2014년 12월 7일 일요일

FROM THE CAVES AND JUNGLES OF HINDOSTAN 10

FROM THE CAVES AND JUNGLES OF HINDOSTAN 10


An Isle of Mystery



When evening began to draw on, we were driving beneath the trees of a
wild jungle; arriving soon after at a large lake, we left the carriages.
The shores were overgrown with reeds--not the reeds that answer our
European notions, but rather such as Gulliver was likely to meet with in
his travels to Brobdingnag. The place was perfectly deserted, but we saw
a boat fastened close to the land. We had still about an hour and a
half of daylight before us, and so we quietly sat down on some ruins and
enjoyed the splendid view, whilst the servants of the Takur transported
our bags, boxes and bundles of rugs from the carriages to the ferry
boat. Mr. Y---- was preparing to paint the picture before us, which
indeed was charming.

"Don't be in a hurry to take down this view," said Gulab-Sing. "In half
an hour we shall be on the islet, where the view is still lovelier. We
may spend there the night and tomorrow morning as well."

"I am afraid it will be too dark in an hour," said Mr. Y----, opening
his color box. "And as for tomorrow, we shall probably have to start
very early."

"Oh, no! there is not the slightest need to start early. We may even
stay here part of the afternoon. From here to the railway station it is
only three hours, and the train only leaves for J ubbulpore at eight
in the evening. And do you know," added the Takur, smiling in his usual
mysterious way, "I am going to treat you to a concert. Tonight you shall
be witness of a very interesting natural phenomenon connected with this
island."

We all pricked up our ears with curiosity.

"Do you mean that island there? and do you really think we must go?"
asked the colonel. "Why should not we spend the night here, where we are
so deliciously cool, and where..."

"Where the forest swarms with playful leopards, and the reeds shelter
snug family parties of the serpent race, were you going to say,
colonel?" interrupted the Babu, with a broad grin. "Don't you admire
this merry gathering, for instance? Look at them! There is the father
and the mother, uncles, aunts, and children.... I am sure I could point
out even a mother-in-law."

Miss X---- looked in the direction he indicated and shrieked, till all
the echoes of the forest groaned in answer. Not farther than three steps
from her there were at least forty grown up serpents and baby snakes.
They amused themselves by practising somersaults, coiled up, then
straightened again and interlaced their tails, presenting to our dilated
eyes a picture of perfect innocence and primitive contentment. Miss
X---- could not stand it any longer and fled to the carriage, whence she
showed us a pale, horrified face. The Takur, who had arranged himself
comfortably beside Mr. Y---- in order to watch the progress of his
paint-ing, left his seat and looked attentively at the dangerous group,
quietly smoking his gargari--Rajput narghile--the while.

"If you do not stop screaming you will attract all the wild animals of
the forest in another ten minutes," said he. "None of you have anything
to fear. If you do not excite an animal he is almost sure to leave you
alone, and most probably will run away from you."

With these words he lightly waved his pipe in the direction of the
serpentine family-party. A thunderbolt falling in their midst could not
have been more effectual. The whole living mass looked stunned for a
moment, and then rapidly disappeared among the reeds with loud hissing
and rustling.

"Now this is pure mesmerism, I declare," said the colonel, on whom not a
gesture of the Takur was lost. "How did you do it, Gulab-Sing? Where did
you learn this science?"

"They were simply frightened away by the sudden movement of my chibook,
and there was no science and no mesmerism about it. Probably by this
fashionable modern word you mean what we Hindus call vashi-karana
vidya--that is to say, the science of charming people and animals by the
force of will. However, as I have already said, this has nothing to do
with what I did."

"But you do not deny, do you, that you have studied this science and
possess this gift?"

"Of course I don't. Every Hindu of my sect is bound to study the
mysteries of physiology and psychology amongst other secrets left to
us by our ancestors. But what of that? I am very much afraid, my dear
colonel," said the Takur with a quiet smile, "that you are rather
inclined to view the simplest of my acts through a mystical prism.
Narayan has been telling you all kinds of things about me behind my
back.... Now, is it not so?"

And he looked at Narayan, who sat at his feet, with an indescribable
mixture of fondness and reproof. The Dekkan colossus dropped his eyes
and remained silent.

"You have guessed rightly," absently answered Mr. Y----, busy over his
drawing apparatus. "Narayan sees in you something like his late deity
Shiva; something just a little less than Parabrahm. Would you believe
it? He seriously assured us--in Nassik it was--that the Raj-Yogis, and
amongst them yourself--though I must own I still fail to understand what
a Raj-Yogi is, precisely--can force any one to see, not what is before
his eyes at the given moment, but what is only in the imagination of the
Raj-Yogi. If I remember rightly he called it Maya.... Now, this seemed
to me going a little too far!"

"Well! You did not believe, of course, and laughed at Narayan?" asked
the Takur, fathoming with his eyes the dark green deeps of the lake.

