Tuesday, November 18, 2008

The Boy who’d Whispered a Resistance to the Sadhu’s Fusillade against the Gypsy Girl

24
             The Boy who’d Whispered a Resistance to the
                 Sadhu’s Fusillade against the Gypsy Girl

His little voice of truth had symphonically tried to interfuse her innocence with the soft, innocent beats of his little heart on that eventful day. It however was lost purposelessly in the noise of the grown-ups’ frayed tempers. The religioner, but, felt some ingrained prejudice against this mutineer revolting to cleanse the tainted flower.
This little one had bright teeth shining against the background of his swarthy cute face. He bore a pair of circular, surprised eyes. His little nose was a bit round, while his combed down hair was cut in a straight line across the middle of his forehead making him appear coy and subdued.
Aha, the unhindered bandwidth or spectrum of childhood panoramically bathed with showering sprinklings! When the sunshine of unselfish emotions rains down, drenching everything in humane warmth. The elders are, however, always on craggy tenterhooks with their sharply unyielding and twitchy nerves; their hearts too stony and cumbersome to have full view of the inscrutable wilderness sprawling across a child’s heart.
The little boy’s heart had leapt for the defence of that weeping, helpless girl when the villainously bearded fellow slapped her. While the whole fee-faw was noisily going on, he’d cried bitterly. Perhaps it was a piously true mourning for the injustice being meted out to such a beautiful girl, which the yawningly big eyes of the elders missed.
If we missed a particular incidence among that swirling storm of happenings on that day, then we can recall it now:
The boy had pounded his little fists on the religioner’s lame leg, who whacked him onto the ground.
The boy’d cried, “It’s you who lifts children, not she! Why were you wandering in the streets that night? Even Pa was with you.”
Amidst such noise of war proportions even the Sadhu himself hadn’t heard the little one’s counter-charge.
After a few weeks of the happening, the guru was invited to a satsang, religious discourse, at the community chaupal of Bhagte’s caste. Personal care attendant-cum-disciple was the event manager.
A few religioners, singers of Kabir’s poetry, local morality and ballad singers, and a group of musicians (wielding tanpura, dholak and harmonium) waited to open the flash-channels of religious rivulet.
From the very early age Bhagte’d grown up attending such musico-religious gatherings. Incense smoke arising along with devotionally charged-up particles of God-lorn metres, local folk-poetry, sermons encapsulating linguistic version of the ultimate reality were the things which’d firmed up his faith to unflinching proportions.
Predominant themes of these devotional songs and bhajans were the sayings and preachings of medieval bhakti saints and very cryptically said factoids of social conduct (which ended up giving a satirical little nudge) by the native religious figures, whose luminant memories hadn’t yet faded away from people’s guidance-seeking psyches.
Such was the period of medieval India when the art of devotional preaching reached the cusp of human sentimentality in His name; when the lonely lounging lollops in a particular section of the human heart made it a permanent temple in His name. Unfalteringly whole-hearted and single-minded devotion to the guru guided one to the farthest limits of faith. Saint poets like Kabir’ve hailed a true guru as greater than even the God.
Bhagte on his part knew so many of these sayings that he never failed to put up one or two in any context and situation. So much so that whenever a debate, argument or even an idle talk was going around him, he kept the noble composure of his silence. Then suddenly-–but without any disturbance-–a great couplet would escape from his mouth as the prologue and epilogue of a beautiful God-fearing thought. Other than this he won’t say anything else. They, however, termed it a lampoon’s timidity.
Further, it was his utter spellboundedness to the guru’s God-like lofty position so soulfully eulogised in those sacred religious ballads, which made the Sadhu a worshipable symbol of his faith in God.
These kinds of gatherings meant so much to him. He took part in them as if the occasion was no less than the greatest festival of India. So today too he was attired in best of clothes. A neat bath and well-oiled hair combed in cutest of a style made him look like the humble prince of this tiny religious fair. The Chaupal too wore a festive environment. He was arranging things with a gait which personified his pride for managing such an important thing: the very same thing he grew up watching as a spectator from a distance.
Hidingly mixed up in the motley crowd, his boy was staring at the villainous foe, the bearded bulky fellow the likes of whom he’d seen in some Hindi movies watched with a bated breath on a neighbour’s television. The seven-year-old was the only brother of his sister siblings. His father put him to tentation.
“Deepu, go and call your mother,” Bhagte’s morose and mopish tone failed to bring paternal tartness in the order.
