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Home and the World, The
Chapter Three
Rabindranath Tagore
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       Chapter Three
       Bimala's Story
       I WONDER what could have happened to my feeling of shame. The
       fact is, I had no time to think about myself. My days and nights
       were passing in a whirl, like an eddy with myself in the centre.
       No gap was left for hesitation or delicacy to enter.
       One day my sister-in-law remarked to my husband: "Up to now the
       women of this house have been kept weeping. Here comes the men's
       turn.
       "We must see that they do not miss it," she continued, turning to
       me. "I see you are out for the fray, Chota [12] Rani! Hurl your
       shafts straight at their hearts."
       Her keen eyes looked me up and down. Not one of the colours into
       which my toilet, my dress, my manners, my speech, had blossomed
       out had escaped her. I am ashamed to speak of it today, but I
       felt no shame then. Something within me was at work of which I
       was not even conscious. I used to overdress, it is true, but
       more like an automaton, with no particular design. No doubt I
       knew which effort of mine would prove specially pleasing to
       Sandip Babu, but that required no intuition, for he would discuss
       it openly before all of them.
       One day he said to my husband: "Do you know, Nikhil, when I first
       saw our Queen Bee, she was sitting there so demurely in her gold-
       bordered __sari__. Her eyes were gazing inquiringly into
       space, like stars which had lost their way, just as if she had
       been for ages standing on the edge of some darkness, looking out
       for something unknown. But when I saw her, I felt a quiver run
       through me. It seemed to me that the gold border of her
       __sari__ was her own inner fire flaming out and twining round
       her. That is the flame we want, visible fire! Look here, Queen
       Bee, you really must do us the favour of dressing once more as a
       living flame."
       So long I had been like a small river at the border of a village.
       My rhythm and my language were different from what they are now.
       But the tide came up from the sea, and my breast heaved; my banks
       gave way and the great drumbeats of the sea waves echoed in my
       mad current. I could not understand the meaning of that sound in
       my blood. Where was that former self of mine? Whence came
       foaming into me this surging flood of glory? Sandip's hungry
       eyes burnt like the lamps of worship before my shrine. All his
       gaze proclaimed that I was a wonder in beauty and power; and the
       loudness of his praise, spoken and unspoken, drowned all other
       voices in my world. Had the Creator created me afresh, I
       wondered? Did he wish to make up now for neglecting me so long?
       I who before was plain had become suddenly beautiful. I who
       before had been of no account now felt in myself all the
       splendour of Bengal itself.
       For Sandip Babu was not a mere individual. In him was the
       confluence of millions of minds of the country. When he called
       me the Queen Bee of the hive, I was acclaimed with a chorus of
       praise by all our patriot workers. After that, the loud jests of
       my sister-in-law could not touch me any longer. My relations
       with all the world underwent a change. Sandip Babu made it clear
       how all the country was in need of me. I had no difficulty in
       believing this at the time, for I felt that I had the power to do
       everything. Divine strength had come to me. It was something
       which I had never felt before, which was beyond myself. I had no
       time to question it to find out what was its nature. It seemed
       to belong to me, and yet to transcend me. It comprehended the
       whole of Bengal.
       Sandip Babu would consult me about every little thing touching
       the Cause. At first I felt very awkward and would hang back, but
       that soon wore off. Whatever I suggested seemed to astonish him.
       He would go into raptures and say: "Men can only think. You
       women have a way of understanding without thinking. Woman was
       created out of God's own fancy. Man, He had to hammer into
       shape."
       Letters used to come to Sandip Babu from all parts of the country
       which were submitted to me for my opinion. Occasionally he
       disagreed with me. But I would not argue with him. Then after a
       day or two--as if a new light had suddenly dawned upon him--he
       would send for me and say: "It was my mistake. Your suggestion
       was the correct one." He would often confess to me that wherever
       he had taken steps contrary to my advice he had gone wrong. Thus
       I gradually came to be convinced that behind whatever was taking
       place was Sandip Babu, and behind Sandip Babu was the plain
       common sense of a woman. The glory of a great responsibility
       filled my being.
       My husband had no place in our counsels. Sandip Babu treated him
       as a younger brother, of whom personally one may be very fond and
       yet have no use for his business advice. He would tenderly and
       smilingly talk about my husband's childlike innocence, saying
       that his curious doctrine and perversities of mind had a flavour
       of humour which made them all the more lovable. It was seemingly
       this very affection for Nikhil which led Sandip Babu to forbear
       from troubling him with the burden of the country.