"Not precisely... Though, I dare say, I did just a little bit," went on
Mr. Y----, absently, being fully engrossed by the view, and trying to
fix his eyes on the most effective part of it. "I dare say I am too
scep-tical on this kind of question."

"And knowing Mr. Y---- as I do," said the colonel, I can add, for
my part, that even were any of these phenomena to happen to himself
personally, he, like Dr. Carpenter, would doubt his own eyes rather than
believe."

"What you say is a little bit exaggerated, but there is some truth in
it. Maybe I would not trust myself in such an occurrence; and I tell you
why. If I saw something that does not exist, or rather exists only for
me, logic would interfere. However objective my vision may be, before
believing in the materiality of a hallucination, I feel I am bound to
doubt my own senses and sanity.... Besides, what bosh all this is! As
if I ever will allow myself to believe in the reality of a thing that
I alone saw; which belief implies also the admission of somebody else
governing and dominating, for the time being, my optical nerves, as well
as my brains."

"However, there are any number of people, who do not doubt, because they
have had proof that this phenomenon really occurs," remarked the Takur,
in a careless tone, which showed he had not the slightest desire to
insist upon this topic.

However, this remark only increased Mr. Y----'s excitement.

"No doubt there are!" he exclaimed. "But what does that prove?
Besides them, there are equal numbers of people who believe in the
materialization of spirits. But do me the kindness of not including me
among them!"

"Don't you believe in animal magnetism?"

"To a certain extent, I do. If a person suffering from some contagious
illness can influence a person in good health, and make him ill, in his
turn, I suppose somebody else's overflow of health can also affect the
sick person, and, perhaps cure him. But between physiological contagion
and mesmeric influence there is a great gulf, and I don't feel inclined
to cross this gulf on the grounds of blind faith. It is perfectly
possible that there are instances of thought-transference in cases of
somnambulism, epilepsy, trance. I do not positively deny it, though I am
very doubtful. Mediums and clairvoyants are a sickly lot, as a rule. But
I bet you anything, a healthy man in perfectly normal conditions is not
to be influenced by the tricks of mesmerists. I should like to see a
magnetizer, or even a Raj-Yogi, inducing me to obey his will."

"Now, my dear fellow, you really ought not to speak so rashly," said the
colonel, who, till then, had not taken any part in the discussion.

"Ought I not? Don't take it into your head that it is mere boastfulness
on my part. I guarantee failure in my case, simply because every
renowned European mesmerist has tried his luck with me, without any
result; and that is why I defy the whole lot of them to try again, and
feel perfectly safe about it. And why a Hindu Raj-Yogi should succeed
where the strongest of European mesmerists failed, I do not quite
see...."

Mr. Y---- was growing altogether too excited, and the Takur dropped the
subject, and talked of something else.

For my part, I also feel inclined to deviate once more from my subject,
and give some necessary explanations.

Miss X---- excepted, none of our party had ever been numbered amongst
the spiritualists, least of all Mr. Y----. We Theosophists did not
believe in the playfulness of departed souls, though we admitted the
possibility of some mediumistic phenomena, while totally disagreeing
with the spiritualists as to the cause and point of view. Refusing to
believe in the interference, and even presence of the spirits, in the
so-called spiritualistic phenomena, we nevertheless believe in the
living spirit of man; we believe in the omnipotence of this spirit, and
in its natural, though benumbed capacities. We also believe that, when
incarnated, this spirit, this divine spark, may be apparently quenched,
if it is not guarded, and if the life the man leads is unfavorable
to its expansion, as it generally is; but, on the other hand, our
conviction is that human beings can develop their potential spiritual
powers; that, if they do, no phenomenon will be impossible for their
liberated wills, and that they will perform what, in the eyes of the
uninitiated, will be much more wondrous than the materialized forms of
the spiritualists. If proper training can render the muscular strength
ten times greater, as in the cases of renowned athletes, I do not see
why proper training should fail in the case of moral capacities. We
have also good grounds to believe that the secret of this proper
training--though unknown to, and denied by, European physiologists
and even psychologists--is known in some places in India, where its
knowledge is hereditary, and entrusted to few.

Mr. Y---- was a novice in our Society and looked with distrust even on
such phenomena as can be pro-duced by mesmerism. He had been trained
in the Royal Institute of British Architects, which he left with a
gold medal, and with a fund of scepticism that caused him to distrust
everything, en dehors des mathematiques pures. So that no wonder he lost
his temper when people tried to convince him that there existed things
which he was inclined to treat as "mere bosh and fables."

Now I return to my narrative.

