things — looks, status, money. None of it would protect him from the snake about to appear. ✦ Answer: Before the snake arrived, the doctor was completely lost in vanity. He admired his looks in the mirror, planned expensive grooming purchases (hair tonic, shaving kit), fantasised about marrying a rich fat female doctor for money, and imagined his future glory. This shallow self-obsession sets up the story's central irony — all his vanity would prove worthless in the face of mortal danger.
Q4MEDIUM· Theme
What does the doctor learn from his encounter with the snake?
Show solution
Step 1 — A brush with mortality. Sitting frozen with a deadly cobra on his shoulder, the doctor came face to face with how easily he could die. This single moment shattered his world. Step 2 — The futility of vanity. His expensive grooming kit, his fantasy marriage, his self-admiration — all suddenly seemed POINTLESS. None of these could save him from the snake. Step 3 — Loss of possessions. After he ran out, thieves stole everything from his room — money, clothes, instruments. But he didn't care, because he was alive. Step 4 — A new perspective. He realised: SURVIVAL ITSELF IS THE GREATEST GIFT. Health and life are real wealth. Everything else — looks, money, status — is decoration. Step 5 — A philosophical change. He emerged from the experience with a sense of DETACHMENT (vairāgya in Sanskrit) — accepting life as it is, not chasing vain fantasies. Step 6 — His own words. 'I was no more conscious of the things I had lost. I had escaped from the snake. What more could I want?' ✦ Answer: The doctor learns that VANITY IS FRAGILE and MORTALITY IS THE GREATEST TEACHER. His brush with the cobra shows him that all his grooming, fantasy plans, and self-admiration are worthless compared to the simple fact of being alive. After losing all his material possessions to thieves, he feels not sorrow but liberation — survival itself is the real wealth. The story teaches detachment from materialism, born from a moment of mortal danger.
Q5HARD· Analysis
Discuss how Vaikom Muhammad Basheer uses humour to convey a serious moral message. Refer specifically to the irony of the snake also admiring itself in the mirror.
Show solution
Step 1 — Basheer's style. Basheer is famous for using humour to deliver depth. His stories never preach — they make you laugh first, then think. Step 2 — The doctor's vanity as comedy. The opening of the story is COMIC — a young man admiring himself, fantasising about a fat rich wife, planning a 'doctor's moustache'. The reader laughs at his shallow vanity. Step 3 — The cobra's arrival heightens humour. Then suddenly — a COBRA on his shoulder! The juxtaposition of vain self-admiration and mortal danger is comically jarring. Basheer uses this contrast for maximum effect. Step 4 — The masterstroke: the snake's own vanity. Here is Basheer's genius — the SNAKE ITSELF is so taken by its reflection in the mirror that it forgets to bite the doctor. The snake is just as vain as the doctor! Both are mirror-gazing creatures. Step 5 — Symbolic mirroring. • The doctor admires himself in the mirror • The snake admires itself in the mirror • TWO SELF-ADMIRERS, side by side • The snake's vanity SAVES the doctor's life This is a profound, funny, philosophical moment all at once. Step 6 — The moral, lightly delivered. Basheer never moralises. He simply shows us: • Vanity is everywhere (even snakes have it) • Vanity is foolish (it nearly killed the doctor) • But vanity is also surprising (it can save you too!) The moral is implicit, not preached. Step 7 — Loss of possessions as final comic-philosophical touch. When the doctor returns to find EVERYTHING STOLEN — but he doesn't care because he's alive — this is again a comic-philosophical moment. Loss becomes liberation. The thieves' inability to steal books (couldn't read!) adds another layer of dark humour. Step 8 — Why this combination works. Pure preaching would be boring. Pure horror would be one-dimensional. Pure comedy would be shallow. But HUMOUR + DANGER + REFLECTION together produce LASTING WISDOM that readers carry away with them. Step 9 — Application today. Today's social-media culture is a vast mirror — selfies, filters, likes, followers. Basheer's story is more relevant now than ever. We are ALL the young doctor, admiring ourselves in the mirror, while the world's fragility hangs over us. Step 10 — Conclusion. Basheer's brilliance is making the reader LAUGH at human vanity (including their own) without ever sounding judgemental. The snake mirrors the doctor — and BOTH mirror US. That is great literature: showing us ourselves, gently. ✦ Answer: Basheer uses HUMOUR throughout — the doctor's silly fantasies, the absurd marriage plan, and most brilliantly, the SNAKE ALSO ADMIRING ITSELF IN THE MIRROR. This ironic symmetry (doctor + snake = both vain creatures) delivers the moral without preaching: vanity is universal, fragile, even comic. The thieves stealing everything except his unreadable books adds another layer of dark humour. Basheer's genius is the LIGHT TOUCH — making readers laugh at human vanity (their own included) while quietly teaching the deep lesson that life is the only true wealth. In the age of social media, this story is more relevant than ever.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Author: Vaikom Muhammad Basheer (21 Jan 1908 – 5 Jul 1994)
  • Born: Thalayolaparambu, Vaikom, Travancore (now Kerala)
  • Nickname: 'Beypore Sultan' (his fans gave him this title)
  • Padma Shri 1982; Sahitya Akademi Fellowship; Vayalar Award
  • Originally Malayalam writer; freedom fighter (jailed in 1930s)
  • Genre: autobiographical short story; frame narrative (story to friend)
  • Protagonist: young homeopathic doctor (~23-24 yrs)
  • Setting: small rented room in Kerala village, hot summer night
  • Key objects: mirror, lamp, shaving kit, hair tonic, talcum powder, books
  • Doctor's vanity: admires himself, plans fancy moustache, dreams of fat-rich wife
  • Snake: fully grown cobra; slithers from rafters onto doctor's shoulder
  • Snake's behaviour: attracted by mirror, gazed at own reflection, then left
  • Aftermath: doctor ran to friend's house; thieves stole everything; only books remained (unreadable to thieves)
  • Doctor's realisation: vanity is foolish, life itself is the real wealth
  • Famous quote: 'I was no more conscious of the things I had lost. I had escaped from the snake. What more could I want?'
  • Other Basheer works: Pathummayude Aadu, Balyakalasakhi, Mathilukal
  • Symbolism: mirror = vanity; snake = mortality/reality check