       Nature has many anodynes in her pharmacy, which she secretly
       administers when vital relations are being insidiously severed,
       so that none may know of the operation, till at last one awakes
       to know what a great rent has been made. When the knife was busy
       with my life's most intimate tie, my mind was so clouded with
       fumes of intoxicating gas that I was not in the least aware of
       what a cruel thing was happening. Possibly this is woman's
       nature. When her passion is roused she loses her sensibility for
       all that is outside it. When, like the river, we women keep to
       our banks, we give nourishment with all that we have: when we
       overflow them we destroy with all that we are.
       ------
       12. Bimala. the younger brother's wife, was the __Chota__ or
       Junior Rani.
        
       Sandip's Story
       II
        
       I can see that something has gone wrong. I got an inkling of it
       the other day.
       Ever since my arrival, Nikhil's sitting-room had become a thing
       amphibious--half women's apartment, half men's: Bimala had access
       to it from the zenana, it was not barred to me from the outer
       side. If we had only gone slow, and made use of our privileges
       with some restraint, we might not have fallen foul of other
       people. But we went ahead so vehemently that we could not think
       of the consequences.
       Whenever Bee comes into Nikhil's room, I somehow get to know of
       it from mine. There are the tinkle of bangles and other little
       sounds; the door is perhaps shut with a shade of unnecessary
       vehemence; the bookcase is a trifle stiff and creaks if jerked
       open. When I enter I find Bee, with her back to the door, ever
       so busy selecting a book from the shelves. And as I offer to
       assist her in this difficult task she starts and protests; and
       then we naturally get on to other topics.
       The other day, on an inauspicious [13] Thursday afternoon, I
       sallied forth from my room at the call of these same sounds.
       There was a man on guard in the passage. I walked on without so
       much as glancing at him, but as I approached the door he put
       himself in my way saying: "Not that way, sir."
       "Not that way! Why?"
       "The Rani Mother is there."
       "Oh, very well. Tell your Rani Mother that Sandip Babu wants to
       see her."
       "That cannot be, sir. It is against orders."
       I felt highly indignant. "I order you!" I said in a raised
       voice.
       "Go and announce me."
       The fellow was somewhat taken aback at my attitude. In the
       meantime I had neared the door. I was on the point of reaching
       it, when he followed after me and took me by the arm saying: "No,
       sir, you must not."
       What! To be touched by a flunkey! I snatched away my arm and
       gave the man a sounding blow. At this moment Bee came out of the
       room to find the man about to insult me.
       I shall never forget the picture of her wrath! That Bee is
       beautiful is a discovery of my own. Most of our people would see
       nothing in her. Her tall, slim figure these boors would call
       "lanky". But it is just this lithesomeness of hers that I
       admire--like an up-leaping fountain of life, coming direct out of
       the depths of the Creator's heart. Her complexion is dark, but
       it is the lustrous darkness of a sword-blade, keen and
       scintillating.
       "Nanku!" she commanded, as she stood in the doorway, pointing
       with her finger, "leave us."
       "Do not be angry with him," said I. "If it is against orders, it
       is I who should retire."
       Bee's voice was still trembling as she replied: "You must not go.
       Come in."
       It was not a request, but again a command! I followed her in,
       and taking a chair fanned myself with a fan which was on the
       table. Bee scribbled something with a pencil on a sheet of paper
       and, summoning a servant, handed it to him saying: "Take this to
       the Maharaja."
       "Forgive me," I resumed. "I was unable to control myself, and
       hit that man of yours.
       "You served him right," said Bee.
       "But it was not the poor fellow's fault, after all. He was only
       obeying his orders."
       Here Nikhil came in, and as he did so I left my seat with a rapid
       movement and went and stood near the window with my back to the
       room.
       "Nanku, the guard, has insulted Sandip Babu," said Bee to Nikhil.
       Nikhil seemed to be so genuinely surprised that I had to turn
       round and stare at him. Even an outrageously good man fails in
       keeping up his pride of truthfulness before his wife--if she be
       the proper kind of woman.
       "He insolently stood in the way when Sandip Babu was coming in
       here," continued Bee. "He said he had orders ..."
       "Whose orders?" asked Nikhil.
       "How am I to know?" exclaimed Bee impatiently, her eyes brimming
       over with mortification.