The Babu and Mulji left us to help the servants to transport our luggage
to the ferry boat. The remainder of the party had grown very quiet and
silent. Miss X---- dozed peacefully in the carriage, forgetting her
recent fright. The colonel, stretched on the sand, amused himself by
throwing stones into the water. Narayan sat motionless, with his hands
round his knees, plunged as usual in the mute contemplation of Gulab
Lal-Sing. Mr. Y---- sketched hurriedly and diligently, only raising his
head from time to time to glance at the opposite shore, and knitting his
brow in a preoccupied way. The Takur went on smoking, and as for me, I
sat on my folding chair, looking lazily at everything round me, till my
eyes rested on Gulab-Sing, and were fixed, as if by a spell.

"Who and what is this mysterious Hindu?" I wondered in my uncertain
thoughts. "Who is this man, who unites in himself two such distinct
personalities: the one exterior, kept up for strangers, for the orld in
general, the other interior, moral and spiritual, shown only to a few
intimate friends? But even these intimate friends do they know much
beyond what is generally known? And what do they know? They see in him a
Hindu who differs very little from the rest of educated natives, perhaps
only in his perfect contempt for the social conventions of India and the
demands of Western civilization.... And that is all--unless I add that
he is known in Central India as a sufficiently wealthy man, and a Takur,
a feudal chieftain of a Raj, one of the hundreds of similar Rajes.
Besides, he is a true friend of ours, who offered us his protection
in our travels and volunteered to play the mediator between us and the
suspicious, uncommunicative Hindus. Beyond all this, we know absolutely
nothing about him. It is true, though, that I know a little more than
the others; but I have promised silence, and silent I shall be. But the
little I know is so strange, so unusual, that it is more like a dream
than a reality."

A good while ago, more than twenty-seven years, I met him in the house
of a stranger in England, whither he came in the company of a certain
dethroned Indian prince. Then our acquaintance was limited to two
conversations; their unexpectedness, their gravity, and even severity,
produced a strong impression on me then; but, in the course of time,
like many other things, they sank into oblivion and Lethe. About seven
years ago he wrote to me to America, reminding me of our conversation
and of a certain promise I had made. Now we saw each other once more in
India, his own country, and I failed to see any change wrought in his
appearance by all these long years. I was, and looked, quite young, when
I first saw him; but the passage of years had not failed to change me
into an old woman. As to him, he appeared to me twenty-seven years ago
a man of about thirty, and still looked no older, as if time were
powerless against him. In England, his striking beauty, especially his
extraordinary height and stature, together with his eccentric refusal to
be presented to the Queen--an honour many a high-born Hindu has sought,
coming over on purpose--excited the public notice and the attention of
the newspapers. The newspapermen of those days, when the influence of
Byron was still great, discussed the "wild Rajput" with untiring
pens, calling him "Raja-Misanthrope" and " Prince Jalma-Samson," and
in-venting fables about him all the time he stayed in England.

All this taken together was well calculated to fill me with consuming
curiosity, and to absorb my thoughts till I forgot every exterior
circumstance, sitting and staring at him in no wise less intensely than
Narayan.

I gazed at the remarkable face of Gulab-Lal-Sing with a mixed feeling of
indescribable fear and enthusiastic admiration; recalling the mysterious
death of the Karli tiger, my own miraculous escape a few hours ago in
Bagh, and many other incidents too many to relate. It was only a few
hours since he appeared to us in the morning, and yet what a number of
strange ideas, of puzzling occurrences, how many enigmas his presence
stirred in our minds! The magic circle of my revolving thought grew too
much for me. "What does all this mean!" I exclaimed to myself, trying
to shake off my torpor, and struggling to find words for my meditation.
"Who is this being whom I saw so many years ago, jubilant with manhood
and life, and now see again, as young and as full of life, only still
more austere, still more incomprehensible. After all, maybe it is his
brother, or even his son?" thought I, trying to calm myself, but with no
result. "No! there is no use doubting; it is he himself, it is the same
face, the same little scar on the left temple. But, as a quarter of a
century ago, so now: no wrinkles on those beautiful classic features;
not a white hair in this thick jet-black mane; and, in moments of
silence, the same expression of perfect rest on that face, calm as a
statue of living bronze. What a strange expression, and what a wonderful
Sphinx-like face!"

"Not a very brilliant comparison, my old friend!" suddenly spoke the
Takur, and a good-natured laughing note rung in his voice, whilst I
shuddered and grew red like a naughty schoolgirl. "This comparison is
so inaccurate that it decidedly sins against history in two important
points. Primo, the Sphinx is a lion; so am I, as indicates the word Sing
in my name; but the Sphinx is winged, and I am not. Secondo, the Sphinx
is a woman as well as a winged lion, but the Rajput Sinhas never had
anything effeminate in their characters. Besides, the Sphinx is the
daughter of Chimera, or Echidna, who were neither beautiful nor good;
and so you might have chosen a more flattering and a less inaccurate
comparison!"

