09 Chapter 4
09 Chapter 4
09 Chapter 4
CHAPTER IV
HE TERM VERBAL ART WAS used to define oral folklore that is,
Verbal art generally implies such type of art, even the literary
art, which is oral or spoken in nature. It is an indispensable part of literature.
Without the verbal art literature cannot reflect itself in society. Therefore
“the oral literature has association with the dental hygiene on the one hand
and with Freudianism on the other.”
Though song, myth, tale, proverb and riddle etc., are the verbal
art, yet there remains some kind of differences among them as special
genres, which can easily mark them out and we have to face some
difficulties in finding them out. But for Bascom “ the concept of verbal art
avoids all these difficulties and has the further advantage of emphasizing the
essential features which distinguish the folktale, myth, proverbs and related
forms.” 4
About the medium of verbal art, Bascom has his view: “The
medium of expression of verbal art is the spoken word rather than material
substances as in the graphic and plastic arts, tones and rhythms as in music,
or movements and gesture as in the dance.” 5
Dorson has given another analytical view about verbal art when
he observes, “Verbal art is sometimes called expressive literature. They are
spoken, sung and voiced forms of traditional utterance which show a
A Ib id , p 67
5 .Ib id , p. 69.
6 Ib id , p.74.
90
repetitive patterns. Its one of the large subdivision is folk narrative which in
turn has its manifold distinction which may fall on the spoken, sung and oral
traditional things. All oral folk expression is not verbal. Yodels, hollers,
cries, chants and laments may acquire their own traditional character based
on non lexical Sounds.” 7
1.Oral tradition
and 2.Written tradition
and as oral literature. W. R. Bascom has suggested using the term verbal art
in lieu o f oral literature or folk literature. He observes that oral literature-
folk literature—is verbal art and it will be better if we use the term verbal art
in place of folk literature or oral literature.
According to him,
“the terms ‘unwritten literature,’ ‘popular literature,’ ‘folk
literature,’ ‘primitive literature’ and ‘oral literature’ emphasize the relations
of these forms to literature but all are premised upon the irreconcilable
contradiction that literature is based upon letters and writing, whereas
folklore is not.” 10
Verbal art is the common term to avoid all these difficulties.
8.W. R. Bascom, Folklore and Anthropology, Pp. 284-85.
9.Ibid.
I0.W. R. Bascom, Contributions to Folkloristics, p.67
92
1 Ubid, p.68.
12. Bayard, The Materials o f Folklore,$A.
13. W. R. Bascom, Contributions to Folkloristic, p.70.
\ A.Ibid, p.70.
93
a) Verse narratives
as far as the author or the singer is concerned. This last trait is of the very
first importance in determining the quality or qualities, which gives the
ballad its peculiar place in literature. Unlike other songs, it does not purport
to give utterance to the feelings or the mood of the singer.” 17 according to
Prof. Ker, “It is not narrative poem only; it is a narrative poem lyrical in
form, or a lyrical poem with a narrative body in it.” 18 Prof. Gerould says, “
What we have come to call a ballad is always a narrative is always sung to a
rounded melody, is always learned from the lips of others rather than by
reading.” 19
i) A ballad is a narrative.
ii) A ballad is sung to the accompaniment of dance.
iii) A ballad belongs to the folk in content, style and
designation.
iv) A ballad focuses on a single incident moving itself by
dialogue and incident quickly to the end. 21
Classification of ballads
Looking at the situation from various angles, P. Goswami has classified the
Assamese ballads in the following heads:
i) Historical ballads
ii) Ballads of Magic
iii) Realistic
iv) Satirical. 24
Mythical ballads:
[Ai, the sitala devi hails from heaven by looking at the lake
temple and has reached the place of human being or the earth].
[Let us bow down to Ai and hold her feet and if we adore her
like this we can lead our life happily].
[Let us bow down to god Narayana who has created the things
as follows: the earth, the heaven, the salt, the thal, the fire, the
air, the barun (rain), and buran, gajan and brahman etc.].