With some uppishness the boy, in khaki knickers and white shirt (oddly this was not his school dress, because mostly on such occasions his school dress also served as the best piece of clothing), looked at his father. His little twinklings eyes seemed to complain to his father for his hob-knobbing with the bearded bad fellow. That’s how children define elders-–either good or bad; no mixed up in between characterisation. To the boy’s unstigmatised senses the religioner seemed the rakshasha, the demon, who’d imprisoned a beautiful fairy in some folk tale.
“Why’re you staring at me like this? Go and call your mother. And you too come with her!” the father pitched up some tartness.
“No, I won’t,” the boy seemed adamant.
“Now do’u need a little slap for that!” while saying this with feigned aggressiveness, the father seemed more perturbed than the boy himself.
The boy at once ran out on his spiky legs to avoid any such eventuality. His backside showed a very neatly washed up rumpled shirt, explicitly telling he’d worn it only this morning after it’d lain crumpled up in some old trunk, waiting for some special occasion to arrive. His cheap plastic slippers drummed-up his pace as they struck musically against his heels.
The boy returned with a cowering figure that followed the little man as if he was her sole protector. The disciple’s little wife was shyly draped in a red sari tucked a couple of inches above her ankles. Its colour had lost the charm despite retaining some redness. Her large silver anklets prominently displayed their trinketish garnet-garishment against the background of red socks and black sandals. Below the lower edges of her sari, pleated ends of a plain, faded petticoat were visible. Only her blouse had some mundane ornamentation, but most of it was hidden under the dexterously drawn pallu of her sari which also served as her purdah.
All it displayed was the cake and ale of countryside fashion prevalent among these poor ladies with nice, hardworking hearts; though it might seem ragged, emaciated and sun-bleached to the knuckle-rapping city sentimentality. Still, an odd emotional resonance in these bucolic hearts tries to chalk down a bright fashion statement on a few special occasions: extreme coloured wares; black sandals over red socks; anklets which jingle disproportionately to their tiny, trivial existence; too much oil in the braided hair, which makes head appear like a bald scalp painted dark black; lipstick missing the feminine edges making them appear funnily simple dummies; their hesitating dabbling into the glitters and shimmers of mascara, kohl, lipstick, bindi and nail-polish; dupattas and chunnis salvaged from some neighbour’s long obsolete wedding dress. Such are the crooning vital stats of folk-fashion.
In his simple unauthoritative voice Bhagte ordered his wife from the upper ladder in the harmonious hierarchy of lopsided relationship between husband and wife in a traditional, conservative society:
“Go, touch the feet of guruji and ask for blessings!”
The big, hairy and bare-chested religioner was enjoying his time with a thin old man wearing a big garland of flowers. Whatever might have been the nature of their conversation, but by the look of it one would’ve wondered if they were bantering away jokes. A slobbery peel of laughter culminated in a loud pat on his thigh as if he was a commoner just like any other person in the chaupal.
“Guruji, here’re your children!” Bhagte gave a little nudge at the shoulder of his shy, hesitant wife. “Turn their life successful by your blessings,” he almost pleaded.
She went forward and put her head on the Sadhu’s feet with the meekness of a goat.
“Shiva Shambhu bless you the best of a fortune, daughter!” the fiery-eyed God’s confidante showered a blessing in his dry and depersonalized tone. His firm upper body became religiously taut.
“Now you, Deepu!” head disciple felt a sensation of nervous energy as he smelt particles of defiance above the kid’s head.
With horror in his little twinkling eyes, the boy didn’t budge from his ground. His childish, willowy figure seemed stuck up like a peg in the ground.
“Yes, yes! What’re you waiting for? Get blessings from mahatmaji for your well being in life,” the father repeated, shoveling the son forward.
The boy’s face contorted in a firm resolution.
“No... no Pa no, I won’t! He beat that girl and... and his friends killed her brother who came to save her!” he almost fainted in the effort.
Aha, what big sympathetic space in children’s hearts for the wrongs committed to fellow human beings! Why then it goes on narrowing as we grow up, and finally take part in those very same wrongs?
The religioner’s coarse, craggy and cross face turned diabolically adversarial. There was a hell-raising flashback and flashforward of her memory. His large temples under those staggeringly big locks and curls of graying hair throbbed with stormy agitation.
“Didn’t I tell you that bitch’d cast an evil charm on this little pigeon of yours!” with inherent deceit and destructiveness he stared at his disciple.