       Nikhil sent for the man and questioned him. "It was not my
       fault," Nanku repeated sullenly. "I had my orders."
       "Who gave you the order?"
       "The Bara Rani Mother."
       We were all silent for a while. After the man had left, Bee
       said: "Nanku must go!"
       Nikhil remained silent. I could see that his sense of justice
       would not allow this. There was no end to his qualms. But this
       time he was up against a tough problem. Bee was not the woman to
       take things lying down. She would have to get even with her
       sister-in-law by punishing this fellow. And as Nikhil remained
       silent, her eyes flashed fire. She knew not how to pour her
       scorn upon her husband's feebleness of spirit. Nikhil left the
       room after a while without another word.
       The next day Nanku was not to be seen. On inquiry, I learnt that
       he had been sent off to some other part of the estates, and that
       his wages had not suffered by such transfer.
       I could catch glimpses of the ravages of the storm raging over
       this, behind the scenes. All I can say is, that Nikhil is a
       curious creature, quite out of the common.
       The upshot was, that after this Bee began to send for me to the
       sitting-room, for a chat, without any contrivance, or pretence of
       its being an accident. Thus from bare suggestion we came to
       broad hint: the implied came to be expressed. The daughter-in-
       law of a princely house lives in a starry region so remote from
       the ordinary outsider that there is not even a regular road for
       his approach. What a triumphal progress of Truth was this which,
       gradually but persistently, thrust aside veil after veil of
       obscuring custom, till at length Nature herself was laid bare.
       Truth? Of course it was the truth! The attraction of man and
       woman for each other is fundamental. The whole world of matter,
       from the speck of dust upwards, is ranged on its side. And yet
       men would keep it hidden away out of sight, behind a tissue of
       words; and with home-made sanctions and prohibitions make of it a
       domestic utensil. Why, it's as absurd as melting down the solar
       system to make a watch-chain for one's son-in-law! [14]
       When, in spite of all, reality awakes at the call of what is but
       naked truth, what a gnashing of teeth and beating of breasts is
       there! But can one carry on a quarrel with a storm? It never
       takes the trouble to reply, it only gives a shaking.
       I am enjoying the sight of this truth, as it gradually reveals
       itself. These tremblings of steps, these turnings of the face,
       are sweet to me: and sweet are the deceptions which deceive not
       only others, but also Bee herself. When Reality has to meet the
       unreal, deception is its principal weapon; for its enemies always
       try to shame Reality by calling it gross, and so it needs must
       hide itself, or else put on some disguise. The circumstances are
       such that it dare not frankly avow: "Yes, I am gross, because I
       am true. I am flesh. I am passion. I am hunger, unashamed and
       cruel."
       All is now clear to me. The curtain flaps, and through it I can
       see the preparations for the catastrophe. The little red ribbon,
       which peeps through the luxuriant masses of her hair, with its
       flush of secret longing, it is the lolling tongue of the red
       storm cloud. I feel the warmth of each turn of her __sari__,
       each suggestion of her raiment, of which even the wearer may not
       be fully conscious.
       Bee was not conscious, because she was ashamed of the reality; to
       which men have given a bad name, calling it Satan; and so it has
       to steal into the garden of paradise in the guise of a snake, and
       whisper secrets into the ears of man's chosen consort and make
       her rebellious; then farewell to all ease; and after that comes
       death!
       My poor little Queen Bee is living in a dream. She knows not
       which way she is treading. It would not be safe to awaken her
       before the time. It is best for me to pretend to be equally
       unconscious.
       The other day, at dinner, she was gazing at me in a curious sort
       of way, little realizing what such glances mean! As my eyes met
       hers, she turned away with a flush. "You are surprised at my
       appetite," I remarked. "I can hide everything, except that I am
       greedy! Anyhow, why trouble to blush for me, since I am
       shameless?"
       This only made her colour more furiously, as she stammered: "No,
       no, I was only..."
       "I know," I interrupted. "Women have a weakness for greedy men;
       for it is this greed of ours which gives them the upper hand.
       The indulgence which I have always received at their hands has
       made me all the more shameless. I do not mind your watching the
       good things disappear, not one bit. I mean to enjoy every one of
       them."
       The other day I was reading an English book in which sex-problems
       were treated in an audaciously realistic manner. I had left it
       lying in the sitting-room. As I went there the next afternoon,
       for something or other, I found Bee seated with this book in her
       hand. When she heard my footsteps she hurriedly put it down and
       placed another book over it--a volume of Mrs Hemans's poems.