Etiological ballads:
•»
[As Sri Rama He (God) has killed Baliraj the king o f banaras
and handed over the kingdom to Sugriba the younger brother o f
Baliraj. Riding on the chariot Sugrib forgot Ramchandra, which
aroused the anger of Laksmana and chased Sugrib to kill him at
his temple. Threatened by Laksmana Sugrib went away to find
out Ramachandra and cried out by repeating his name. By this
crying the Ramagiri turned into Rama].
Vandana
durgak pujile p a i !
Historical ballads:
Historical ballads are built from the authentic historical incidents and events.
These ballads contain some elements of the historical truths. Scholars
believe that these .ballads can form the core of the modem oral histories of
the communities and as such can be highly useful for writing new history
books. The adventure of the hero or the heroine gets an important place in
historical ballads. Therefore, these ballads can be identified with the famous
32 ibid, p. 222
105
i) Barphukanar git
33 Ibid, p.226
i
5) Gandhi’s so n g ,
6) Phulguri’s Dhawa etc.38
Realistic ballads:
Many Assamesi [ballads are more or less transcripts from life and reflect the
t!
realistic attitude to life. Sometimes these may describe ordinary love affairs.
21.Ibid. Pp.31-32;
38. N.C.Sarma, Lokasanuskriti, p.30.
108
Occasionally these types of ballads deal with marvelous incidents. They are
mostly found in the Kamrup and modern Darrang districts. According to P.
Goswami the realistic ballads “reflect a more or less realistic attitude to life
and may describe ordinary affairs, even love, occasionally. The marvelous
hardly enters into them.” 39 Examples of realistic ballads are given below:
be angling for the fish and Santi, the chaste lady of Dubala who
arrives at the lake for a bath, notices him when he was fishing.
She asks him what fish is he catching. We answers that he was
not catching fish but looking at her beauty. She does not reply
but is angry with him. He then goes home sad and enters the
“house of dissatisfaction.” His mother wants to know what has
happened to him and a female wreath-maker is called who asks
the merchant about the cause of his sorrow. He answers:
The wreath-maker directly goes to Santi and tells her how the
merchant is feeling about her and suffering. Her reply is that “he can come
1
to her if he brings for her dog a cup of rice, for her elephant a banana tree,
39.P.Goswami: Ballads and Tales o f Assam, p.51.
109
for her two sons gold cymbals, for her father-in-law a gold stick, for her
mother-in-law a sari of ‘fire’ silk, for her husband a garment of white silk
and for herself a gold necklace.” The wreath-maker goes back and repeats
what the chaste lady had told her.40 The ballad strangely ends without a
conclusion. However one can presume that the merchant was proposed some
impossible tasks before he could possess the woman. The general fairy tale
structure seems working here in this ballad too. However, the difference is
that in the fairy tales the hero does, more often than not, fulfill the
commitment concealed in the difficult tasks, but the ballad remains more
realistic and its narrative ends without completing the difficult tasks.
Therefore the social code of conduct for a married woman, a mother and a
chaste housewife is reestablished by deviating from the general fairy tale
ending in the ballad. One must notice that from a psychological point of
view the tasks proposed in this ballad are all what can be termed a bunch of
“impossibles” and have certain symbolic meanings in the context of the
social code which, reinforces the impossibility of this relationship. Terms
such as “fire silk,” “banana tree,” “gold cymbals,” “gold stick,” are loaded
with connotations matching impossibles, thereby underlining the impossible
relation the merchant had tried to establish.
Lilavati objects to his leaving her behind alone. Let her father-
in-law go instead and the merchant stays at home. When the
husband remains adamant, she prays—“Let the sea dry up” and
cries. The merchant is touched by Leavati’s crying and puts his
1i
‘gplden flute in Lila’s hand:
|i
4You give me your flute; should 1 eat or give it away? ’
'You give your rupee coin: should J eat them or give them away? ’
Thus the merchant gives her his golden girdle, his red
waistband, his wooden sandals and his gold cup. But she is not appeased.