“Now you little foolish haunted one, come here!” he raised his hairy hand towards the boy.
“Now, I won’t!” completely fear-frozen, the boy started to weep.
As was to be expected, Bhagte gave a whack with his moderately thick, veiny and hairy hand at the boy’s back for perpetrating insult to his revered guruji. The boy let out a fluminous cry.
“No... no... Pa... no! He’s a bad man. Didn’t I tell you how he beat that girl? She knew a, b, c, d. Even then he hit her!” the boy cried at the top of his throat.
“Shut up you fool! What filth are you shouting?” with an emaciated look Bhagte lost the divine equanimity of his flawlessly cool temper.
His boy was publicly unspooling sacrilege against the symbol of his faith. With shaking hands he put his palm over the kid’s mouth to stop the unholy voice. The boy writhed under his grasp. In desperation, his freckled cheeks twitching with fear, the father gave many kicks at the boy’s bare, callused knees.
“Seems he’s still under the black charm of that filthy nomad,” the predator preyed upon the suffocated prey. “Didn’t I tell you how witchy these homeless wanderers are? Now see with your own eyes. She wasn’t able to take him with her, but left an evil spell on him. Look, how he speaks from her side as if his own father doesn’t mean anything to him!” he sermonized his accusation against the tiny reality-knower.
Bhagte almost shivered under the impact of his dark prophecy.
The little valiant bit his father’s hand and stood his ground, “She knew one, two, three and a, b, c, d so well. And... and didn’t pull my ears like masterji when I forgot the count. She knew all of them. Even then you beat her! Why?”
He threatened the religioner with his innocent eyes. Bhagte gave another merciless thwack at the back of his head.
“A girl of those illiterate lampoons knows all that lies in fat books! Ha... Ha... Haa! What a powerful black magic!” the sermoneer strengthened his position.
His disciple took it from where the guru’d left, “You... you... fool! How could’u be haunted this much without my knowledge? Oh, God! Why’s this happened to me? Me! Me, who has always followed your path. Oh, this little bewitched fool haunted by the cursed ill magic of that devil spirit hiding inside that pretty faced girl!” his faith was dangerously taking up the contours of webby superstition from which it’s so difficult to get out.
He couldn’t speak anymore. His lips quivered in a violent commotion. His tongue choked. Aggrieveness was then worded by the salty stream of tears. Glimpsing through the diluvial lenses, the purblind view of his guru seemed magically aglow. Words once again welled up in his throat; this time in the form of a prayer.
“O Lord, he’s my only son…the latest step in our continuance on the path of goodness. Why in thy name he’s been ensnared in this danger? Please Lord, please... save my child!” with sad, teary he was staring heavenwards.
With his hands clasped together he looked at the boy’s face so intensely as if to see the effect of his prayer. His belief in God was so close-grained that had there been an oracle from above, it won’t have surprised him even a bit. But then we no longer get surprised by miracles. Rather, the hard facts of real life are becoming manifold surprising. And beyond this, God’s ways and means are so implicitly indirect that it’s hard to differentiate between a commonly known reality and a miracle.
The voice of course came from the religioner’s mouth, “Don’t be too worried Bhagte. Why’re you giving trouble to the God who’s too far and has too many works at His disposal? He’s deputed people like me for such simple and easy tasks. Don’t trouble Him for such little things. I’ve handled most dangerous of evil spirits. I assure you that I’ll very easily bury this one in earth.” Hawk-fierce tone of the thick-set religioner now mellowed down to religious proportions.
The Sadhu’s heavy, sly eye-lids stopped their work for a moment and he peeped into the honest and ardent eyes of his disciple. With the air of a saviour he signaled Bhagte to bring the boy to him. An obedient Bhagte shoved the boy towards the clutch-lorn hand of the religioner. Displaying the quickness of a bird of prey, his spiritual mentor’s inexorably hard fingers caught hold of the boy’s seraphically soft tissue-–his earlobe. Acting on the nocent reflection of his soul’s instinct of mercilessly preying upon soft targets, he twisted it with full force.
Tortured by this demonic interjection into his softly mellifluous childhood, the boy gave a loudly abusive cry.
“Leave me... leave me... you sister-fucker... leave me!” amongst the painful shaking of his round head, the obscenity sounded clear.
