There
is a pre-Diwali clean-up in the house. Thanks to the festival spirit, morose strains
of discontent and apathy get dispelled from the soul. Loud-mouthed disorder and
clumsy disarray get confronted finally. Festivals bestow you a moonlighted
spirit and carry a genial touch of humanity. My cleaning the house, as a Lord
Ram worshipping Hindu, to welcome Diwali, leaves enough amusing nuggets for the
Muslim trash-picker to make him really happy. He is not-a-boy, not-yet-a-man.
Due
to the shake-up drive, the crickets are startled, a conference of frogs gets
disturbed under a rusty piece of iron, a lazy lizard scurries away as a plastic
case is taken out, and spiders struggle on their arthritic, shaky legs as
corners are cleaned. The shoebox tied to a not-in-use ceiling fan, fixed to
serve as a nest for the birds that never accepted the tenancy offer, has
stinging hornets. Well, not all tenants are submissive. They save their house
in the cleaning drive. A fighting attitude helps these days.
These
are balmy late October days, the autumn holding the little world in cute enticement.
The clear sky hanging with a swanky magnanimity. The stars leave a fluorescent
nightglow. Peace and harmony hit a peak when the monkeys aren’t around. But
then some liquor-lover comfortably fills up the vacuum. The wives of the
liquor-lovers have to daily stretch their patience to accommodate newer
domestic troubles.
There
are myriads of anecdotal stories in nature’s kitty. A hailstorm strikes to send
down the message that not everything is under our control, at least for the
time being. It’s a heavy lashing by the skies. There are broken branches and
decimated paddy in the fields. Who can help it? There are still confusing
contours of myriads of mysteries above.
An
old alpha male monkey, fuelled by his vintage sexuality, has a child bride
towing him these days. How I wish that he gets at least a dozen strikes with
big icy clods from the heavens!
The
banana cone is still there. Its layers open with gentle succession. A purple
sunbird is busy at it during the day. The bats get its possession at nights.
The monkeys have stoically spared it so far. They just pluck away little banana
fingers as these unfold above the cone.
The
little frog in the kitchen seems distraught that the ever-eating Trummp is
gone. It was a good source of food. Little crumbs would fall from the cage and
the little frog would dine under the cage. The gluttonous parrot proudly looked
at the tiny frog below. Well, that reminds me of Trummp again. I missed to
mention that as it finally emerged from its charming spell about eating and
emerged from the cage, I shouted, ‘Ja
Shimran jee le apni zindagi!’ Let’s hope she is having a nice nuptial
inning with her husband. I would prefer to call it Shimran now because there is
no need of using cuss words now.
It
reminds me of another parrot. My brother’s friend has a pet parrot in Kashmir.
It drinks wine with his retired father in the evenings and after that in eased-up
spirits whistles at any woman who comes visiting the house. He isn’t bothered
about the men entering the house. Maybe the cosmic sense of masculinity itself
carries the strains of lecherousness.
Mistri Sat Prakash, a native of Jhansi,
informs that the parrots born on an old, grandfatherly neem tree are wise and clever and can be taught to speak. But those
born on mahua trees are dimwits and
enjoy their foolish tete-tete only.
Sat
Prakash is helping me restore a semblance of order in the dilapidated and disarrayed
yard. The bricklayer is a small frail man with strong hands. The latter fact is
more important for a mason because only strong hands enable you to keep
grasping at life, especially if you are poor and have to work daily to survive.
Last
night, after he had finished his work for the day in my yard, a smart teacher
lured him and others to transfer his provisions to the town. ‘It will take just
an hour,’ he told them. But that one hour got completed at three in the
morning. So he and his helper are sleepy as they work for me on the next day.
They work very lazily and I allow them their semi-sleep. Exploitation there has
to be compensated here with some lenience now. It helps people in keeping their
faith in humanity.
He
is extremely soft spoken and a simple man. You point out the most glaring fault
in what he has done, he will listen to you very patiently; he would continue
listening though your suggested solution and would finally add, very gently,
that this is exactly what he was going to do. His best quality is that he
doesn’t trouble his brains with his own plans as a mason. He would do exactly
what you tell him to do.
In
his sleepy state, taking the afternoon tea, to make up for the inefficiency at
work during the day, he gives me new nuggets of information. ‘A prêt has just three of the five primal
elements, a sort of spooky concoction of air, sky and ether. So we shouldn’t
worry too much about them. They lack solidity and ground to do something
physical directly,’ he informs me. Well, that makes the ghosts pretty harmless
to me now. It seems a highly scientific explanation.
His
helper is big built, very suitable for the physical tasks of digging, lifting
load, mixing concrete and the rest of ilk that a mason expertly orders his
helper to do. The boy is smeared with soil and cement and grumbles about his
slovenliness. ‘Who has ever washed a lion’s face?; who has washed a male
buffalo’s behind?’ Sat Prakash eggs him on, making him a lion and a robust
buffalo both at the same time.
Despite
all the strength of his hands, his handshake carries a feather touch. It feels
like you are holding a lifeless hand. It seems he has shaken hands for the
first time in the late fifties of his life. Who shakes hands with them? The
people usually shake and jolt the littlest semblance of dignity and respect
their soul still carry.
And
irrespective of the day’s concretely frank and upfront tidings, the nights can
be gentle, affable if you have the aesthetic signpost of some slow-paced,
gently characterized Iranian movie to guide your way through the night’s
oeuvre. The Iranian movie ‘A Cold Day’ is another warm, little story. To like
an Iranian movie, you need to be a lover of small-time beauty of nature, hills,
flowers, streams; the unhurried pace of life; smiles, soft emotions, simplicity
of life and dollops of nature. They beautifully make up for the absence of song
and drama.
It’s
a little school among small, rolling hills. A teacher saves a little second
grader from the fire in the school and gets serious burn injuries. Little Ali
is the boy concerned. He is plagued with self-reproach as the teachers blame
him for the episode. The teacher has burns on his face and is hesitant to
appear before the students. Ali breaks the ice by visiting the teacher who has
gone into utter isolation on account of his changed looks. They face each other
with frankness, dignity and respect. The smiles return.