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Home and the World, The
Chapter Four
Rabindranath Tagore
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       _
       Chapter Four
       Nikhil's Story
       III
       I WAS never self-conscious. But nowadays I often try to take an
       outside view--to see myself as Bimal sees me. What a dismally
       solemn picture it makes, my habit of taking things too seriously!
       Better, surely, to laugh away the world than flood it with tears.
       That is, in fact, how the world gets on. We relish our food and
       rest, only because we can dismiss, as so many empty shadows, the
       sorrows scattered everywhere, both in the home and in the outer
       world. If we took them as true, even for a moment, where would
       be our appetite, our sleep?
       But I cannot dismiss myself as one of these shadows, and so the
       load of my sorrow lies eternally heavy on the heart of my world.
       Why not stand out aloof in the highway of the universe, and feel
       yourself to be part of the all? In the midst of the immense,
       age-long concourse of humanity, what is Bimal to you? Your wife?
       What is a wife? A bubble of a name blown big with your own
       breath, so carefully guarded night and day, yet ready to burst at
       any pin-prick from outside.
       My wife--and so, forsooth, my very own! If she says: "No, I am
       myself"--am I to reply: "How can that be? Are you not mine?"
       "My wife"--Does that amount to an argument, much less the truth?
       Can one imprison a whole personality within that name?
       My wife!--Have I not cherished in this little world all that is
       purest and sweetest in my life, never for a moment letting it
       down from my bosom to the dust? What incense of worship, what
       music of passion, what flowers of my spring and of my autumn,
       have I not offered up at its shrine? If, like a toy paper-boat,
       she be swept along into the muddy waters of the gutter--would I
       not also... ?
       There it is again, my incorrigible solemnity! Why "muddy"? What
       "gutter" names, called in a fit of jealousy, do not change the
       facts of the world. If Bimal is not mine, she is not; and no
       fuming, or fretting, or arguing will serve to prove that she is.
       If my heart is breaking--let it break! That will not make the
       world bankrupt--nor even me; for man is so much greater than the
       things he loses in this life. The very ocean of tears has its
       other shore, else none would have ever wept.
       But then there is Society to be considered ... which let Society
       consider! If I weep it is for myself, not for Society. If Bimal
       should say she is not mine, what care I where my Society wife may
       be?
       Suffering there must be; but I must save myself, by any means in
       my power, from one form of self-torture: I must never think that
       my life loses its value because of any neglect it may suffer.
       The full value of my life does not all go to buy my narrow
       domestic world; its great commerce does not stand or fall with
       some petty success or failure in the bartering of my personal
       joys and sorrows.
       The time has come when I must divest Bimala of all the ideal
       decorations with which I decked her. It was owing to my own
       weakness that I indulged in such idolatry. I was too greedy. I
       created an angel of Bimala, in order to exaggerate my own
       enjoyment. But Bimala is what she is. It is preposterous to
       expect that she should assume the role of an angel for my
       pleasure. The Creator is under no obligation to supply me with
       angels, just because I have an avidity for imaginary perfection.
       I must acknowledge that I have merely been an accident in
       Bimala's life. Her nature, perhaps, can only find true union
       with one like Sandip. At the same time, I must not, in false
       modesty, accept my rejection as my desert. Sandip certainly has
       attractive qualities, which had their sway also upon myself; but
       yet, I feel sure, he is not a greater man than I. If the wreath
       of victory falls to his lot today, and I am overlooked, then the
       dispenser of the wreath will be called to judgement.
       I say this in no spirit of boasting. Sheer necessity has driven
       me to the pass, that to secure myself from utter desolation I
       must recognize all the value that I truly possess. Therefore,
       through the, terrible experience of suffering let there come upon
       me the joy of deliverance--deliverance from self-distrust.
       I have come to distinguish what is really in me from what I
       foolishly imagined to be there. The profit and loss account has
       been settled, and that which remains is myself--not a crippled
       self, dressed in rags and tatters, not a sick self to be nursed
       on invalid diet, but a spirit which has gone through the worst,
       and has survived.
       My master passed through my room a moment ago and said with his
       hand on my shoulder. "Get away to bed, Nikhil, the night is far
       advanced."
       The fact is, it has become so difficult for me to go to bed till
       late--till Bimal is fast asleep. In the day-time we meet, and
       even converse, but what am I to say when we are alone together,
       in the silence of the night?--so ashamed do I feel in mind and
       body.
       "How is it, sir, you have not yet retired?" I asked in my turn.
       My master smiled a little, as he left me, saying: "My sleeping
       days are over. I have now attained the waking age."
