READ AND FIND OUT
Q1. Who was Dr Sadao? Where was his house?
Ans. Dr Sadao Hoki was an eminent Japanese surgeon and scientist.
He had spent eight valuable years of his youth in America to learn all that
could be learnt of surgery and medicine there. He was perfecting a discovery
which would render wounds entirely clean.
Dr Sadao’s house was built on rocks well above a narrow beach that was outlined
with bent pines. It was on a spot of the Japanese coast.
Q2. Will Dr Sadao be arrested on the
charge of harbouring an enemy?
Ans. Dr Sadao knew that they would be arrested if they sheltered a
white man in their house. The wounded man was a prisoner of war who had escaped
with a bullet on his back. Since Japan was at war with America, harbouring an
enemy meant being a traitor to Japan. Dr Sadao could be arrested if anyone
complained against him and accused him of harbouring an enemy.
Q3. Will Hana help the wounded man
and wash him herself?
Ans. The gardener and the cook were frightened that their master
was going to heal the wound of a white man—an enemy. They felt that after being
cured he (the white man) will take revenge on the Japanese. Yumi, the maid, was
also frightened. She refused to wash the white man. Hana rebuked the maid who
had refused to wash a wounded helpless man. Then she dipped a small dean towel
into the steaming hot water and washed the white man’s face. She kept on
washing him until his upper body was quite dean. But she dared not turn him
over.
Q4. What will Dr Sadao and his wife do
with the man?
Ans. Dr
Sadao and his wife, Hana, had told the servants that they only wanted to bring
the man to his senses so that they could turn him over as a prisoner. They knew
that the best possible course under the circumstances was to put him back into
the sea. However, Dr Sadao was against handing over a wounded man to the
police. He dedded to carry him into his house. He operated upon him and
extracted the bullet from his body. He kept the white man in his house. He and
his wife looked after him and fed him till he was strong enough to walk on his
legs. .
Q5. Will Dr Sadao be arrested on the
charge of harbouring an enemy?
Ans. It
was the seventh day since Dr Sadao had operated upon the young white man. Early
that morning, their three servants left together. In the afternoon, a messenger
came there in official uniform. He told Dr Sadao that he had to come to the
palace at once as the old General was in pain again.
Hana, who had thought that the officer had come to arrest Dr Sadao, asked the
messenger, “Is that all?” The baffled messenger enquired if that was not
enough. She tried to cover her mistake by expressing regret and admitted that
the General’s illness was enough. Dr Sadao told the General about the white man
he had operated upon. Since Dr Sadao was indispensable to the General, he
promised that Dr Sadao would not be arrested.
Q6. What will Dr Sadao do to get rid
of the man?
Ans.Dr
Sadao had told the old General that he had operated upon a white man. The
General promised to send his private assassins to kill the man silently and
secretly at night and remove his body. Dr Sadao left the outer partition of
white man’s room open. He waited anxiously for three nights. The servants had
left their house. His wife Hana had to cook, clean the house and serve the wounded
man. She was unaccustomed to this labour. She was anxious that they should get
rid of the man.
Dr Sadao told Tom, the white man, that he was quite well then. He offered to
put his boat on the shore that night. It would have food and extra clothing in
it. Tom might be able to row to the little island which was not far from the
coast. It had not been fortified. The .water was quite deep. Nobody lived
there, as it was submerged in storm. Since it was not the season of storm, he
could live there till he saw a Korean fishing boat pass by. He gave the man his
flashlight. He was to signal twice with his flashlight at sunset in case his
food ran out. In case, he was still there and all right, he was to signal only
once.
Dr Sadao gave the man Japanese clothes
and covered his blond head with a black doth. In short, Dr Sadao helped the man
to escape from Japan. At the same time he also got rid of the man.
READING WITH
INSIGHT
Q1.There are moments in
life when we have to make hard choices between our roles as private individuals
and as citizens with a sense of national loyalty? Discuss with reference to the
story you have just read.
Ans. Dr
Sadao Hoki faces a dilemma when he finds the body of an unconscious wounded
white man lying on the lonely coast with dangerous rocks near his house. His
first reaction was that the person was perhaps a fisherman who had been washed
from his boat. He ran quickly down the steps. His wife, Hana came behind him.
When they came near, Sadao found that the man was wounded and lay motionless.
His face was in the sand. As they saw his face, they found that he was a white
man with long yellow hair and a rough yellow beard.
Being an expert surgeon, Dr Sadao saw that the man had a gun-wound on the right
side of his lower back. He at once packed the wound with sea moss to stanch the
fearful bleeding. Since Japan was at war with America, the white man was an
enemy. Dr Sadao muttered, “What shall we do with this man?” He answered the
question himself, “The best thing that we could do would be to put him back in
the sea.” His wife approved of his decision.
Then Sadao made another observation. If they sheltered a white man in their
house they would be arrested and if they turned him over as a prisoner, he
would certainly die. Hana still insisted on putting him back into the sea. From
his battered cap, Dr Sadao concluded that he was a sailor from an American
warship. The man was a prisoner of war. He had escaped and that was why he was
wounded in the back..
Hana asked if they were able to put him back into the sea. Sadao then said that
if the man was whole he could turn the man over to the police without
difficulty. He cared nothing for the man. He was their enemy. All Americans
were their ‘enemy’. But since he was wounded… Hana understood his dilemma and
realised that in the conflict between his sense of national loyalty and his
duty as a doctor, it was the latter which proved dominant. Since Sadao too
could not throw him back to the sea, the only course left for them was to carry
him to their house. Sadao enquired about the reaction of the servants.
Hana said that they would, tell the servants that they intended to give the man
to the police. She told Sadao that they must do so. They had to think of the
children and the doctor’s position. It would endanger all of them if they did
not give that man over as a prisoner of war.
Sadao agreed and promised that he would not think of doing anything else.
