We went crying away from that place,
hand-inhand, across the fields; and our money was seven annas and six pie.
There was a famine in the land. I do not know the name of the land. So, on
a night when we were sleeping, my brother took the five annas that
remained to us and ran away. I do not know whither he went. The curse of
my father be upon him. But I and the sister begged food in the villages,
and there was none to give. Only all men said—“Go to the Englishmen and
they will give.” I did not know what the Englishmen were; but they said
that they were white, living in tents. I went forward; but I cannot say
whither I went, and there was no more food for myself or the sister. And
upon a hot night, she weeping and calling for food, we came to a well, and
I bade her sit upon the kerb, and thrust her in, for, in truth, she could
not see; and it is better to die than to starve.’
‘Ai! Ahi!’ wailed the grooms’ wives in chorus; ‘he thrust her in, for
it is better to die than to starve!’
‘I would have thrown myself in also, but that she was not dead and
called to me from the bottom of the well, and I was afraid and ran. And
one came out of the crops saying that I had killed her and defiled the
well, and they took me before an Englishman, white and terrible, living in
a tent, and me he sent here. But there were no witnesses, and it is better
to die than to starve. She, furthermore, could not see with her eyes, and
was but a little child.’
‘Was but a little child,’ echoed the Head Groom’s wife. ‘But who art
thou, weak as a fowl and small as a day-old colt, what art THOU?’
‘I who was empty am now full,’ said Little Tobrah, stretching himself
upon the dust. ‘And I would sleep.’
The groom’s wife spread a cloth over him while Little Tobrah slept the
sleep of the just.
Table of Contents
Next
Last updated on
Fri Mar 27 14:07:25 2009 for
eBooks@Adelaide.
Rudyard Kipling
Life's Handicap
Bubbling Well Road
Look out on a large scale map the place where the Chenab river falls
into the Indus fifteen miles or so above the hamlet of Chachuran. Five
miles west of Chachuran lies Bubbling Well Road, and the house of the
gosain or priest of Arti-goth. It was the priest who showed me the road,
but it is no thanks to him that I am able to tell this story.
Five miles west of Chachuran is a patch of the plumed jungle-grass,
that turns over in silver when the wind blows, from ten to twenty feet
high and from three to four miles square. In the heart of the patch hides
the gosain of Bubbling Well Road. The villagers stone him when he peers
into the daylight, although he is a priest, and he runs back again as a
strayed wolf turns into tall crops. He is a one-eyed man and carries,
burnt between his brows, the impress of two copper coins. Some say that he
was tortured by a native prince in the old days; for he is so old that he
must have been capable of mischief in the days of Runjit Singh. His most
pressing need at present is a halter, and the care of the British
Government.
These things happened when the jungle-grass was tall; and the villagers
of Chachuran told me that a sounder of pig had gone into the Arti-goth
patch. To enter jungle-grass is always an unwise proceeding, but I went,
partly because I knew nothing of pig-hunting, and partly because the
villagers said that the big boar of the sounder owned foot long tushes.
Therefore I wished to shoot him, in order to produce the tushes in after
years, and say that I had ridden him down in fair chase. I took a gun and
went into the hot, close patch, believing that it would be an easy thing
to unearth one pig in ten square miles of jungle. Mr. Wardle, the terrier,
went with me because he believed that I was incapable of existing for an
hour without his advice and countenance. He managed to slip in and out
between the grass clumps, but I had to force my way, and in twenty minutes
was as completely lost as though I had been in the heart of Central
Africa. I did not notice this at first till I had grown wearied of
stumbling and pushing through the grass, and Mr. Wardle was beginning to
sit down very often and hang out his tongue very far. There was nothing
but grass everywhere, and it was impossible to see two yards in any
direction. The grass-stems held the heat exactly as boiler-tubes do.
In half-an-hour, when I was devoutly wishing that I had left the big
boar alone, I came to a narrow path which seemed to be a compromise
between a native foot-path and a pig-run.
1 comment