She continues praying to the gods to cause the sea dry up. Then she proposes
that let him go by water and she will follow him on land. He gives her his
wishing ring and when he sails westward she is able to follow him on the
land. Both at last arrive at their home. “Thus Lila tests the love of her
husband ...”41 The other examples of realistic ballads are:
1) Kanya Baramahi
2) Fagala Parvatir git
2) The young wife’s sorrow etc.
41. P.Goswami, Ballads and Tales o f Assam, Pp 5 1-52.
Ill
Satirical ballads:
The village buffoon generally composes the satirical ballads. In Kamrup the
buffoon is known as Bhawra or impersonator. In upper Assam the term
Bahuwa is used for this character, in these ballads the things or incidents
which are socially unpleasant and the acts of the ruling class are satirized
morbidly. The ballads of this type have an aim to reform the particular class
of people, which is the object of the satire. Normally these ballads are
composed by word of mouth by the ballad singers and these compositions
are improvised in tune with the context of the singing event. This kind of
improvisations are often done by folk singer be he a Bhawra, Bhawaria,
Bahuwa, Ojapali, or the Dhulia. According to P. Goswami, “ballads of this
facetious type are not few in number, but they have no large circulation and
are not popular in the best tradition. They don’t have an essential element of
the ballad, the story. They may be composed about the opium-eater, the
harmful effects of tea, a circus party which visits the locality, the girl who is
not expert in spinning and weaving, and such subjects.” '12 Again there are
some other themes as well, on which these ballads are raised. These include
corrupt and selfish behaviour of the politicians such as the Minister, Member
of the Legislative Assembly, the bureaucrats such as the Maujadar, or the
village officials such as CJaon Burba. The village buffoon generally
composes the satirical ballads. In Kamrup the buffoon is known as Bhawra
or impersonator. In upper Assam the term Bahuwa is used for this character.
In these ballads the things or incidents which are socially unpleasant and the
acts of the ruling class arc satirized morbidly. The ballads of this type have
an aim to reform the particular class of people, which is the object of the
satire.
42. Ibid, Pp. 56-57
112
Even day to day events that touch the community such as “the murderer
husband, the bad days, when people don’t get vegetables, fish and meat
...”43 are also very well taken subjects of these ballads. The following are
some of the examples of satirical ballads.
43.Ibid, p.57. !
44. Ibid, p.57. !
, |
45.Ibid, p.57. , j
46.1bid, Pp.57-5a
113
He talks big but has to beg from door to door. The description
seems to throw some light on the roaming life led by the minstrels.”47
4) "Naharar Juna”: Here the young and inept Nahar finds that he has
nothing to eat at home. He tells his old mother that he will go out for
tr a d in g . H e s e ts o u t w ith a lo a d o f s ix s c o re fo w ls . “ T h e w a te r o f th e
r iv e r D ik h o w is u p to th e b r in k a n d th e fe rry m a n w ill n o t ta k e h im
a c ro s s . S o it is f o u n d th a t th e tr a d e rs a re a t th e f a ir th e m o th e r s
d a r lin g is n o t th e re . In s te a d o f lo a d o f s a lt N a h a r b r in g s b a c k a lo a d o f
c la y . T h a t w o u ld a t le a s t e n a b le o n e to s m e a r-c le a n th e f lo o r ...” 48
s p in a n d w e a v e . T h e y o u n g w ife p u rc h a s e s s o m e c o tto n a n d
a f te r g in n in g a n d b le a c h in g it s h e b e g in s s p in n in g :
A s e e r o f th e c o tto n s h e s p i n e s r e - le u - te u ,
A s e e r s h e s p i n s in to y a r n a s la r g e a s
T h e f i b r e o f th e b a n a n a ,
A s e e r s h e s p in s in th e m id d le o f th e n ig h t,
W ith th a t is t i e d th e tu s k e r e le p h a n t
A s e e r s h e s p in s in to y a r n th e f i n e s t o f a ll.