Q2. Dr Sadao
was compelled by his duty as a doctor to help the enemy soldier. What made
Hana, his wife, sympathetic to him in the face of open defiance from the
domestic staff?
Ans. Dr
Sadao and his wife, Hana, together lifted the wounded man and carried him to an
empty bedroom in their house. The man was very dirty. Sadao suggested that he
had better be washed. He offered to do so if she would fetch water. Hana was
against it. She suggested that the maid, Yumi, could wash the man. They would
have to tell the servants. Dr Sadao examined the man again and remarked that
the man would die unless he was operated upon at once. He left the room to
bring his surgical instruments.
The servants did not approve of their master’s decision to heal the wound of a
white man. Even Yumi refused to wash the white man. There was so fierce a look
of resistance upon Yumi’s round dull face that Hana felt unreasonably afraid.
Then she said with dignity that they only wanted to bring him to his senses so
that they would turn him over as a prisoner. However, Yumi refused to have
anything to do with him. Hana asked Yumi gently to return to her work.
The open defiance from the domestic staff hurt Hana’s feelings. She had told
the servants to do what their master commanded them. She was convinced of her
own superiority. She now became sympathetic to her husband and helped him in
his efforts to heal the wounded man. Though the sight of the white man was
repulsive to her, she washed his face and his upper body. She prepared herself
to give him the anaesthetic according to her husband’s instructions. She had
never seen an operation. She choked and her face turned pale like sulphur. She
felt like vomiting and left for a while. She returned after retching and
administered anaesthetic to the man. Thus she co-operated with her husband
fully to save the wounded man.
Q3. How would
you explain the reluctance of the soldier to leave the shelter of the doctor’s
home even when he knew he couldn’t stay there without risk to the doctor and
himself?
Ans. On
the third day after the operation, the young man asked Dr Sadao what he was
going to do with him and if he was going to hand him over. Dr Sadao said that
he did not know himself what he would do with the mem. He ought to hand him
over to the police as he was a prisoner of war.
The young man saw that Dr Sadao and his wife Hana were different from other
Japanese. They spoke English well, looked after him and served him food. Seven
days after the operation of the man, Dr Sadao was called to the palace to see
the General. Hana thought that the police had come to arrest Dr Sadao. Dr Sadao
confided in the General and he (General) promised to send his personal
assassins to kill the man and remove his body. Dr Sadao waited for three
nights. Nothing happened. Then he made a plan to let the prisoner escape. He
told Tom, the young American, about it. The young man stared at him and asked
if he had to leave. It seemed he was reluctant to leave. Dr Sadao told him that
he should understand everything clearly. It was not hidden that he was there
and this situation was full of risk for himself as well as for the doctor and
his family. Thus it is quite clear that the reluctance of the soldier was
caused by the single motive of self-preservation. He knew from the treatment he
had received from the couple that they would save him.
Q4. What
explains the attitude of the General in the matter of the enemy soldier? Was it
human consideration, lack of national loyalty, dereliction of duty or simply
self-absorption?
Ans. During
his meeting with the General, Dr Sadao told him about the man he had operated
on successfully. He explained that he cared nothing for the man. The General
appreciated his skill and efficiency and promised that he would not be
arrested.
The General thought it quite unfortunate that the man had been washed up to Dr
Sadao’s doorstep and thought it best if he could be quietly killed. He promised
to send his private assassins to do so and remove his dead body. He suggested
that Dr Sadao should leave the outer partition of the white man’s room to the
garden open at night.
It is evident that the General had no human consideration in this matter. For
him an enemy was an enemy and must be wiped out. He wanted the man to be
eliminated silently to save the doctor from being arrested. It was neither lack
of national loyalty nor dereliction of duty that guided and inspired his
decision. It was simply his sense of self-absorption. He “wanted to keep Dr
Sadao safe only for his own sake. He had no faith in the other Germany trained
doctors. He might have to be operated upon anytime when he had another attack
and he had full faith in the skill and loyalty of Dr Sadao only.
This fact is further corroborated by the General’s remarks to Dr Sadao, one
week after the emergency operation upon the General. Dr Sadao informed him that
the man had escaped. The General asked whether he had not promised Sadao that
he would kill the
man for him. Dr Sadao replied that he had done nothing. The General admitted
that he had forgotten his promise as he had been suffering a great deal and he
thought of nothing but himself. He revealed the whole truth. He admitted that
it was careless of him to have forgotten his promise. But added that it was not
lack of patriotism or dereliction of duty on his part.
Q5. While
hatred against a member of the enemy race is justifiable, especially during
wartime, what makes a human being rise above narrow prejudices?
Ans. It
is the consciousness of the demands of one’s calling that make a sensitive soul
respond to the call of his duty as a professional doctor to attend to the
wounded human being regardless of his being an enemy.
In the story ‘The Enemy’ Dr Sadao Hoki finds a prisoner of war washed ashore
and in a dying state thrown to his doorstep. As a patriot, it is his duty to
hand him over to the police. If he does not want to be entangled, the next best
thing is to put him back to the sea.
However, the surgeon in him instinctively inspires him to operate upon the
dying man and save him from the jaws of death. First, he packs the wound with
sea-moss to stanch the fearful bleeding. Then he brings him home with the help
of his wife. In spite of stiff opposition and open defiance of the servants, he
operates upon the man and harbours him till he is able to leave. He knows fully
well the risk of sheltering a white man—a prisoner of war—in his house. But his
sentimentality for the suffering and wounded person help him rise above narrow
national prejudices and extend his help and services even to an enemy.
Q6. Do you
think the doctor’s final solution to the problem was the best possible one in
the circumstances?
Ans. Yes,
I think the doctor’s final solution to the problem was the best possible one in
the circumstances. Initially, the doctor as well as his wife thought that the
best as well as kindest thing would be to put him back into the sea. But
neither of them was able to put him back into the sea.
