Oroonoko by Aphra Behn in Hindi

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  • Опубликовано: 23 окт 2024

Комментарии • 156

  • @perfectchoiceonlineshop
    @perfectchoiceonlineshop 4 года назад +8

    Thanks a lot sir.
    I was eagerly waiting for oroonoko from you...
    At last I got it.

  • @cristianochannel78
    @cristianochannel78 4 года назад +4

    💯👏👍, time saving video with awesome explanation.

  • @princemishra939
    @princemishra939 4 года назад +4

    Wow what a co incident, u made videos of Hemingway 's the sun also rises and a faiwell to arms just when I was reading it, u r great sir, now u r producing videos of great value on ugc net syllabus, thanks sir. Love u sir.

    • @CuriousCorner2010
      @CuriousCorner2010 7 месяцев назад

      The original summary 🤓🤓
      Oroonoko chronicles the story of the African prince Oroonoko and his beloved wife Imoinda, who are captured by the British and brought to Surinam as slaves. The tale is set primarily in this locale on the northern coast of South America during the 1640s, just before the English surrendered the colony to the Dutch.
      A young English woman, the nameless narrator, resides on Parham Plantation awaiting transportation back to England. She is the daughter of the new deputy-governor, who unfortunately died during the family's voyage to take up his new post. During her wait, she has the opportunity to meet and befriend prince Oroonoko and his lovely wife, Imoinda. Before introducing the primary character, however, the narrator provides great detail about the colony and the inhabitants, presenting first a list of multicolored birds, myriad insects, high-colored flora and exotic fauna, and then an almost anthropological account of the natives with whom the British trade and who seem to the narrator to be as innocent as Adam and Eve in "the first state of innocence, before man knew how to sin." The British, she insists, live happily with the natives. Because of their vast numbers, the colonists are unable to enslave them and so must look elsewhere for slaves to work on the sugar plantations--that is, they look to Africa.
      After her overview of Surinam, the narrator switches the setting to Coramantien (today Ghana) on the west coast of Africa, where the protagonist Oroonoko is about to meet Imoinda, the daughter of the general who has just died saving Oroonoko's life. The king of Coramantien, who is the 100-year-old grandfather of Oroonoko, has also fallen in love with the young and beautiful girl and has beaten Oroonoko to the punch by sending her the royal veil, a gift Imoinda cannot refuse, and which signifies that she is now the wife of the king. She will spend the rest of her days locked within the otan, or the royal seraglio, which only the king can visit. Oroonoko, however, breaks into the otan with the help of his good friend Aboan, who keeps one of the king's senior wives named Onahal occupied with lovemaking. The king catches him, and Oroonoko flees. Although Imoinda is sold into slavery, the king later informs Oroonoko that she has been honorably put to death.
      Meanwhile, the British arrive in Coramantien to trade for the war captives whom Oroonoko sells as slaves. The captain invites the prince and his friends to board his vessel as his guest, but then surprises them and takes them captive. Soon after he promises Oroonoko his freedom, when he and his friends refuse to eat, but he fails to keep this promise. Upon the ship's arrival at Surinam, Oroonoko is sold to the mild-mannered and witty overseer of Parham Plantation who befiends him, Mr. Trefry. At this point, Oroonoko meets the narrator. She and Trefry assure the prince that as soon as the lord-governor Willoughby arrives in Surinam he will be set free.
      Because of his high social status, superior education, and spectacular physical appearance, Oroonoko is never sent to work. He resides away from the other slaves in the plantation house. While walking with Trefry one day, he sees Imoinda. The lovers fall happily into each other's arms and all but instantly marry. Soon Imoinda becomes pregnant.
      At this point Oroonoko, who desperately desires that his child not be born a slave, becomes even more concerned about his enslaved status despite Trefry's and the narrator's renewed promises that all will be well when the governor arrives. They attempt to divert him with hunting, fishing, and a trip to a native village. Oroonoko is a champion hunter who kills two tigers singlehandedly in addition to managing to hold onto a fishing rod even when an electric eel knocks him unconscious. Although the native village provides distraction (and another means for Behn to provide cultural information about the natives in this region), Oroonoko incites a slave revolt with the other plantation slaves. They escape on Sunday night when the whites are drunk, but they leave a trail that is easy to follow because they have to burn the brush in front of them. The plan is to settle a new community near the shore and find a ship on which to return to Africa. Meanwhile, the narrator flees to safety, but later she gets a firsthand account of the events.
      Deputy-governor Byam negotiates with Oroonoko to surrender and promises him amnesty. Once more he assures Oroonoko that he and his family will be freed and returned to Africa. Hardly surprising, however, Byam lies once more to Oroonoko and sees that he is whipped brutally, with pepper poured into his wounds, as soon as he surrenders. The despondent Oroonoko realizes he now will never be free and that his child will be born in captivity. He informs Imoinda that he has decided to kill her honorably, take revenge on Byam, and then kill himself. She thanks her husband for allowing her to die with dignity, and he cuts her throat and removes her face with his knife. But Oroonoko becomes prostrated with grief and can never generate enough energy to go after Byam. Sinking ever deeper into depression, he waits for eight days next to the body of his dead wife until the stench brings Byam's men to the site, where they immediately set about killing him. Finally, Oroonoko stands stoically smoking his pipe while they chop off his nose, ears, and one leg. Then he falls down dead, and they quarter his body before disposing of it.

  • @aartipanghal127
    @aartipanghal127 2 года назад +16

    Great efforts sir.... actually the death scene of Imoimda was little bit different. .he himself killed her with her permission so that she need not to face the atrocity of the governor ...