W ith th a t i s t i e d th e b u llo c k
S h e p u t s th e y a r n u p o n th e s h e lf ... 49
i
1
6) OkanirJam
7) Chah Puran
8) Puranar Git
9) Paehala Puran.50
with unreal powers and the tactfulness with which he solves things
magically have been depicted nicely. From that point of view these ballads
can be called the Romance. Sometimes in these ballads the sub-hero or the
heroine seems to be present who take the main part o f the action. Again, a
magical world has been reflected here where the ancient people gave
importance in the Pan-animism. Further, here different animals, the power of
nature and things are to be turned into human being. 5,According to P.
Goswami, “there are three ballads of this class besides a fragment, all
comparatively long. The first two: Manikowarar git and Phulkowarar git are
closely related, for the hero in the second is the son of the hero in the first.”
Baramahi Git
The Baramahi git (songs of twelve monthed) has taken an important role in
ballads of Assam. In other states other than Assam, they are known as
Baramasi or Baramasa songs. In some other states of India we find
sowmash (quarterly) and saymash (half yearly) songs as well. In the ballads
of this type the twelve months of the year have been described. Here the
description is about how the nature changes itself in each month. In A
Handbook o f Folk Materials o f North East India , have given an illusive
description of Baramahi Git as follows:
“Baramahi is a class of songs that depict the state of the mind from
month to month, usually of a young wife, while her husband is away on
business: a few (e.g. Ram-Baramahi) also speak of a sentiment of the
separated male. Most of them could be classified, as songs o f love -love
between husband and wife - expressed against the background of nature in
the different seasons. While some are small pieces simply describing the
lovelorn wife’s plight in successive months, quite a number have a strong
element in them, mostly concerning the return of the husband after a long
sojourn, the test of the fidelity of the wife, and their eventual happy reunion.
Such baramahis naturally approach the ballad. There arc few in which the
themes are deviations from this common pattern e.g., growing up of a child,
bride up to her jeoming of age, a young man’s infatuation with a married
i
woman etc. Assamese baramahis have echoes in those found in Barak
Valley.” 54
54.Birendranath Datta, N.C.Sarma, Prabin Das (Eds.), A Handbook o f Folklore Material
1 s
o f North East India ip.71. also P. Goswami, Bara Mahar Tera G it , / ’p.72-73.
118
The following is the beula barmahi that starts from the month of
bahag. The Oja and Pali in “Mare Gan” sing this song.
i"
I
Beula baramahi
sorrows due to forlorn love from the very beginning to the end. The other is,
in the first eleven months there is the description o f the sorrows due to the
separation o f the lover and the beloved and in the last month is devoted to
the union between the two.
b) Prose narrative:
Prose narrative is a term for the wide spread and important category o f
verbal art which includes myths, legends and folktales. These three are
related to each other in that way that they are narratives in prose. This fact
distinguishes them from proverbs, riddles, ballads, poems, tongue twisters
and other forms' o f verbal art. Prose narrative is clearly less equivocal for the
broad category jthan folktale. Folktale has often been used by folklorists to
, I
mean Marchen. The English term “ folktale” is equal to the German term
120
broader sense to include all forms of prose narrative, written or oral which
■ t
Religion has also played a mighty role in encouraging the narrative art.
For religious mind has tried to understand the beginnings and for ages has
told stories of ancient days and sacred beings —that might be acknowledged
as legends. In fact the whole cosmologies have unfolded themselves in these
legends and hierarchies of gods and heroes. Thus Thompson has found the
hero tale, the explanatory legend, and the animal anecdotes everywhere in
this world.
i . 1
Some of the Assamese tales explain rituals and related to gods
and spirits. These are usually called myths. In the villages of Assam popular
Hinduism flourishes in which the belief in large number of spirits emerges.