Sadao explained that if the man was whole he could turn him over to the police
without difficulty, but since he was wounded, the doctor could not throw him
back to the sea. He could not kill the man whom he had saved from the jaws of
death.
The General promised to send his private assassins to kill the man and remove
his dead body. Sadao waited for three nights for their arrival, but they never
came as the General being preoccupied with his own suffering, forgot everything
else.
Meanwhile the fear of Hana, the doctor’s wife, that he would be arrested on the
charge of harbouring an enemy kept on mounting. Dr Sadao made up his mind to
get rid of the man as it was not only inconvenient but also dangerous for them
to have him there any longer. He, therefore, quietly devised the plan of
letting the prisoner escape by using his own boat and Japanese clothes.
As soon as the enemy left, the servants returned and life became normal once
again. Dr Sadao informed the General that “the man” had escaped. The General
admitted that he had forgotten his promise as he thought of nothing but himself
as he was suffering a great deal. He confessed that it was careless of him but
it was not his lack of patriotism or dereliction of duty. In short, the doctor’s
strategy to let the prisoner escape was the best possible solution to the
problem under the prevailing circumstances.
Q7. Does the
story remind you of ‘Birth’ by A. J. Cronin that you read in ‘Snapshots’ last
year? What are the similarities?
Ans. Yes,
the story ‘The Enemy’ by Pearl S. Buck certainly reminds us of the story
‘Birth’ by A. J. Cronin. Both the stories have certain obvious similarities.
Both the stories revolve around the protagonist who is a doctor. Both of them
focus on the doctor’s devotion and dedication to his duty and his concern for
the well-being of his patient. The doctor sacrifices his own rest and comfort
while attending to the patient. If the doctor brings a ‘still-born’ baby back
to life in the story ‘Birth’, Dr Sadao Hoki performs no less a miracle. He
saves an almost dying man from the jaws of death by skilfully extracting the
bullet from his body and giving him medicines and injections for quick relief.
Dr Sadao runs a greater risk than Dr Andrew Mason. While the former could be
arrested on the charge of harbouring an enemy and condemned to death, the
latter (Dr Andrew) was foregoing rest and staking his reputation as a medical
practitioner. He had had a disappointing evening with Christine, the girl he
loves, but he forgets his personal feelings and concentrates on the safe
delivery of child and then of reviving the middle-aged mother and the
still-born child. Similarly, Dr Sadao is dedicated to his patient and his
problems. He forgets everything while concentrating on the operation. His
servants have defied him for sheltering an enemy and run away. His wife, Hana,
has to do menial jobs while attending to the patient and her retching disturbs
him. Her distress and his inability to attend to her make him impatient and
irritable, but he does not desert the man who is under his knife. To conclude,
we may say that the zeal, dedication and efforts of both the doctors are
similar. There is difference of degree in the risk factor, but their devotion
to suffering humanity is undoubtedly of the same kind.
Q8. Is there
any film you have seen or novel you have read with a similar theme?
Ans. I
remember an old Hindi film ‘Dr Kotnis ki Amar Kahani’ that deals with a similar
theme. The eminent doctor gives up his practice and goes to the war front to
look after the wounded and ailing soldiers and render them medical help. He
spares no pain in performing his duties. He ignores the demands of his own body
that is sleep, rest and comfort. Service to suffering humanity is his sole
motivation and in his zeal to restore the maximum number of victims back to
health, the doctor suffers from physical and mental exhaustion and ultimately
dies.
The film based on the life of Florence Nightingale, the lady with the lamp,
also glorifies the spirit of service and sacrifice of a member of the medical
profession. It is through her sheer hard work and dedication to duty that
Florence Nightingale raises the job of a nurse to a high pedestal.
MORE QUESTIONS SOLVED
SHORT ANSWER
TYPE QUESTIONS
Q1.What do you learn
about Sadao’s father from the story ‘The Enemy’?
Ans. Sadao’s
father was a visionary. He knew that the islands near the sea coast were the
stepping stones to the future for Japan. No one could limit their future as it
depended on what they made it. His son’s education was his chief concern. He
sent his son to America at the age of twenty-two to learn all that could be
learned of surgery and medicine. He loved the Japanese race, customs and
manners.
Q2. Why was Dr
Sadao being kept in Japan and not sent abroad with the troops?
Ans. Sadao
was an eminent surgeon and a scientist. He was perfecting a discovery which
would render wounds entirely clean. Secondly, the old General was being treated
medically for a condition for which he might need an operation. Due to these
two reasons Sadao was being kept in Japan and not sent abroad with the troops.
Q3. Who was
Sadao’s wife? Where had he met her? Why did he wait to fall in love with her?
Ans. Hana
was Sadao’s wife. He had met her by chance at an American professor’s house.
Professor Harley and his wife had been kind people. They held a party at their
home for their few foreign students. Hana was a new student. He waited to fall
in love with her until he was sure she was Japanese. It was because his father
would never have received her unless she had been pure in her race.
Q4. When and
where did Sadao marry Hana? How was their married life?
Ans. Sadao
married Hana when they returned to Japan after finishing their work at medical
school. Sadao’s father saw her. The marriage was then arranged in the old
Japanese way. They had been married years enough to have two children. Their
married life was quite happy. They still loved each other.
Q5. ‘Both of
them saw something black came out of the mists’. What did they see and how did
they react to it?
Ans. It
was a man who had been flung up out of the ocean, to his feet by a breaker. He
staggered a few steps with his arms above his head. Then the curled mists hid
him again. When they next saw him, he was on his hands and knees crawling. Then
they saw him fall on his face and lie there. Sadao thought that he was perhaps
a fisherman who had been washed from his boat. He ran quickly down the steps.
Hana followed him.
Q6. In which
state did Sadao and Hana find the man? What did they learn about him?
