by Rabindranath Tagore
(translated and edited by MA Quayum, Professor,
Department of English Language and Literature, Human Sciences Division,
International Islamic University Malaysia, from the collection The Ruined Nest and other stories recently published by Silverfish Books, which is now available in all major bookshops in the country.)
Soon
after his appointment, the postmaster was sent for duty to the village
of Ulapur. It was an ordinary village. There was an Indigo factory
nearby and, using his influence, its English proprietor had managed to
get a post office established in the village.
Being from the city of Kolkata, our postmaster found himself like a fish
out of water in his new rustic surrounding. His office was in a dingy
cabin house, adjacent to a slimy pond filled with water-hyacinth and
surrounded by bushy trees on all four sides. The employees of the
factory had little upbringing or free time to associate with this
gentleman.
The urban-bred young man was also lacking in social skills. Whenever he
went to a new place, he looked either confused or arrogant, and could
barely interact with the villagers. On the other hand, he didn’t have
much work at office, either. Occasionally he wrote poetry expressing a
romantic sentiment of happiness at the sight of floating clouds and
fluttering shrubs, but God knew that if some genie from the Arabian
tales came and transformed the bushes into paved roads overnight and
built high rises that kept the clouds out of sight, then this
emotionally flagging sensitive person’s life would be revived again.
The postmaster worked on a meagre salary, so he had to cook his own
meals. He was assisted in his housework by a destitute orphan girl, in
return for a little food. The girl’s name was Ratan. The prospects of
her getting married soon looked faint.
In the evening, curls of smoke from fumigation spiralled from the
cowsheds, crickets chirped merrily in the thickets, tipsy bauls in
distant villages started playing on tom-toms and cymbals and singing at a
high pitch. Sitting on the porch in the dark, the poet’s lonely heart
would agitate slightly at the sight of the trembling boughs. At that
hour, standing in one corner of the house, the postmaster would light a
dim lamp and call out, “Ratan.” She would be sitting on the doorstep and
waiting for that call, but she never came into the house immediately.
Instead, she would reply, “Sir, do you need any help?”
“What are you doing?” the postmaster would ask.
“I am lighting the fireplace. I have work in the kitchen,” Ratan would reply.
“Your kitchen work can wait. Can you first get me the tobacco pipe?”
Soon Ratan would step into the house with cheeks inflated, blowing
persistently into a lighted tobacco bowl. Taking it from her hand, the
postmaster would ask her abruptly, “Ratan, do you still remember your
mother?” That was a long story, some of which she could recall and some
of which she couldn’t; but her father loved her more than her mother did
and she still remembered her father faintly. After a long day, her
father would return in the evening, and scattered images of some of
those evenings were somehow still firmly fixed in her mind. In the midst
of their idle talk, Ratan would gradually settle down on the clay floor
of the house, next to the postmaster’s feet. She remembered that she
had a little brother, and long ago, the two of them had played together,
fishing in a nearby pond using broken twigs of trees as fishing rods.
More than any of the serious incidents, this particular memory cropped
up in her mind often. Sometimes they would continue to chat late into
the night and the postmaster would feel too lazy to cook by then, so the
two of them would finish their dinner with the stale curry from the
morning and a few baked breads that Ratan prepared by making a quick
fire.
On some evenings, sitting in his office chair at one corner of the cabin
house, the postmaster would recall memories of his own family – his
mother, little brother and elder sister. Those fond memories filled his
lonely heart, away from home, with pain. The agonising thoughts, which
he could never share with the employees of the indigo factory, recurred
in his mind and he narrated them freely to this little illiterate girl
without ever considering it inappropriate. Eventually, it so happened
that during their conversations, the girl started calling his family
members in his own fashion, addressing them as “ma” (mother), “didi”
(elder sister), “dada” (elder brother), as if she had known them
forever. In her little heart, the girl even pictured the imaginary faces
of these people.
It was the rainy season and a warm gentle wind was blowing softly on a
sunny afternoon. An odour emitted from the sun-drenched vegetation, as
if the respiration of a flagging earth was blowing directly onto the
body, and an alien obstinate bird sang all through the afternoon,
complaining repeatedly to the world. The postmaster was relatively free
that day. The rain-washed, shiny, rustling leaves of trees and, in the
white light of a partly sunny day, the piled up clouds gathering in
layers in the sky after the rain was really a sight to see. The
postmaster observed that sight attentively and wondered what if he had
someone he loved close by then, someone whose heart was tied with his,
and who was the idol of his soul. It occurred to him that the plaintive
monotone of the bird and the surging noise of the foliage in an
afternoon landscape, void of human presence, were also perhaps telling a
similar story. No one knew it, or even suspected that the heart of the
postmaster of that little village, living on a meagre salary, was filled
with such thoughts of anguish and yearning on silent afternoons,
especially during the festive holidays.
Heaving a deep sigh, the postmaster called out, “Ratan.”
Ratan was sitting at the foot of a guava tree, her legs stretched out,
eating a raw fruit. On hearing the voice of her master, she ran inside
and asked breathlessly, “Dada Babu, did you call me?”
“I’ll teach you how to read bit by bit every day,” the postmaster
replied. With that, he spent the whole afternoon teaching her the
alphabets, and in a few days finished teaching her the compound letters.
There was no end to the monsoon rains, and soon it filled up all the
rivers, canals and marshy land; day and night frogs croaked and the rain
pounded. Most of the roads were inundated, and boats were used for
travelling to the market.
One day, when it had been raining heavily since morning, the
postmaster’s student, Ratan waited at the door for a long time for the
routine call from her master. But when she heard none, she slowly went
inside the house on her own, with her book and writing slate in hand.