    • @CuriousCorner2010
      @CuriousCorner2010 7 месяцев назад +1

      The original summary 🤓🤓
      Oroonoko chronicles the story of the African prince Oroonoko and his beloved wife Imoinda, who are captured by the British and brought to Surinam as slaves. The tale is set primarily in this locale on the northern coast of South America during the 1640s, just before the English surrendered the colony to the Dutch.
      A young English woman, the nameless narrator, resides on Parham Plantation awaiting transportation back to England. She is the daughter of the new deputy-governor, who unfortunately died during the family's voyage to take up his new post. During her wait, she has the opportunity to meet and befriend prince Oroonoko and his lovely wife, Imoinda. Before introducing the primary character, however, the narrator provides great detail about the colony and the inhabitants, presenting first a list of multicolored birds, myriad insects, high-colored flora and exotic fauna, and then an almost anthropological account of the natives with whom the British trade and who seem to the narrator to be as innocent as Adam and Eve in "the first state of innocence, before man knew how to sin." The British, she insists, live happily with the natives. Because of their vast numbers, the colonists are unable to enslave them and so must look elsewhere for slaves to work on the sugar plantations--that is, they look to Africa.
      After her overview of Surinam, the narrator switches the setting to Coramantien (today Ghana) on the west coast of Africa, where the protagonist Oroonoko is about to meet Imoinda, the daughter of the general who has just died saving Oroonoko's life. The king of Coramantien, who is the 100-year-old grandfather of Oroonoko, has also fallen in love with the young and beautiful girl and has beaten Oroonoko to the punch by sending her the royal veil, a gift Imoinda cannot refuse, and which signifies that she is now the wife of the king. She will spend the rest of her days locked within the otan, or the royal seraglio, which only the king can visit. Oroonoko, however, breaks into the otan with the help of his good friend Aboan, who keeps one of the king's senior wives named Onahal occupied with lovemaking. The king catches him, and Oroonoko flees. Although Imoinda is sold into slavery, the king later informs Oroonoko that she has been honorably put to death.
      Meanwhile, the British arrive in Coramantien to trade for the war captives whom Oroonoko sells as slaves. The captain invites the prince and his friends to board his vessel as his guest, but then surprises them and takes them captive. Soon after he promises Oroonoko his freedom, when he and his friends refuse to eat, but he fails to keep this promise. Upon the ship's arrival at Surinam, Oroonoko is sold to the mild-mannered and witty overseer of Parham Plantation who befiends him, Mr. Trefry. At this point, Oroonoko meets the narrator. She and Trefry assure the prince that as soon as the lord-governor Willoughby arrives in Surinam he will be set free.
      Because of his high social status, superior education, and spectacular physical appearance, Oroonoko is never sent to work. He resides away from the other slaves in the plantation house. While walking with Trefry one day, he sees Imoinda. The lovers fall happily into each other's arms and all but instantly marry. Soon Imoinda becomes pregnant.
      At this point Oroonoko, who desperately desires that his child not be born a slave, becomes even more concerned about his enslaved status despite Trefry's and the narrator's renewed promises that all will be well when the governor arrives. They attempt to divert him with hunting, fishing, and a trip to a native village. Oroonoko is a champion hunter who kills two tigers singlehandedly in addition to managing to hold onto a fishing rod even when an electric eel knocks him unconscious. Although the native village provides distraction (and another means for Behn to provide cultural information about the natives in this region), Oroonoko incites a slave revolt with the other plantation slaves. They escape on Sunday night when the whites are drunk, but they leave a trail that is easy to follow because they have to burn the brush in front of them. The plan is to settle a new community near the shore and find a ship on which to return to Africa. Meanwhile, the narrator flees to safety, but later she gets a firsthand account of the events.
      Deputy-governor Byam negotiates with Oroonoko to surrender and promises him amnesty. Once more he assures Oroonoko that he and his family will be freed and returned to Africa. Hardly surprising, however, Byam lies once more to Oroonoko and sees that he is whipped brutally, with pepper poured into his wounds, as soon as he surrenders. The despondent Oroonoko realizes he now will never be free and that his child will be born in captivity. He informs Imoinda that he has decided to kill her honorably, take revenge on Byam, and then kill himself. She thanks her husband for allowing her to die with dignity, and he cuts her throat and removes her face with his knife. But Oroonoko becomes prostrated with grief and can never generate enough energy to go after Byam. Sinking ever deeper into depression, he waits for eight days next to the body of his dead wife until the stench brings Byam's men to the site, where they immediately set about killing him. Finally, Oroonoko stands stoically smoking his pipe while they chop off his nose, ears, and one leg. Then he falls down dead, and they quarter his body before disposing of it.

  • @pakistankhan4589
    @pakistankhan4589 4 года назад +1

    Sir ji tusii great ho allah pak apko himat de or flaaah means welfare ka kam kre

  • @brightlearners4491
    @brightlearners4491 4 года назад +6

    Awesome work by Aphra Behn.... and you explained it so well 😊😊

    • @CuriousCorner2010
      @CuriousCorner2010 7 месяцев назад

      The original summary 🤓🤓
      Oroonoko chronicles the story of the African prince Oroonoko and his beloved wife Imoinda, who are captured by the British and brought to Surinam as slaves. The tale is set primarily in this locale on the northern coast of South America during the 1640s, just before the English surrendered the colony to the Dutch.
      A young English woman, the nameless narrator, resides on Parham Plantation awaiting transportation back to England. She is the daughter of the new deputy-governor, who unfortunately died during the family's voyage to take up his new post. During her wait, she has the opportunity to meet and befriend prince Oroonoko and his lovely wife, Imoinda. Before introducing the primary character, however, the narrator provides great detail about the colony and the inhabitants, presenting first a list of multicolored birds, myriad insects, high-colored flora and exotic fauna, and then an almost anthropological account of the natives with whom the British trade and who seem to the narrator to be as innocent as Adam and Eve in "the first state of innocence, before man knew how to sin." The British, she insists, live happily with the natives. Because of their vast numbers, the colonists are unable to enslave them and so must look elsewhere for slaves to work on the sugar plantations--that is, they look to Africa.
      After her overview of Surinam, the narrator switches the setting to Coramantien (today Ghana) on the west coast of Africa, where the protagonist Oroonoko is about to meet Imoinda, the daughter of the general who has just died saving Oroonoko's life. The king of Coramantien, who is the 100-year-old grandfather of Oroonoko, has also fallen in love with the young and beautiful girl and has beaten Oroonoko to the punch by sending her the royal veil, a gift Imoinda cannot refuse, and which signifies that she is now the wife of the king. She will spend the rest of her days locked within the otan, or the royal seraglio, which only the king can visit. Oroonoko, however, breaks into the otan with the help of his good friend Aboan, who keeps one of the king's senior wives named Onahal occupied with lovemaking. The king catches him, and Oroonoko flees. Although Imoinda is sold into slavery, the king later informs Oroonoko that she has been honorably put to death.
      Meanwhile, the British arrive in Coramantien to trade for the war captives whom Oroonoko sells as slaves. The captain invites the prince and his friends to board his vessel as his guest, but then surprises them and takes them captive. Soon after he promises Oroonoko his freedom, when he and his friends refuse to eat, but he fails to keep this promise. Upon the ship's arrival at Surinam, Oroonoko is sold to the mild-mannered and witty overseer of Parham Plantation who befiends him, Mr. Trefry. At this point, Oroonoko meets the narrator. She and Trefry assure the prince that as soon as the lord-governor Willoughby arrives in Surinam he will be set free.
      Because of his high social status, superior education, and spectacular physical appearance, Oroonoko is never sent to work. He resides away from the other slaves in the plantation house. While walking with Trefry one day, he sees Imoinda. The lovers fall happily into each other's arms and all but instantly marry. Soon Imoinda becomes pregnant.
      At this point Oroonoko, who desperately desires that his child not be born a slave, becomes even more concerned about his enslaved status despite Trefry's and the narrator's renewed promises that all will be well when the governor arrives. They attempt to divert him with hunting, fishing, and a trip to a native village. Oroonoko is a champion hunter who kills two tigers singlehandedly in addition to managing to hold onto a fishing rod even when an electric eel knocks him unconscious. Although the native village provides distraction (and another means for Behn to provide cultural information about the natives in this region), Oroonoko incites a slave revolt with the other plantation slaves. They escape on Sunday night when the whites are drunk, but they leave a trail that is easy to follow because they have to burn the brush in front of them. The plan is to settle a new community near the shore and find a ship on which to return to Africa. Meanwhile, the narrator flees to safety, but later she gets a firsthand account of the events.
      Deputy-governor Byam negotiates with Oroonoko to surrender and promises him amnesty. Once more he assures Oroonoko that he and his family will be freed and returned to Africa. Hardly surprising, however, Byam lies once more to Oroonoko and sees that he is whipped brutally, with pepper poured into his wounds, as soon as he surrenders. The despondent Oroonoko realizes he now will never be free and that his child will be born in captivity. He informs Imoinda that he has decided to kill her honorably, take revenge on Byam, and then kill himself. She thanks her husband for allowing her to die with dignity, and he cuts her throat and removes her face with his knife. But Oroonoko becomes prostrated with grief and can never generate enough energy to go after Byam. Sinking ever deeper into depression, he waits for eight days next to the body of his dead wife until the stench brings Byam's men to the site, where they immediately set about killing him. Finally, Oroonoko stands stoically smoking his pipe while they chop off his nose, ears, and one leg. Then he falls down dead, and they quarter his body before disposing of it.