Ans. The
man lay motionless with his face in the sand. As they turned the man’s head,
they saw that he was a white man with long yellow hair. His young face had a
rough yellow beard. He was unconscious. From his battered cap they learnt that
he was a sailor from an American warship.
Q7. What did
Sadao learn about the white man’s wound?
Ans. Sadao
saw that a gun-wound had been reopened on the right side of his lower back. The
flesh was blackened with powder. The man had been shot recently and had not
been tended. It was bad chance that the rock had struck the wound and reopened
it.
Q8. How can
you say that Sadao’s head and hands worked in different directions?
Ans. Sadao’s
head told him to put the man back into the sea as he was an American soldier-an
enemy of Japan. His trained hands seemed, of their own will, to be doing what
they could to stanch the fearful bleeding. He packed the wound with the
sea-moss that strewed the beach. The bleeding was stopped for the moment.
Q9.What
dilemma did Sadao face about the young white man?
Ans. The
white man was wounded. He needed immediate medical care. Dr Sadao could do so.
But if they sheltered a white man in their house, they would be arrested. On
the other hand, if they turned him over as a prisoner, he would certainly die.
Dr Sadao was in a fix. It was difficult for him to come to any decision.
Q10.What was
the attitude of Sadao and Hana towards the white man?
Ans. They
stared upon the inert figure of the white man with a curious repulsion. Both
talked of putting him back into the sea, but neither of them was able to do so
alone. They hesitated. Sadao said that being American, the man was his enemy.
He would have handed him over to the police if he had not been wounded. But
since he was wounded… He left the sentence incomplete, implying that he
couldn’t do so.
Q11.What
solution did Hana offer to resolve Sadao’s predicament?
Ans. Hana
found that neither of them could throw the white man back into the sea. There
was only one thing to do. They must carry the man into their house. They must
tell the servants that they intended to hand him over to the police. She
reminded her husband of his position and children. It would endanger all of
them if they did not give that man over as a prisoner of war.
Q12. How did
Sadao and Hana take the man inside their house?
Ans. Together
they lifted the man. He was very light. His arms were hanging down. They
carried him up the steps and into the side door of the house. This door opened
into a passage. Down the passage, they carried him towards an empty bedroom.
They laid the man on the deeply matted floor.
Q13. Hana took
out a soft quilt from the wall cupboard. Then she hesitated. Why? What did her
husband suggest? Why did she not agree?
Ans. The
quilt was covered with flowered silk and the lining was pure white silk.
Secondly, the man was quite dirty. So Hana hesitated. Her husband suggested
that he should be washed. He offered to wash him, if she was willing to fetch
water. She could not bear for him to touch the man and offered to tell Yumi,
the maid, to wash him.
Q14. Why did
Dr Sadao had to touch the man? What did he observe?
Ans. The
utter pallor of the man’s unconscious face moved Dr Sadao first to stoop and
feel his pulse. It was faint but it was there. Then he put his hand against the
man’s cold breast. The heart too was yet alive. He observed that the man would
die unless he was operated on.
Q15. Why did
Hana come behind Sadao when he went out of the room quickly?
Ans. Hana
did not wish to be left alone with the white man. He was the first she had seen
since she left America. He seemed to have nothing to do with those whom she had
known there. Here he was her enemy, a menace, living or dead.
Q16. How did
the servants react when their master told them about the wounded white man?
Ans. The
servants were frightened and puzzled. The old gardener told Hana that the
master ought not to heal the wound of that white man. He said that the white
man ought to die. First he was shot. Then the sea caught him and wounded him
with her rocks. If the master healed what the gun and the sea had done, they
would take revenge on them.
Q17. Why had
Hana to wash the wounded man herself?
Ans. Hana
told Yumi to fetch hot water and bring it to the room where the white man was.
Yumi put down the wooden bucket, but refused to wash the dirty white man. Hana
cried at her severely. She told her to do what her master commanded her to do.
The fierce look of resistance upon Yumfe dull face made Hana afraid. Under
these circumstances, Hana had no option but to wash the white man herself.
Q18. How did
Hana wash the wounded man?
Ans. First,
Hana untied the knotted rugs that kept the white man covered. When she had his
breast bare, she dipped a small clean towel into the steaming hot water and
washed his face carefully. She kept on washing him until his upper body was
quite clean. But she dared not turn him over for fear of the wound.
Q19. What help
did Dr Sadao seek from Hana while operating the wounded white man?
Ans. First,
he asked her to fetch towels. Then he told her that she would have to give him
the anaesthetic if he needed it. Since, Hana had never done so, he told her
that it was easy enough. He asked her to soak the cotton with anaesthetic and
hold it near his nostrils. When he breathed badly, she had to move it away a
little. Thus, Hana proved herself helpful to her husband.
Q20. How did
Hana react to Sadao’s absorption in his work?
Ans. Sadao
went on with his swift concise movements. He did not seem to hear her. She was
used to his absorption when he was at work. She wondered for a moment if it
mattered to him what the body was upon which he worked so long as it was for
the work which he did so excellently.
Q21. What did
Sadao remark when he peered into the wound with his bright surgeon’s light?
Ans. He
remarked that the bullet was still there. He said so with cool interest. He
then wondered
how deep that wound was. If it was not very deep it was possible that he could
get the bullet. He observed that the bleeding was not superficial. The man had
already lost much blood.
Q22. What made
a cool surgeon (like Dr Sadao) speak sharply to his wife? How did she react to
his command?
Ans. The
sight of blood made Hana choke. Her face turned pale. She had never seen an
operation. Dr Sadao spoke sharply and asked her not to faint. He did not put
down his exploring instrument. He argued that if he stopped then the man would
surely die. Hana clapped her hands to her mouth, leaped up and ran out of the
room. He heard her retching in the garden. But he went on with his work.
Q23. What
forced Dr Sadao to be impatient and irritable with his patient?
