Monday 30 April 2007

The Dawn..

The Angel taketh her hand and blest the canvas with 'er grace..
She doth but create mountains, and rivers and great cities alike..
She doth give life to trees, and to good men;
And taketh away from those who dare sin..
She giveth to me the gray-vest viewsing..
An Angel ever did bequeath to her child..

Another rout of a routine day and we negotiated for a dine-out outing. I hope you could have seen the drag of a face I felt burdened to carry, for it is not usual. I insist on your presence there for I know, these words are not nearly enough to describe the death of activity in my mind during that array of insignificant events. A few months away from home, and I embody home-sickness. Anyway, that was all to change, albeit momentarily.

In the midst of the crowd, we sit, sipping something I do not remember, gorging something I care not to remember. Any which way, in this particular direction, I notice this family of three, blissfully enjoying their meal on a table for two, with the child, I trust to be not more than a third-of-a-dozen years old, on the fathers lap, particularly disturbed and in envy (I had learnt from fables authored apparently by my mother, that she insists involve a protagonist that somehow resembles me; hence I could make out..) regarding her mother paying undue attention to food and her husband (not necessarily in that particular order), than to her. I smiled; somehow she reminded me of myself. The only way to pacify her was, as the following series of short-and-sweet events revealed to me, for the mother to take her into her own arms and stroke her gently on her back and feed her with her bare hands, bite-by-bite. And then she was to be set free onto her elder sister (elder only by about a couple of years) where she'd easily pass the remainder of the time taken by her parents to finish off their meal, brimming with the satisfaction of the day's work done.

As I follow the hop-walking sugar-coated white chocolate of a little girl that she was, I stumble upon another table for two, occupied by another little girl, who seemed to be (not from resemblance, but merely from the sequence of events that preceded) her elder sister. My engineer mind (trust me it wasn't me, not that I am ashamed of it; just that it's odd to me then as it is to you now) was immensely satisfied at the satisfaction of the law of proportionality, with each of the family now having (relative to my perception) precisely one seat.

On her table, I notice, what I remember to be six glasses with differing quantities of water. The first impression was that of that musical instrument we're all so fond of being played. However, the lack of any sound, or that of intent to play, or that of a metal spoon, pivotal to the instrument led me to believe otherwise. Next, I remember, very lucidly, I noticed three straws on the tables, a-third of each was still drenched in water; and yet another one in her bright white hand, held with the apparent finesse of an artist. And she dipped the straw in precisely the third glass from her left, then flicked it further left on the table. Further, she bathed (now to a lesser degree) the seemingly too-long-to-handle straw (I remember it seemed disturbing to me at that time, an artist of her caliber was using such archaic measures) to the second glass from the right, then reiterating the flicking procedure. After she was satisfied, and I could easily see the tension wearing off her beautiful face (well, it's unfortunate I have no other word for something so beautiful), she caressed the water she had laid down with her fore-finger and spread it in, what I could make out of it to be a rectangular structure, with an upward-pointing triangle on top. Aah, a small little village house of her own. She then used her other instrument of creation, the straw (I was already beginning to miss her holding it) to fill in the voids with whatever was the vivid colour she imagined to be.

Following the house, she created the trees, a gushing river with a boat and a smiling boatman waving at her in the joy of creation, in it. She lit up the sky with an orange-vermilion sun and painted the rest of the void with shades morphing from the hot surface of the sun to the tranquil turquoise of dawn. She didn't leave the little barking dog, or the village-women begging for life, and gave them clothes she was magnanimous enough to provide. Somewhere from the woods of the far side across the river, she left a cow to graze all she could, and a well stood nearby, around which half-a-dozen children were playing hide and seek. Further across the page, there were approaching the kings own men, with eyes gleaming, helping the sunshine to grow, with the aid the gracious saviour-of-all had sent. There were also fishermen, scouring the river for the catch of the day, and the their women preparing the grills for the village feast there was today. It was a carnival, I say! The way the temple had been adorned with all the glitter and food the village could conjure up with and more. The priests prepared for the customary traditions and fire lit up the temple foyer. It was the start of the new year..

And then she looked up at me. And I turned away. I hope she didn't believe me to be disturbing her in her own world, in her own figment of imagination. Her new world so pure, it could crush a creature as adulterated as me. Yet I cannot and will not let go of the smile she inspired me to wear to this moment. This is the beginning..

7 comments:

Nithya said...

"not more than a third-of-a-dozen years old"... Call the kid four!

Really vivid imagination, I liked the style:)

Rtinkslinger said...

ahem ahem ... I see I ain't the first to comment ..but still..


" Following the house, she created the trees, a gushing river with a boat and a smiling boatman waving at her in the joy of creation, in it. She lit up the sky with an orange-vermilion sun and painted the rest of the void with shades morphing from the hot surface of the sun to the tranquil turquoise of dawn. She didn't leave the little barking dog, or the village-women begging for life, and gave them clothes she was magnanimous enough to provide. Somewhere from the woods of the far side across the river, she left a cow to graze all she could, and a well stood nearby, around which half-a-dozen children were playing hide and seek. Further across the page, there were approaching the kings own men, with eyes gleaming, helping the sunshine to grow, with the aid the gracious saviour-of-all had sent. There were also fishermen, scouring the river for the catch of the day, and the their women preparing the grills for the village feast there was today. It was a carnival, I say! The way the temple had been adorned with all the glitter and food the village could conjure up with and more. The priests prepared for the customary traditions and fire lit up the temple foyer. It was the start of the new year.."

Some imagery ! ..fantasy: quiet not, I believe :p

Unknown said...

@nithya
A little consideration for the metric system, please! :)

Unknown said...

@shhhhhh..
Thanks.. :) And I can see you're replacing 'quite' with 'quiet', quite in tandem with your alias.. :D

Rtinkslinger said...

@anachronys

Mind not the anachronism, but now I disguise myself in a new masquerade!

I AM B

The following comment I wanted to post. It took me some time cous , coz I cudnt QUITE gather the name of this Wodehouse piece. But now that I recall, it demands that it be stuck on your wall!

" ..This is he felt, was about as much as the scenery was good for in the way of entertainment value. Carry on in the same vein, and he might just as well send her the local guide-book. What was required now was a splash of human interest. That not so gossipy stuff that girls like. he looked around about him again, and again received inspiration. A fat man, accompanied by a slim girl had just come..."

--- The Luck Of the Bodkins
(P. G. Wodehouse)

The imagery of the whole entry (besides the one I rightly and yet un-rightfully quoted in mah last comment) makes me doubt and reason, that blogs, like letters written to girls (and maybe emails too :P :( :D :? ) must carry a certain note of such "human interest" for them to receive comments from ladies of all styles, from those with vivid imagination to the ones from VIVID productions :D!

As for the metric system, I'd rather care for the meter-ic system ! (quite in tandem with my new alias :D)

Adieu

D'Anachronys said...

Pseud! :D

fatema rangwalla said...

wow really well writtten . It had this really good feel about it . ur a good writer , i should say !

Im always interested in how ppl see things u knw ,Sumthing fascinates someone ....while the other considers it void .

I believe in this : six billion ppl, six billion worlds .

the manner in which u've jot down ur thoughts is appaudable :\

keep writing :)