123
These dwell in fields, forests, lakes, and large trees. The tribal gods and
goddess like Burha-Gosain and Burhi Gosain worshipped by the Kacharies
have also been drawn to the Assamese Hindu villages. This way tales of the
nature came in vogue, which are supposed to be true.
is often said that they are told only for amusement, they have other
important functions, as the class of moral folktales should have suggested.
Dr. P. Goswami in his book Ballads and Tales o f Assam has classified oral
narratives in this following manner:
A. Tales and tradition
B. Songs
1. Narrative ballads
2. Lyric: m ostly love songs
3. Work songs
4. Play songs
5. Children songs etc.
C. Riddles
D. Proverbs
E. Sayings
F. Charms.60
Again prose narratives have been divided into the following heads:
Linda Degh has added to this aforesaid classification and made it much more
scientific:
A. Complex ta le :
B. Simple tales:
The wild animals, wild and domestic animals, men and wild animals
birds fish and other animals and objects: All these put together create
narratives with definite massages.
This group of tales includes playful, witty game like forms with brief
narrative core. The single motif can be used for the introduction and
the conclusion o f a complex tale, for children’s entertainment or for
humorous trick of refusal to tell a tale. As with certain lying tales, the
narrator of the formula tales does not demand attention to and concern
for the context but rather expects emotional response to the stylistic
devices he employs.
It has definite narrative core that must be repeated exactly. The action
may be launched at a wedding through the death of an animal by
eating of the object. Types “Death of the little hen,” “The old woman
and her pig (AT 2030), “The house that Jack built (AT 2035 6 .6 .) 61
Again W. R. Bascom has divided prose narratives into the
following sub genres. They are myth, legend and folktales. According to him
myths are prose narratives, which in the society in which they are told, are
considered to be truthful accounts of what had happened in the remote past.
They are accepted in faith; they are thought to be believed, and they eon be
cited as authority in answer to ignorance, doubt, or disbelief. Myths are the
embodiment of dogma; they are usually sacred, and they are often associated
with theology and ritual. Their main characters are not usually human beings
but they often have human attributes; they are animals, deities or culture
heroes, whose actions are set in an earlier world when the earth was different
from what it is today, or in another world such as the sky or under world.
Myths account for the origin of the world, of mankind o f death or for
characteristics of birds, animals, geographical features and the phenomena of
nature. They may recount the activities of the deities, their love affairs their
family relationships, their friendships and enmities, their victories and
defeats. They may, purport to explain details of ceremonial paraphernalia or
ritual, or why taboos must be observed but such etiological elements are not
confined to myths.
D o r s o n , T h e U n iv e r s it y o f C h ic a g o a n d L o n d o n , 197 2 ,P p .5 3 -8 0
130
narratives under a single heading, the folktale than to list them side by side
with myths and legends.
Myth, legend and folktale are not the only major categories of
prose narratives, under which all other kinds of prose narratives must be
classified as subtypes. Reminiscences or anecdotes, humorous or otherwise
jokes and jests may constitute the fourth and fifth such categories.
Reminiscence or anecdotes concern human characters that are known to the
narrator or his audience, but apparently they may be retold frequently
enough to acquire the style of verbal art and some may be retold after the
132
characters are no longer known at first hand. They are accepted as truth, and
can be considered as a subtype of the legend or a proto-legend. The
Kimbundu and the Marshallese distinguish anecdotes from the legends, as
well as we shall see but the Hawaiians do not. Anecdotes are not well
represented in any of the studies reviewed here. In contrast, jokes or jests do
not call for belief on part of the narrator or his audience, and in this resemble
folktales. It may be possible to distinguish jokes from folktales and other
prose narratives on formal grounds. Both jokes and anecdotes require more
attention by folklorists than they have received and yet they have got proper
attention as Dorson has made them the subtypes of the folktales and the
legend.