Ans. Sadao
heard Hana retching in the garden and said that it would be better for her to
empty her stomach. He went on with his work. He had forgotten that she had never
seen an operation. But her distress and his inability to go to her at once made
him impatient and irritable with the man who lay like dead under his knife.
Q24. What
instructions did Sadao give to Hana to administer the anaesthetic and when?
Ans. The
man was beginning to stir. Hana asked Sadao where the anaesthetic was. Sadao
motioned with his chin. She now had the bottle and some cotton in her hand.
Sadao instructed her to saturate the cotton with anaesthetic and hold it near
the man’s nostrils. She had to move it away a little when he breathed badly.
Q25. How did
Hana react to the stories they heard of the sufferings of the prisoners of war?
What made her think so?
Ans. These
stories came like flickers of rumour, told by word of mouth. They were always
contradicted. Hana wondered whether these stories were true. In the newspapers
the reports were that people received the Japanese armies gladly with cries of
joy at their liberation.
Q26. In what
context does Hana remember General Takima? What does she infer?
Ans. General
Takima was a ruthless despot. At home he beat his wife cruelly. No one
mentioned it now because he had won a victory in a battle in Manchuria. Hana
remembers him in the context of the sufferings of the prisoners of war. She
infers that if a man (like General Takima) could be so cruel to a woman in his
power, he would be quite cruel to a prisoner. The deep red scars on the white
man’s neck confirmed her apprehension.
Q27. “Ml
thought left him. He felt only the purest pleasure.” Why, do you think, did Dr
Sadao behave in this way?
Ans. Dr
Sadao was concentrating hard on locating the bullet. He felt the tip of his
probing instrument strike against something hard, dangerously near the kidney.
He was filled with the purest pleasure at the success of his skill. He thought
only of curing his patient and did not answer even his wife’s query.
Q28. Dr Sadao
was ‘familiar with every atom of this human body’. Who had seen to that
knowl¬edge and how?
Ans. It
was Sadao’s old American professor of Anatomy who had seen to the perfect
knowledge of human body. He would tell his students, ‘Ignorance of the human
body is the surgeon’s cardinal sin.” He would go a step further and impress
upon the budding surgeons to have as complete knowledge of the body as if they
had made it. To operate with anything less than that meant a murder.
Q29. Comment
on Dr Sadao’s attitude to the white man in the light of the following:
(i) “Sadao took up his
wrist, hating the touch of it.”
(ii) “But certainly I do
not want this man to live.”
(iii) “This man will
live in spite of all.”
Ans. Sadao
has an ambivalent attitude towards the wounded white man. Since he is their
enemy, he hates touching his wrist. As a patriot he does not want that man to
live. However, as a surgeon, he does not want the man to die after a successful
operation. Hence, in order to revive his faint, feeble pulse, he gives him an
injection. The pulse now flutters and then grows stronger. The survival of the
man is the victory of the surgeon’s skill.
Q30. How did Harm
look after the white man? How did he react?
Ans. Hana
had to serve him herself, for none of the servants would enter the room. She
did not like him and yet she was moved to comfort him. She found the man quite
weak and terrified. She knelt and fed him gently from the porcelain spoon. He
ate unwillingly but still he ate.
Q31. How did
Dr Sadao respond to the boy’s query: “What are you going to do with me?…Are you
going to hand me over?”
Ans. Dr
Sadao examined the boy and then told him that he did not know himself what he
would do with the boy. He ought to give him to the police as he was a prisoner
of war.
Q32. What did
Hana inform Sadao about the servants? How did Sadao react to it?
Ans. The
servants felt that they could not stay there if their master sheltered the
white man there any more. They also accused them of liking Americans and of
having forgotten to think of their own country first. Dr Sadao protested that
it was not true. Americans were their enemies. But he had been trained not to
let a man die if he could help him. Hana told him that the servants could not
understand it.
Q33. ‘Somehow
the household dragged on’. How did the servants behave after Sadao had operated
upon the American? What opinions did they express?
Ans. The
servants grew more watchful day by day. Their courtesy was as careful as ever,
but their eyes were cold towards Hana and Sadao. The old gardener was sore, why
Sadao had not let the young man bleed when he was so near the death. The cook
remarked contemptuously that being proud of his skill to save life that he
saves any life. Yumi added that they must think of the children. She enquired:
“What will be their fate if their father is condemned as a traitor?”
Q34. What two
things happened on the seventh day after that?
Ans. In
the morning the servants left together with their belongings tied in large
square cotton kerchiefs. Hana paid them off gracefully and thanked them for all
that they had done for her. In the afternoon, a messenger came to the door in
official uniform.
Q35. How did
Hana react when she saw a messenger at the door in official uniform?
Ans. Hana
was working hard on unaccustomed labour. When she saw the uniformed messenger,
her hands went weak and she could not draw her breath. She feared that the
servants must have told everything already. She thought that they had come to
arrest Dr Sadao.
Q36. Why, do
you think, had the messenger come to Dr Sadao’s house? How did Hana react to
the message and what did the messenger take exception to?
Ans. The
messenger had arrived there to ask Dr Sadao to come to the palace as the old
General was in pain again. In her anxiety for her husband’s safety, Hana asked
if that was all. The messenger took exception to the word ‘all’ and enquired if
that was not enough. Hana apologised for the error.
Q37. Why did
Dr Sadao tell the General everything about the man he had operated upon?
Ans. Dr
Sadao could not report the arrival of the escaped prisoner at his doorstep. He
wanted to get rid of the man for the sake of his wife. He explained his position
to the General. He did not care for that man, but since he had operated upon
the man he could not kill him. The
General praised his skill, called him indispensable and promised that he would
allow nothing to happen to Dr Sadao.
Q38. Why, do
you think, did the old General not want Dr Sadao to be arrested?