She saw the postmaster lying on his bed, and, thinking that he was
resting, was about to step out again quietly when she suddenly heard the
call, “Ratan.”
She stepped back quickly and asked, “Dada Babu, were you sleeping?”
The postmaster replied in a weak voice, “I am not feeling well. Could you check with your palm the temperature on my forehead?”
Being sick on a rainy day, in a lonely place away from home, one would
long the comfort of affectionate care. One would imagine the soft touch
of a woman’s hand, wearing bangles, on the burning forehead. Afflicted
by ill-health in this secluded life, one would yearn for a mother or
sister by the bedside in the form of a loving woman, and the yearning of
this lonesome individual didn’t go in vain. The young Ratan was no
longer a little girl. Instantly she assumed the role of the mother –
called the physician, gave him medicine at appropriate times, waited by
his bedside the whole night, prepared his diet on her own accord, and
asked him over and over again, “Are you feeling a little better, Dada
Babu?”
After many days, frail in body, the postmaster stepped out of the
sick-bed and decided enough was enough. He must get a transfer from the
place. Referring to the unhealthy environment of the village, he hastily
wrote a petition to the authorities in Kolkata, requesting for a
transfer.
Relieved of her nursing duties, Ratan returned to her old seat at the
threshold of the house. Sometimes she pried inside and saw the
postmaster lying on the bed or sitting on a bench, absentmindedly. While
Ratan sat there, awaiting a call from him, the postmaster eagerly
awaited a reply to his transfer request. Hunkered down at her seat
outside the house, the girl went over her old lessons countless times
lest all the compound letters got mixed up in the event she was called
up unexpectedly and asked to recite them by rote. Finally, the call came
one evening after about a week, and, stepping into the house with an
effusive heart, Ratan asked, “Dada Babu, did you call me?”
“Ratan, I am leaving tomorrow,” answered the postmaster.
“Where to, Dada Babu?” Ratan asked.
“I am going home.”
“When will you be back?”
“Never.”
Ratan didn’t ask any more questions. The postmaster explained to her
voluntarily that he had applied for a transfer and his request had been
granted; therefore, he was now taking discharge of his current posting
and going home. When the postmaster finished, both of them went into a
prolonged silence. The lamp was burning dimly at one corner of the
house, and rainwater was dripping onto an earthen lid, seeping through
the rundown roof of the house.
After a while, Ratan got up slowly and went to make some bread. It was
not done as spiritedly as in the past, because she looked preoccupied.
On completion of his evening meal, Ratan asked the postmaster, “Dada
Babu, will you take me with you?”
“How could I do that?” said the postmaster with a laugh. He never bothered to explain to the girl why it was not possible.
Throughout the night, in her dream and wakefulness, the girl heard the
cackling laugh of the postmaster and his curt reply, “How could I do
that?”
In the morning the postmaster saw his bathing water in the pail like
every day, a habit of bathing with river water carried home in a bucket,
which he had formed in Kolkata. For some reason the girl had never
asked him about his time of departure, but in case he needed the water
in the morning she went to the river late at night to fill the bucket.
Concluding his bath, the postmaster called out for Ratan, and stepping
into the house quietly, Ratan looked up at her master’s face in silence
for his command. The master said, “Ratan, I’ll tell the person who comes
to replace me to look after you the way I did. You don’t have to worry
that I am leaving.” There was no doubt that those words came from a
loving and kind heart, but who could fathom a woman’s mind! Ratan had
quietly swallowed many reproaches from her master in the past, but she
couldn’t accept those mild words. Howling out, she said, “No, no, there
is no need for you to say anything. I don’t want to be here.”
The postmaster was struck dumb by her response because he had never seen Ratan behave that way.
The new postmaster arrived. Handing over duties to him, the outgoing
postmaster prepared to leave. At the time of his departure he called
Ratan and said, “Ratan, I have never been able to give you anything, but
today I am leaving behind a little money which will support you for a
few days.”
Saving some passage money for himself, he took out all the money he had
saved from his salary from his pocket. Ratan fell at his feet and
started pleading, “Dada Babu, I beg you, there is no need to give me
anything; no one has to worry about me, please.” She then rushed out of
the house.
The postmaster sighed, and, with his carpetbag in hand, an umbrella on
his shoulder, his blue and white trunk lifted to his porter’s head,
began walking towards the boat calmly.
When he got into the boat and it started moving out of the landing area,
the rain-inundated river appeared to surge like the earth’s eyes
suffused with tears, and he began to feel an anguish in his heart – the
melancholic face of an ordinary village girl seemed to tell the story of
an inexplicable tribulation of the entire world. A passionate thought
crossed his mind, “Let me go back and bring that forlorn girl with me.”
But the sail had set; the monsoon currents in the river were flowing
rapidly. Crossing the village, they were already in sight of the
cremating grounds, and an idea dawned in the mind of the listless
traveller drifting on the stream – separation and death are a recurrent
fact of life. What is the point of going back? Aren’t we all solitary on
this earth?
But no such idea arose in Ratan’s mind. She simply continued wandering
around the posthouse with tears in her eyes. Perhaps she had a faint
hope that Dada Babu might come back – she couldn’t leave the place, and
break that magic bond. Ah, frail human heart! Its illusions are endless;
sense comes to the human mind at a sluggish pace; it clings onto false
hopes defying even the strongest of evidence, until one day the hopes
flee, sucking the last drop of blood from the heart. Only then the sense
returns, briefly, before the heart becomes restless again to enter into
a new delusion.
Friday, February 28, 2014
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