  • @ishfaqahmad951
    @ishfaqahmad951 4 года назад +3

    Thanks sir for making this vedio and for its planly expression.

  • @parthapratimborah6408
    @parthapratimborah6408 4 года назад +16

    I repeatedly praising you that please make a video on "Ragtime" by E.L Doctorow and "Literature and Exhaustion" by John Barth. I request you to make the on the live when you were asking the situations of particular places.

  • @kohinurakter9021
    @kohinurakter9021 2 года назад +23

    There is a mistake about how did Imoinda actually died. Oroonoko killed Imoinda.... I'm also one of your fan but this could make confusion. Hope you understand and solve it.

    • @madhurimasaikia3254
      @madhurimasaikia3254 Год назад +3

      Yes . He was wrong at this point

    • @_THAMEEM_
      @_THAMEEM_ 11 месяцев назад

      Yep

    • @CuriousCorner2010
      @CuriousCorner2010 7 месяцев назад +7

      The original summary 🤓🤓
      Oroonoko chronicles the story of the African prince Oroonoko and his beloved wife Imoinda, who are captured by the British and brought to Surinam as slaves. The tale is set primarily in this locale on the northern coast of South America during the 1640s, just before the English surrendered the colony to the Dutch.
      A young English woman, the nameless narrator, resides on Parham Plantation awaiting transportation back to England. She is the daughter of the new deputy-governor, who unfortunately died during the family's voyage to take up his new post. During her wait, she has the opportunity to meet and befriend prince Oroonoko and his lovely wife, Imoinda. Before introducing the primary character, however, the narrator provides great detail about the colony and the inhabitants, presenting first a list of multicolored birds, myriad insects, high-colored flora and exotic fauna, and then an almost anthropological account of the natives with whom the British trade and who seem to the narrator to be as innocent as Adam and Eve in "the first state of innocence, before man knew how to sin." The British, she insists, live happily with the natives. Because of their vast numbers, the colonists are unable to enslave them and so must look elsewhere for slaves to work on the sugar plantations--that is, they look to Africa.
      After her overview of Surinam, the narrator switches the setting to Coramantien (today Ghana) on the west coast of Africa, where the protagonist Oroonoko is about to meet Imoinda, the daughter of the general who has just died saving Oroonoko's life. The king of Coramantien, who is the 100-year-old grandfather of Oroonoko, has also fallen in love with the young and beautiful girl and has beaten Oroonoko to the punch by sending her the royal veil, a gift Imoinda cannot refuse, and which signifies that she is now the wife of the king. She will spend the rest of her days locked within the otan, or the royal seraglio, which only the king can visit. Oroonoko, however, breaks into the otan with the help of his good friend Aboan, who keeps one of the king's senior wives named Onahal occupied with lovemaking. The king catches him, and Oroonoko flees. Although Imoinda is sold into slavery, the king later informs Oroonoko that she has been honorably put to death.
      Meanwhile, the British arrive in Coramantien to trade for the war captives whom Oroonoko sells as slaves. The captain invites the prince and his friends to board his vessel as his guest, but then surprises them and takes them captive. Soon after he promises Oroonoko his freedom, when he and his friends refuse to eat, but he fails to keep this promise. Upon the ship's arrival at Surinam, Oroonoko is sold to the mild-mannered and witty overseer of Parham Plantation who befiends him, Mr. Trefry. At this point, Oroonoko meets the narrator. She and Trefry assure the prince that as soon as the lord-governor Willoughby arrives in Surinam he will be set free.
      Because of his high social status, superior education, and spectacular physical appearance, Oroonoko is never sent to work. He resides away from the other slaves in the plantation house. While walking with Trefry one day, he sees Imoinda. The lovers fall happily into each other's arms and all but instantly marry. Soon Imoinda becomes pregnant.
      At this point Oroonoko, who desperately desires that his child not be born a slave, becomes even more concerned about his enslaved status despite Trefry's and the narrator's renewed promises that all will be well when the governor arrives. They attempt to divert him with hunting, fishing, and a trip to a native village. Oroonoko is a champion hunter who kills two tigers singlehandedly in addition to managing to hold onto a fishing rod even when an electric eel knocks him unconscious. Although the native village provides distraction (and another means for Behn to provide cultural information about the natives in this region), Oroonoko incites a slave revolt with the other plantation slaves. They escape on Sunday night when the whites are drunk, but they leave a trail that is easy to follow because they have to burn the brush in front of them. The plan is to settle a new community near the shore and find a ship on which to return to Africa. Meanwhile, the narrator flees to safety, but later she gets a firsthand account of the events.
      Deputy-governor Byam negotiates with Oroonoko to surrender and promises him amnesty. Once more he assures Oroonoko that he and his family will be freed and returned to Africa. Hardly surprising, however, Byam lies once more to Oroonoko and sees that he is whipped brutally, with pepper poured into his wounds, as soon as he surrenders. The despondent Oroonoko realizes he now will never be free and that his child will be born in captivity. He informs Imoinda that he has decided to kill her honorably, take revenge on Byam, and then kill himself. She thanks her husband for allowing her to die with dignity, and he cuts her throat and removes her face with his knife. But Oroonoko becomes prostrated with grief and can never generate enough energy to go after Byam. Sinking ever deeper into depression, he waits for eight days next to the body of his dead wife until the stench brings Byam's men to the site, where they immediately set about killing him. Finally, Oroonoko stands stoically smoking his pipe while they chop off his nose, ears, and one leg. Then he falls down dead, and they quarter his body before disposing of it.

    • @hureainhassan1313
      @hureainhassan1313 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@CuriousCorner2010thanks

    • @space_tv2002
      @space_tv2002 3 месяца назад

      Thanks bro​@@CuriousCorner2010

  • @devretarzani
    @devretarzani Год назад +1

    Nice video aapki sari video muje bhot pasnd hey 💕💕

  • @JyotiTiwari-no5uf
    @JyotiTiwari-no5uf 4 года назад +1

    You are the best bhai....👌👌👌
    ...🙏🙏🙏

  • @ektasharmajithegreat7878
    @ektasharmajithegreat7878 4 года назад +13

    Kitni khatarnaak story h 😰😰😰 itni buri maut ......
    😣
    🧐
    Or imoinda beautiful thi to beautiful c photo lagani thi ye bhootni jesi q lagaai 🤭🤭🤭
    Bahut a66iiii video h sir thanks for this

    • @Aasifa5677
      @Aasifa5677 4 года назад

      Good evening. ..

