Keep your hands busy, said my father every time I used to
lean against the tree to catch my breath. Keep your hands busy you idiot, keep
your hands busy, don’t let your head decide for you. Keep your hands busy, he
would coax me to get working.
And so I would again start chiselling the chunk of rock, along
the lines my father, a master sculptor, had already outlined. But I would still
dream with eyes wide open. When the hammer used to fall so gently yet firm on
the chisel, I used to dream of the cities and the grand mansions.
I was not good in sculpting, yet I wanted to be the greatest
sculptor in this world. I wanted to be honoured by my king. I wanted to be the
subject for which kings wage wars against each other. I was a dreamer, I had
ambitions. But I didn’t want to waste my life working so hard like my father.
My father was strange. He never used to argue with his
customers, mostly petty officials of the king commissioning works for the next
temple. He was the master sculptor, honoured by high ranking officials of the
kingdom. He smiled when someone praised him, he kept his head low when someone
rebuked. Yet, I have a suspicion he was acting, for he again used to be
absorbed in his work, outlining the rock by which we should chisel. I was his
son, but one of his worst workers. He loved me and perhaps that’s why he hated
me the most in this world.
I had dreams and he perhaps thought dreams are the working
of a lazy mind. Although, he never told me so.
He kept his hands busy and always wanted to see ours hands
busy too. Conversations were allowed, even laughter was not a crime as long as
our hands were moving things around.
I never could understand why this strange insistence.
As time passed, I picked up some tricks of the trade from my
father. He was an old man now, he was not able to train his hammer and chisel
in a way that resembled a raga. His hands used to move like an elaborate
ritual, the cling clang had a rhythm. If you have lived long enough with him,
you would have known what kind of shape would come out of the rock in his hand.
With his hammer and chisel, he used to breathe life in those black stones.
I was nowhere close to him. And I knew his skill will die
with him. Like all sons, I used to maintain a respectable distance with my
father. The distance grew when the King himself called him to his capital and pronounced
him the greatest sculptor of our country and beyond. Accolades and rewards
started showering on my father, but it did not increase his wealth. Our house
became a refuge for all the hungry people in the world. The kitchen fire never
got extinguished. His rewards were enough to buy seven villages and become the
head of all that we saw, but we remained a poor sculptor family. My father kept
nagging us with ‘keep your hands busy’ stupidity.
He never explained why. But as he started aging, he slowed
down and started relegating works on us. He was there at the workshop, yet he
was very distant. My distance with my father grew even further. He would now do
nothing. Just kept quiet like Lord Buddha and smiled at anything and nothing. He
smiled if a leaf fell, he smiled if a flower bloomed. He smiled when a child
fell on the ground, he smiled when the toddler dusted off and toddled off.
The responsibility of my parents and sisters fell on me. My
father won’t work anymore. I had no other way but to keep my hands busy.
But when the moon rose above the thick banyan tree and the sky
shone in divine light of Indra, my dreams kept haunting me. I was a young man, brimming
with ambitions, yet I was chained to this dreary life. My father didn’t save
anything for future. As he smiled looking at the full moon like a lunatic does,
my heart was filled with contempt for this cruel man. He was nothing but an idiot to me. An idiot
who was blessed by accidental talent.
Now I was the head of the family. I had nothing but contempt
for my father and he was nothing but a liability for me. I had no respect left
and hence, I did not waste any opportunity to rebuke him.
I rebuked him for not saving anything, I rebuked him for
telling us repeatedly, like a stupid, to keep the hands busy, without telling
us what to do with the outcome. I rebuked him for not knowing the ways of the
world. And I made sure I conveyed to him how I hated him for wasting my youth. He
just smiled. I didn’t know what to do with him when he used to smile like an
innocent baby.
But I couldn’t take the death of my youth anymore. Dark
clouds gathered in my heart on days. I wanted to go to the city and become a
big man. I wanted to be rich, I wanted to be an achiever. I started weeping in
private.
One day when the full moon mirrored on the great village
pond, I couldn’t hold my tears. As I was weeping, I felt a warm hand on my
shoulder. My father was looking at me with all the calmness in the world in his
face. Before I could say something he told me to go and live my life, fulfil my
dream. I was free of my responsibilities. He would take care of the family, he
said.
As I was leaving my house, all alone, for the first time in
my life and my face was all flushed up with excitement, my father repeated what
he used to tell us when he was in charge of his world.
“Keep your hands busy … whenever you have nothing to do,
make your hands busy immediately.”
He need not have said that. For I knew this was what he
would have told me. He was a predictable man.
I went to the city of my dreams. It was filled with
mansions. Horses carried noble men on paved roadways. The lanes were busy with
people from all countries carrying on their myriad businesses. The city had a
peculiar smell, which felt like heavenly to me. The cacophony sounded like raga
meghamallar. I was excited to be
here. I was to build my future here, I was to be someone here. I was to be
famous.
To my surprise, I was easily the best sculptor out there. My
work soon found wealthy patrons. I soon became famous for making busts of
beautiful women. As days progressed, I became bolder and started making the
busts topless. Soon I was making sculpture of copulating couple.
My work was on great demand among filthy rich people who commissioned me to
make their sculptures love-locked with the famous city courtesans. Soon I myself
became a night creature, hungry to satiate my desires of flesh. I did not have
to care about my wealthy patrons. I was rich enough not to work for months. I
was in such heavy demand for my busts that I had to be rude with all. Rudeness
soon became my second nature as arrogance enveloped me. I was finally, famous
and successful!