Oh, those jocosely jousting urchins, whose tongues grow up believing that obscenities and foul words are just name-sake common things of usage! Bhagte’s son was no exception. He poured out his whole knowledge in the matter. In fact, some of them were hair-raising in their offensiveness.
From top to tail, every ounce of the religioner’s soul baulked a separate harangue.
“Pretty foul mouthed evil spirit, you see,” his nostrils quivering, the godhead tried to control the blatantly open show of his rage. “If not done away with very soon, it’ll drink all his sweet blood. See... see how it comes? The blood!” he but failed to put reins to his anger. His broad cheek-bones and that grizzled look bestowed him some strange, savage handsomeness. The veins on his hairy temples were sending repercussions through whole of his head.
In broad day light it was turning a bloody, paranormal thing. With preterhuman gumption, fear psychosis fell upon the gathering. Earlobe was cut at the corner. “The blood of evil spirit, which she drank from him!” having a quick glance at the father on the verge of fainting, he added, “Don’t worry Bhagte. I’ll protect your boy from this gory spirit. Take my word on this!” The pious guest-of honour’s thickly bearded jaw was drawn like a pincer.
Staring at the spawn, once again he started his ritualistic thuggery, “Om... Om... Om... Go away you child’s blood sucker!”
The exorcist’s soul went for a perilous stoop. His fingertips were tainted with the sanguine symbol of his inner paradoxical fury volcanically smouldering inside the stony fortress of his religionhood. Sole worldly chink in the walls of earlier had by now acquired a few more worldly siblings. Now he was fully determined to brave up the worldly, materialistic fusillade. His utilitarian religious armoury, thus, was naturally bound to get some more cleavages.
Like a predator gearing up for another strike he rolled his fingertips laced with the mire of unholy deed. Seeing a tiny unit of his existence dead and dried-up on the insensitively dying flakes on his foe’s fingertips, the child was drawn into a mysteriously chimerical world of childhood inquisitions. A severely hard lesson churned out of it. Don’t mess up with this monster; otherwise consequences’ll be more punitive.
Defeatedly the kid dropped his gaze onto the ground. His silently suffering sobs bearing a testimony to the treacherous lesson learnt from the mutinous episode. From his kamandla the fearsome, barrel-chested exorcist splashed water over the boy’s face. A serenely swelling-up sob was disharmonically captured by a chilly hiccup. Once again he stared in those bulging blood-red eyes, which devilishly ordained, ‘Never put up a revolt against me in the future!’
And he---a mere seven-year-old---understood the message very well. A further splash of water carried once chirpy kid into a sea of unplayful gloom. It was his initiation into the glum world of fear and unchildish imagination. The religioner became the sole symbol of jaw-clenching fee-faw and unknown inhibitions. Afraid that any mischief of his would throw him into the devil’s tentacles, he put unnaturally hasty breaks to his childhood manoeuvres. A mysterious sorrow and fear blanketed the flower.
His father, who used to have nightmares watching the son’s naughtiness, was now chanting the name of his guru with every breath, servilely thankful for bringing the harbinger of his pedigree on the right track. In a society where a father visiting his children’s teachers is able to muster up just this one reformative phrase ‘Sir, give him hardest of a beating!’, so we should’ve no problem in estimating this father’s obligedness to his guru for the mighty lesson taught to his son.
Still, there was a mildly nagging worry. Only to keep the grain of paranormal insecurity alive inside his disciple, the exorcist’d closed the religious discourse that day with these words:
“See... See! Didn’t I assure you I’ll handle it! See, the evil’s withdrawn into its shell. But, it still exists in some littlest of point inside the body and can invigorate itself if this little fool gives it an opportune time!”
The boy from that day did his best not to let it happen. A miraculously reformed boy, indeed!

                                                    25
                         Myths, Legends, Folk-tales: History

Apart from the common Gods of a particular socio-cultural and religious section there’re smaller local Gods, deities and deified family and clan ancestors who firm up the faith of smaller constituent settlements. Similarly, there’s a parallel (or constituent) unit of local legends, myths, folk and fairy-tales alongside the overarching hierarchy of common cultural and historical milieu.
This village too basked in the luminous solitude of its own little myths, legends and historical tales. As far as history is concerned who can give a historically confident account of nearly six lakh human settlements across the length and breadth of India? Some people of course can: the genealogists, known as bhats. But only on one condition: one must have some acquisitiveness (at least to the extent of a dilute dilettante’s taste) to catch up with some last scion of this fastly extinguishing profession. And to find one it’ll take an archaeologist’s effort.
