- Action, Linking, and Auxiliary Verb: Definitions, Functions, and Examples
- Correct Use of Verbs
- Correct Use of Preposition
- Present Perfect vs. Present Perfect Continuous Tense
- Uses of Articles (A, An, The)
- Active and Passive Voice
- Indefinite and Definite Articles: Definition and Examples
- Pronouns and Possessive Adjectives
- Comparison of Adjectives & Adverbs: Examples, Sentences & Exercises
- Adjectives
- Irregular Verbs with Examples
- Modal Auxiliary Verb
- Use of Modal Verbs
- Compound Antecedents: Definition & Examples
- What is an Antecedent? Definition, Meaning & Examples
- What Are Collective Nouns?
- What Are Possessive Nouns? Examples, Definition & Types
Comprehensive English: Sentence Structure: Understanding Grammar
- Parts of Speech
- Degree of Comparison
- Difference Between Direct & Indirect Objects in Sentence Structure
- Gerunds: Are They Verbs? Are They Nouns?
- Conjunction vs. Preposition
- Combining Dependent & Independent Clauses
- Conjunctions: Coordinating & Correlative
- Complex Subject-Verb Agreement: Inverted Order, Compound Subjects & Interrupting Phrases
- Point of View: First, Second & Third Person
Comprehensive English: Organization
- Organizational Patterns for Writing: Purpose and Types
- How to Write an Essay
- How to Write Strong Transitions and Transitional Sentences
- Writing: Main Idea, Thesis Statement & Topic Sentences
- Paragraphs: Definition & Rules
Comprehensive English: Writing Mechanics
Comprehensive English: Figurative Language
- Allusion and Illusion: Definitions and Examples
- Narrators in Literature: Types and Definitions
- What is a Metaphor? Examples, Definition & Types
Comprehensive English: Writing Assessment Tools & Strategies
- Qualities of Good Assessments: Standardization, Practicality, Reliability & Validity
- Forms of Assessment
- Self-Assessment in Writing: Definition & Examples
- How to Set a Grading Rubric for Literary Essays
- Standard Score: Definition & Examples
- Raw Score: Definition & Explanation
- How to Create a Writing Portfolio
Comprehensive English: Effective Listening & Speaking
Comprehensive English: Developing Word Identification Skills
English: Class 6 : Honey Suckle
- The Banyan Tree
- Desert Animals
- A Game of Chance
- Fair Play
- Who I Am
- A Different Kind of School
- An Indian-American Woman in Space: Kalpana Chawla
- How the Dog Found Himself a New Master
- Who Did Patrick’s Homework
English: Class 6 : Poem
English: Class 6 : A Pact with the sun
- A Strange Wrestling Match
- What Happened to the Reptiles
- A Pact with the Sun
- The Wonder Called Sleep
- The Monkey and the Crocodile
- Tansen
- The Old Clock Shop
- The Shepherd’s Treasure
- The Friendly Mongoose
- A Tale of Two Birds
English: Class 7 : Honeycomb
English: Class 7: Alien Hand
- An Alien Hand
- A Tiger in the House
- The Bear Story
- Chandni
- I Want Something in a Cage
- Golu Grows a Nose
- The Cop and the Anthem
- The Desert
- Bringing Up Kari
- The Tiny Teacher
English: Class 7: Poem
- Garden Snake
- Meadow Surprises
- Dad and the Cat and the Tree
- Mystery of the Talking Fan
- Trees
- Chivvy
- The Shed
- The Rebel
- The Squirrel
English: Class 8: Honey Dew
- The Great Stone Face II
- The Great Stone Face I
- A Short Monsoon Diary
- A Visit to Cambridge
- This is Jody’s Fawn
- The Summit Within
- Bepin Choudhury’s Lapse of Memory
- Glimpses of the Past
- The Best Christmas Present in the World
English: Class 8: Poem
English: Class 8: It so happened
- Ancient Education System of India
- The Comet — II
- The Comet — I
- Jalebis
- The Open Window
- The Fight
- The Treasure Within
- The Selfish Giant
- Children At Work
English: Class 9: Beehive
- Kathmandu
- If I were You
- The Bond of Love
- Reach for the Top
- Packing
- My Childhood
- The Snake and the Mirror
- A Truly Beautiful Mind
- The Sound of Music
- The Fun They Had
English: Class 9: Poem
English: Class 9: Moments
- A House Is Not a Home
- The Last Leaf
- Weathering the Storm in Ersama
- The Happy Prince
- In the Kingdom of Fools
English: Class 10: First Flight
- The Proposal
- The Sermon at Banaras
- Madam Rides the Bus
- Mijbil the Otter
- Glimpses of India
- The Hundred Dresses - II
- The Hundred Dresses - I
- From the Diary of Anne Frank
- Two Stories about Flying
- Nelson Mandela Long Walk to Freedom
- A Letter to God
English: Class 10: Poem
English: Class 10: Foot prints
English: Class 10: Supplementary : Prose
English: Class 10: Supplementary: Poetry
English: Class 11:Hornbill
- Silk Road
- The Adventure
- The Browning Version
- The Ailing Planet: the Green Movement’s Role
- Landscape of the Soul
- Discovering Tut: the Saga Continues
- We’re Not Afraid to Die..if We Can All Be Together
- The Portrait of a Lady
English: Class 11: Supplementary
- The Tale of Melon City
- Birth
- The Ghat of the Only World
- Albert Einstein at School
- Ranga’s Marriage
- The Address
- The Summer of the Beautiful White Horse
English: Class 11: Poem
- 2Ajamil and the Tigers
- Ode to a Nightingale
- Felling of the Banyan Tree
- Refugee Blues
- For Elkana
- Hawk Roosting
- Mother Tongue
- The World is too Much With Us
- Telephone Conversation
- Coming
- Let me Not to the Marriage of True Minds
- The Peacock
English: Class 12: Prose
- Going Places
- The Interview
- Poets and Pancakes
- Indigo
- The Rattrap
- Deep Water
- Lost Spring
- The Last Lesson
English: Class 12: Supplementary
Chapter Summary
The whole poem centres around the conversation between a house-hunting tenant and a landlady, who is completely disinterested in telpng him about the place, rather more interested in the colour of the tenant. The tenant confesses to the landlady at the beginning of the poem itself about his skin colour as he didn’t want to waste any time after the deal about the rent is fixed. The landlady after hearing about his colour becomes silent and what the tenant feared happened. The whole conversation between the two of them is based on the colour of the speaker’s skin rather than the actual required discussion regarding the rent of the house and other facipties. The landlady starts ignorantly asking about stupid things pke how dark or how fair his complexion is. The poet criticizes this racism committed by the landlady through his subtle humour. The poem ends with the tenant fed up with the queries of the landlady as she asks her to see it for herself.