However, I could sense my art doesn’t have
something that should have been there. I couldn’t look at what I created. They
seemed so ugly, particularly when people gloated about that. Their words
sounded vulgar to me. But the money was plenty and I had nothing to protest.
All this while my hatred for my father grew.
If he wanted he could have been much more than I was. Yet, I wondered why he
stayed away. I was convinced my father was an idiot.
One day I saw a goddess walking down to my
workshop. She was the most beautiful woman the world has ever seen. She came
straight for me and asked me to make a bust of hers. She was the courtesan
Bhanumati. Nobody else, other than the King himself could claim her as his own.
I was in love.
And I soon realised she was in love with me
too. In one of our meetings, she let her saree slip from her bosom. I never could
imagine God was so creative.
Bhanumati and I met every day and we slept
side by side. As I put my lips on those luscious figs of her lips, a shiver ran
through my body. I was under the spell of goddess Bhanumati and I didn’t want
the spell to break.
But she was the property of the king. That
despicable creature, who despite being old and all wrinkled, had several
hundreds of women like Bhanumati kept as objects. I wanted to kill him. I
wanted to give him a dog’s death.
My whole being became violent. Luckily, I
became part of a court intrigue and had the chance to kill the king. I couldn’t
see Bhanumati’s sad face. She loved me and I loved her and there’s nothing in
the world I could be stopped from doing to free her from her fate.
I couldn’t sculpt anymore. The art had left
me. Not that it bothered me. I had enough money by now. I had no business with such
menial jobs anymore.
But Bhanumati praised about me to the king.
The king wanted his portrait done and be made immortal. Bhanumati told him, only
I could make him immortal.
My real mandate was to do the exact opposite.
I was to drive my chisel deep into the king’s
old heart. I was to smash his head with my hammer. I was to make a paste of him
with the rock kept for carving him out.
I couldn’t. He was the same King who
proclaimed my father the greatest sculptor in the world. The King was old and
frail, but he was the same king who blessed me for being the son of the great
man, my father.
As I stood cold in fear and disgust, I fell
to the ground and apologised to the king. At first the king didn’t understand,
but when he did, he shook his head slowly and walked away heavily.
Bhanumati promptly jumped between us and
stabbed me … like a loyal servant to the king.
I couldn’t protest. I was still in love with
her.
I survived. Bhanumati and her clan didn’t,
they were exposed all by themselves.
I was pardoned. Disgraced, and discarded, I was
a pauper.
I wanted to kill myself, but before that, I
wanted to see my parents, my sisters, my friends. I wanted to go back to my
home. I wanted to see the moon shine above the forest, to see it reflect on our
pond. That was my deathwish.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
I reached home a broken man.
And from a distance I heard the familiar
music that I used to enjoy so much as a young. I could tell from the rhythm that
my old man was carving something. My old man, my father, my guru was calling
me.
I ran as fast as I could. Panting I reached
near my village and saw the most beautiful thing I have ever seen in my life.
My father was sculpting out a temple from a
small hill in our village. The same king who I planned to kill had ordered this
work soon after I left for the city. Many years now, I was not aware of this. My
father, and his team of hundreds of sculptors were carving out a Shiva temple
out chunks of rock. The deities, outside decorations of Gods and Goddesses and
mythical animals are all hidden in this hill, waiting to be carved out.
In the early morning light, my smiling father
was shining like Lord Buddha. I fell flat on his feet and begged his
forgiveness. He smiled again. I wept and pleaded him to tell me what went
wrong.
“You didn’t keep your hands busy enough ….”
I finally understood.
I am
sixty years old now, same as when my father had left me for a monk’s life in
the jungles, giving me responsibility to progress the carving of this temple. I
have so far completed as much as he had done.
And I am pleased with my work. And I know I
am now as accomplished a sculptor as my father ever was. It just came one day
on its own. I woke up and started carving. As I carved, I tuned in to the music
of this existence.
My music soothed me. Pleased with my music,
Gods and Goddesses started appearing from the rock on their own. I kept my
hands busy. I kept on striking and playing the music my father always tried to
teach me when I was younger and vain.
The whole world praises me now. It doesn’t
matter anymore. I can’t take money more than what is needed to just keep me
alive. Rest I give it away to people who need it. The flames on my kitchen
never extinguish. Everyday hundreds of poor and my disciples helping me in
this temple work eat at my home.
The temple cannot be completed in my
lifetime, but me, and my future generations in charge of carving out this
temple must keep their hands busy.
5 comments:
Ha! So you spurn my freely-offered editorial services, but place your trust in a robotic spell-checker, which betrays you before the entire world. Mahatma Gandhi, champion of homespun, would have despaired.
Portrayed should be portrait.
Monk’s like should be monk’s life.
my disciplines should be my disciples.
Anyhow, I enjoyed this draft. It reads like a legend or fairy-tale full of personal symbolism, a kind of Indian rendition of something like the myth of Oedipus. But more particularly it dramatizes the male life-cycle of rebellion against the father, wanting to kill the king as substitute for the father; but in the end realizing that he has become just like the father.
The world with bated breath waits for the leaner/fatter version whose author has re-read it after writing and before publication.
Please edit it.
I will, "If my mood permits" and also after the promised leaner/fatter version has been delivered to me with a cheque of suitable value.
changed those three damned words. my mood permitted so much till now.
While the mood lasts, you might consider also changing "me, and my future generations" to "I, and my future generations"; "keep their hands busy" to "keep our hands busy".
Sorry to be so annoying; but it's what I do best.
Post a Comment