In earlier times, practically every settlement did boast of one such unofficially recognised historian, who in his books kept the family names across generations, their charities and donations to the bhat ancestors. From sandiest of remoteness they still arrive with their books probably once or twice in a year. Give then the host a few anxious moments by parroting the monotonous chronology of unknown names from an indistinct past. But a slipshod present rambling along the flungs and flumps of modern life is grossly short of time to have even a single look at the subtle shades of an unfacetious past. So in order to get rid of this time waste the host ends up doling out a little charity to the redundant lineage record-keeper. So a bhat is just worth some wheat and some money for the pacification and appeasement of ancestral souls still trying to pull at the physical sinews through those words in the fat books cover-bound with a ragged red cloth.
If someone’d the patience to look at the first page in the village bhat’s book, he would’ve learnt the village of our tale came into being in 1285or 1286.
“People from Prithviraj Chauhan’s clan!” the genealogist’d have tried to varnish a glow of molten gold over the lacklustre past.
Isn’t it surprising that these innocuously unsophisticated and simple villagers of today draw their lineage from the clan of mightiest arm of Rajput resistance against the Muslim attackers?
“Yes, your forefathers, the ancestors of whole village, belonged to that great warrior clan and migrated from Rajasthan.”
But, why an emigration out of the land of the proud sword-bearing arms of India?
“Perhaps, Islam’s sustained campaign slowly won over them... they, who were ever ready to die for a cause, left the sandy wastes for better pastures. If there was no external cause, they finished it up among themselves. For pride, women, clan, ethnicity, etc., etc.”
Oh, is’t so! But, why do they look so unwarrior type now? Of course, except the roughly enthusiastic cynicism of their dialect.
“Time’s rust eats away most of the things. Might and bravery are no exception to that.”
Still, it’s sensible enough not to get killed at the mere drop of a pin!
“Very sensible your excellency! I go off from here. If you’ve anything to give, then give or burn my burden as the Islamic zealots did with our scriptures during the medieval times!”
Now after history, a bit of talk about the native legends from the hollow-cheeked grandpas, who make them sound characters from not so popular folk-tales. For sure, within a decade or two all these’ll be lost in the anonymous bibliography of greater history. Eldest surviving members most of whom would be finishing their journey within the decade to come sometimes pull at the memory cords of these native legends now on the verge of extinction. Chapters of ‘might is right’, robberies, wrestlers, saviours, mighty great bets (which sometimes ended with a loss of life) hesitatingly flow out of the time’s culvert beneath the road of ‘present’ clogged with a heavy traffic of events and happenings.
If someone has the time to listen to the robust old man who still gulps a lot of milk, butter-milk and butter (although, winning it in a fight with the daughter-in-law, who mutters with each mouthful of his, “Bloated oldie, we’ve no more of it! Now, eat us!”) then the conversation would take such a shape:
“You people, the strongest of youths among you! Even the weakest of our times would’ve killed you in wrestling. Have’u heard about Bagha? No! Oh my poor youngling, he was that pahalvan from our village who was known in the whole state for his wrestling powers. Never, ever lost a fight in his life!”
“But he did once!”
“Haa... even your father wasn’t born by that time. And here you’re trying to stigmatise the strong man.”
“Isn’t it a truth that he was defeated by a dead weight?”
“Oh, you fool! You people of today call it a defeat. Then you people don’t know what victory means. It was in fact a most memorable victory. Greatest victory I ever saw! You know, the stone was at least two hundred kilogram. Get all your pahalvans of today to lift it. All of you, I challenge! Go, it’s still lying there!”
“But he died under that, dadaji.”
“No! He’d won. In the bet it was just to be lifted above the head. What happened after that, it’s nobody’s business. No such thing as dead or alive after accomplishing the feat. He was as mighty as Hanuman holding a mountain above his head. His hands were trembling. And we children were celebrating because the respect of the whole village had been saved. Then the elders realised the great victor was holding his trophy for too long. Too long to fatality! His eyes were glazing wider and wide to match the effort. Hugely anxious they shouted at him to throw away the stone. Aaah... he won’t! They ran to push the death hovering over his head to one side. The mountain fell with a bang; near his feet. Only then he toppled over the defeated stone lying at his feet. The victor, the greatest victor! From that day they started saying, ‘Never play with the weight, stone or iron, for who could do it is no more!’ Such were the pahalvans of our times!”