       I had written thus far, and was about to rise to go off bedwards
       when, through the window before me, I saw the heavy pall of July
       cloud suddenly part a little, and a big star shine through. It
       seemed to say to me: "Dreamland ties are made, and dreamland ties
       are broken, but I am here for ever--the everlasting lamp of the
       bridal night."
       All at once my heart was full with the thought that my Eternal
       Love was steadfastly waiting for me through the ages, behind the
       veil of material things. Through many a life, in many a mirror,
       have I seen her image--broken mirrors, crooked mirrors, dusty
       mirrors. Whenever I have sought to make the mirror my very own,
       and shut it up within my box, I have lost sight of the image.
       But what of that. What have I to do with the mirror, or even the
       image?
       My beloved, your smile shall never fade, and every dawn there
       shall appear fresh for me the vermilion mark on your forehead!
       "What childish cajolery of self-deception," mocks some devil from
       his dark corner--"silly prattle to make children quiet!"
       That may be. But millions and millions of children, with their
       million cries, have to be kept quiet. Can it be that all this
       multitude is quieted with only a lie? No, my Eternal Love cannot
       deceive me, for she is true!
       She is true; that is why I have seen her and shall see her so
       often, even in my mistakes, even through the thickest mist of
       tears. I have seen her and lost her in the crowd of life's
       market-place, and found her again; and I shall find her once more
       when I have escaped through the loophole of death.
       Ah, cruel one, play with me no longer! If I have failed to track
       you by the marks of your footsteps on the way, by the scent of
       your tresses lingering in the air, make me not weep for that for
       ever. The unveiled star tells me not to fear. That which is
       eternal must always be there.
       Now let me go and see my Bimala. She must have spread her tired
       limbs on the bed, limp after her struggles, and be asleep. I
       will leave a kiss on her forehead without waking her--that shall
       be the flower-offering of my worship. I believe I could forget
       everything after death--all my mistakes, all my sufferings--but
       some vibration of the memory of that kiss would remain; for the
       wreath which is being woven out of the kisses of many a
       successive birth is to crown the Eternal Beloved.
       As the gong of the watch rang out, sounding the hour of two, my
       sister-in-law came into the room. "Whatever are you doing,
       brother dear?" [16] she cried. "For pity's sake go to bed and
       stop worrying so. I cannot bear to look on that awful shadow of
       pain on your face." Tears welled up in her eyes and overflowed
       as she entreated me thus.
       I could not utter a word, but took the dust of her feet, as I
       went off to bed.
       ------
       16. When a relationship is established by marriage, or by mutual
       understanding arising out of special friendship or affection, the
       persons so related call each other in terms of such relationship,
       and not by name. [Trans.].
        
       Bimala's Story
       VII
        
       At first I suspected nothing, feared nothing; I simply felt
       dedicated to my country. What a stupendous joy there was in this
       unquestioning surrender. Verily had I realized how, in
       thoroughness of self-destruction, man can find supreme bliss.
       For aught I know, this frenzy of mine might have come to a
       gradual, natural end. But Sandip Babu would not have it so, he
       would insist on revealing himself. The tone of his voice became
       as intimate as a touch, every look flung itself on its knees in
       beggary. And, through it all, there burned a passion which in
       its violence made as though it would tear me up by the roots, and
       drag me along by the hair.
       I will not shirk the truth. This cataclysmal desire drew me by
       day and by night. It seemed desperately alluring--this making
       havoc of myself. What a shame it seemed, how terrible, and yet
       how sweet! Then there was my overpowering curiosity, to which
       there seemed no limit. He of whom I knew but little, who never
       could assuredly be mine, whose youth flared so vigorously in a
       hundred points of flame--oh, the mystery of his seething
       passions, so immense, so tumultuous!
       I began with a feeling of worship, but that soon passed away. I
       ceased even to respect Sandip; on the contrary, I began to look
       down upon him. Nevertheless this flesh-and-blood lute of mine,
       fashioned with my feeling and fancy, found in him a master-
       player. What though I shrank from his touch, and even came to
       loathe the lute itself; its music was conjured up all the same.
       I must confess there was something in me which ... what shall I
       say? ... which makes me wish I could have died!
       Chandranath Babu, when he finds leisure, comes to me. He has the
       power to lift my mind up to an eminence from where I can see in a
       moment the boundary of my life extended on all sides and so
       realize that the lines, which I took from my bounds, were merely
       imaginary.
       But what is the use of it all? Do I really desire emancipation?
       Let suffering come to our house; let the best in me shrivel up
       and become black; but let this infatuation not leave me--such
       seems to be my prayer.
       When, before my marriage, I used to see a brother-in-law of mine,
       now dead, mad with drink--beating his wife in his frenzy, and
       then sobbing and howling in maudlin repentance, vowing never to
       touch liquor again, and yet, the very same evening, sitting down
       to drink and drink--it would fill me with disgust. But my
       intoxication today is still more fearful. The stuff has not to
       be procured or poured out: it springs within my veins, and I know
       not how to resist it.