    • @brightlearners4491
      @brightlearners4491 4 года назад +1

      Imoinda ki pic achchhi lagani chahiye thi sach me

    • @rakheebuddhist105
      @rakheebuddhist105 4 года назад +1

      Beautyful phonto isliye nhi lgayi kyuki studends bhi use like krne lgenge 🤗🤗🤗

  • @javaidiqbal870
    @javaidiqbal870 4 года назад

    Apka method mje itna pasand he k apki video ko check kiye bager hi me download kr leti hun

  • @preeti6725
    @preeti6725 4 месяца назад

    Bhai I always watch yr video.. thank you..

  • @gulafshabano8090
    @gulafshabano8090 4 года назад +8

    Sir plz make a video on the woodlanders by Thomas hardy

  • @himanshisingh3077
    @himanshisingh3077 4 года назад +1

    Plz make videos on topics like norman conquest, english and american civil war etc ..... It'll be really helpful.....

  • @sabitrirokaya722
    @sabitrirokaya722 Год назад

    I am watching from Nepal 🇳🇵😊thank uh

  • @rajnitanwar5780
    @rajnitanwar5780 3 года назад +4

    Sir as u explain Imoinda & their child was killed by Byam...but in books i have read she was killed by Oronokoo himself..can u reply & clear this Plz?

    • @CuriousCorner2010
      @CuriousCorner2010 7 месяцев назад

      The original summary 🤓🤓
      Oroonoko chronicles the story of the African prince Oroonoko and his beloved wife Imoinda, who are captured by the British and brought to Surinam as slaves. The tale is set primarily in this locale on the northern coast of South America during the 1640s, just before the English surrendered the colony to the Dutch.
      A young English woman, the nameless narrator, resides on Parham Plantation awaiting transportation back to England. She is the daughter of the new deputy-governor, who unfortunately died during the family's voyage to take up his new post. During her wait, she has the opportunity to meet and befriend prince Oroonoko and his lovely wife, Imoinda. Before introducing the primary character, however, the narrator provides great detail about the colony and the inhabitants, presenting first a list of multicolored birds, myriad insects, high-colored flora and exotic fauna, and then an almost anthropological account of the natives with whom the British trade and who seem to the narrator to be as innocent as Adam and Eve in "the first state of innocence, before man knew how to sin." The British, she insists, live happily with the natives. Because of their vast numbers, the colonists are unable to enslave them and so must look elsewhere for slaves to work on the sugar plantations--that is, they look to Africa.
      After her overview of Surinam, the narrator switches the setting to Coramantien (today Ghana) on the west coast of Africa, where the protagonist Oroonoko is about to meet Imoinda, the daughter of the general who has just died saving Oroonoko's life. The king of Coramantien, who is the 100-year-old grandfather of Oroonoko, has also fallen in love with the young and beautiful girl and has beaten Oroonoko to the punch by sending her the royal veil, a gift Imoinda cannot refuse, and which signifies that she is now the wife of the king. She will spend the rest of her days locked within the otan, or the royal seraglio, which only the king can visit. Oroonoko, however, breaks into the otan with the help of his good friend Aboan, who keeps one of the king's senior wives named Onahal occupied with lovemaking. The king catches him, and Oroonoko flees. Although Imoinda is sold into slavery, the king later informs Oroonoko that she has been honorably put to death.
      Meanwhile, the British arrive in Coramantien to trade for the war captives whom Oroonoko sells as slaves. The captain invites the prince and his friends to board his vessel as his guest, but then surprises them and takes them captive. Soon after he promises Oroonoko his freedom, when he and his friends refuse to eat, but he fails to keep this promise. Upon the ship's arrival at Surinam, Oroonoko is sold to the mild-mannered and witty overseer of Parham Plantation who befiends him, Mr. Trefry. At this point, Oroonoko meets the narrator. She and Trefry assure the prince that as soon as the lord-governor Willoughby arrives in Surinam he will be set free.
      Because of his high social status, superior education, and spectacular physical appearance, Oroonoko is never sent to work. He resides away from the other slaves in the plantation house. While walking with Trefry one day, he sees Imoinda. The lovers fall happily into each other's arms and all but instantly marry. Soon Imoinda becomes pregnant.
      At this point Oroonoko, who desperately desires that his child not be born a slave, becomes even more concerned about his enslaved status despite Trefry's and the narrator's renewed promises that all will be well when the governor arrives. They attempt to divert him with hunting, fishing, and a trip to a native village. Oroonoko is a champion hunter who kills two tigers singlehandedly in addition to managing to hold onto a fishing rod even when an electric eel knocks him unconscious. Although the native village provides distraction (and another means for Behn to provide cultural information about the natives in this region), Oroonoko incites a slave revolt with the other plantation slaves. They escape on Sunday night when the whites are drunk, but they leave a trail that is easy to follow because they have to burn the brush in front of them. The plan is to settle a new community near the shore and find a ship on which to return to Africa. Meanwhile, the narrator flees to safety, but later she gets a firsthand account of the events.
      Deputy-governor Byam negotiates with Oroonoko to surrender and promises him amnesty. Once more he assures Oroonoko that he and his family will be freed and returned to Africa. Hardly surprising, however, Byam lies once more to Oroonoko and sees that he is whipped brutally, with pepper poured into his wounds, as soon as he surrenders. The despondent Oroonoko realizes he now will never be free and that his child will be born in captivity. He informs Imoinda that he has decided to kill her honorably, take revenge on Byam, and then kill himself. She thanks her husband for allowing her to die with dignity, and he cuts her throat and removes her face with his knife. But Oroonoko becomes prostrated with grief and can never generate enough energy to go after Byam. Sinking ever deeper into depression, he waits for eight days next to the body of his dead wife until the stench brings Byam's men to the site, where they immediately set about killing him. Finally, Oroonoko stands stoically smoking his pipe while they chop off his nose, ears, and one leg. Then he falls down dead, and they quarter his body before disposing of it.

  • @vanshikachoubey8865
    @vanshikachoubey8865 2 года назад +2

    Your voice is amazing sir

  • @taeroz
    @taeroz 2 года назад +2

    I really like the way u explain.. But the ending was a bit different specially the death scene of Imoinda...

  • @shreyagupta9872
    @shreyagupta9872 4 года назад +2

    Thanks a lot sir.....Sir please make video on "Desire Under the Elms"

  • @RohitSharma-yh7nv
    @RohitSharma-yh7nv 4 года назад

    Very dangerous story
    Nice explaining sir

  • @peacefulsoul6747
    @peacefulsoul6747 4 года назад +7

    Sir please please make videos on these topics please🙏🙏🙏
    Roland barthes- death of the the author
    Ellen showalter -towards a feministic poetics
    Helene cixous- the laugh of the medusa
    Kate millett -sexual politics
    Norrs Christopher- deconstruction theory and practice
    Jonathan culler- structuralism and literature
    Jacques Derrida -structure sign and play

  • @nomitashil2368
    @nomitashil2368 2 года назад

    U r the best 👍

  • @mdmonaimekhan6993
    @mdmonaimekhan6993 5 месяцев назад

    I'm from Bangladesh, sir your video is good

  • @priyankabarman3757
    @priyankabarman3757 4 года назад +1

    Sir kya aap Greek mythology ke baare main video bna sakte hain kyuki yeh humare syllabus main hain..Humare syllabus main Greek Titan aur Olympian Gods ke baare main hain ..