There’re so many other such lower heroes forming the unknown lower leitmotif of the commonly known microcosm of graceful columns and fine facade of the palace of higher folk-tales. Time’s poignancy and penetration cut them down to still smaller and smaller size with the passage of each generation. Most probably the grandpas of our tale’d be the last ones to vivaciously think about them; bringing them back from time’s abditory. So, while the din of life continues unabated, the elders still whisper homage to these unsung heroes.
Further, there’re so many other still smaller heroes in the small shelves of little local abditories in the universal archives of cosmic history. Figures who lived believing might is stronger than mind: animally eating unbelievable (to create unofficial records) quantities of butter, chapattis, milk, butter-milk, raw vegetables and lumps of jaggery. One fellow like a mini elephant ended up uprooting a grown-up acacian tree. His arms gripping it like an elephant’s trunk. One used to run so fast that the British collector came to hold a darbar in the village to see and award him. Another one had the might to try his hand on a buffalo. They say he made a successful attempt at lifting a grown-up buffalo. Growing skeptic, yes? Well, the old eyes which once saw the spectacular feat still try to convince that it indeed happened. ‘How was it possible?’ the skeptical present generation might still insist. Some worldly-wise spirit can put up an effort:
“Man’s will power when extends to the extreme horizons, it enters the realm of God. Then everything becomes possible. The man started lifting the animal right from the time it was born and went on doing it everyday thinking he was lifting the same, almost weightless, little calf. Thus, even if each day added a little weight to the animal, the cosmic constant of his will-power nullified that. His resolve stood rock firm. The actual weight isn’t the amount of mass lying in a stone. It’s what it seems to one’s mind. So in the end the man ended up lifting a whole of buffalo!”
Well, what a fellow! Shining like a celestial truth at the fringe of the world of myth, legends and folk-tales.
Then, another was from the world of shooting-–marksmanship, we mean. Yes, don’t you believe it? Buddy, heavily stands a skeptic’s head because it wears the crown of overpossessive logic. Still, you’re justified a bit in your disbelief. After all, in that era of purest rural-rusticity, when they’d few things to eat, same wares to wear and almost the same work of ploughing, how could someone from the village be expected to possess the guts and time to excel in this sport of cribbling and trickily demanding specialisation. Hoom, well... if someone is driven by dreams and determination then walking on one’s own chosen path becomes possible.
The above mentioned person was a simpleton farmer. Now, talents in most of the cases are inborn. His sun-bleached face betrayed an excellent sense of distance, marksmanship, force to be put behind the throw and the likes. Had it not been the case, how could he hit so many birds in his attempts to shoo them away from his bajra fields. That too with the help of such a crude throwing instrument called gopia. It was just a double rope whose both ends were held in the hand. The other end consisted of a woven loop to hold a pebble or earthen clod. Operating methodology required it to be swung around the body and then release one end of the rope with all expertise, inborn and learnt judgments at the bird-drove eating the crop. What an instrument! Swinging it around one’s head to hit the target! Littlest of a delay or snag threatened to bust the aim’s ceiling. When it came to the gulail (the sling-shot) he showed the exact accuracy of his art. This instrument consisted of a rubber tied at the upper ends of a V-shaped wood. Stretch the rubber with a pebble pinched between your fingers and go with a bang.
As talent is no slave to either temper or tongue. Such people when get the refined tools of their interest they don’t miss the target. They always put behind those who from cradle to coffin have the opportunity to see, smell and feel those very equipments in and around their houses. Similar was the case with this rough diamond lying in the bucolic countryside mine.
In pre-independence India, whenever the Britishers felt the pinch of urban-suffocation, pithy aphorisms from the countryside would start playing welcome songs in their ears. Attracted by this irresistible pacifism of the panoramic and poor sprawls they would arrive with a royal charm and aura; their ladies and retinue accompanying them. Following the path of mildly charming nature and hunting-lorn they found themselves in the oriental pastures; their overburdened, ruling, reforming senses enjoying a relaxing, spicy twinge of the subjects’ lower world. On such occasions the gora sahibs in hunting top-boots, breeches, flat-topped hats and solar topees, tight-waisted jackets with low collars and shirts having lace-cuffs---all in all the European-style smart casuals---revealed their uncynical, unofficial persona to the peasantry clad in home-spun vests and small loin-cloths. Sometimes they came in open carriages; sometimes in closed ones. On some occasions, the otherworldly white ladies descended from the curtained palanquins. On other occasions they were the defiant and flamboyant damsels on the steeds; subtle shades of their delicate curves mysteriously evincing through the gossamer delicacy of their wares. Looking at these blondes and brunettes, mischievously concealing their fairy forms in that coquettish transparency of silk, calico and muslin finery, the natives took long and silent sips of sensuousness.