       Must this continue to the end of my days? Now and again I start
       and look upon myself, and think my life to be a nightmare which
       will vanish all of a sudden with all its untruth. It has become
       so frightfully incongruous. It has no connection with its past.
       What it is, how it could have come to this pass, I cannot
       understand.
       One day my sister-in-law remarked with a cutting laugh: "What a
       wonderfully hospitable Chota Rani we have! Her guest absolutely
       will not budge. In our time there used to be guests, too; but
       they had not such lavish looking after--we were so absurdly taken
       up with our husbands. Poor brother Nikhil is paying the penalty
       of being born too modern. He should have come as a guest if he
       wanted to stay on. Now it looks as if it were time for him to
       quit ... O you little demon, do your glances never fall, by
       chance, on his agonized face?"
       This sarcasm did not touch me; for I knew that these women had it
       not in them to understand the nature of the cause of my devotion.
       I was then wrapped in the protecting armour of the exaltation of
       sacrifice, through which such shafts were powerless to reach and
       shame me.
       VIII
        
       For some time all talk of the country's cause has been dropped.
       Our conversation nowadays has become full of modern sex-problems,
       and various other matters, with a sprinkling of poetry, both old
       Vaishnava and modern English, accompanied by a running undertone
       of melody, low down in the bass, such as I have never in my life
       heard before, which seems to me to sound the true manly note, the
       note of power.
       The day had come when all cover was gone. There was no longer
       even the pretence of a reason why Sandip Babu should linger on,
       or why I should have confidential talks with him every now and
       then. I felt thoroughly vexed with myself, with my sister-in-
       law, with the ways of the world, and I vowed I would never again
       go to the outer apartments, not if I were to die for it.
       For two whole days I did not stir out. Then, for the first time,
       I discovered how far I had travelled. My life felt utterly
       tasteless. Whatever I touched I wanted to thrust away. I felt
       myself waiting--from the crown of my head to the tips of my toes
       --waiting for something, somebody; my blood kept tingling with
       some expectation.
       I tried busying myself with extra work. The bedroom floor was
       clean enough but I insisted on its being scrubbed over again
       under my eyes. Things were arranged in the cabinets in one kind
       of order; I pulled them all out and rearranged them in a
       different way. I found no time that afternoon even to do up my
       hair; I hurriedly tied it into a loose knot, and went and worried
       everybody, fussing about the store-room. The stores seemed
       short, and pilfering must have been going on of late, but I could
       not muster up the courage to take any particular person to task--
       for might not the thought have crossed somebody's mind: "Where
       were your eyes all these days!"
       In short, I behaved that day as one possessed. The next day I
       tried to do some reading. What I read I have no idea, but after
       a spell of absentmindedness I found I had wandered away, book in
       hand, along the passage leading towards the outer apartments, and
       was standing by a window looking out upon the verandah running
       along the row of rooms on the opposite side of the quadrangle.
       One of these rooms, I felt, had crossed over to another shore,
       and the ferry had ceased to ply. I felt like the ghost of myself
       of two days ago, doomed to remain where I was, and yet not really
       there, blankly looking out for ever.
       As I stood there, I saw Sandip come out of his room into the
       verandah, a newspaper in his hand. I could see that he looked
       extraordinarily disturbed. The courtyard, the railings, in
       front, seemed to rouse his wrath. He flung away his newspaper
       with a gesture which seemed to want to rend the space before him.
       I felt I could no longer keep my vow. I was about to move on
       towards the sitting-room, when I found my sister-in-law behind
       me. "O Lord, this beats everything!" she ejaculated, as she
       glided away. I could not proceed to the outer apartments.
       The next morning when my maid came calling, "Rani Mother, it is
       getting late for giving out the stores," I flung the keys to her,
       saying, "Tell Harimati to see to it," and went on with some
       embroidery of English pattern on which I was engaged, seated near
       the window.
       Then came a servant with a letter. "From Sandip Babu," said he.
       What unbounded boldness! What must the messenger have thought?
       There was a tremor within my breast as I opened the envelope.
       There was no address on the letter, only the words: __An urgent
       matter--touching the Cause. Sandip__.
       I flung aside the embroidery. I was up on my feet in a moment,
       giving a touch or two to my hair by the mirror. I kept the
       __sari__ I had on, changing only my jacket--for one of my
       jackets had its associations.
       I had to pass through one of the verandahs, where my sister-in-
       law used to sit in the morning slicing betel-nut. I refused to
       feel awkward. "Whither away, Chota Rani?" she cried.
       "To the sitting-room outside."
       "So early! A matinee, eh?"