I simply gasped in my utter confusion, and he gave vent to his
merriment, which by no means relieved me. "Shall I give you some good
advice?" continued Gulab-Sing, changing his tone for a more serious one.
"Don't trouble your head with such vain speculations. The day when this
riddle yields its solution, the Rajput Sphinx will not seek destruction
in the waves of the sea; but, believe me, it won't bring any profit to
the Russian Oedipus either. You already know every detail you ever will
learn. So leave the rest to our respective fates."

And he rose because the Babu and Mulji had informed us that the ferry
boat was ready to start, and were shouting and making signs to us to
hasten.

"Just let me finish," said Mr. Y----, "I have nearly done. Just an
additional touch or two."

"Let us see your work. Hand it round!" insisted the colonel and Miss
X----, who had just left her haven of refuge in the carriage, and joined
us still half asleep.

Mr. Y---- hurriedly added a few more touches to his drawing and rose to
collect his brushes and pencils.

We glanced at his fresh wet picture and opened our eyes in astonishment.
There was no lake on it, no woody shores, and no velvety evening mists
that covered the distant island at this moment. Instead of all this we
saw a charming sea view; thick clusters of shapely palm-trees scattered
over the chalky cliffs of the littoral; a fortress-like bungalow with
balconies and a flat roof, an elephant standing at its entrance, and a
native boat on the crest of a foaming billow.

"Now what is this view, sir?" wondered the colonel. "As if it was worth
your while to sit in the sun, and detain us all, to draw fancy pictures
out of your own head!"

"What on earth are you talking about?" exclaimed Mr. Y----. "Do you mean
to say you do not recognize the lake?"

"Listen to him--the lake! Where is the lake, if you please? Were you
asleep, or what?"

By this time all our party gathered round the colonel, who held the
drawing. Narayan uttered an exclamation, and stood still, the very image
of bewilderment past description.

"I know the place!" said he, at last. "This is Dayri--Bol, the country
house of the Takur-Sahib. I know it. Last year during the famine I lived
there for two months."

I was the first to grasp the meaning of it all, but something prevented
me from speaking at once.

At last Mr. Y---- finished arranging and packing his things, and
approached us in his usual lazy, careless way, but his face showed
traces of vexation. He was evidently bored by our persistency in seeing
a sea, where there was nothing but the corner of a lake. But, at the
first sight of his unlucky sketch, his countenance suddenly changed.
He grew so pale, and the expression of his face became so piteously
distraught that it was painful to see. He turned and returned the piece
of Bristol board, then rushed like a madman to his drawing portfolio and
turned the whole contents out, ransacking and scattering over the sand
hundreds of sketches and of loose papers. Evidently failing to find
what he was looking for, he glanced again at his sea-view, and suddenly
covering his face with his hands totally collapsed.

We all remained silent, exchanging glances of wonder and pity, and
heedless of the Takur, who stood on the ferry boat, vainly calling to us
to join him.

"Look here, Y----!" timidly spoke the kind-hearted colonel, as if
addressing a sick child. "Are you sure you remember drawing this view?"

Mr. Y---- did not give any answer, as if gathering strength and thinking
it over. After a few moments he answered in hoarse and tremulous tones:

"Yes, I do remember. Of course I made this sketch, but I made it from
nature. I painted only what I saw. And it is that very certainty that
upsets me so."

"But why should you be upset, my dear fellow? Collect yourself! What
happened to you is neither shameful nor dreadful. It is only the result
of the temporary influence of one dominant will over another, less
powerful. You simply acted under 'biological influence,' to use the
expression of Dr. Carpenter."

"That is exactly what I am most afraid of.... I remember everything now.
I have been busy over this view more than an hour. I saw it directly
I chose the spot, and seeing it all the while on the opposite shore I
could not suspect anything uncanny. I was perfectly conscious... or,
shall I say, I fancied I was conscious of putting down on paper what
everyone of you had before your eyes. I had lost every notion of the
place as I saw it before I began my sketch, and as I see it now.... But
how do you account for it? Good gracious! am I to believe that these
confounded Hindus really possess the mystery of this trick? I tell you,
colonel, I shall go mad if I don't understand it all!"

"No fear of that, Mr. Y----," said Narayan, with a triumphant twinkle in
his eyes. "You will simply lose the right to deny Yoga-Vidya, the great
ancient science of my country."

Mr. Y---- did not answer him. He made an effort to calm his feelings,
and bravely stepped on the ferry boat with firm foot. Then he sat down,
apart from us all, obstinately looking at the large surface of water
round us, and struggling to seem his usual self.

Miss X---- was the first to interrupt the silence.

"Ma chere!" said she to me in a subdued, but triumphant voice. "Ma
chere, Monsieur Y---- devient vraiment un medium de premiere force!"

In moments of great excitement she always addressed me in French. But
I also was too excited to control my feelings, and so I answered rather
unkindly:

"Please stop this nonsense, Miss X----. You know I don't believe in
spiritualism. Poor Mr. Y----, was not he upset?"

