Saturday, February 22, 2014

বাবুর অসুখ/ Babur Oshukh/ The Master's illness by Sarat Kumar Mukhopadhyay



Put the three legged table by him
Spread a cloth as pure as your caring heart.
A glass for his pills, a foil pack of capsules
Clock, a bottle of water
That is all; now
You must all wait at a distance till the doctor arrives.
The master is sick.

This is a very dangerous disease, but still
If you can, let his wife know.
People say, wives don’t catch things
A couple of friends too, the kind
That can look on, expressionless
At the person on the bed by the white covered table
His eyes red with pain,
As he gets help with this and that.
The kind that sit down for five minutes and make him feel happy
Then leave.

Whatever you do, try to do it quickly

You will not get this chance as easily, once he gets better.

Sarat Kumar Mukhopadhyay

Monday, February 17, 2014

Shambo by Kalkut/Samaresh Basu: An extract



Let me tell you about the time I went with this friend of mine whom I call Dada, to Shimultala in the Santhal Parganas. There were many others with us. It does not really matter why we were there. There was this feel of being on a picnic. After lunch and a rest it was decided that we would go to the markets at Tiluabazar three miles away to get some things. Actually that was like going on a trip on its own merit.

There was a Santhal girl at the markets with a cage full of pigeons. These were newly fledged and plump. The pigeons were anxious and fearful and the people around them made them flap their wings inside the cage. Suddenly recalling that we had not had pigeon meat in a long time, I said to Dada, ‘Let us buy all the pigeons, we will eat them.’

Dada looked at me through his thick lenses, his brown eyes bright as he asked, ‘You want to eat pigeon meat?’ He looked at the pigeons in the cage and then at the girl selling them. He said, ‘I suppose you should buy them then.’

Buy them I did. When I heard the price, I felt rather like the ‘Damn cheap’ babu of the story. Dada reached for the cage, saying, ‘Let me see them?’

I handed the cage to him. As he opened the door to the cage, he said, ‘You wanted to eat pigeon meat? Well, eat!’ And he caught the birds one by one and threw them into the sky.

As I tried to stop him,  I saw how the pigeons flew in an explosion of colours into the fading egg yolk sunshine of that autumn day in the Santhal Parganas. Dada was looking at me. There was not the slightest sign of regret in his face; his eyes twinkling instead as he asked, ‘Do you want to buy more pigeons? Come and let us see if there are any more on sale in the market.’
The Santhal girl who had sold the pigeons, the people around us and even our own friends had started laughing by now. I came on a trip. The pigeons went on one of their own to the skies. But by then, the laughter had entered my soul.
‘যে যায় এমন ভ্রমণে
কৃষ্ণ থাকে তার সনে।’



painting by Jan Fyt(1611-1661)
http://www.metmuseum.org/collections/search-the-collections/436424


Wednesday, February 5, 2014

অলীক জন্মকাহিনী/Aleek Jonmokahini/ Did I Imagine My Birth......সুনীল গঙ্গোপাধ্যায়/Sunil Gangopadhyay







Did I Imagine My Birth

That river that taught me to swim
Is not even there any more.
Sometimes I stroke my own skin and think,
Did I really once dip my head in those waters and float upon it?

The flowers of the jamrul used to shower down gently
Just like close family, standing before my house with arms spread wide.
A brown bird with a long tail would come and sit often
I don’t quite know its name, people called it Ishtikutum.
I do not see those birds any more
Even the tree fades each day a little.
They sell the fruit on the pavement, I have never touched one, ever.

In the evenings after her bath, a woman walked by, her skin still wet.
Binti, I called her aunt….. from next door
That was the first time I saw a woman
Waist narrowing like a lioness, young grapefruit
Her heavy breasts.
Shapely like a violin in motion, her behind swayed to each step
Making me think she was a goddess descended from the heavens
She was the one who aroused a young boy’s
Primal desire.
She set herself on fire one day and disappeared
But I still burn in that searing heat.

The kitchen on one side, on the other a grandmother lived
The space left in the courtyard was where the birthing room was made.
There was so much rain, one lightning filled dawn
I arrived on this earth from the darkness of my mother’s womb
To see for the first time the blue morning light of rural Bengal
A little over there near the big room sat my grandfather
Hookah in hand.
He roared with laughter as he heard my newborn cries.

There is no one left to tell these stories
Where is that house? Like faded illusion
Lost is that kitchen, the courtyard, where my grandfather sat, nothing remains.
Someone ploughs seed into the earth of my once-upon home
Green heads of rice snake up.
Now that my birthplace is gone, I sometimes think
Was I ever really born?



 Sunil Gangopadhyay