       And, as I passed on without further reply, she hummed after me a
       flippant song.
       IX
        
       When I was about to enter the sitting-room, I saw Sandip immersed
       in an illustrated catalogue of British Academy pictures, with his
       back to the door. He has a great notion of himself as an expert
       in matters of Art.
       One day my husband said to him: "If the artists ever want a
       teacher, they need never lack for one so long as you are there."
       It had not been my husband's habit to speak cuttingly, but
       latterly there has been a change and he never spares Sandip.
       "What makes you suppose that artists need no teachers?" Sandip
       retorted.
       "Art is a creation," my husband replied. "So we should humbly be
       content to receive our lessons about Art from the work of the
       artist."
       Sandip laughed at this modesty, saying: "You think that meekness
       is a kind of capital which increases your wealth the more you use
       it. It is my conviction that those who lack pride only float
       about like water reeds which have no roots in the soil."
       My mind used to be full of contradictions when they talked thus.
       On the one hand I was eager that my husband should win in
       argument and that Sandip's pride should be shamed. Yet, on the
       other, it was Sandip's unabashed pride which attracted me so. It
       shone like a precious diamond, which knows no diffidence, and
       sparkles in the face of the sun itself.
       I entered the room. I knew Sandip could hear my footsteps as I
       went forward, but he pretended not to, and kept his eyes on the
       book.
       I dreaded his Art talks, for I could not overcome my delicacy
       about the pictures he talked of, and the things he said, and had
       much ado in putting on an air of overdone insensibility to hide
       my qualms. So, I was almost on the point of retracing my steps,
       when, with a deep sigh, Sandip raised his eyes, and affected to
       be startled at the sight of me. "Ah, you have come!" he said.
       In his words, in his tone, in his eyes, there was a world of
       suppressed reproach, as if the claims he had acquired over me
       made my absence, even for these two or three days, a grievous
       wrong. I knew this attitude was an insult to me, but, alas, I
       had not the power to resent it.
       I made no reply, but though I was looking another way, I could
       not help feeling that Sandip's plaintive gaze had planted itself
       right on my face, and would take no denial. I did so wish he
       would say something, so that I could shelter myself behind his
       words. I cannot tell how long this went on, but at last I could
       stand it no longer. "What is this matter," I asked, "you are
       wanting to tell me about?"
       Sandip again affected surprise as he said: "Must there always be
       some matter? Is friendship by itself a crime? Oh, Queen Bee, to
       think that you should make so light of the greatest thing on
       earth! Is the heart's worship to be shut out like a stray cur?"
       There was again that tremor within me. I could feel the crisis
       coming, too importunate to be put off. Joy and fear struggled
       for the mastery. Would my shoulders, I wondered, be broad enough
       to stand its shock, or would it not leave me overthrown, with my
       face in the dust?
       I was trembling all over. Steadying myself with an effort I
       repeated: "You summoned me for something touching the Cause, so I
       have left my household duties to attend to it."
       "That is just what I was trying to explain," he said, with a dry
       laugh. "Do you not know that I come to worship? Have I not told
       you that, in you, I visualize the __Shakti__ of our country?
       The Geography of a country is not the whole truth. No one can
       give up his life for a map! When I see you before me, then only
       do I realize how lovely my country is. When you have anointed me
       with your own hands, then shall I know I have the sanction of my
       country; and if, with that in my heart, I fall fighting, it shall
       not be on the dust of some map-made land, but on a lovingly
       spread skirt--do you know what kind of skirt?--like that of the
       earthen-red __sari__ you wore the other day, with a broad
       blood-red border. Can I ever forget it? Such are the visions
       which give vigour to life, and joy to death!"
       Sandip's eyes took fire as he went on, but whether it was the
       fire of worship, or of passion, I could not tell. I was reminded
       of the day on which I first heard him speak, when I could not be
       sure whether he was a person, or just a living flame.
       I had not the power to utter a word. You cannot take shelter
       behind the walls of decorum when in a moment the fire leaps up
       and, with the flash of its sword and the roar of its laughter,
       destroys all the miser's stores. I was in terror lest he should
       forget himself and take me by the hand. For he shook like a
       quivering tongue of fire; his eyes showered scorching sparks on
       me.
       "Are you for ever determined," he cried after a pause, "to make
       gods of your petty household duties--you who have it in you to
       send us to life or to death? Is this power of yours to be kept
       veiled in a zenana? Cast away all false shame, I pray you; snap
       your fingers at the whispering around. Take your plunge today
       into the freedom of the outer world."