       "I have never been able to make out," I began, "why women are so
       shy about being caught reading poetry. We men--lawyers,
       mechanics, or what not--may well feel ashamed. If we must read
       poetry, it should be at dead of night, within closed doors. But
       you women are so akin to poesy. The Creator Himself is a lyric
       poet, and Jayadeva [15] must have practised the divine art seated
       at His feet."
       Bee made no reply, but only blushed uncomfortably. She made as
       if she would leave the room. Whereupon I protested: "No, no,
       pray read on. I will just take a book I left here, and run
       away." With which I took up my book from the table. "Lucky you
       did not think of glancing over its pages," I continued, "or you
       would have wanted to chastise me."
       "Indeed! Why?" asked Bee.
       "Because it is not poetry," said I. "Only blunt things, bluntly
       put, without any finicking niceness. I wish Nikhil would read
       it."
       Bee frowned a little as she murmured: "What makes you wish that?"
       "He is a man, you see, one of us. My only quarrel with him is
       that he delights in a misty vision of this world. Have you not
       observed how this trait of his makes him look on __Swadeshi__
       as if it was some poem of which the metre must be kept correct at
       every step? We, with the clubs of our prose, are the iconoclasts
       of metre."
       "What has your book to do with __Swadeshi__?"
       "You would know if you only read it. Nikhil wants to go by made-
       up maxims, in __Swadeshi__ as in everything else; so he knocks
       up against human nature at every turn, and then falls to abusing
       it. He never will realize that human nature was created long
       before phrases were, and will survive them too."
       Bee was silent for a while and then gravely said: "Is it not a
       part of human nature to try and rise superior to itself?"
       I smiled inwardly. "These are not your words", I thought to
       myself. "You have learnt them from Nikhil. You are a healthy
       human being. Your flesh and blood have responded to the call of
       reality. You are burning in every vein with life-fire--do I not
       know it? How long should they keep you cool with the wet towel
       of moral precepts?"
       "The weak are in the majority," I said aloud. "They are
       continually poisoning the ears of men by repeating these
       shibboleths. Nature has denied them strength--it is thus that
       they try to enfeeble others."
       "We women are weak," replied Bimala. "So I suppose we must join
       in the conspiracy of the weak."
       "Women weak!" I exclaimed with a laugh. "Men belaud you as
       delicate and fragile, so as to delude you into thinking
       yourselves weak. But it is you women who are strong. Men make a
       great outward show of their so-called freedom, but those who know
       their inner minds are aware of their bondage. They have
       manufactured scriptures with their own hands to bind themselves;
       with their very idealism they have made golden fetters of women
       to wind round their body and mind. If men had not that
       extraordinary faculty of entangling themselves in meshes of their
       own contriving, nothing could have kept them bound. But as for
       you women, you have desired to conceive reality with body and
       soul. You have given birth to reality. You have suckled reality
       at your breasts."
       Bee was well read for a woman, and would not easily give in to my
       arguments. "If that were true," she objected, "men would not
       have found women attractive."
       "Women realize the danger," I replied. "They know that men love
       delusions, so they give them full measure by borrowing their own
       phrases. They know that man, the drunkard, values intoxication
       more than food, and so they try to pass themselves off as an
       intoxicant. As a matter of fact, but for the sake of man, woman
       has no need for any make-believe."
       "Why, then, are you troubling to destroy the illusion?"
       "For freedom. I want the country to be free. I want human
       relations to be free."
       ------
       13. According to the Hindu calendar [Trans.].
       14. The son-in-law is the pet of a Hindu household.
       15. A Vaishnava poet (Sanskrit) whose lyrics of the adoration of
       the Divinity serve as well to express all shades of human passion
       [Trans.].
       III
        
       I was aware that it is unsafe suddenly to awake a sleep-walker.
       But I am so impetuous by nature, a halting gait does not suit me.
       I knew I was overbold that day. I knew that the first shock of
       such ideas is apt to be almost intolerable. But with women it is
       always audacity that wins.
       Just as we were getting on nicely, who should walk in but
       Nikhil's old tutor Chandranath Babu. The world would have been
       not half a bad place to live in but for these schoolmasters, who
       make one want to quit in disgust. The Nikhil type wants to keep
       the world always a school. This incarnation of a school turned
       up that afternoon at the psychological moment.