  • @Easylearning01317
    @Easylearning01317 10 месяцев назад +1

    The beautiful ladki👌

  • @anishadas3846
    @anishadas3846 4 года назад +13

    Imoinda ka bal 😂😂
    Sir ki line, "kul milake ache log the wo log"😂😂
    But Marne katne ki bat achi nahi lagi...

    • @devikabansal4060
      @devikabansal4060 3 года назад +1

      Imoinda nhi . beautiful ladki 🤣🤣🤣🤣....m library me bethi literally jor jor se hnsne lgi iski pic dekhte hi..isk baal 🤣🤣🤣🤣👍🏻

    • @Mohdrizwan-thescholar
      @Mohdrizwan-thescholar 3 года назад

      @@devikabansal4060 haa bahut jyada beautiful hai na isliye 😂😂🤣🤣

    • @blaiterawn9043
      @blaiterawn9043 Год назад

      Racist kahike

  • @SanobarENM
    @SanobarENM 3 года назад +2

    Sir we need one Video on "The Unfortunate Traveller".

  • @rakheebuddhist105
    @rakheebuddhist105 4 года назад

    Sir story was really nice but its all because of you thankyuo thankyou so much sir 💜💜💜

  • @naveenbarala739
    @naveenbarala739 4 года назад +1

    sr crticism ki do books hn..p.k.nayar ki..or dusra peter berry ki

  • @iqrasalim134
    @iqrasalim134 3 года назад +3

    Thank you Sir, much respect from Pakistan!

  • @fahimhossain1176
    @fahimhossain1176 3 года назад

    Oroonoko's encounter with the numb-eel? Please give some idea

  • @sajidmanzoor7326
    @sajidmanzoor7326 4 года назад

    Legendary sir you are great

  • @bantipawar1196
    @bantipawar1196 2 года назад +1

    Thank you sir 😊

  • @diach5172
    @diach5172 4 года назад +1

    Please make video on Mourning Becomes Elctra

  • @sonisingh8343
    @sonisingh8343 4 года назад +1

    Sir plz make a video on "ishwaran the storyteller ".......Plz sir

  • @SumanSharma-lp7qj
    @SumanSharma-lp7qj 4 года назад

    Sir plz make the videos on famous and important works of Augustan age

  • @themaygirl
    @themaygirl Год назад

    can you make video about indian ink by Tom stoppard

  • @kelashkumawat7491
    @kelashkumawat7491 4 года назад +1

    Sir fantastic voyage by Isaac Asimov par bhi ek video banaeya na please sir please please🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏

  • @anticparty19
    @anticparty19 4 года назад +1

    Nice and thank you

  • @Anonymous-eu3yq
    @Anonymous-eu3yq 4 года назад +1

    Could you please make a video on "Tithonus" by Tennyson

  • @parwaz3310
    @parwaz3310 Год назад

    Thank you Sir

  • @rupkumarmaity9602
    @rupkumarmaity9602 4 года назад

    Please analysis Abra Behn's song Loved Armed.

  • @shyamsundersingh995
    @shyamsundersingh995 2 года назад

    grand expression💐

  • @somnathbagdi1150
    @somnathbagdi1150 4 года назад +1

    Sir. Make video on The Spectator by Addison. Sir plz plz.

  • @sishafik4382
    @sishafik4382 2 года назад

    Thank you Sir.

  • @princemishra939
    @princemishra939 4 года назад

    Plz make a video on cultural studies.

  • @rinkudubey3533
    @rinkudubey3533 Год назад +2

    He explained so beautifully ❤ I will hardly forget

  • @Hashmiulfat453
    @Hashmiulfat453 Год назад

    Sir plz make a video on "Man of mode "

  • @lifeline8154
    @lifeline8154 4 месяца назад

    Imoinda wakie bahut khoobsurat hai😂😂😂

  • @s.sarkar.9375
    @s.sarkar.9375 8 месяцев назад

    Nice❤

  • @maheshwareepatel7813
    @maheshwareepatel7813 3 года назад

    Sir Narrator was Afra Behan.

  • @sanjayram999
    @sanjayram999 3 года назад +1

    Kapil sir please while giving summary firstly explain about background in short

  • @amanroy2927
    @amanroy2927 4 года назад

    Sir shamela by Henry fielding An Apology for the Life of Mrs. Shamela Andrews please make k video on it. Confuse hu Ku ki iske jesi ek or story bhi hai

  • @vishakhamer8995
    @vishakhamer8995 4 года назад +2

    Please please please explain shamela by Henry Fielding

  • @sumanmahtha2287
    @sumanmahtha2287 4 года назад

    Sir please ek video Prothalamion by Spencer pe banaiye

  • @chayanikashandilya5847
    @chayanikashandilya5847 2 года назад

    sir ,, plz make a video on Edward Bond "Lear"

  • @sajeenabanu4214
    @sajeenabanu4214 4 года назад

    Bhaiya make a video on Derek walcott, Walter Scott, Anthony Burgess and Walter pater

  • @avanipatel4783
    @avanipatel4783 3 года назад

    Sir plz make the video of john milton Aeropagitica

  • @alshayanalshayan7046
    @alshayanalshayan7046 4 года назад

    Sir plz make a video on notes from the underground by F. Dostoevsky

  • @sumairabibi8713
    @sumairabibi8713 4 года назад

    Thanks Sir!

  • @Mohdirfan-gr6li
    @Mohdirfan-gr6li 2 года назад

    Thx sir jii

  • @A.khan123
    @A.khan123 4 года назад +1

    Please upload vedio on EMFoster short stories

  • @maparaanjum7564
    @maparaanjum7564 3 года назад

    Sir imoinda ko kon oten mein lay ka geya tha

  • @zinniathakur2450
    @zinniathakur2450 4 года назад

    Sir aap SET exam ki preparation krwao aap literaure bahut acha explain krte hai 🙏🙏🙏🙏

  • @amanofmettletejendernegi1843
    @amanofmettletejendernegi1843 3 года назад

    Imoinda V beautiful u have portrayed sir🤣

  • @kiranrathor1718
    @kiranrathor1718 4 года назад +1

    😢😢😢sad ending

  • @saileshsrin5535
    @saileshsrin5535 4 года назад

    Sir make a video on indo European family language

  • @FarooqAhmad-gl3rw
    @FarooqAhmad-gl3rw 4 года назад

    Sir plz plz make video on Of wisdom for man's self by Francis Bacon

  • @farzanashamim2726
    @farzanashamim2726 3 года назад

    Shuqriya

  • @SSyadav-fe9ne
    @SSyadav-fe9ne 4 года назад +1

    Afra behn was first female spy...

  • @rajkumarsahu2287
    @rajkumarsahu2287 4 года назад

    Thank you so much sir

  • @sumanmahtha2287
    @sumanmahtha2287 4 года назад +1

    Please sir it's my humble request agar possible ho to 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻

  • @parwaz3310
    @parwaz3310 Год назад +2

    Oroonoko kills Imoinda not Byam. You are mistaken.