Receiving this rebuke and no sympathy from me, she could not think
of anything better than drawing out the Babu, who, for a wonder, had
managed to keep quiet till then.

"What do you say to all this? I for one am perfectly confident that no
one but the disembodied soul of a great artist could have painted that
lovely view. Who else is capable of such a wonderful achievement?"

"Why? The old gentleman in person. Confess that at the bottom of your
soul you firmly believe that the Hindus worship devils. To be sure it is
some deity of ours of this kind that had his august paw in the matter."

"Il est positivement malhonnete, ce Negre-la!" angrily muttered Miss
X----, hurriedly withdrawing from him.

The island was a tiny one, and so overgrown with tall reeds that, from
a distance, it looked like a pyramidal basket of verdure. With the
exception of a colony of monkeys, who bustled away to a few mango trees
at our approach, the place seemed uninhabited. In this virgin forest of
thick grass there was no trace of human life. Seeing the word grass the
reader must not forget that it is not the grass of Europe I mean; the
grass under which we stood, like insects under a rhubarb leaf, waved
its feathery many-colored plumes much above the head of Gulab-Sing
(who stood six feet and a half in his stockings), and of Narayan, who
measured hardly an inch less. From a distance it looked like a waving
sea of black, yellow, blue, and especially of rose and green. On
landing, we discovered that it consisted of separate thickets of
bamboos, mixed up with the gigantic sirka reeds, which rose as high as
the tops of the mangos.

It is impossible to imagine anything prettier and more graceful than the
bamboos and sirka. The isolated tufts of bamboos show, in spite of their
size, that they are nothing but grass, because the least gush of wind
shakes them, and their green crests begin to nod like heads adorned with
long ostrich plumes. There were some bamboos there fifty or sixty feet
high. From time to time we heard a light metallic rustle in the reeds,
but none of us paid much attention to it.

Whilst our coolies and servants were busy clearing a place for our
tents, pitching them and preparing the supper, we went to pay
our respects to the monkeys, the true hosts of the place. Without
exaggeration there were at least two hundred. While preparing for their
nightly rest the monkeys behaved like decorous and well-behaved people;
every family chose a separate branch and defended it from the intrusion
of strangers lodging on the same tree, but this defence never passed
the limits of good manners, and generally took the shape of threatening
grimaces. There were many mothers with babies in arms amongst them; some
of them treated the children tenderly, and lifted them cautiously,
with a perfectly human care; others, less thoughtful, ran up and
down, heedless of the child hanging at their breasts, preoccupied with
something, discussing something, and stopping every moment to quarrel
with other monkey ladies--a true picture of chatty old gossips on a
market day, repeated in the animal kingdom. The bachelors kept apart,
absorbed in their athletic exercises, performed for the most part
with the ends of their tails. One of them, especially, attracted our
attention by dividing his amusement between sauts perilleux and teasing
a respectable looking grandfather, who sat under a tree hugging two
little monkeys. Swinging backward and forward from the branch, the
bachelor jumped at him, bit his ear playfully and made faces at him,
chattering all the time. We cautiously passed from one tree to another,
afraid of frightening them away; but evidently the years spent by them
with the fakirs, who left the island only a year ago, had accustomed
them to human society. They were sacred monkeys, as we learned, and so
they had nothing to fear from men. They showed no signs of alarm at our
approach, and, having received our greeting, and some of them a piece of
sugar-cane, they calmly stayed on their branch-thrones, crossing their
arms, and looking at us with a good deal of dignified contempt in their
intelligent hazel eyes.

The sun had set, and we were told that the supper was ready. We all
turned "homewards," except the Babu. The main feature of his character,
in the eyes of orthodox Hindus, being a tendency to blasphemy, he could
never resist the temptation to justify their opinion of him. Climbing up
a high branch he crouched there, imitating every gesture of the monkeys
and answering their threatening grimaces by still uglier ones, to the
unconcealed disgust of our pious coolies.

As the last golden ray disappeared on the horizon, a gauze-like veil
of pale lilac fell over the world. But as every moment decreased the
transparency of this tropical twilight, the tint gradually lost its
softness and became darker and darker. It looked as if an invisible
painter, unceasingly moving his gigantic brush, swiftly laid one coat
of paint over the other, ever changing the exquisite background of our
islet. The phosphoric candles of the fireflies began to twinkle here and
there, shining brightly against the black trunks of the trees, and lost
again on the silvery background of opalescent evening sky. But in a
few minutes more thousands of these living sparks, precursors of Queen
Night, played round us, pouring like a golden cascade over the trees,
and dancing in the air above the grass and the dark lake.

