登陆注册
19052400000010

第10章 THE MIRACLE OF PURUN BHAGAT(3)

Immediately below him the hillside fell away, clean and cleared for fifteen hundred feet, where a little village of stone-walled houses, with roofs of beaten earth, clung to the steep tilt.

All round it the tiny terraced fields lay out like aprons of patchwork on the knees of the mountain, and cows no bigger than beetles grazed between the smooth stone circles of the threshing-floors. Looking across the valley, the eye was deceived by the size of things, and could not at first realise that what seemed to be low scrub, on the opposite mountain-flank, was in truth a forest of hundred-foot pines. Purun Bhagat saw an eagle swoop across the gigantic hollow, but the great bird dwindled to a dot ere it was half-way over. A few bands of scattered clouds strung up and down the valley, catching on a shoulder of the hills, or rising up and dying out when they were level with the head of the pass. And "Here shall I find peace,"said Purun Bhagat.

Now, a Hill-man makes nothing of a few hundred feet up or down, and as soon as the villagers saw the smoke in the deserted shrine, the village priest climbed up the terraced hillside to welcome the stranger.

When he met Purun Bhagat's eyes--the eyes of a man used to control thousands--he bowed to the earth, took the begging-bowl without a word, and returned to the village, saying, "We have at last a holy man. Never have I seen such a man. He is of the Plains--but pale-coloured--a Brahmin of the Brahmins." Then all the housewives of the village said, "Think you he will stay with us?" and each did her best to cook the most savoury meal for the Bhagat. Hill-food is very simple, but with buckwheat and Indian corn, and rice and red pepper, and little fish out of the stream in the valley, and honey from the flue-like hives built in the stone walls, and dried apricots, and turmeric, and wild ginger, and bannocks of flour, a devout woman can make good things, and it was a full bowl that the priest carried to the Bhagat. Was he going to stay? asked the priest. Would he need a chela--a disciple--to beg for him? Had he a blanket against the cold weather? Was the food good?

Purun Bhagat ate, and thanked the giver. It was in his mind to stay. That was sufficient, said the priest. Let the begging-bowl be placed outside the shrine, in the hollow made by those two twisted roots, and daily should the Bhagat be fed; for the village felt honoured that such a man--he looked timidly into the Bhagat's face--should tarry among them.

That day saw the end of Purun Bhagat's wanderings. He had come to the place appointed for him--the silence and the space. After this, time stopped, and he, sitting at the mouth of the shrine, could not tell whether he were alive or dead; a man with control of his limbs, or a part of the hills, and the clouds, and the shifting rain and sunlight. He would repeat a Name softly to himself a hundred hundred times, till, at each repetition, he seemed to move more and more out of his body, sweeping up to the doors of some tremendous discovery; but, just as the door was opening, his body would drag him back, and, with grief, he felt he was locked up again in the flesh and bones of Purun Bhagat.

Every morning the filled begging-bowl was laid silently in the crutch of the roots outside the shrine. Sometimes the priest brought it; sometimes a Ladakhi trader, lodging in the village, and anxious to get merit, trudged up the path; but, more often, it was the woman who had cooked the meal overnight; and she would murmur, hardly above her breath. "Speak for me before the gods, Bhagat. Speak for such a one, the wife of so-and-so!"Now and then some bold child would be allowed the honour, and Purun Bhagat would hear him drop the bowl and run as fast as his little legs could carry him, but the Bhagat never came down to the village. It was laid out like a map at his feet. He could see the evening gatherings, held on the circle of the threshing-floors, because that was the only level ground; could see the wonderful unnamed green of the young rice, the indigo blues of the Indian corn, the dock-like patches of buckwheat, and, in its season, the red bloom of the amaranth, whose tiny seeds, being neither grain nor pulse, make a food that can be lawfully eaten by Hindus in time of fasts.

When the year turned, the roofs of the huts were all little squares of purest gold, for it was on the roofs that they laid out their cobs of the corn to dry. Hiving and harvest, rice-sowing and husking, passed before his eyes, all embroidered down there on the many-sided plots of fields, and he thought of them all, and wondered what they all led to at the long last.