    • @CuriousCorner2010
      @CuriousCorner2010 7 месяцев назад

      The original summary 🤓🤓
      Oroonoko chronicles the story of the African prince Oroonoko and his beloved wife Imoinda, who are captured by the British and brought to Surinam as slaves. The tale is set primarily in this locale on the northern coast of South America during the 1640s, just before the English surrendered the colony to the Dutch.
      A young English woman, the nameless narrator, resides on Parham Plantation awaiting transportation back to England. She is the daughter of the new deputy-governor, who unfortunately died during the family's voyage to take up his new post. During her wait, she has the opportunity to meet and befriend prince Oroonoko and his lovely wife, Imoinda. Before introducing the primary character, however, the narrator provides great detail about the colony and the inhabitants, presenting first a list of multicolored birds, myriad insects, high-colored flora and exotic fauna, and then an almost anthropological account of the natives with whom the British trade and who seem to the narrator to be as innocent as Adam and Eve in "the first state of innocence, before man knew how to sin." The British, she insists, live happily with the natives. Because of their vast numbers, the colonists are unable to enslave them and so must look elsewhere for slaves to work on the sugar plantations--that is, they look to Africa.
      After her overview of Surinam, the narrator switches the setting to Coramantien (today Ghana) on the west coast of Africa, where the protagonist Oroonoko is about to meet Imoinda, the daughter of the general who has just died saving Oroonoko's life. The king of Coramantien, who is the 100-year-old grandfather of Oroonoko, has also fallen in love with the young and beautiful girl and has beaten Oroonoko to the punch by sending her the royal veil, a gift Imoinda cannot refuse, and which signifies that she is now the wife of the king. She will spend the rest of her days locked within the otan, or the royal seraglio, which only the king can visit. Oroonoko, however, breaks into the otan with the help of his good friend Aboan, who keeps one of the king's senior wives named Onahal occupied with lovemaking. The king catches him, and Oroonoko flees. Although Imoinda is sold into slavery, the king later informs Oroonoko that she has been honorably put to death.
      Meanwhile, the British arrive in Coramantien to trade for the war captives whom Oroonoko sells as slaves. The captain invites the prince and his friends to board his vessel as his guest, but then surprises them and takes them captive. Soon after he promises Oroonoko his freedom, when he and his friends refuse to eat, but he fails to keep this promise. Upon the ship's arrival at Surinam, Oroonoko is sold to the mild-mannered and witty overseer of Parham Plantation who befiends him, Mr. Trefry. At this point, Oroonoko meets the narrator. She and Trefry assure the prince that as soon as the lord-governor Willoughby arrives in Surinam he will be set free.
      Because of his high social status, superior education, and spectacular physical appearance, Oroonoko is never sent to work. He resides away from the other slaves in the plantation house. While walking with Trefry one day, he sees Imoinda. The lovers fall happily into each other's arms and all but instantly marry. Soon Imoinda becomes pregnant.
      At this point Oroonoko, who desperately desires that his child not be born a slave, becomes even more concerned about his enslaved status despite Trefry's and the narrator's renewed promises that all will be well when the governor arrives. They attempt to divert him with hunting, fishing, and a trip to a native village. Oroonoko is a champion hunter who kills two tigers singlehandedly in addition to managing to hold onto a fishing rod even when an electric eel knocks him unconscious. Although the native village provides distraction (and another means for Behn to provide cultural information about the natives in this region), Oroonoko incites a slave revolt with the other plantation slaves. They escape on Sunday night when the whites are drunk, but they leave a trail that is easy to follow because they have to burn the brush in front of them. The plan is to settle a new community near the shore and find a ship on which to return to Africa. Meanwhile, the narrator flees to safety, but later she gets a firsthand account of the events.
      Deputy-governor Byam negotiates with Oroonoko to surrender and promises him amnesty. Once more he assures Oroonoko that he and his family will be freed and returned to Africa. Hardly surprising, however, Byam lies once more to Oroonoko and sees that he is whipped brutally, with pepper poured into his wounds, as soon as he surrenders. The despondent Oroonoko realizes he now will never be free and that his child will be born in captivity. He informs Imoinda that he has decided to kill her honorably, take revenge on Byam, and then kill himself. She thanks her husband for allowing her to die with dignity, and he cuts her throat and removes her face with his knife. But Oroonoko becomes prostrated with grief and can never generate enough energy to go after Byam. Sinking ever deeper into depression, he waits for eight days next to the body of his dead wife until the stench brings Byam's men to the site, where they immediately set about killing him. Finally, Oroonoko stands stoically smoking his pipe while they chop off his nose, ears, and one leg. Then he falls down dead, and they quarter his body before disposing of it.

  • @NavrajBathindewala
    @NavrajBathindewala 4 года назад

    Sir please The monk by Matthew Gregory Lewis explain in hindi

  • @Pri11798
    @Pri11798 4 года назад +4

    Sir photo toh beautiful c lgate Imoinda ki😁😁😁😁😁😁

  • @mathewarnold7742
    @mathewarnold7742 Год назад

    Imoinda da ka dari kaise agaya,ye smj me nhi aya

  • @nehabhardwaj7374
    @nehabhardwaj7374 Год назад

    Shamela by Henry fielding,,, please sir

  • @dimpalkumarigadiluhar685
    @dimpalkumarigadiluhar685 2 года назад

    Sir plz THE ALCHEMIST ka video banavo

  • @neerajkumar7360
    @neerajkumar7360 4 года назад

    sir publishing date bhi describe kare

  • @anikatahsinprintu873
    @anikatahsinprintu873 4 года назад

    Please make corrections... Oroonoko killed his wife along with his child

  • @ravigahlawat4156
    @ravigahlawat4156 4 года назад +1

    👌👌👌👌👌

  • @GamitSanjana-m9m
    @GamitSanjana-m9m Месяц назад

    Please ap savitri book5 canto 3 par bhi video banye..

  • @tinas...7208
    @tinas...7208 3 года назад

    Thanks

  • @azharirfan7398
    @azharirfan7398 4 года назад +1

    Sir plz 'romantic prose' or 'novel of manners'...plzzzzzz Sir...ye sem 2 k syllabus me h😔😔

  • @nikkikashyap2539
    @nikkikashyap2539 4 года назад

    Sir plsss henery fielding shameld bhi bta do

  • @rajkumartarafdar619
    @rajkumartarafdar619 4 года назад

    Thank you

  • @reemvlogs99
    @reemvlogs99 3 года назад

    Thank you🙏🙏🙏😇😇💖

  • @stark4923
    @stark4923 3 года назад +1

    Sir ending of this is different oroonoko himself kills his wife and child in order to protect them from further suffering