Dealing with the subject matter of a tale we can classify the folktales in the
following sub-genres:
1) Animal tale,
2) Magical or wondrous or romantic or supernatural tale,
3) Etiological or explanatory tale,
4) Jokes and humorous tale,
5) Trickster tale,
6) Cumulative tale or chain or formula tale,
7) Dilemma tale,
8) Cante fable,
135
9) Endless tale,
10) Religious tale.62
Animal tales
Animal tales have a noteworthy place in the genre of folktales. In the famous
animal tale animals seems to act like humans. All cultural categories the
humans have devised are imposed on animal characters so that the symbolic
messages humans want to communicate are communicated through this
medium. In that sense then animal tale is a symbolic mask to communicate
that, which, may not be communicable otherwise.
appears when the tale is clearly not in the mythical cycle. It is such non-
mythological stories, that we designate by the simple term “animal tales.”
They are designed usually to show cleverness of one animal and the
stupidity of another, and their interest usually lies in the humour or the
absurd predicaments the animal’s stupidity leads him into. The American
Indian series of the coyote and the popular European cycle of the fox and the
wolf, best known in America as the tales of Uncle Remus, are outstanding
examples of this form.” 64
all over India we fin d animal tales in which one animal tries to outwit
another. The fo x figures prominently in such tales, fo r instance, in the
Assamese “The Fox and the Monkey," fox plays the hero-role and in a
Kachari tale the fox's place is occupied by a hare. 65
Yet in some animal tales it has been observed that many human
characters play their roles very effectively alongside the animal characters
and more often than not sharing the major concerns of the tale or tales.
These characters speak and act like human beings to such an extent that the
narrator cannot distinctly identify the role-boundaries between man and the
beast.
In all Assamese tales it is seen that the fox takes the pivotal role
and outwits jother animal characters. It is depicted as a cunning and
resourceful type character while the tiger appears to be dull though it can
outwit others in matters of strength and speed. The point is that such tales
seem to emphasize that one does not always win by virtue of physical
strength; it may be that the wit may be more important than the strength.
This becomes the message of tales of this nature. However, among the “wild
animals the tiger plays an important role ”66in the tales in Assam.
The animal tale is not very long in size and form. The tales
mainly deal with different adventures of the hero-animal. The animals play
role in the tale just like human beings do. These talcs are very simple, so are
the characters also. One character, mainly the chief character wants to assist
others but consequently it wants to help the human being on its own. The
chief tales relating to fox are mentioned below.
Again there are some other tales, which mainly deal with the
tiger as the chief character of the tales. These are:
1. The tiger and the crab
2. The long legged one
3. The tiger’s marriage
Supernatural tales:
The tales of this sort are the extraordinary ones. These deal with the
adventurous work of human beings who are the chief characters of these
tales. Here the normal human being fights with the superhuman characters
engages in struggles with them and finally overpowers them and wins. The
hero’s life begins with various obstacles on his way but the hero successfully
overcomes them.
According to P. Goswami, “in tales of this sort the reins are
thrown on the neck of the imagination, and heroes and heroines with
marvelous ski 11s£ihid'achievements, supernatural adversaries, magical means,
often with a complex! plot, are their features. They are wholly fictional.”66*
Again Thompson, notes that “the clear-cut distinction made by the Irish
between legends supposed to be true and purely fictional tales, would be
very rare for example in India.” 67
1.Tejimala,
2. Champavati,
3. Panesai,
4. The kite’s daughter,
5. The demon Astrologer,
6. The tale of Phulkonwar,
140
It is very close to the local tradition “other terms for it are etiological, Nature
Sage, parquet story.” 68 These kind of tales mainly deal with the origin of
!
different things, origin o f the earth etc., things like Mango-tree, betel nut,
i
betel nut leaf, crushed rice and other things that are related to some religious
purposes or puja also the themes of the etiological tale. Again explanation of
natural business, the origin of hills and mountains, the birth of rivers, pond-
lakes etc., birth of different birds like Hudu, Owl, Crane, Jam Dakini, flowers
like Keteki, Kopou etc, belong to this category. Why it happened? How it
happened? - ail the answers o f such questions are concealed in the etiological
Tale. According to Stith Thompson “the local legend often explains the
existence of some hill or cliff or tells why a certain river menders over the
landscape. There are similar stories explaining the origins and characteristics
of various animats and plants, the stars and mankind and his institutions.