Ans. Dr
Sadao had told the General that he could stand only one more such attack as he
had that day. Then he would have to be operated upon. The General wanted Dr
Sadao to operate upon him. He had no faith in the other surgeons trained by the
Germans. So, he would not let Dr Sadao be arrested.
Q39. What plan
did the old General suggest for getting rid of the ‘man’?
Ans. He
thought that it would be best if the white man could be quietly killed—not by
the doctor, but by someone who did not know him. He offered to send two of his
private assassins any night to his home. These capable assassins would make no
noise. They knew the trick of inward bleeding. They could even remove the body.
Dr Sadao had to leave the outer partition of the room open and this made
restless.
Q40. Why did
Sadao sleep badly at night after meeting the General?
Ans. Sadao
woke up time and again thinking he heard the rustling of footsteps, the sound
of a twig broken or a stone displaced in the garden—or any noise such as men
might make who carried a burden. This went on for three nights. Every night
Sadao expected the assassins to come and this made him restless.
Q41. What plan
did Dr Sadao devise to get rid of the man?
Ans. Dr
Sadao devised the plan of letting the man escape to the nearest uninhabited
island. He told the man everything. He put his boat on the shore with food and
extra clothing. He advised the man to row to the little island not far from the
coast. He could live there till he saw a Korean fishing boat pass by.
Q42. How was
the plan of the prisoner’s escape executed?
Ans. Dr
Sadao had put food and bottled water in his stout boat. He also put two quilts.
After supper, he cheked the American again. He gave him his flashlight and told
him to signal two flashes if he needed more food. One signal would mean he was
OK He had to signal at sunset and not in the darkness. The man was dressed in
Japanese clothes and his blond head was covered with a black cloth.
Q43. What did
Sadao tell the General after a week? Why did he wait that long?
Ans. The
General had undergone an emergency operation a week before. The gall bladder
was involved. He was in critical state for twelve hours. Then he recovered
slowly. After a week Sadao felt that the General was well enough to be spoken
to about the prisoner. He told the General that the prisoner had escaped.
Q44. What did
the General tell Dr Sadao about his promise to kill the prisoner for him?
Ans. Dr
Sadao did not want to disturb the General much. So he simply said that the
prisoner had escaped. The General at once remembered his promise. He confessed
that he had been suffering a great deal. He thought of nothing but himself. He
forgot his promise, but it was not lack of patriotism or dereliction of duty.
Q45. “I wonder
why I could not kill him?” What makes Dr Sadao think so?
Ans. After
the departure of the young American, Dr Sadao thinks of the other white faces
he had “come across. The Americans were full of prejudice and he had found it
bitter to live there. The white people were repulsive even in their kindness.
It was relief to be openly at war with them. Then he remembered the youthful,
haggard face of the prisoner. It was also white and repulsive. He thought it
strange that he spared his enemy. He wondered why he could not kill him.
LONG ANSWER
TYPE QUESTIONS
Q1. Why did Sadao Hoki
go to America? What do you learn about his experiences there?
Ans. Sadao’s
education was his father’s chief concern. So he had been sent at twenty-two to
America to leam all that could be learnt of surgery and medicine. He studied
there for eight years and returned to Japan at thirty. Before his father died,
Sadao had become famous not only as a surgeon, but also as a scientist.
He had had great difficulty in finding a place to live in America because he
was a Japanese. The Americans were full of prejudice and it had been bitter to
live in it, knowing himself to be superior to them. An ignorant and dirty old
woman at last consented to house him in her miserable home. He found her
repulsive to him even in her kindness.
One of his American professors and his wife were kind people. They were anxious
to do something for their few foreign students. But their rooms were quite
small, the food was very bad, the professor was a dull person and his wife was
a silly talkative woman.
Q2. How can
you say that Dr Sadao’s father was a Japanese to the core?
Ans. Dr
Sadao’s father had high dreams about the future of Japan. There was no limit to
their future as it depended on what they made it. He never played or joked with
his only son. But he spent infinite pains upon him. For the sake of the best
possible medical education, he sent his son to America. Sadao met Hana there,
but waited to fall in love with her until he was sure she was Japanese. His
father would never have received her unless she had been pure in her race.
Their marriage was arranged in the old Japanese way only after Sadao’s father
had seen her when both of them had come home to Japan after finishing their
education.
He was a Japanese every inch. The floor of his room was deeply matted. He would
never sit on a chair or sleep in a foreign bed in his house. The quilt was
covered with flowered silk and the lining was pure white silk. In short,
everything here had been Japanese to please him.
Q3. What do
you learn about Dr Sadao and Harm from the story ‘The Enemy’?
Ans. Sadao
and Hana represent modem, enlightened and educated Japanese who get the benefit
of American training in medical science, yet retain love and respect for their
moth¬erland and its customs and traditions. He was an obedient and caring son
who had deep regard for his father. He married Hana only after his father had
seen her. Their marriage was arranged in the old Japanese way. They were
perfectly happy and had two children. Even years after their marriage they
retained the same love and affection for each other. Since Japan was at war
with America, they considered the Americans as their enemies. The waves of the
ocean had flung up a wounded young American to their doorstep. They wanted to
put him back into the sea, but neither of them was able to do so. They brought
the wounded man inside their house in spite of repulsion for him. Sadao had
been trained not to let a man die if he could help him. The ethics of the
medical profession forced him to save even his enemy. His wife Hana obeyed all
his commands and instructions like a child though she suffered a lot
internally.
Q4. What was
the dilemma that Sadao faced when he saw a wounded, young white man washed to
his doorstep? What solution did his wife, Hana, offer to resolve his (Sadao’s)
predica¬ment?
Ans. The
young white man was bleeding. He had a bullet wound on his lower back. He
needed immediate medical attention. Dr Sadao, an eminent surgeon, could do so.
But if they sheltered a white man in their house, they would be arrested. On
the other hand, if they tinned him over as a prisoner, he would certainly die.
