Madhumati signifies what the state-sponsored secular narrative cannot accept or recognize but must deal with by either rejecting or accommodating. Madhumati was released a decade after Independence, in an era marked by highly intrusive economic and political actions of an increasingly centralizing state, which included the passage of the Hindu Code Bills that sought to codify, regulate and modernise millennia-old Hindu traditions of marriage, succession, adoption and maintenance. It also introduced provisions for divorce, although marriages in Hinduism are considered sacrosanct and indissoluble. Despite objections from conservative quarters, the social and the political milieu was ready to acquiesce in the subjection of the spiritual to the secular, as embodied in the ghost of Madhumati which can materialize and dematerialize at will, yet desires revenge only through the agency of the state. Anand's words: ‘Mujrim apne jurm ki sazaa payega (The criminal will be punished for his crime)’, with the police taking away Ugranarayan takes on an extra diegetic resonance. They imply the reaffirmation of the citizen’s trust in the workings of the state and its assurance of punishment for the guilty. And with a ghost that ‘abides by law’, this refusal to wreck vengeance thus allows the state's realm to extend itself not just to the temporal but also to the phantasmal and has two points of significance: first, the phantasmal recognizes the authority of the temporal and its agency the secular state as the sole arbiter, thereby reaffirming faith in its lawdispensing abilities. Second, by submitting itself to secular authority, the spiritual has elevated the temporal over and above itself and thus deified it.