Frequently this explanation seems to be the entire reason for the existence of
the story, but more often than is usually recognized these explanations are
merely added to a; story to give an interesting ending. Such explanations may
indeed be attached to almost any narrative form, such as Marchen or the hero
tale.” 69
68. Stith Thompson, Op-cit, p. 21
69. Ibid \
141
Stith Thompson observes, “short anecdotes told for humorous purposes are
found everywhere. They are variously referred to as jest, humorous
anecdote, merry tale and (German) Schwank. Among some they are usually
animal tales, but even where this is true the action is essentially that
characteristic of men. Important themes producing these popular jests are the
absurd acts of foolish persons (the numskull tale), deception of all kinds, and
obscene situations. There is a tendency for jest to form cycles, since
humorous adventures become attached to some character that thereafter
attracts into his orbit all kinds of jest, appropriate and inappropriate. The
same hero may be celebrated for his clever ruses, and for his utter stupidity,
and obscene tales may often be told about him. But jests frequently detach
themselves from cycles and may be encountered in most unlikely places.
They are easily remembered and universally liked, so that they travel with
great ease. Some of the funny stories heard today have lived three or four
thousand years and have been carried all over the earth.” 70
P. Goswami has used the word Tetkuti as the alternate term for
joke or humorous tale in his book Tetkuti Kino fisher is the introducer for
the word joke. Jokes are “a playful judgment.” 71 Again P. Goswami
observes some of the Assamese jokes are essentially animal tales. For
example “Officer Fox,” “Teacher Fox,” and “The Tiger’s Marriage,” as
shown at No. 11 above are jokes types.
70. Ibid, p.9 ___
71. Ibid, p, 10
142
Trickster tales:
In Assamese these tales are called the Teton or the Teton’s tale. Here the
main character or the hero of the tale cheats the other characters. ‘The
interest is in the cleverness of the trickster who goes about his work with
comparative impurity. The trickster may on the occasion be deceived
himself. Further the trickster is frequently an animal. Among North
72. N.C. Sarnia, Lokasanskriti, Pp. 1-5 and P. Goswami, Ballads and Tales o f Assam,
Pp.6-11.
143
American Indians trickster stories are very popular. The trickster among
these people is frequently the Culture Hero who initiates a custom or gives
the people some item of material culture. The role of the Culture Hero is not
seen in the makeup of the Assamese trickster, whether man or animal”.
Stith Thompson observes, “The adventure of the Trickster, even when
considered by themselves are inconsistent. Part is the result of his stupidity,
and about an equal number shows him overcoming his enemies through
cleverness. Such trickster as Coyote, therefore, may appear in any of three
roles: the beneficent Culture Hero, the clever deceiver, or the numskull. As
we look at these incidents, we find that this mixture of concept is continually
present, so that any series of adventures is likely to be a succession of clever
tricks and foolish mishaps.” 7'1
74. Linda Degh :Folk Narratives in Folklore and Folklife: An Introduction , p.69 .
75- 7 6 . N.C. Sarm a. Op-cit, p.62
144
According to Linda Ddgh, This group includes playful, witty, game like
forms with a brief narrative core. The single m otif can be used fo r the
introduction and the conclusion o f a complex tale, fo r children's
entertainment, or fo r a humorous trick o f refusal to tell a tale. As with
certain thing tales (AT 1875-1886), the narrator o f the formula tales does
not demand attention to and concern fo r the content but rather exempts
emotional response to the stylistic devices he employs.