Neither of them could put him back into the sea and get rid of him. They were
true humanist. So, they hesitated.
Sadao declared that being an American, the man was his enemy. He would have
handed him over to the police if he had been hale and hearty. But since he was
wounded… He left the sentence unfinished implying that he could not do so as he
had been trained not to let a man die if he could help him.
Hana suggested that they must carry the man inside the house. They must tell
the ser¬vants that they intended to hand him over to the police. She reminded
her husband of his position and the children. It would endanger all of them if
they did not hand that man over as a prisoner of war. His doubts were removed
and they decided to carry the man into their house.
Q5. How did Dr
Sadao take the man inside his house and try to save him?
Ans. Dr
Sadao and Hana lifted the man together. He was very light. His arms were
hanging
down. They carried him up the steps and into the side door of the house. This
door opened •
into a passage. Down the passage, they carried him towards an empty bedroom.
They laid the man on the deeply matted floor. The man was quite dirty, so Dr
Sadao suggested that he should be washed.
The utter pallor of the man’s unconscious face moved Dr Sadao first to stoop
and feel his pulse. It was faint, but it was there. Then he put his hand
against the man’s cold breast.
The heart too was yet alive. He observed that the man would die unless he was
operated upon immediately. He left the room to bring his instruments to perform
an emergency operation to save the man’s life.
Q6. How did
the servants initially react to the presence of a white man in their masters
house?
Ans.When
Dr Sadao told the cook and the gardener about the wounded young white man, they
had brought inside the house, the two servants were frightened and puzzled. The
*
superstitious old gardener looked so annoyed that he pulled the few hairs on
his upper lip.
He bluntly told Hana that the master ought not to heal the wound of that white
man. He said that the white man ought to die. First he was shot. Then the sea
caught him and wounded him with her rocks. If the master healed what the gun
and the sea had done, they would take revenge on them.
Even the maid, Yumi, refused to wash the man though Hana cried at her severely
and told her to do what the master had commanded her to do. The servants seemed
to be in a defiant mood. The fierce look of resistance upon Yumi’s dull face
frightened Hana. She thought that the servants might report something that was
not as it happened. She main¬tained her dignity and told the maid that they
wanted to bring him to his senses so that they could turn him over as a
prisoner. Even this explanation failed to convince Yumi and she refused to do
anything for the white man.
Q7. What was
the change in the mood of open defiance of their master on the part of domestic
staff as time passed and the white man was kept in Dr Sadao’s house ?
Ans. Dr
Sadao not only kept the young white man at his home, but also operated upon
him. It was the third day after the operation. The servants continued their
open defiance of their master and did not enter the white man’s room. Hana
served him herself. Hana told Sadao what the servants had conveyed through
Yumi. The domestic staff felt that they could not stay there if their. master
sheltered that man any more. They accused them of having forgotten to think of
their own countiy because they had lived for a long time in America. They
thought that their master and mistress liked Americans. Dr Sadao tried to
clarify his position as a man and as a doctor. Hana told him that the servants could
not understand this subtle distinction.
”Somehow the household dragged on. The servants grew more watchful day by day.
They were careful in their courtesy as ever but their eyes were cold. The old
gardener was the most vocal. He taunted that their master knew very well what
he ought to do. He was sore why Sadao had not let the young man bleed when he
was so near to death. The cook remarked contemptuously that the young master
was so proud of his skill to save life that he saved any life. Yumi added that
they must think of the children. She enquired: “What will be their fate if
their father is condemned as a traitor?”
Since the white man was not handed over to the police, even after a week, all
the servants left on the seventh day after that.
Q8. Hana was a
loving, caring, devoted and obedient wife who was quite anxious about her
husband’s wellbeing, position and reputation? Discuss.
Ans. Hana
is the alter ego of her husband, Dr Sadao Hoki. She has adapted herself to his
ways. She knows that saving a life is a mission for him and when he is
attending on his patient, he forgets everything else—even Hana herself. Even
years after their marriage, they retain the same love and affection for each
other.
She cared for him a lot and would not let him stand outside in the cold foggy
February night. She was a bit sentimental, yet pragmatic in her approach. She
was quick to judge what went on in her husband’s mind and suggested solutions.
She maintained her dignity when the servants showed resistance and open defiance.
As an obedient and devoted wife, she carried out all the orders and
instructions of her husband. She washed the wounded white man, gave him
anaesthesia and later on food.
She was worried about her husband’s safety, position and reputation. Initially,
she suggested to throw the man back into the sea. She was afraid that the
servants might misreport. Her fears are exhibited clearly when a messenger in
uniform arrives from the palace. In order to calm down her fears, Dr Sadao
decides to get rid of the white man anyhow. In short, she is an ideal life
partner.
Q9. What
impression do you form of Dr Sadao as a man and as a surgeon from your reading
of the story ‘The Enemy’?
Ans. Dr
Sadao Hoki was a true Japanese like his father. He was a brave boy who obeyed
and respected his father and loved Japanese culture, tradition and people. He
was intelligent and hard working and studied surgery and medicine in America
for eight years. He mar¬ried a Japanese girl, Hana, whom he had met in America.
But he waited for his father’s approval and their marriage was arranged in the
old Japanese way after they had re¬turned home to Japan. They had two children.
He still loved his wife as warmly as ever. He returned home at fixed hours.
Dr Sadao was an eminent surgeon as well as scientist. The old General had full
faith in him. He was not sent abroad with the troops because the old General
might need an operation. Dr Sadao was called even at odd hours from the palace.
Dr Sadao was a real doctor. He would not let a man die if he could help him.
That is why he cured even an “enemy” of bullet wound and did not hand him over
to the police. He faced a great risk to his position and life by sheltering the
man. Since Dr Sadao could not kill the man himself, he sought the help of the
old General to get rid of him. When that plan failed, he let the prisoner
escape in order to calm down the fears of his wife and let the household run
properly. It may be a blemish from a narrow patriotic angle but a sensitive
soul can’t take back what he has given.