The village pond, as was the case at the time of our tale, was the favourite spot for migratory birds. To earn a sporty dinner their rifles would go through a fiery and furious drudgery. The bird-hunters lay in the shrubbery and tried their marksmanship. Their ladies, standing like fairies draped in those neo-classical pleats, frills, folds, silken laces and flimsy and wispy gauze, clapped at each hit.
Whenever a bird failed to take off with the flock flying for life and flapped in the water instead, either their dogs or the native servants ran to get it out with all humility and obedience. The village boys too vied with each other to collect the empty bullet shells-–an object of hilarious satisfaction whenever they got one.
Now, it so happened that on a fine wintry sunlit noon the Britishers were having a bad day. Several shots had been fired since morning, but the groups of ducks flew unharmed (not to be seen for almost half an hour after the noise). Waiting game was thus becoming treacherously long drawn. The ladies in lace caps were getting bored. (Even with their perennially rejuvenating habit of checking their make-up and dress!) More serious was the failure before the subjects’ eyes. And then someone from the village, who had been a soldier in the British army and a veteran of world war first, felt his arms itching for an aim. He strugglingly smattered across a sentence or two in English; was lucky to convey the message; was luckier in getting the sahib’s nod. He, but, had grown old; quite strangely with great speed; could, thus, smell the looming failure. So the old man tucked forward the young farmer (who never missed a mark in his fields) as an alternative shooter. The proposal stirred up a hornet’s nest of laughter among the sahibs and mems. At one point of time the laughter even reached to the extent of a seeming irritation and a bit of anger, for they were too desperate that day. But one of the many good things about the Britishers (as is the case with the people of many nationalities) is that they want a perfect laugh, but before that they’ve the patience to offer a chance to the target of their laugh.
“Take this and shoot!” they stiffened up their lips. One of them kicked a tuft of gray grass with his sharp-toed boot. Out of eagerness one lady adjusted her lace cap.
The situation might have been warlike for the simpleton, but not for the old soldier. Deftly he told him the preliminary nitty-gritties of rifle and aim. With a war cry he urged him to the mission. Most of those present were expecting the boy to fall back due to the shock and the bullet going to the skies putting angels on their heels to escape from the hunting piece of metal. But they were wrong. Tools are the slaves of talent and will, not vice-versa. Inside him were the qualities of a fine marksman. He’d never depended on the nozzle and trigger of a rifle for the perfection of a shot. Rather, it was the stillness and aimful instinct in some concretised corridor of his brain. He pulled the trigger. Perhaps, for the first time his shot went precisely in harmony with what was inside him. It killed as many ducks as a single shot could.
All and sundry human fragilities apart, let’s have a look at another simple good thing about the Britishers. They react decently in such situations, in place of becoming belligerent due to ego hurts. In a fluminously mellifluous gesture, they heartfully congratulated him. From then onwards they saved themselves from all the dusty creepings of earlier times. With artful pleats of authority over their faces they watched comfortably, while the new-found, bolt-upright shooter did the job. He became a local hero, because his farmer fans thought that even the Britishers depended upon him. As it was to happen-–another good thing about the Britishers-–they deemed it prudent to have him in the army: a British way of making full use of the dependable subjects, so that both parties were happy in their respective roles as ‘authority’ and ‘efficient workers’!
In punctilious reserves of the village’s small history book, there were heroically voracious eaters-–another parameter of measuring might, pride and achievement. Someone could drink a whole pitcher of butter-milk; someone could eat chapattis whose number dangerously progressed towards three figures; someone could eat a mini mountain of butter; someone ate as much jaggery as an oxen; someone could eat as much sugar as the depth up to which five kilograms of melted butter reached in a sugar sack; someone could plough as much area as would put a tractor to shame.
Such were the laconic halts of time in its journey through these goat-tracks of small history. These were the moments which fell somewhat heavily from the time’s flow: just like a small pebble dropped into a pond, creating ripples for a while before vanishing again in the same monotony. Others meanwhile flew featherily, smoothly-smoothly... without creating turbulence of any sort. 

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