       When, in Sandip's appeals, his worship of the country gets to be
       subtly interwoven with his worship of me, then does my blood
       dance, indeed, and the barriers of my hesitation totter. His
       talks about Art and Sex, his distinctions between Real and
       Unreal, had but clogged my attempts at response with some
       revolting nastiness. This, however, now burst again into a glow
       before which my repugnance faded away. I felt that my
       resplendent womanhood made me indeed a goddess. Why should not
       its glory flash from my forehead with visible brilliance? Why
       does not my voice find a word, some audible cry, which would be
       like a sacred spell to my country for its fire initiation?
       All of a sudden my maid Khema rushed into the room, dishevelled.
       "Give me my wages and let me go," she screamed. "Never in all my
       life have I been so ..." The rest of her speech was drowned in
       sobs.
       "What is the matter?"
       Thako, the Bara Rani's maid, it appeared, had for no rhyme or
       reason reviled her in unmeasured terms. She was in such a state,
       it was no manner of use trying to pacify her by saying I would
       look into the matter afterwards.
       The slime of domestic life that lay beneath the lotus bank of
       womanhood came to the surface. Rather than allow Sandip a
       prolonged vision of it, I had to hurry back within.
        
       X
       My sister-in-law was absorbed in her betel-nuts, the suspicion of
       a smile playing about her lips, as if nothing untoward had
       happened. She was still humming the same song.
       "Why has your Thako been calling poor Khema names?" I burst out.
       "Indeed? The wretch! I will have her broomed out of the house.
       What a shame to spoil your morning out like this! As for Khema,
       where are the hussy's manners to go and disturb you when you are
       engaged? Anyhow, Chota Rani, don't you worry yourself with these
       domestic squabbles. Leave them to me, and return to your
       friend."
       How suddenly the wind in the sails of our mind veers round! This
       going to meet Sandip outside seemed, in the light of the zenana
       code, such an extraordinarily out-of-the-way thing to do that I
       went off to my own room, at a loss for a reply. I knew this was
       my sister-in-law's doing and that she had egged her maid on to
       contrive this scene. But I had brought myself to such an
       unstable poise that I dared not have my fling.
       Why, it was only the other day that I found I could not keep up
       to the last the unbending hauteur with which I had demanded from
       my husband the dismissal of the man Nanku. I felt suddenly
       abashed when the Bara Rani came up and said: "It is really all my
       fault, brother dear. We are old-fashioned folk, and I did not
       quite like the ways of your Sandip Babu, so I only told the guard
       ... but how was I to know that our Chota Rani would take this as
       an insult?--I thought it would be the other way about! Just my
       incorrigible silliness!"
       The thing which seems so glorious when viewed from the heights of
       the country's cause, looks so muddy when seen from the bottom.
       One begins by getting angry, and then feels disgusted.
       I shut myself into my room, sitting by the window, thinking how
       easy life would be if only one could keep in harmony with one's
       surroundings. How simply the senior Rani sits in her verandah
       with her betel-nuts and how inaccessible to me has become my
       natural seat beside my daily duties! Where will it all end, I
       asked myself? Shall I ever recover, as from a delirium, and
       forget it all; or am I to be dragged to depths from which there
       can be no escape in this life? How on earth did I manage to let
       my good fortune escape me, and spoil my life so? Every wall of
       this bedroom of mine, which I first entered nine years ago as a
       bride, stares at me in dismay.
       When my husband came home, after his M.A. examination, he
       brought for me this orchid belonging to some far-away land beyond
       the seas. From beneath these few little leaves sprang such a
       cascade of blossoms, it looked as if they were pouring forth from
       some overturned urn of Beauty. We decided, together, to hang it
       here, over this window. It flowered only that once, but we have
       always been in hope of its doing so once more. Curiously enough
       I have kept on watering it these days, from force of habit, and
       it is still green.
       It is now four years since I framed a photograph of my husband in
       ivory and put it in the niche over there. If I happen to look
       that way I have to lower my eyes. Up to last week I used
       regularly to put there the flowers of my worship, every morning
       after my bath. My husband has often chided me over this.
       "It shames me to see you place me on a height to which I do not
       belong," he said one day.
       "What nonsense!"
       "I am not only ashamed, but also jealous!"
       "Just hear him! Jealous of whom, pray?"
       "Of that false me. It only shows that I am too petty for you,
       that you want some extraordinary man who can overpower you with
       his superiority, and so you needs must take refuge in making for
       yourself another 'me'."
       "This kind of talk only makes me angry," said I.
       "What is the use of being angry with me?" he replied. "Blame
       your fate which allowed you no choice, but made you take me
       blindfold. This keeps you trying to retrieve its blunder by
       making me out a paragon."
       I felt so hurt at the bare idea that tears started to my eyes
       that day. And whenever I think of that now, I cannot raise my
       eyes to the niche.