Q10. Under
what circumstances did Dr Sadao let the wounded white man escape? Was it lack
of national loyalty, professional ego and sentimentality, human consideration
or just an attempt to save his skin?
Ans. Hr
Sadao had no love for the repulsive Americans and he considered them his
enemies. Unfortunately, the sea-waves pushed a wounded white man to his
doorstep. He knew that the best possible thing was to throw him back into the
sea. He could not handover a wounded ‘enemy’ to police because he would
certainly die. Being a doctor, he could save him and not kill him. His efforts
to get him removed with the help of the old General’s private assassins did not
bear fruit.
He was under a severe strain. His domestic servants had left him. His wife had
to do unaccustomed labour and run the household. Moreover, his wife was anxious
about his safety. They might be arrested for harbouring an enemy prisoner of
war and condemned as traitors.
Dr Sadao let the man escape in the larger interest of professional ethics and
human consideration. He rose above narrow national loyalty and sentimentality.
He did not think of himself as the General had already assured him that no harm
would be caused to him. The matter remained unreported and closed from public
eyes and ears. The servants returned after the white man had “left”. Everything
became normal again.
Q11. Comment
on the role of the old General in the story ‘The Enemy’.
Ans. The
old General plays an important role in the story. He is being treated medically
for a condition which might need an operation any time. Since he has full faith
in Dr Sadao, he is kept back in Japan. Dr Sadao is indispensable to the
General. He assures Sadao that nothing will happen to him and he will not be
arrested.
The arrival of the messenger rouses Hana’s worst fears. She thinks that police
has come to arrest her husband. Dr Sadao gets distressed at her anxiety and
decides to get rid of the white man for her sake. When Dr Sadao confides in the
General, the latter promises to send two of his private assassins to remove the
man from the scene.
The old General has an unsual sense of humour as well as frankness and ability
to admit his mistake. Dr Sadao keeps on waiting for three nights for the
assassins who fail to turn up. He loses sleep and rest. Finally he lets the
white man escape.
When Dr Sadao tells the General that the man has escaped, the General admits
that he forgot his promise. He was suffering a great deal and thought of
nothing but himself. It was careless of him but not lack of patriotism or
dereliction of duty, It is his self-absorption and instinct of preserving
himself that saves Dr Sadao and his family from being arrested.
Q12. The
ending of the story ‘The Enemy’ epitomises the attitude of a Japanese towards
Americans during the war. Elucidate.
OR
Comment on the ending of
the story ‘The Enemy’.
Ans. The
ending of the story, ‘The Enemy’ is highly artistic. The old General,
recovering from the operation, promises that Dr Sadao will be rewarded as he is
a good man. Dr Sadao has his reward when he finds that his prisoner has gone
away safely from the island. He now recalls all the other white faces he ever
came across. The professor, at whose house he met Hana, was a dull man and his
wife had been a silly, talkative woman, in spite of her wish to be kind. His
old teacher of anatomy had been insistent on ‘mercy with the knife’. He
remembered the face of his fat and slatterly landlady whom he had despised for
being ignorant and dirty. He remembered the difficulties he faced in finding a
place to live in America because he was a Japanese. The Americans were full of
prejudice and, it had been bitter to live in America. He found the white people
repulsive. It was a relief to be openly at war with them. Then he remembered
the youthful, haggard face of the prisoner. It was also white and repulsive. He
thought it strange that he spared his enemy. He is left wondering why he could
not kill the white man “his enemy”.
Q13. Do you
think the title ‘The Enemy’ is appropriate? Give reasons in support of your
answer.
Ans. The
title ‘The Enemy’ is quite appropriate and highly suggestive. It focuses our
attention on the wounded man who is incidentally washed ashore to the doorstep
of a famous Japanese surgeon, Dr Sadao Hoki during the war.
The first reaction of the Japanese pair is typical of average, patriotic
Japanese who hate their white enemies. However, the doctor in Sadao prompts him
to bring the man inside his house and cure him. The doctor’s involvement with
the white enemy annoys the domestic staff who show open defiance and
resistance. The doctor faces grave danger to his position, safety, name, fame
and family by harbouring the enemy. He could be condemned as a traitor and
killed.
In spite of all the odds, the doctor finds himself emotionally unable to hand
him over to the police. He has no love for the man. He regards him his enemy,
yet he can’t kill him. He tells the old General how he operated on the white
man and saved him. The General is all praise for his skill, hopes for his own
successful operation at his hand, and promises to kill the man for him.
The doctor faces a lot of tension—mental, emotional and physical. He passes
sleepless nights waiting for the assassins, who never turn up. Meanwhile, ‘the
enemy’ recovers and the doctor devises means to let him escape in order to get
rid of him. At the end of the story he is left wondering why he could not kill
that man.
Q14. What was
the General’s plan to get rid of the American prisoner ? Was it executed ? What
traits of the General’s character are highlighted in the lesson ‘The
Enemy’?[All India 2014]
Ans. The
General made a plan to get rid of the American prisoner by sending his personal
assassins to kill the prisoner. He also wanted to remove the body of American
prisoner from Sadao’s house. But, unfortunately he could not succeed in his
attempt. The plan was i not executed. The General could not send the assassins.
The General had an unusual sense of humour as well as frankness and ability to
admit his mistake. Dr. Sadao keeps on waiting for three nights for the
assassins who fail to turn up. He loses his rest and sleep. Finally he lets the
white man escape. When Dr. Sadao tells the General that the man has escaped,
the General admits that he forgot his promise. It was carelessness of him but
not the lack of patriotism. It is his self-absorption and instinct of
preserving himself that saves Dr. Sadao and his family being arrested.
God Bless you
all………