       We all remain schoolboys in some corner of our hearts, and I,
       even I, felt somewhat pulled up. As for poor Bee, she at once
       took her place solemnly, like the topmost girl of the class on
       the front bench. All of a sudden she seemed to remember that she
       had to face her examination.
       Some people are so like eternal pointsmen lying in wait by the
       line, to shunt one's train of thought from one rail to another.
       Chandranath Babu had no sooner come in than he cast about for
       some excuse to retire, mumbling: "I beg your pardon, I..."
       Before he could finish, Bee went up to him and made a profound
       obeisance, saying: "Pray do not leave us, sir. Will you not take
       a seat?" She looked like a drowning person clutching at him for
       support--the little coward!
       But possibly I was mistaken. It is quite likely that there was a
       touch of womanly wile in it. She wanted, perhaps, to raise her
       value in my eyes. She might have been pointedly saying to me:
       "Please don't imagine for a moment that I am entirely overcome by
       you. My respect for Chandranath Babu is even greater."
       Well, indulge in your respect by all means! Schoolmasters thrive
       on it. But not being one of them, I have no use for that empty
       compliment.
       Chandranath Babu began to talk about __Swadeshi__. I thought
       I would let him go on with his monologues. There is nothing like
       letting an old man talk himself out. It makes him feel that he
       is winding up the world, forgetting all the while how far away
       the real world is from his wagging tongue.
       But even my worst enemy would not accuse me of patience. And
       when Chandranath Babu went on to say: "If we expect to gather
       fruit where we have sown no seed, then we ..." I had to
       interrupt him.
       "Who wants fruit?" I cried. "We go by the Author of the Gita
       who says that we are concerned only with the doing, not with the
       fruit of our deeds."
       "What is it then that you do want?" asked Chandranath Babu.
       "Thorns!" I exclaimed, "which cost nothing to plant."
       "Thorns do not obstruct others only," he replied. "They have a
       way of hurting one's own feet."
       "That is all right for a copy-book," I retorted. "But the real
       thing is that we have this burning at heart. Now we have only to
       cultivate thorns for other's soles; afterwards when they hurt us
       we shall find leisure to repent. But why be frightened even of
       that? When at last we have to die it will be time enough to get
       cold. While we are on fire let us seethe and boil."
       Chandranath Babu smiled. "Seethe by all means," he said, "but do
       not mistake it for work, or heroism. Nations which have got on
       in the world have done so by action, not by ebullition. Those
       who have always lain in dread of work, when with a start they
       awake to their sorry plight, they look to short-cuts and scamping
       for their deliverance."
       I was girding up my loins to deliver a crushing reply, when
       Nikhil came back. Chandranath Babu rose, and looking towards
       Bee, said: "Let me go now, my little mother, I have some work to
       attend to."
       As he left, I showed Nikhil the book in my hand. "I was telling
       Queen Bee about this book," I said.
       Ninety-nine per cent of people have to be deluded with lies, but
       it is easier to delude this perpetual pupil of the schoolmaster
       with the truth. He is best cheated openly. So, in playing with
       him, the simplest course was to lay my cards on the table.
       Nikhil read the title on the cover, but said nothing. "These
       writers," I continued, "are busy with their brooms, sweeping away
       the dust of epithets with which men have covered up this world of
       ours. So, as I was saying, I wish you would read it."
       "I have read it," said Nikhil.
       "Well, what do you say?"
       "It is all very well for those who really care to think, but
       poison for those who shirk thought."
       "What do you mean?"
       "Those who preach 'Equal Rights of Property' should not be
       thieves. For, if they are, they would be preaching lies. When
       passion is in the ascendant, this kind of book is not rightly
       understood."
       "Passion," I replied, "is the street lamp which guides us. To
       call it untrue is as hopeless as to expect to see better by
       plucking out our natural eyes."
       Nikhil was visibly growing excited. "I accept the truth of
       passion," he said, "only when I recognize the truth of restraint.
       By pressing what we want to see right into our eyes we only
       injure them: we do not see. So does the violence of passion,
       which would leave no space between the mind and its object,
       defeat its purpose."
       "It is simply your intellectual foppery," I replied, "which makes
       you indulge in moral delicacy, ignoring the savage side of truth.
       This merely helps you to mystify things, and so you fail to do
       your work with any degree of strength."