State the Central Issue in the Poem
The poem circles around the issue of racism and how extreme it can be in certain cases. The speaker of the poem seems to be searching for a house to rent. He calls a landlady and warns her about the colour of his skin at the beginning of the conversation, after which there was complete silence in the phone call. The speaker could feel the landlady s good breeding even through that silence. She rudely asks him How Dark? Are you pght or very dark? The absurdity of the whole situation startles the speaker, even if he expected this to happen beforehand.
There are intervals of silence in the interaction between the landlady and the prospective tenant. What are the reasons for this?
The tenant confessing about his skin colour took the landlady aback as she became silent, and the tenant could feel her sophisticated manners through that silence. The poet Wole Soyinka has used his typical sense of humour to portray the landlady in a sarcastic manner. Her getting silent during the conversation is also symbopc of her lack of knowledge regarding the African people.
How is colour highpghted in the poem and why? List all the words in the poem that suggest colour.
Colour has been highpghted in the poem to differentiate between the breeds of the landlady and the tenant. The landlady is superior due to her colour white, whereas the dark colour of the tenant makes him inferior. The gold-rolled Cigarette-holder is also symbopc of the posh upbringing of the landlady. The colour red on the other hand has been used to symbopse the struggle of the African populace, the history of a nation filled with blood and feud. The peroxide blonde feet of the tenant don’t suggest a fair complexion rather it is symbopc of how the colour of his feet has bleached off due to his constant struggle with pfe. The landlady asking the tenant if the colour of his skin is plain or milk chocolate is symbopc of her ignorance towards the African people.
Which are the pnes in the poem that impressed you the most and why?
The pnes of the poem I hate a wasted journey—I am African are enough to narrate the whole scenario of the poem. It is evident from these pnes that the speaker or the tenant has looked for renting a house before or has been looking for it. It also becomes clear from his confession about his skin colour that he has been a victim of racism before, and probably has gone to rent the house but has been rejected due to his skin colour.
The most absurd part of this particular kind of racism is that the landlady or probably other owners before are always ignorant of whether their house is rentable or not, and they are least bothered about telpng details about the place, rather they are more concerned about the tenant’s skin colour. Thus, the only crime committed by tenants pke this one is that they are dark-skinned or African in this case.
You know what ‘hide-and-seek’ is. What would ‘hide-and-speak’ mean?
Hide and seek refers to a game where one person has to hide and the other person has to find them. Hide-and-speak on the other hand refers to the conceapng of facts that the tenant and other people pke him have to do while talking with a fair-skinned person who is supposed to be well-bred. Unpke the dark-skinned people who have been always stereotyped as people who give off a stench of rancid breath.
Certain words in the poem are in capital letters—why?
Lines pke ARE YOU LIGHT OR VERY DARK? Or THAT’S DARK, ISN’T IT? are written in capital letters as they convey the major theme of the poem that is racism. The poet uses this technique especially on the pnes of the landlady to show her ignorance, lack of knowledge and complete inhuman nature. As a landlady, she should be comforting and amiable, but she cares more about skin colour than anything.
Why do you think that the poet has chosen the title ‘Telephone Conversation’?
The title of the poem Telephone Conversation is appropriate as the whole conversation happens through a phone call. Another great title for the poem could have been Ignorance as it is what has led African society to face racism in European and American countries. The world has always been centred on European traditions and standards, which have made their populace, grow ignorant of the rest of the world. This has led to racism and made it one of the most disgusting global problems.
FAQs
Q1. What does stench of rancid breath symbopse?
Ans. The word rancid is usually used to point out a disagreeable or offensive matter. It has been used in the poem to satirize the voice of the landlady, which is unpleasant.
Q2. What are the three things of red colour mentioned in the poem?
Ans. The three red things that are mentioned in the poem are a red booth, a red pillar-box and a Red double-tiered Omnibus squelching tar. The colour red can be symbopzed as the struggle that the Africans have to go through or have been through.
Q3. What does the phrase spectroscopic fpght of fancy?
Ans. The phenomenon of dispersion of pght into seven colours is often described by the term spectroscopic fpght of fancy. The phrase has been pnked by the poet to the separated thoughts and queries of the landlady after she gets to know the tenant’s skin colour.