       For now there is another photograph in my jewel case. The other
       day, when arranging the sitting-room, I brought away that double
       photo frame, the one in which Sandip's portrait was next to my
       husband's. To this portrait I have no flowers of worship to
       offer, but it remains hidden away under my gems. It has all the
       greater fascination because kept secret. I look at it now and
       then with doors closed. At night I turn up the lamp, and sit
       with it in my hand, gazing and gazing. And every night I think
       of burning it in the flame of the lamp, to be done with it for
       ever; but every night I heave a sigh and smother it again in my
       pearls and diamonds.
       Ah, wretched woman! What a wealth of love was twined round each
       one of those jewels! Oh, why am I not dead?
       Sandip had impressed it on me that hesitation is not in the
       nature of woman. For her, neither right nor left has any
       existence--she only moves forward. When the women of our country
       wake up, he repeatedly insisted, their voice will be unmistakably
       confident in its utterance of the cry: "I want."
       "I want!" Sandip went on one day--this was the primal word at
       the root of all creation. It had no maxim to guide it, but it
       became fire and wrought itself into suns and stars. Its
       partiality is terrible. Because it had a desire for man, it
       ruthlessly sacrificed millions of beasts for millions of years to
       achieve that desire. That terrible word "I want" has taken flesh
       in woman, and therefore men, who are cowards, try with all their
       might to keep back this primeval flood With their earthen dykes.
       They are afraid lest, laughing and dancing as it goes, it should
       wash away all the hedges and props of their pumpkin field. Men,
       in every age, flatter themselves that they have secured this
       force within the bounds of their convenience, but it gathers and
       grows. Now it is calm and deep like a lake, but gradually its
       pressure will increase, the dykes will give way, and the force
       which has so long been dumb will rush forward with the roar: "I
       want!"
       These words of Sandip echo in my heart-beats like a war-drum.
       They shame into silence all my conflicts with myself. What do I
       care what people may think of me? Of what value are that orchid
       and that niche in my bedroom? What power have they to belittle
       me, to put me to shame? The primal fire of creation burns in me.
       I felt a strong desire to snatch down the orchid and fling it out
       of the window, to denude the niche of its picture, to lay bare
       and naked the unashamed spirit of destruction that raged within
       me. My arm was raised to do it, but a sudden pang passed through
       my breast, tears started to my eyes. I threw myself down and
       sobbed: "What is the end of all this, what is the end?"
        
       Sandip's Story
       IV
        
       When I read these pages of the story of my life I seriously
       question myself: Is this Sandip? Am I made of words? Am I
       merely a book with a covering of flesh and blood?
       The earth is not a dead thing like the moon. She breathes. Her
       rivers and oceans send up vapours in which she is clothed. She
       is covered with a mantle of her own dust which flies about the
       air. The onlooker, gazing upon the earth from the outside, can
       see only the light reflected from this vapour and this dust. The
       tracks of the mighty continents are not distinctly visible.
       The man, who is alive as this earth is, is likewise always
       enveloped in the mist of the ideas which he is breathing out.
       His real land and water remain hidden, and he appears to be made
       of only lights and shadows.
       It seems to me, in this story of my life, that, like a living
       plant, I am displaying the picture of an ideal world. But I am
       not merely what I want, what I think--I am also what I do not
       love, what I do not wish to be. My creation had begun before I
       was born. I had no choice in regard to my surroundings and so
       must make the best of such material as comes to my hand.
       My theory of life makes me certain that the Great is cruel To be
       just is for ordinary men--it is reserved for the great to be
       unjust. The surface of the earth was even. The volcano butted
       it with its fiery horn and found its own eminence--its justice
       was not towards its obstacle, but towards itself. Successful
       injustice and genuine cruelty have been the only forces by which
       individual or nation has become millionaire or monarch.
       That is why I preach the great discipline of Injustice. I say to
       everyone: Deliverance is based upon injustice. Injustice is the
       fire which must keep on burning something in order to save itself
       from becoming ashes. Whenever an individual or nation becomes
       incapable of perpetrating injustice it is swept into the dust-bin
       of the world.
       As yet this is only my idea--it is not completely myself. There
       are rifts in the armour through which something peeps out which
       is extremely soft and sensitive. Because, as I say, the best
       part of myself was created before I came to this stage of
       existence.
       From time to time I try my followers in their lesson of cruelty.
       One day we went on a picnic. A goat was grazing by. I asked
       them: "Who is there among you that can cut off a leg of that
       goat, alive, with this knife, and bring it to me?" While they
       all hesitated, I went myself and did it. One of them fainted at
       the sight. But when they saw me unmoved they took the dust of my
       feet, saying that I was above all human weaknesses. That is to
       say, they saw that day the vaporous envelope which was my idea,
       but failed to perceive the inner me, which by a curious freak of
       fate has been created tender and merciful.