And behold! here is the queen in person. Noiselessly descending upon
earth, she reassumes her rights. With her approach, rest and peace
spread over us; her cool breath calms the activities of day. Like a fond
mother, she sings a lullaby to nature, lovingly wrapping her in her soft
black mantle; and, when everything is asleep, she watches over nature's
dozing powers till the first streaks of dawn.

Nature sleeps; but man is awake, to be witness to the beauties of this
solemn evening hour. Sitting round the fire we talked, lowering our
voices as if afraid of awaking night. We were only six; the colonel,
the four Hindus and myself, because Mr. Y---- and Miss X---- could
not resist the fatigue of the day and had gone to sleep directly after
supper.

Snugly sheltered by the high "grass," we had not the heart to spend this
magnificent night in prosaic sleeping. Besides, we were waiting for the
"concert" which the Takur had promised us.

"Be patient," said he, "the musicians will not appear before the moon
rises."

The fickle goddess was late; she kept us waiting till after ten o'clock.
Just before her arrival, when the horizon began to grow perceptibly
brighter, and the opposite shore to assume a milky, silvery tint, a
sudden wind rose. The waves, that had gone quietly to sleep at the feet
of gigantic reeds, awoke and tossed uneasily, till the reeds swayed
their feathery heads and murmured to each other as if taking counsel
together about some thing that was going to happen.... Suddenly, in the
general stillness and silence, we heard again the same musical notes,
which we had passed unheeded, when we first reached the island, as if
a whole orchestra were trying their musical instruments before playing
some great composition. All round us, and over our heads, vibrated
strings of violins, and thrilled the separate notes of a flute. In a
few moments came another gust of wind tearing through the reeds, and the
whole island resounded with the strains of hundreds of Aeolian harps.
And suddenly there began a wild unceasing symphony. It swelled in the
surrounding woods, filling the air with an indescribable melody. Sad and
solemn were its prolonged strains; they resounded like the arpeggios of
some funeral march, then, changing into a trembling thrill, they shook
the air like the song of a nightingale, and died away in a long sigh.
They did not quite cease, but grew louder again, ringing like hundreds
of silver bells, changing from the heartrending howl of a wolf, deprived
of her young, to the precipitate rhythm of a gay tarantella, forgetful
of every earthly sorrow; from the articulate song of a human voice, to
the vague majestic accords of a violoncello, from merry child's laughter
to angry sobbing. And all this was repeated in every direction by
mocking echo, as if hundreds of fabulous forest maidens, disturbed in
their green abodes, answered the appeal of the wild musical Saturnalia.

The colonel and I glanced at each other in our great astonishment.

"How delightful! What witchcraft is this?" we exclaimed at the same
time.

The Hindus smiled, but did not answer us. The Takur smoked his gargari
as peacefully as if he was deaf.

There was a short interval, after which the invisible orchestra
started again with renewed energy. The sounds poured and rolled in
unrestrainable, overwhelming waves. We had never heard anything like
this inconceivable wonder. Listen! A storm in the open sea, the wind
tearing through the rigging, the swish of the maddened waves rushing
over each other, or the whirling snow wreaths on the silent steppes.
Suddenly the vision is changed; now it is a stately cathedral and the
thundering strains of an organ rising under its vaults. The powerful
notes now rush together, now spread out through space, break off,
intermingle, and become entangled, like the fantastic melody of a
delirious fever, some musical phantasy born of the howling and whistling
of the wind.

Alas! the charm of these sounds is soon exhausted, and you begin to feel
that they cut like knives through your brain. A horrid fancy haunts our
bewildered heads; we imagine that the invisible artists strain our
own veins, and not the strings of imaginary violins; their cold breath
freezes us, blowing their imaginary trumpets, shaking our nerves and
impeding our breathing.

"For God's sake stop this, Takur! This is really too much," shouted
the colonel, at the end of his patience, and covering his ears with his
hands. "Gulab-Sing, I tell you you must stop this."

The three Hindus burst out laughing; and even the grave face of the
Takur lit up with a merry smile. "Upon my word," said he, "do you really
take me for the great Parabrahm? Do you think it is in my power to stop
the wind, as if I were Marut, the lord of the storms, in person. Ask for
something easier than the instantaneous uprooting of all these bamboos."

"I beg your pardon; I thought these strange sounds also were some kind
of psychologic influence."

"So sorry to disappoint you, my dear colonel; but you really must think
less of psychology and electrobiology. This develops into a mania
with you. Don't you see that this wild music is a natural acoustic
phenomenon? Each of the reeds around us--and there are thousands on this
island--contains a natural musical instrument; and the musician, Wind,
comes here daily to try his art after nightfall--especially during the
last quarter of the moon."

"The wind!" murmured the colonel. "Oh, yes! But this music begins to
change into a dreadful roar. Is there no way out of it?"

"I at least cannot help it. But keep up your patience, you will soon get
accustomed to it. Besides, there will be intervals when the wind falls."