       "The intrusion of strength," said Nikhil impatiently, "where
       strength is out of place, does not help you in your work ... But
       why are we arguing about these things? Vain arguments only brush
       off the fresh bloom of truth."
       I wanted Bee to join in the discussion, but she had not said a
       word up to now. Could I have given her too rude a shock, leaving
       her assailed with doubts and wanting to learn her lesson afresh
       from the schoolmaster? Still, a thorough shaking-up is
       essential. One must begin by realizing that things supposed to
       be unshakeable can be shaken.
       "I am glad I had this talk with you," I said to Nikhil, "for I
       was on the point of lending this book to Queen Bee to read."
       "What harm?" said Nikhil. "If I could read the book, why not
       Bimala too? All I want to say is, that in Europe people look at
       everything from the viewpoint of science. But man is neither
       mere physiology, nor biology, nor psychology, nor even sociology.
       For God's sake don't forget that. Man is infinitely more than
       the natural science of himself. You laugh at me, calling me the
       schoolmaster's pupil, but that is what you are, not I. You want
       to find the truth of man from your science teachers, and not from
       your own inner being."
       "But why all this excitement?" I mocked.
       "Because I see you are bent on insulting man and making him
       petty."
       "Where on earth do you see all that?"
       "In the air, in my outraged feelings. You would go on wounding
       the great, the unselfish, the beautiful in man."
       "What mad idea is this of yours?"
       Nikhil suddenly stood up. "I tell you plainly, Sandip," he said,
       "man may be wounded unto death, but he will not die. This is the
       reason why I am ready to suffer all, knowing all, with eyes
       open."
       With these words he hurriedly left the room.
       I was staring blankly at his retreating figure, when the sound of
       a book, falling from the table, made me turn to find Bee
       following him with quick, nervous steps, making a detour to avoid
       passing too near me.
       A curious creature, that Nikhil! He feels the danger threatening
       his home, and yet why does he not turn me out? I know, he is
       waiting for Bimal to give him the cue. If Bimal tells him that
       their mating has been a misfit, he will bow his head and admit
       that it may have been a blunder! He has not the strength of mind
       to understand that to acknowledge a mistake is the greatest of
       all mistakes. He is a typical example of how ideas make for
       weakness. I have not seen another like him--so whimsical a
       product of nature! He would hardly do as a character in a novel
       or drama, to say nothing of real life.
       And Bee? I am afraid her dream-life is over from today. She has
       at length understood the nature of the current which is bearing
       her along. Now she must either advance or retreat, open-eyed.
       The chances are she will now advance a step, and then retreat a
       step. But that does not disturb me. When one is on fire, this
       rushing to and fro makes the blaze all the fiercer. The fright
       she has got will only fan her passion.
       Perhaps I had better not say much to her, but simply select some
       modern books for her to read. Let her gradually come to the
       conviction that to acknowledge and respect passion as the supreme
       reality, is to be modern--not to be ashamed of it, not to glorify
       restraint. If she finds shelter in some such word as "modern",
       she will find strength.
       Be that as it may, I must see this out to the end of the Fifth
       Act. I cannot, unfortunately, boast of being merely a spectator,
       seated in the royal box, applauding now and again. There is a
       wrench at my heart, a pang in every nerve. When I have put out
       the light and am in my bed, little touches, little glances,
       little words flit about and fill the darkness. When I get up in
       the morning, I thrill with lively anticipations, my blood seems
       to course through me to the strains of music ...
       There was a double photo-frame on the table with Bee's photograph
       by the side of Nikhil's. I had taken out hers. Yesterday I
       showed Bee the empty side and said: "Theft becomes necessary only
       because of miserliness, so its sin must be divided between the
       miser and the thief. Do you not think so?"
       "It was not a good one," observed Bee simply, with a little
       smile.
       "What is to be done?" said I. "A portrait cannot be better than
       a portrait. I must be content with it, such as it is."
       Bee took up a book and began to turn over the pages. "If you are
       annoyed," I went on, "I must make a shift to fill up the
       vacancy."
       Today I have filled it up. This photograph of mine was taken in
       my early youth. My face was then fresher, and so was my mind.
       Then I still cherished some illusions about this world and the
       next. Faith deceives men, but it has one great merit: it imparts
       a radiance to the features.
       My portrait now reposes next to Nikhil's, for are not the two of
       us old friends?
       Content of Chapter Three [Rabindranath Tagore's novel: The Home and the World]
       _