Chapters 24-25
The hot season arrives in India, and the day of the trial dawns. Adela fears she
may break down on the witness stand. As the English party drives to the court,
the town is restive, and some workers are on strike in protest against the trial.
Some of the English blame Fielding for the bad feeling in the city, and Callendar
takes the opportunity to make a series of vicious racist remarks against the
Indians.
At the trial, Mr. McBryde opens the case for the prosecution. There is an
interruption, and the English party demand to be seated on the raised platform.
They intimidate the magistrate, Das, and virtually take charge of the courtroom.
But the defense, led by Amritao, soon succeeds in getting all the English
removed from the platform, with the exception of Miss Quested.
McBryde continues with the prosecution case, attempting to demonstrate that the
assault was premeditated. He mentions Mrs. Moore, whom he does not intend to
call as a witness, and the rumor goes around the court that the prosecution has
smuggled her out of the country because she would have proved Aziz's
innocence. Mahmoud Ali demands that Mrs. Moore be produced. He gets excited
by his own rhetoric, then walks out of the court, saying the trial is a farce. The
Indians in the court invoke Mrs. Moore's name, and the chant is taken up by the
crowd in the street outside.
After order is restored, Adela is called to testify. But as McBryde prompts her to
say that Aziz followed her into the cave, she balks. She cannot find any memory
of Aziz being present. She replies that she is not sure. When pressed by
McBryde, she says she made a mistake, that Aziz never followed her into the
cave. As bedlam breaks out in the courtroom, Adela says she withdraws her
charge. Stunned, McBryde is forced to drop the case. The court breaks up in
confusion.
Outside, as the authorities declare that a riot is taking place, Fielding takes
charge of protecting Adela. They are carried along in a carriage together while
the Indians throw garlands on them and applaud them. They end up at Fielding's
Government College, where they rest.
Meanwhile, a triumphal procession carries Aziz along, although for him there is
no pleasure in it, because he has suffered too much. Fired up by the excitable
Mahmoud Ali, the mob is about to attack the hospital to free Nureddin, the
grandson of the Nawab Bahadur, whom they claim is being tortured. Only an
intervention by Dr. Panna Lal, who retrieves Nureddin from the hospital, saves
the day. The Nawab declares that he will renounce his British-conferred title.
Analysis
The trial scene combines drama with farce. It seems to bring out the worst in
both sides. Each has contempt for the other, and every action, on either side,
merely confirms the racial stereotypes already well established. The English act
as if they own the court, and McBryde's remark that the darker races are
attracted to the fairer, but not vice versa, is presented (as racism often is) as a
simple matter of scientific fact, not prejudice. It is McBryde's belief in this kind of
science that enables him to regard the Indians as an inferior race, and still think
of himself as a fair-minded man.
Adela's sudden reversal comes as a surprise, but she has had her doubts all
along about Aziz's guilt, and she finally finds the courage, at the last minute, to
speak honestly. What really happened in the cave has still not been established;
it remains a mystery.
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