We were told that there are many such natural orchestras in India. The
Brahmans know well their wonderful properties, and calling this kind of
reed vina-devi, the lute of the gods, keep up the popular superstition
and say the sounds are divine oracles. The sirka grass and the bamboos
always shelter a number of tiny beetles, which make considerable holes
in the hollow reeds. The fakirs of the idol-worshipping sects add art to
this natural beginning and work the plants into musical instruments. The
islet we visited bore one of the most celebrated vina-devis, and so, of
course, was proclaimed sacred.

"Tomorrow morning," said the Takur, "you will see what deep knowledge
of all the laws of acoustics was in the possession of the fakirs. They
enlarged the holes made by the beetle according to the size of the reed,
sometimes shaping it into a circle, sometimes into an oval. These
reeds in their present state can be justly considered as the finest
illustration of mechanism applied to acoustics. However, this is not to
be wondered at, because some of the most ancient Sanskrit books about
music minutely describe these laws, and mention many musical instruments
which are not only forgotten, but totally incomprehensible in our days."

All this was very interesting, but still, disturbed by the din, we could
not listen attentively.

"Don't worry yourselves," said the Takur, who soon understood our
uneasiness, in spite of our attempts at composure. "After midnight the
wind will fall, and you will sleep undisturbed. However, if the too
close neighborhood of this musical grass is too much for you, we may as
well go nearer to the shore. There is a spot from which you can see the
sacred bonfires on the opposite shore."

We followed him, but while walking through the thickets of reeds we did
not leave off our conversation. "How is it that the Brahmans manage to
keep up such an evident cheat?" asked the colonel. "The stupidest man
cannot fail to see in the long run who made the holes in the reeds, and
how they come to give forth music."

"In America stupid men may be as clever as that; I don't know," answered
the Takur, with a smile; "but not in India. If you took the trouble to
show, to describe, and to explain how all this is done to any Hindu, be
he even comparatively educated, he will still see nothing. He will tell
you that he knows as well as yourself that the holes are made by the
beetles and enlarged by the fakirs. But what of that? The beetle in his
eyes is no ordinary beetle, but one of the gods incarnated in the insect
for this special purpose; and the fakir is a holy ascetic, who has acted
in this case by the order of the same god. That will be all you will
ever get out of him. Fanaticism and superstition took centuries to
develop in the masses, and now they are as strong as a necessary
physiological function. Kill these two and the crowd will have its eyes
opened, and will see truth, but not before. As to the Brahmans, India
would have been very fortunate if everything they have done were as
harmless. Let the crowds adore the muse and the spirit of harmony. This
adoration is not so very wicked, after all."

The Babu told us that in Dehra-Dun this kind of reed is planted on
both sides of the central street, which is more than a mile long. The
buildings prevent the free action of the wind, and so the sounds are
heard only in time of east wind, which is very rare. A year ago Swami
Dayanand happened to camp off Dehra-Dun. Crowds of people gathered round
him every evening. One day he delivered a very powerful sermon against
superstition. Tired out by this long, energetic speech, and, besides,
being a little unwell, the Swami sat down on his carpet and shut his
eyes to rest as soon as the sermon was finished. But the crowd, seeing
him so unusually quiet and silent, all at once imagined that his soul,
abandoning him in this prostration, entered the reeds--that had just
begun to sing their fantastical rhapsody--and was now conversing
with the gods through the bamboos. Many a pious man in this gathering,
anxious to show the teacher in what fulness they grasped his teaching
and how deep was their respect for him personally, knelt down before the
singing reeds and performed a most ardent puja.

"What did the Swami say to that?"

"He did not say anything.... Your question shows that you don't know
our Swami yet," laughed the Babu. "He simply jumped to his feet, and,
uprooting the first sacred reed on his way, gave such a lively European
bakshish (thrashing) to the pious puja-makers, that they instantly took
to their heels. The Swami ran after them for a whole mile, giving it hot
to everyone in his way. He is wonderfully strong is our Swami, and no
friend to useless talk, I can tell you."

"But it seems to me," said the colonel, "that that is not the right way
to convert crowds. Dispersing and frightening is not converting."

"Not a bit of it. The masses of our nation require peculiar
treatment.... Let me tell you the end of this story. Disappointed with
the effect of his teachings on the inhabitants of Dehra-Dun, Dayanand
Saraswati went to Patna, some thirty-five or forty miles from there. And
before he had even rested from the fatigues of his journey, he had to
receive a deputation from Dehra-Dun, who on their knees entreated him to
come back. The leaders of this deputation had their backs covered with
bruises, made by the bamboo of the Swami! They brought him back with no
end of pomp, mounting him on an elephant and spreading flowers all along
the road. Once in Dehra-Dun, he immediately proceeded to found a Samaj,
a society as you would say, and the Dehra-Dun Arya-Samaj now counts
at least two hundred members, who have renounced idol-worship and
superstition for ever."