       In the present chapter of my life, which is growing in interest
       every day round Bimala and Nikhil, there is also much that
       remains hidden underneath. This malady of ideas which afflicts
       me is shaping my life within: nevertheless a great part of my
       life remains outside its influence; and so there is set up a
       discrepancy between my outward life and its inner design which I
       try my best to keep concealed even from myself; otherwise it may
       wreck not only my plans, but my very life.
       Life is indefinite--a bundle of contradictions. We men, with our
       ideas, strive to give it a particular shape by melting it into a
       particular mould--into the definiteness of success. All the
       world-conquerors, from Alexander down to the American
       millionaires, mould themselves into a sword or a mint, and thus
       find that distinct image of themselves which is the source of
       their success.
       The chief controversy between Nikhil and myself arises from this:
       that though I say "know thyself", and Nikhil also says "know
       thyself", his interpretation makes this "knowing" tantamount to
       "not knowing".
       "Winning your kind of success," Nikhil once objected, "is success
       gained at the cost of the soul: but the soul is greater than
       success."
       I simply said in answer: "Your words are too vague."
       "That I cannot help," Nikhil replied. "A machine is distinct
       enough, but not so life. If to gain distinctness you try to know
       life as a machine, then such mere distinctness cannot stand for
       truth. The soul is not as distinct as success, and so you only
       lose your soul if you seek it in your success."
       "Where, then, is this wonderful soul?"
       "Where it knows itself in the infinite and transcends its
       success."
       "But how does all this apply to our work for the country?"
       "It is the same thing. Where our country makes itself the final
       object, it gains success at the cost of the soul. Where it
       recognizes the Greatest as greater than all, there it may miss
       success, but gains its soul."
       "Is there any example of this in history?"
       "Man is so great that he can despise not only the success, but
       also the example. Possibly example is lacking, just as there is
       no example of the flower in the seed. But there is the urgence
       of the flower in the seed all the same."
       It is not that I do not at all understand Nikhil's point of view;
       that is rather where my danger lies. I was born in India and the
       poison of its spirituality runs in my blood. However loudly I
       may proclaim the madness of walking in the path of self-
       abnegation, I cannot avoid it altogether.
       This is exactly how such curious anomalies happen nowadays in our
       country. We must have our religion and also our nationalism; our
       __Bhagavadgita__ and also our __Bande Mataram__. The result is that
       both of them suffer. It is like performing with an English military
       band, side by side with our Indian festive pipes. I must make it
       the purpose of my life to put an end to this hideous confusion.
       I want the western military style to prevail, not the Indian.
       We shall then not be ashamed of the flag of our passion, which
       mother Nature has sent with us as our standard into the
       battlefield of life. Passion is beautiful and pure--pure as the
       lily that comes out of the slimy soil. It rises superior to its
       defilement and needs no Pears' soap to wash it clean.
        
       V
       A question has been worrying me the last few days. Why am I
       allowing my life to become entangled with Bimala's? Am I a
       drifting log to be caught up at any and every obstacle?
       Not that I have any false shame at Bimala becoming an object of
       my desire. It is only too clear how she wants me, and so I look
       on her as quite legitimately mine. The fruit hangs on the branch
       by the stem, but that is no reason why the claim of the stem
       should be eternal. Ripe fruit cannot for ever swear by its
       slackening stem-hold. All its sweetness has been accumulated for
       me; to surrender itself to my hand is the reason of its
       existence, its very nature, its true morality. So I must pluck
       it, for it becomes me not to make it futile.
       But what is teasing me is that I am getting entangled. Am I not
       born to rule?--to bestride my proper steed, the crowd, and drive
       it as I will; the reins in my hand, the destination known only to
       me, and for it the thorns, the mire, on the road? This steed now
       awaits me at the door, pawing and champing its bit, its neighing
       filling the skies. But where am I, and what am I about, letting
       day after day of golden opportunity slip by?
       I used to think I was like a storm--that the torn flowers with
       which I strewed my path would not impede my progress. But I am
       only wandering round and round a flower like a bee--not a storm.
       So, as I was saying, the colouring of ideas which man gives
       himself is only superficial. The inner man remains as ordinary
       as ever. If someone, who could see right into me, were to write
       my biography, he would make me out to be no different from that
       lout of a Panchu, or even from Nikhil!
       Last night I was turning over the pages of my old diary ... I
       had just graduated, and my brain was bursting with philosophy.
       Even so early I had vowed not to harbour any illusions, whether
       of my own or other's imagining, but to build my life on a solid
       basis of reality. But what has since been its actual story?
       Where is its solidity? It has rather been a network, where,
       though the thread be continuous, more space is taken up by the
       holes. Fight as I may, these will not own defeat. Just as I was
       congratulating myself on steadily following the thread, here I am
       badly caught in a hole! For I have become susceptible to
       compunctions.
