When we were growing up, the village
had plenty of bullock carts. Cattle, buffalo and bulls still pulled the cart of
farming. Tractors had just started to come onto the scene. Carts, driven by
male buffalos and bulls, had their unique means of shifting gears to increase the
speed. Imagine the farmer and the bull both falling into a lethargy, the carter
almost dozing with sleep and the bull going very slowly in the rut of the track
while chewing cud. Fully relaxed. Then the farmer suddenly realized the
passivity. Then he would shift gears. It involved holding the cart-puller’s
tail, giving it a jerk, simultaneously his heel hitting the bull’s balls, and
the tongue giving a loud clucking sound. All done in perfect synchronism. The
bull would be jolted out of its laziness.
So we would imitate clucking our
tongues like seasoned farmers. In fact we had tongue-clucking competitions. The
atmosphere would resound with clucking sounds. Some chaps would cluck their
tongues so loudly that even the bulls tethered in the barns got startled.
My brother took a fancy to be the
clucking champion in the village. His practice session would cross over into
late evenings when Father arrived from office. The sound has a vehement,
egging-on vibes. And who won’t be egged on after a day at the office followed
by a commute in a crowded train from Delhi to the nearby town and then a ride
in some rag-tag three wheeler plying on the potholed road? So Father
reprimanded him very severely after a week. ‘You know what, your tongue will
get a fracture with so much striking like flint against your palate!’ Father further
admonished. ‘I saw a guy with a fractured tongue. He cannot speak now.’ So my
brother had to abandon his practice to become the village clucking champion.
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