Even in populated India a man cannot a day sit still before the wild things run over him as though he were a rock; and in that wilderness very soon the wild things, who knew Kali's Shrine well, came back to look at the intruder. The langurs, the big gray-whiskered monkeys of the Himalayas, were, naturally, the first, for they are alive with curiosity; and when they had upset the begging-bowl, and rolled it round the floor, and tried their teeth on the brass-handled crutch, and made faces at the antelope skin, they decided that the human being who sat so still was harmless. At evening, they would leap down from the pines, and beg with their hands for things to eat, and then swing off in graceful curves. They liked the warmth of the fire, too, and huddled round it till Purun Bhagat had to push them aside to throw on more fuel; and in the morning, as often as not, he would find a furry ape sharing his blanket.

All day long, one or other of the tribe would sit by his side, staring out at the snows, crooning and looking unspeakably wise and sorrowful.

同类推荐
  • 西域行程记

    西域行程记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 阿弥陀经异本

    阿弥陀经异本

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 重阳分梨十化集

    重阳分梨十化集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 金圣叹读批水浒传

    金圣叹读批水浒传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 外科集验方

    外科集验方

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 我的梦里有你,最爱的真知棒

    我的梦里有你,最爱的真知棒

    丫头,这算是写给你的一封礼物吧,我答应过你会写出来的,意外么?
  • 亚洲:马尔代夫·斯里兰卡(世界我知道)

    亚洲:马尔代夫·斯里兰卡(世界我知道)

    本书内容包括:“狮子国”的窥探;地理大发现;崎岖温润的地理环境;储量丰富的宝藏;历史回眸;美丽的传说;封建专政;殖民统治;独立发展;政体与外交;政体与政党等。
  • The University of Hard Knocks

    The University of Hard Knocks

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 不朽之纵横天下

    不朽之纵横天下

    人类是否可以站在世界的顶峰,去将那高高在上的神践踏脚下。一切不是不可能,只要有方法,你就可以去践踏那高高在上的生物。
  • 英雄联盟之重生男皇

    英雄联盟之重生男皇

    .打野打野无尽的打野为了成为新时代的打野之王陈偌加入了CYY战队进入了一种既快乐又温馨的战队家庭5人一起打一起闹最终将CYY战队推入世界巅峰而他们也焕然一新陈偌也成为了一代打野之王虽然他是穿越而来的……
  • 大神,要点脸成不?

    大神,要点脸成不?

    游戏部门大神时不时撩你是怎么回事?频繁给公司女狼们发送“他是她的人”的信息是几个意思?当游戏大神和部门领导合二为一时,该懵逼还是懵逼的接受?某商场卫生间,一部掉落的手机揭开“她”的身份,以致他在游戏和现实中连环夹攻,把她逼到自己的怀里……游戏里,带她游遍侠客江湖,陪她一起摆平乌龙;生活中,给她当免费保镖,当她“救命”男朋友;只要她需要,他都在。不知不觉中,她接受了他这个游戏情侣,又从游戏走向现实,最终……么么哒,啪啪哒,一齐上。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 青梅竹马:记忆中的晨曦

    青梅竹马:记忆中的晨曦

    小的时候父母就把夏雨曦留在a市,他们去了s市。孤独难耐的夏雨曦在买东西的路上结识了冷晨熙。冷晨熙的父母十分喜欢雨曦。他们在不同的小学,初中,虽不在同一所学校但是他们有时间就会偷偷地溜出学校,不重要的课,变成了他们见面的好时间。夏雨曦文科好,冷晨熙每一科都很好。在初中初三填志愿表的时候他却放弃了自己最想去的圣安,陪着夏雨曦去了米罗。夏雨曦的身体自小就不太好,随着年龄的增长身体越发虚弱,冷晨熙总是在医院里陪着她,照顾她。她身体恢复之后,冷晨熙却不在她身边了,她在一日太阳刚刚升起时,在晨曦洒在她身上时她轻不可闻的留下一句话“你不是说好了长大以后陪我看最美最温暖的晨曦吗?难道你忘了吗?”
  • 巧克力一样的你

    巧克力一样的你

    年少我们相知相遇最后却分离。长大后,再次相遇的我们不知又会经历怎样的不可思议的新旅程,祝福我们......
  • 豪门霸爱:极品娇妻一吻定情

    豪门霸爱:极品娇妻一吻定情

    她就像童话中的灰姑娘,但却以为永远遇不到仙女和王子。“仙女嘛!到是没有,不过呢,本少爷倒是可以做你的王子,你凌初瑶就是我蓝帝轩一辈子的公主。”
  • 北巡私记

    北巡私记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。