"I was present," said Mulji, "two years ago in Benares, when Dayanand
broke to pieces about a hundred idols in the bazaar, and the same stick
served him to beat a Brahman with. He caught the latter in the hollow
idol of a huge Shiva. The Brahman was quietly sitting there talking to
the devotees in the name, and so to speak, with the voice of Shiva, and
asking money for a new suit of clothes the idol wanted."

"Is it possible the Swami had not to pay for this new achievement of
his?"

"Oh, yes. The Brahman dragged him into a law court, but the judge had to
pronounce the Swami in the right, because of the crowd of sympathizers
and defenders who followed the Swami. But still he had to pay for all
the idols he had broken. So far so good; but the Brahman died of cholera
that very night, and of course, the opposers of the reform said his
death was brought on by the sorcery of Dayanand Saraswati. This vexed us
all a good deal."

"Now, Narayan, it is your turn," said I. Have you no story to tell us
about the Swami? And do you not look up to him as to your Guru?"

"I have only one Guru and only one God on earth, as in heaven," answered
Narayan; and I saw that he was very unwilling to speak. "And while I
live, I shall not desert them."

"I know who is his Guru and his God!" thoughtlessly exclaimed the
quick-tongued Babu. "It is the Takur--Sahib. In his person both coincide
in the eyes of Narayan."

"You ought to be ashamed to talk such nonsense, Babu," coldly remarked
Gulab-Sing. "I do not think myself worthy of being anybody's Guru. As to
my being a god, the mere words are a blasphemy, and I must ask you not
to repeat them... Here we are!" added he more cheerfully, pointing to
the carpets spread by the servants on the shore, and evidently desirous
of changing the topic. "Let us sit down!"

We arrived at a small glade some distance from the bamboo forest.
The sounds of the magic orchestra reached us still, but considerably
weakened, and only from time to time. We sat to the windward of the
reeds, and so the harmonic rustle we heard was exactly like the low
tones of an Aeolian harp, and had nothing disagreeable in it. On the
contrary, the distant murmur only added to the beauty of the whole scene
around us.

We sat down, and only then I realized how tired and sleepy I was--and
no wonder, after being on foot since four in the morning, and after all
that had happened to me on this memorable day. The gentlemen went
on talking, and I soon became so absorbed in my thoughts that their
conversation reached me only in fragments.

"Wake up, wake up!" repeated the colonel, shaking me by the hand. "The
Takur says that sleeping in the moonlight will do you harm."

I was not asleep; I was simply thinking, though ex-hausted and sleepy.
But wholly under the charm of this enchanting night, I could not shake
off my drowsiness, and did not answer the colonel.

"Wake up, for God's sake! Think of what you are risking!" continued the
colonel. "Wake up and look at the landscape before us, at this wonderful
moon. Have you ever seen anything to equal this magnificent panorama?"

I looked up, and the familiar lines of Pushkin about the golden moon of
Spain flashed into my mind. And indeed this was a golden moon. At this
moment she radiated rivers of golden light, poured forth liquid gold
into the tossing lake at our feet, and sprinkled with golden dust every
blade of grass, every pebble, as far as the eye could reach, all round
us. Her disk of silvery yellow swiftly glided upward amongst the big
stars, on their dark blue ground.

Many a moonlit night have I seen in India, but every time the impression
was new and unexpected. It is no use trying to describe these feerique
pictures, they cannot be represented either in words or in colors on
canvas, they can only be felt--so fugitive is their grandeur and beauty!
In Europe, even in the south, the full moon eclipses the largest and
most brilliant of the stars, so that hardly any can be seen for a
considerable distance round her. In India it is quite the contrary; she
looks like a huge pearl surrounded by diamonds, rolling on a blue velvet
ground. Her light is so intense that one can read a letter written in
small handwriting; one even can perceive the different greens of the
trees and bushes--a thing unheard of in Europe. The effect of the moon
is especially charming on tall palm trees. From the first moment of her
appearance her rays glide over the tree downwards, beginning with
the feathery crests, then lighting up the scales of the trunk, and
descending lower and lower till the whole palm is literally bathing in
a sea of light. Without any metaphor the surface of the leaves seems
to tremble in liquid silver all the night long, whereas their under
surfaces seem blacker and softer than black velvet. But woe to the
thoughtless novice, woe to the mortal who gazes at the Indian moon with
his head uncovered. It is very dangerous not only to sleep under, but
even to gaze at the chaste Indian Diana. Fits of epilepsy, madness
and death are the punishments wrought by her treacherous arrows on the
modern Acteon who dares to contemplate the cruel daughter of Latona in
her full beauty. The Hindus never go out in the moonlight without their
turbans or pagris. Even our invulnerable Babu always wore a kind of white cap during the night.

댓글 없음: