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Insignificant Gestures

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Insignificant Gestures

By Jo Cannon

This text is written by Jo Cannon. It is about a man who used to be a doctor and his servant, Celia, who has died. The narrator blames him self for Celia’s death, and it affects his present. By analyzing examples from the text, the narrator and the relationship between the narrator and Celia will be characterized. Furthermore, this short story will focus on the narrator’s error of judgment and the significance of time and place.

The narrator wants to forget his time in Africa. He was working as a doctor at a hospital in Africa, and he has experienced a lot of things during his journey. He has, among other things, experienced their hospitality and how it works – and he is definitely not amazed: “The central hospital was a stinking hell-ship…” (p. 10 l. 97) In a way he is shocked to experience all this, because he wants to make a difference in Africa, and he really believes in him self, but it is hard to keep doing that with the circumstances. Now he has had quite enough of this, and all the people who are dying: “I never wanted to smell blood again.” (p. 8 l. 2) He also seems very sensitive, in the way he thinks about Celia. He misses her, and he want to do things over. He wants to go back in time and save Celia – but he cannot.

Instead he is running away from his problems and thoughts. That is why he is no longer a doctor, but a psychiatrist. He cannot even use painting to escape anymore, because the painting reminds him of Celia. So as a way out of this, he listens to other people’s problems to fill in his empty space in his heart and his mind. Otherwise he is thinking of Celia, and every time he is doing that, he feels some kind of guilt. He could have saved her if he did not judge the situation completely wrong. He was busy thinking of all the lives he was going to save, when one of the people who needed him the most, was right in front of him. Celia’s death has torn him apart and it is affecting his own health. He is taking medication that helps him sleep, because he wakes up in the middle of the night – most likely because of Celia and his feeling of guilt.

The relationship between the narrator and Celia is unusual. It is not the typical relationship between a servant and its master. Already in the beginning the narrator does not want a servant; “Servants were a symbol of inequality and exploitation, and I didn’t need one.” (p. 8 l. 29) He does not want to undermine any human’s freedom. He did not ask a lot of her, because he does not want to be a burden, and he wants to fend for himself. They actually got quite close to each other, not in the way you get when you talk together, but he could feel her soul, her breath and her warmth – her personality. They were companions. And Celia could protect him from his worst fear - cockroaches; “The carnage appalled me, but I was secretly touched.” (p. 9 l. 69-79) He likes when she is killing the cockroaches, and it makes him feel like he is safe because of his fear. This is also a very important gesture to him, because he gets the feeling of someone wanting to help him of one’s own free will. Not because one have to – like a servant, but because one feel like helping another.

Celia would probably not have died if this had happened in the present time, and in another environment. As an example the medical assistants and nurses are moved like if they were just a piece of toy, with no kind of consideration for their families. The hospitals communication between is also very old-fashioned and the security and safety is not relevant; “As usual the phones were down; there was no-one to ask for advice.” (p. 10 l. 98-99) If this happened in a big city with modern technology, Celia would have been cured, but in this kind of society a “harmless” illness, like meningitis, is hard to cure, because often no one knows what to do.

In conclusion the narrator has got a scar for life because of his journey to Africa and because of Celia’s death. He will always think of Celia and feel guilt. But in the end of the short story he meet a “new Celia”; the African woman who shows independence and kindness by flicking the cockroach onto the floor and crushing beneath her shoe, reminds him of Celia. He is ready to start all over, and let go of Celia.

“Beginnings start like this, with insignificant gestures.” (p. 12 l. 158-159)
It all started by an insignificant gesture and ends with one too.

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