    • @CuriousCorner2010
      @CuriousCorner2010 7 месяцев назад

      The original summary 🤓🤓
      Oroonoko chronicles the story of the African prince Oroonoko and his beloved wife Imoinda, who are captured by the British and brought to Surinam as slaves. The tale is set primarily in this locale on the northern coast of South America during the 1640s, just before the English surrendered the colony to the Dutch.
      A young English woman, the nameless narrator, resides on Parham Plantation awaiting transportation back to England. She is the daughter of the new deputy-governor, who unfortunately died during the family's voyage to take up his new post. During her wait, she has the opportunity to meet and befriend prince Oroonoko and his lovely wife, Imoinda. Before introducing the primary character, however, the narrator provides great detail about the colony and the inhabitants, presenting first a list of multicolored birds, myriad insects, high-colored flora and exotic fauna, and then an almost anthropological account of the natives with whom the British trade and who seem to the narrator to be as innocent as Adam and Eve in "the first state of innocence, before man knew how to sin." The British, she insists, live happily with the natives. Because of their vast numbers, the colonists are unable to enslave them and so must look elsewhere for slaves to work on the sugar plantations--that is, they look to Africa.
      After her overview of Surinam, the narrator switches the setting to Coramantien (today Ghana) on the west coast of Africa, where the protagonist Oroonoko is about to meet Imoinda, the daughter of the general who has just died saving Oroonoko's life. The king of Coramantien, who is the 100-year-old grandfather of Oroonoko, has also fallen in love with the young and beautiful girl and has beaten Oroonoko to the punch by sending her the royal veil, a gift Imoinda cannot refuse, and which signifies that she is now the wife of the king. She will spend the rest of her days locked within the otan, or the royal seraglio, which only the king can visit. Oroonoko, however, breaks into the otan with the help of his good friend Aboan, who keeps one of the king's senior wives named Onahal occupied with lovemaking. The king catches him, and Oroonoko flees. Although Imoinda is sold into slavery, the king later informs Oroonoko that she has been honorably put to death.
      Meanwhile, the British arrive in Coramantien to trade for the war captives whom Oroonoko sells as slaves. The captain invites the prince and his friends to board his vessel as his guest, but then surprises them and takes them captive. Soon after he promises Oroonoko his freedom, when he and his friends refuse to eat, but he fails to keep this promise. Upon the ship's arrival at Surinam, Oroonoko is sold to the mild-mannered and witty overseer of Parham Plantation who befiends him, Mr. Trefry. At this point, Oroonoko meets the narrator. She and Trefry assure the prince that as soon as the lord-governor Willoughby arrives in Surinam he will be set free.
      Because of his high social status, superior education, and spectacular physical appearance, Oroonoko is never sent to work. He resides away from the other slaves in the plantation house. While walking with Trefry one day, he sees Imoinda. The lovers fall happily into each other's arms and all but instantly marry. Soon Imoinda becomes pregnant.
      At this point Oroonoko, who desperately desires that his child not be born a slave, becomes even more concerned about his enslaved status despite Trefry's and the narrator's renewed promises that all will be well when the governor arrives. They attempt to divert him with hunting, fishing, and a trip to a native village. Oroonoko is a champion hunter who kills two tigers singlehandedly in addition to managing to hold onto a fishing rod even when an electric eel knocks him unconscious. Although the native village provides distraction (and another means for Behn to provide cultural information about the natives in this region), Oroonoko incites a slave revolt with the other plantation slaves. They escape on Sunday night when the whites are drunk, but they leave a trail that is easy to follow because they have to burn the brush in front of them. The plan is to settle a new community near the shore and find a ship on which to return to Africa. Meanwhile, the narrator flees to safety, but later she gets a firsthand account of the events.
      Deputy-governor Byam negotiates with Oroonoko to surrender and promises him amnesty. Once more he assures Oroonoko that he and his family will be freed and returned to Africa. Hardly surprising, however, Byam lies once more to Oroonoko and sees that he is whipped brutally, with pepper poured into his wounds, as soon as he surrenders. The despondent Oroonoko realizes he now will never be free and that his child will be born in captivity. He informs Imoinda that he has decided to kill her honorably, take revenge on Byam, and then kill himself. She thanks her husband for allowing her to die with dignity, and he cuts her throat and removes her face with his knife. But Oroonoko becomes prostrated with grief and can never generate enough energy to go after Byam. Sinking ever deeper into depression, he waits for eight days next to the body of his dead wife until the stench brings Byam's men to the site, where they immediately set about killing him. Finally, Oroonoko stands stoically smoking his pipe while they chop off his nose, ears, and one leg. Then he falls down dead, and they quarter his body before disposing of it.

  • @funnykidssubhanrazzakoffic1507
    @funnykidssubhanrazzakoffic1507 4 года назад

    Sir plzz Christopher Marlowe,s tamburlain pr video bnaiyye plzzz sir

  • @usmanitacademy9109
    @usmanitacademy9109 4 года назад

    Grateful

  • @Silver_mist57
    @Silver_mist57 Год назад +1

    🥺🥺

  • @1212kumari
    @1212kumari 4 года назад

    Sir A Monsoon day fable krva dijiye plz for MA final. Thanks

  • @bismamasood8027
    @bismamasood8027 2 года назад

    👍👍👍👍

  • @triplibhowmick7006
    @triplibhowmick7006 2 года назад

    But sir...
    Imoinda ko to Oroonoko ne mara tha...
    Aapne kaha kind ne mara...
    Mai kuch samjhi nhi

    • @CuriousCorner2010
      @CuriousCorner2010 7 месяцев назад

      The original summary 🤓🤓
      Oroonoko chronicles the story of the African prince Oroonoko and his beloved wife Imoinda, who are captured by the British and brought to Surinam as slaves. The tale is set primarily in this locale on the northern coast of South America during the 1640s, just before the English surrendered the colony to the Dutch.
      A young English woman, the nameless narrator, resides on Parham Plantation awaiting transportation back to England. She is the daughter of the new deputy-governor, who unfortunately died during the family's voyage to take up his new post. During her wait, she has the opportunity to meet and befriend prince Oroonoko and his lovely wife, Imoinda. Before introducing the primary character, however, the narrator provides great detail about the colony and the inhabitants, presenting first a list of multicolored birds, myriad insects, high-colored flora and exotic fauna, and then an almost anthropological account of the natives with whom the British trade and who seem to the narrator to be as innocent as Adam and Eve in "the first state of innocence, before man knew how to sin." The British, she insists, live happily with the natives. Because of their vast numbers, the colonists are unable to enslave them and so must look elsewhere for slaves to work on the sugar plantations--that is, they look to Africa.
      After her overview of Surinam, the narrator switches the setting to Coramantien (today Ghana) on the west coast of Africa, where the protagonist Oroonoko is about to meet Imoinda, the daughter of the general who has just died saving Oroonoko's life. The king of Coramantien, who is the 100-year-old grandfather of Oroonoko, has also fallen in love with the young and beautiful girl and has beaten Oroonoko to the punch by sending her the royal veil, a gift Imoinda cannot refuse, and which signifies that she is now the wife of the king. She will spend the rest of her days locked within the otan, or the royal seraglio, which only the king can visit. Oroonoko, however, breaks into the otan with the help of his good friend Aboan, who keeps one of the king's senior wives named Onahal occupied with lovemaking. The king catches him, and Oroonoko flees. Although Imoinda is sold into slavery, the king later informs Oroonoko that she has been honorably put to death.
      Meanwhile, the British arrive in Coramantien to trade for the war captives whom Oroonoko sells as slaves. The captain invites the prince and his friends to board his vessel as his guest, but then surprises them and takes them captive. Soon after he promises Oroonoko his freedom, when he and his friends refuse to eat, but he fails to keep this promise. Upon the ship's arrival at Surinam, Oroonoko is sold to the mild-mannered and witty overseer of Parham Plantation who befiends him, Mr. Trefry. At this point, Oroonoko meets the narrator. She and Trefry assure the prince that as soon as the lord-governor Willoughby arrives in Surinam he will be set free.
      Because of his high social status, superior education, and spectacular physical appearance, Oroonoko is never sent to work. He resides away from the other slaves in the plantation house. While walking with Trefry one day, he sees Imoinda. The lovers fall happily into each other's arms and all but instantly marry. Soon Imoinda becomes pregnant.
      At this point Oroonoko, who desperately desires that his child not be born a slave, becomes even more concerned about his enslaved status despite Trefry's and the narrator's renewed promises that all will be well when the governor arrives. They attempt to divert him with hunting, fishing, and a trip to a native village. Oroonoko is a champion hunter who kills two tigers singlehandedly in addition to managing to hold onto a fishing rod even when an electric eel knocks him unconscious. Although the native village provides distraction (and another means for Behn to provide cultural information about the natives in this region), Oroonoko incites a slave revolt with the other plantation slaves. They escape on Sunday night when the whites are drunk, but they leave a trail that is easy to follow because they have to burn the brush in front of them. The plan is to settle a new community near the shore and find a ship on which to return to Africa. Meanwhile, the narrator flees to safety, but later she gets a firsthand account of the events.
      Deputy-governor Byam negotiates with Oroonoko to surrender and promises him amnesty. Once more he assures Oroonoko that he and his family will be freed and returned to Africa. Hardly surprising, however, Byam lies once more to Oroonoko and sees that he is whipped brutally, with pepper poured into his wounds, as soon as he surrenders. The despondent Oroonoko realizes he now will never be free and that his child will be born in captivity. He informs Imoinda that he has decided to kill her honorably, take revenge on Byam, and then kill himself. She thanks her husband for allowing her to die with dignity, and he cuts her throat and removes her face with his knife. But Oroonoko becomes prostrated with grief and can never generate enough energy to go after Byam. Sinking ever deeper into depression, he waits for eight days next to the body of his dead wife until the stench brings Byam's men to the site, where they immediately set about killing him. Finally, Oroonoko stands stoically smoking his pipe while they chop off his nose, ears, and one leg. Then he falls down dead, and they quarter his body before disposing of it.