P. Goswami is of the view that here in this tale type the pattern
is more important than the plot. He further says that the cumulative tales are
told often in the. spirit of pure fun. “It includes playful, witty, game like
forms with a brief narrative core. The single motif can be used for the
introduction and the conclusion of a complex tale, for children’s
entertainment, or for a humorous trick of refusal to tell a tale.” 77
D ilem m a tales:
sleep withthe girl at night. He took the form of that young man
and began to stay there pretending to be the young man. The
lady did not pay much attention to the ghost and asked him to
stay in a different room. After some days when the actual
husband came back the riddle or the dilemma aroused to select
the actual husband. The villagers brought a big bamboo and
asked both of them to enter into the bamboo. The real husband
could not enter the bamboo [as he was not a ghost]. Thus the
problem was solved.” 79
/j) “A beautiful young girl, her lather, mother and brother selected
three bridegrooms for her. When she appeared at the marriage, at
the time three of them appeared at the place of the bride and three
of them fought for the girl. At last the girl died. Three of them
burnt her and buried. One o f them went away to bring the
medicine to bring her back to life. Another went away with her
asthi [remains] to throw in the river Ganges. And the other waited
near the dead body to keep watch at the burial place. In due course
the girl was brought back to life. Now the dilemma aroused who is
to marry the girl. The bride herself made the problem clear as she
accepted the man who has given her rebirth with medicine as her
father. The second one who threw her asthi in the Ganges as her
son and the third one was she accepted as her husband.” 80
i
147
Linda Degh observes that the “Numskull Tales or the Numskull Stories
form a specific narrative group that mocks the stupid acts of a whole
community ”81 This technique brings the Numskull Stories close to the
anecdote. They are brief, often reduced to a simile or a proverbial saying.
They are variable and tend to cluster around localities presumably settled by
silly people. _
remote, when the world was much as it is today. Legends are more often
secular than sacred and their principal characters are human. They tell of
migrations, wars and victories, deeds of past heroes, chiefs and kings, and
successions in ruling dynasties. In this they are often the counterparts in
verbal tradition o f written history, but they also include local tales of buried
treasure, ghosts, fairies and saints.
Text, texture and context are the three levels of study of folklore item. If we
want to understand the folklore materials clearly and elaborately, we must
149
know the text, texture and context of any kind of folklore item. The text of
folklore item is essentially a version or a single telling of a tale, a recitation
of proverbs, a singing of a folksong etc. The text may be considered
independent of its texture. In fact folklore as a discipline will never be
adequately defined unless or until all various genres or forms of folklore are
rigorously described. A folklore item is bound to mislead if only internally
analyzed. For example, the superstition “breaking a mirror is seven years
bad luck” has no effect on the people who do not have faith on any kind of
superstition. They cannot find out any reason to have any kind of
relationship between mirror and luck.
82. R ich ard M . D orson : 1964,ed. Buying the Wind:R e g io n a l F o lk lo re in the U n ited
States.C h icago, p . l
1 2 , p. 36
152
r
90. Malinwoski: 1965, ( 'oral Hardens and Their AA/g/V !! I he Language of Magic and
Gardening, Bloomington I irsl published in 19.L5 ,p. 22
155
a) He raised the idea of context but did not elaborate it i.e., he did
not mention about the observer and the performer.
b) He did not observe the context from the point of view of
cultural context of a particular ethnic group.
a) Age
b) Sex
c) Caste
d) Social position
His contemporary folklorist Dan Ben Amos developed his
contextual theory by taking the idea from:
a) Functional Anthropology
b) Sociolinguistic viewpoint
c) Ethnographic viewpoint
the task o f definition. With respect to any given item o f folklore one
mayanalyze its texture, its text and its context. It is unlikely that a genre o f
folklore could be defined on the basis o f just one o f these. Ideally, a genre
should be defined in terms o f all three.
100. c f .the earlier distinction between active and passive hearers o f tradition .( C.W.
The performing art and the study of performing art both are not
equal. The study of folklore performance includes oral literature, customs,
material culture etc. In other sense it is a theoretical development, which
stresses on performance, audiences, settings, situation, interaction and
creative text.
103. Ibid,P.3
164
Thus from the above discussion it is clear that the text and the
texture as well as the context - these three levels have played unavoidable
roles in folklore in general and oral narratives in particular.