       "I want it; it is here; let me take it"--This is a clear-cut,
       straightforward policy. Those who can pursue its course with
       vigour needs must win through in the end. But the gods would not
       have it that such journey should be easy, so they have deputed
       the siren Sympathy to distract the wayfarer, to dim his vision
       with her tearful mist.
       I can see that poor Bimala is struggling like a snared deer.
       What a piteous alarm there is in her eyes! How she is torn with
       straining at her bonds! This sight, of course, should gladden
       the heart of a true hunter. And so do I rejoice; but, then, I am
       also touched; and therefore I dally, and standing on the brink I
       am hesitating to pull the noose fast.
       There have been moments, I know, when I could have bounded up to
       her, clasped her hands and folded her to my breast, unresisting.
       Had I done so, she would not have said one word. She was aware
       that some crisis was impending, which in a moment would change
       the meaning of the whole world. Standing before that cavern of
       the incalculable but yet expected, her face went pale and her
       eyes glowed with a fearful ecstasy. Within that moment, when it
       arrives, an eternity will take shape, which our destiny awaits,
       holding its breath.
       But I have let this moment slip by. I did not, with
       uncompromising strength, press the almost certain into the
       absolutely assured. I now see clearly that some hidden elements
       in my nature have openly ranged themselves as obstacles in my
       path.
       That is exactly how Ravana, whom I look upon as the real hero of
       the __Ramayana__, met with his doom. He kept Sita in his
       Asoka garden, awaiting her pleasure, instead of taking her
       straight into his harem. This weak spot in his otherwise grand
       character made the whole of the abduction episode futile.
       Another such touch of compunction made him disregard, and be
       lenient to, his traitorous brother Bibhisan, only to get himself
       killed for his pains.
       Thus does the tragic in life come by its own. In the beginning
       it lies, a little thing, in some dark under-vault, and ends by
       overthrowing the whole superstructure. The real tragedy is, that
       man does not know himself for what he really is.
       VI
        
       Then again there is Nikhil. Crank though he be, laugh at him as
       I may, I cannot get rid of the idea that he is my friend. At
       first I gave no thought to his point of view, but of late it has
       begun to shame and hurt me. Therefore I have been trying to talk
       and argue with him in the same enthusiastic way as of old, but it
       does not ring true. It is even leading me at times into such a
       length of unnaturalness as to pretend to agree with him. But
       such hypocrisy is not in my nature, nor in that of Nikhil either.
       This, at least, is something we have in common. That is why,
       nowadays, I would rather not come across him, and have taken to
       fighting shy of his presence.
       All these are signs of weakness. No sooner is the possibility of
       a wrong admitted than it becomes actual, and clutches you by the
       throat, however you may then try to shake off all belief in it.
       What I should like to be able to tell Nikhil frankly is, that
       happenings such as these must be looked in the face--as great
       Realities--and that which is the Truth should not be allowed to
       stand between true friends.
       There is no denying that I have really weakened. It was not this
       weakness which won over Bimala; she burnt her wings in the blaze
       of the full strength of my unhesitating manliness. Whenever
       smoke obscures its lustre she also becomes confused, and draws
       back. Then comes a thorough revulsion of feeling, and she fain
       would take back the garland she has put round my neck, but
       cannot; and so she only closes her eyes, to shut it out of sight.
       But all the same I must not swerve from the path I have chalked
       out. It would never do to abandon the cause of the country,
       especially at the present time. I shall simply make Bimala one
       with my country. The turbulent west wind which has swept away
       the country's veil of conscience, will sweep away the veil of the
       wife from Bimala's face, and in that uncovering there will be no
       shame. The ship will rock as it bears the crowd across the
       ocean, flying the pennant of __Bande Mataram__, and it will
       serve as the cradle to my power, as well as to my love.
       Bimala will see such a majestic vision of deliverance, that her
       bonds will slip from about her, without shame, without her even
       being aware of it. Fascinated by the beauty of this terrible
       wrecking power, she will not hesitate a moment to be cruel. I
       have seen in Bimala's nature the cruelty which is the inherent
       force of existence--the cruelty which with its unrelenting might
       keeps the world beautiful.
       If only women could be set free from the artificial fetters put
       round them by men, we could see on earth the living image of
       Kali, the shameless, pitiless goddess. I am a worshipper of
       Kali, and one day I shall truly worship her, setting Bimala on
       her altar of Destruction. For this let me get ready.
       The way of retreat is absolutely closed for both of us. We shall
       despoil each other: get to hate each other: but never more be
       free.
       Content of Chapter Four [Rabindranath Tagore's novel: The Home and the World]
       _