  • @ShabanaSadiqShaikh
    @ShabanaSadiqShaikh Год назад +2

    ...Byam didn't kill Imoinda ...ornooko kill her

    • @CuriousCorner2010
      @CuriousCorner2010 7 месяцев назад

      The original summary 🤓🤓
      Oroonoko chronicles the story of the African prince Oroonoko and his beloved wife Imoinda, who are captured by the British and brought to Surinam as slaves. The tale is set primarily in this locale on the northern coast of South America during the 1640s, just before the English surrendered the colony to the Dutch.
      A young English woman, the nameless narrator, resides on Parham Plantation awaiting transportation back to England. She is the daughter of the new deputy-governor, who unfortunately died during the family's voyage to take up his new post. During her wait, she has the opportunity to meet and befriend prince Oroonoko and his lovely wife, Imoinda. Before introducing the primary character, however, the narrator provides great detail about the colony and the inhabitants, presenting first a list of multicolored birds, myriad insects, high-colored flora and exotic fauna, and then an almost anthropological account of the natives with whom the British trade and who seem to the narrator to be as innocent as Adam and Eve in "the first state of innocence, before man knew how to sin." The British, she insists, live happily with the natives. Because of their vast numbers, the colonists are unable to enslave them and so must look elsewhere for slaves to work on the sugar plantations--that is, they look to Africa.
      After her overview of Surinam, the narrator switches the setting to Coramantien (today Ghana) on the west coast of Africa, where the protagonist Oroonoko is about to meet Imoinda, the daughter of the general who has just died saving Oroonoko's life. The king of Coramantien, who is the 100-year-old grandfather of Oroonoko, has also fallen in love with the young and beautiful girl and has beaten Oroonoko to the punch by sending her the royal veil, a gift Imoinda cannot refuse, and which signifies that she is now the wife of the king. She will spend the rest of her days locked within the otan, or the royal seraglio, which only the king can visit. Oroonoko, however, breaks into the otan with the help of his good friend Aboan, who keeps one of the king's senior wives named Onahal occupied with lovemaking. The king catches him, and Oroonoko flees. Although Imoinda is sold into slavery, the king later informs Oroonoko that she has been honorably put to death.
      Meanwhile, the British arrive in Coramantien to trade for the war captives whom Oroonoko sells as slaves. The captain invites the prince and his friends to board his vessel as his guest, but then surprises them and takes them captive. Soon after he promises Oroonoko his freedom, when he and his friends refuse to eat, but he fails to keep this promise. Upon the ship's arrival at Surinam, Oroonoko is sold to the mild-mannered and witty overseer of Parham Plantation who befiends him, Mr. Trefry. At this point, Oroonoko meets the narrator. She and Trefry assure the prince that as soon as the lord-governor Willoughby arrives in Surinam he will be set free.
      Because of his high social status, superior education, and spectacular physical appearance, Oroonoko is never sent to work. He resides away from the other slaves in the plantation house. While walking with Trefry one day, he sees Imoinda. The lovers fall happily into each other's arms and all but instantly marry. Soon Imoinda becomes pregnant.
      At this point Oroonoko, who desperately desires that his child not be born a slave, becomes even more concerned about his enslaved status despite Trefry's and the narrator's renewed promises that all will be well when the governor arrives. They attempt to divert him with hunting, fishing, and a trip to a native village. Oroonoko is a champion hunter who kills two tigers singlehandedly in addition to managing to hold onto a fishing rod even when an electric eel knocks him unconscious. Although the native village provides distraction (and another means for Behn to provide cultural information about the natives in this region), Oroonoko incites a slave revolt with the other plantation slaves. They escape on Sunday night when the whites are drunk, but they leave a trail that is easy to follow because they have to burn the brush in front of them. The plan is to settle a new community near the shore and find a ship on which to return to Africa. Meanwhile, the narrator flees to safety, but later she gets a firsthand account of the events.
      Deputy-governor Byam negotiates with Oroonoko to surrender and promises him amnesty. Once more he assures Oroonoko that he and his family will be freed and returned to Africa. Hardly surprising, however, Byam lies once more to Oroonoko and sees that he is whipped brutally, with pepper poured into his wounds, as soon as he surrenders. The despondent Oroonoko realizes he now will never be free and that his child will be born in captivity. He informs Imoinda that he has decided to kill her honorably, take revenge on Byam, and then kill himself. She thanks her husband for allowing her to die with dignity, and he cuts her throat and removes her face with his knife. But Oroonoko becomes prostrated with grief and can never generate enough energy to go after Byam. Sinking ever deeper into depression, he waits for eight days next to the body of his dead wife until the stench brings Byam's men to the site, where they immediately set about killing him. Finally, Oroonoko stands stoically smoking his pipe while they chop off his nose, ears, and one leg. Then he falls down dead, and they quarter his body before disposing of it.

  • @rakshasharma9045
    @rakshasharma9045 4 года назад

    Sir please Orwell's essays...

  • @user-ky8hc2sl7f
    @user-ky8hc2sl7f 4 года назад

    Imoind was killed by Oroonoko himself and not by Byam

  • @devikabansal4060
    @devikabansal4060 3 года назад

    Beautiful ladki 🤣🤣🤣🤣