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 4-5 marks per board paper

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
MCQ / Very Short11-2Author; setting; profession; key objects
Short Answer31Doctor's vanity; snake's role; moral
Long Answer50-1Humour + moral; symbolism; today's relevance
Prep strategy
  • Basheer: Malayalam writer (1908-1994), Padma Shri 1982, 'Beypore Sultan'
  • Genre: autobiographical short story; frame narrative
  • Doctor is HOMEOPATHIC (not allopathic)
  • Note the irony: BOTH doctor and snake admire themselves in mirror
  • Snake didn't bite — was distracted by its own reflection
  • Thieves stole everything EXCEPT his medical books (couldn't read!)
  • Famous closing: 'What more could I want?'

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Indian homeopathy

Homeopathy remains popular in India today — over 200,000 registered homeopaths. The young doctor's struggles to earn a living are still relevant to many rural doctors.

Vaikom Muhammad Basheer Smriti Award

Annual literary award given in Kerala in Basheer's honour.

Mainstream filmmaking

Basheer's novels and stories have been adapted into films: 'Mathilukal' (Adoor Gopalakrishnan, 1990) won National Film Awards.

Social media vanity

In the age of selfies and Instagram, Basheer's lesson about mirror-vanity is more relevant than ever. Schools use this story for media literacy discussions.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Identify Basheer as Malayalam writer + Padma Shri
  2. Emphasise the FRAME NARRATIVE structure
  3. Highlight the SYMMETRY — both doctor AND snake admire themselves
  4. Quote the closing line: 'What more could I want?'
  5. For long answers, structure: vanity setup → snake encounter → loss of possessions → philosophical realisation
  6. Connect to today's social-media culture for bonus depth

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Read other Basheer stories: 'The Walls' (Mathilukal), 'Pathummayude Aadu'
  • Compare with other 'animal as teacher' stories in world literature
  • Malayalam literary tradition: Basheer, M.T. Vasudevan Nair, O.V. Vijayan
  • Indian philosophy: vairāgya (detachment) — Bhagavad Gita, Bhagavata Purana
  • Frame narrative tradition: Boccaccio's Decameron, Chaucer's Canterbury Tales
  • Homeopathy history in India — Hahnemann's system arrived 1830s

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Board Class 9High
English Olympiad (SOF IEO)Medium
ASSET EnglishMedium
UGC NET EnglishMedium — Indian writing in English/translation
Kerala State Civil ServiceMedium — Malayalam culture

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Basheer adds a wonderful comic touch: the thieves couldn't read, so they didn't recognise the value of medical books! In rural pre-independence Kerala, literacy was low among the thief class. The books — which were the doctor's professional capital — were 'safe' from theft simply because they weren't recognised as valuable. A brilliant ironic detail.

In the doctor's worldview (which Basheer satirises), FAT = WELL-FED = WEALTHY. A fat woman would come from a prosperous family with dowry and resources. A DOCTOR wife would mean shared practice, double income, easier life. So 'fat doctor' = rich + professional. Basheer presents this fantasy with comic exaggeration to show how shallow and material-minded the young doctor was — making his lesson all the more powerful.

The story is told in autobiographical style — the doctor is the narrator. While Basheer's exact facts may have been fictionalised, the autobiographical FEEL is strong. Basheer was a master of blending real-life experience with literary craft. The story may reflect an incident from his own youth or someone he knew — but the LITERARY truth (the lesson about vanity and mortality) is what matters.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 20 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
Editorial process →
Header Logo