<h2><SPAN name="Page_31" title="31"> </SPAN>THE SKELETON</h2>
<p class="no-indent"> <span class="small-caps">In</span> the room next to the one in which we boys
used to sleep, there hung a human skeleton. In
the night it would rattle in the breeze which
played about its bones. In the day these bones
were rattled by us. We were taking lessons in
osteology from a student in the Campbell Medical
School, for our guardians were determined to make
us masters of all the sciences. How far they
succeeded we need not tell those who know us;
and it is better hidden from those who do not.</p>
<p>Many years have passed since then. In the
meantime the skeleton has vanished from the
room, and the science of osteology from our brains,
leaving no trace behind.</p>
<p>The other day, our house was crowded with
guests, and I had to pass the night in the same
old room. In these now unfamiliar surroundings,
sleep refused to come, and, as I tossed from side to
side, I heard all the hours of the night chimed, one
<SPAN name="Page_32" title="32"> </SPAN>
after another, by the church clock near by. At
length the lamp in the corner of the room, after
some minutes of choking and spluttering, went
out altogether. One or two bereavements had
recently happened in the family, so the going
out of the lamp naturally led me to thoughts of
death. In the great arena of nature, I thought,
the light of a lamp losing itself in eternal darkness,
and the going out of the light of our little
human lives, by day or by night, were much the
same thing.</p>
<p>My train of thought recalled to my mind the
skeleton. While I was trying to imagine what
the body which had clothed it could have been
like, it suddenly seemed to me that something was
walking round and round my bed, groping along
the walls of the room. I could hear its rapid
breathing. It seemed as if it was searching for
something which it could not find, and pacing
round the room with ever-hastier steps. I felt
quite sure that this was a mere fancy of my sleepless,
excited brain; and that the throbbing of the
veins in my temples was really the sound which
seemed like running footsteps. Nevertheless, a
cold shiver ran all over me. To help to get rid
of this hallucination, I called out aloud: ‘Who is
<SPAN name="Page_33" title="33"> </SPAN>
there?’ The footsteps seemed to stop at my bedside,
and the reply came: ‘It is I. I have come to
look for that skeleton of mine.’</p>
<p>It seemed absurd to show any fear before the
creature of my own imagination; so, clutching
my pillow a little more tightly, I said in a casual
sort of way: ‘A nice business for this time of
night! Of what use will that skeleton be to you
now?’</p>
<p>The reply seemed to come almost from my
mosquito-curtain itself. ‘What a question! In
that skeleton were the bones that encircled my
heart; the youthful charm of my six-and-twenty
years bloomed about it. Should I not desire to
see it once more?’</p>
<p>‘Of course,’ said I, ‘a perfectly reasonable
desire. Well, go on with your search, while I try
to get a little sleep.’</p>
<p>Said the voice: ‘But I fancy you are lonely.
All right; I'll sit down a while, and we will have
a little chat. Years ago I used to sit by men and
talk to them. But during the last thirty-five years
I have only moaned in the wind in the burning-places
of the dead. I would talk once more with
a man as in the old times.’</p>
<p>I felt that some one sat down just near my
<SPAN name="Page_34" title="34"> </SPAN>
curtain. Resigning myself to the situation, I replied
with as much cordiality as I could summon:
‘That will be very nice indeed. Let us talk of
something cheerful.’</p>
<p>‘The funniest thing I can think of is my own
life-story. Let me tell you that.’</p>
<p>The church clock chimed the hour of two.</p>
<p>‘When I was in the land of the living, and
young, I feared one thing like death itself, and
that was my husband. My feelings can be likened
only to those of a fish caught with a hook. For
it was as if a stranger had snatched me away with
the sharpest of hooks from the peaceful calm of
my childhood's home—and from him I had no
means of escape. My husband died two months
after my marriage, and my friends and relations
moaned pathetically on my behalf. My husband's
father, after scrutinising my face with great care,
said to my mother-in-law: “Do you not see, she
has the evil eye?”—Well, are you listening? I
hope you are enjoying the story?’</p>
<p>‘Very much indeed!’ said I. ‘The beginning
is extremely humorous.’</p>
<p>‘Let me proceed then. I came back to my
father's house in great glee. People tried to
conceal it from me, but I knew well that I was
<SPAN name="Page_35" title="35"> </SPAN>
endowed with a rare and radiant beauty. What
is your opinion?’</p>
<p>‘Very likely,’ I murmured. ‘But you must
remember that I never saw you.’</p>
<p>‘What! Not seen me? What about that
skeleton of mine? Ha! ha! ha! Never mind.
I was only joking. How can I ever make you
believe that those two cavernous hollows contained
the brightest of dark, languishing eyes? And
that the smile which was revealed by those ruby
lips had no resemblance whatever to the grinning
teeth which you used to see? The mere attempt
to convey to you some idea of the grace, the
charm, the soft, firm, dimpled curves, which in the
fulness of youth were growing and blossoming
over those dry old bones makes me smile; it also
makes me angry. The most eminent doctors of
my time could not have dreamed of the bones
of that body of mine as materials for teaching
osteology. Do you know, one young doctor that
I knew of, actually compared me to a golden
<i>champak</i> blossom. It meant that to him the
rest of humankind was fit only to illustrate the
science of physiology, that I was a flower of beauty.
Does any one think of the skeleton of a <i>champak</i>
flower?</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_36" title="36"> </SPAN>‘When I walked, I felt that, like a diamond
scattering splendour, my every movement set
waves of beauty radiating on every side. I used
to spend hours gazing on my hands—hands which
could gracefully have reined the liveliest of male
creatures.</p>
<p>‘But that stark and staring old skeleton of
mine has borne false-witness to you against me,
while I was unable to refute the shameless libel.
That is why of all men I hate you most! I feel
I would like once for all to banish sleep from your
eyes with a vision of that warm rosy loveliness
of mine, to sweep out with it all the wretched
osteological stuff of which your brain is full.’</p>
<p>‘I could have sworn by your body,’ cried I, ‘if
you had it still, that no vestige of osteology has
remained in my head, and that the only thing that
it is now full of is a radiant vision of perfect
loveliness, glowing against the black background
of night. I cannot say more than that.’</p>
<p>‘I had no girl-companions,’ went on the voice.
‘My only brother had made up his mind not to
marry. In the zenana I was alone. Alone I
used to sit in the garden under the shade of the
trees, and dream that the whole world was in love
with me; that the stars with sleepless gaze were
<SPAN name="Page_37" title="37"> </SPAN>
drinking in my beauty; that the wind was
languishing in sighs as on some pretext or other it
brushed past me; and that the lawn on which my
feet rested, had it been conscious, would have lost
consciousness again at their touch. It seemed to
me that all the young men in the world were as
blades of grass at my feet; and my heart, I know
not why, used to grow sad.</p>
<p>‘When my brother's friend, Shekhar, had passed
out of the Medical College, he became our family
doctor. I had already often seen him from
behind a curtain. My brother was a strange man,
and did not care to look on the world with open
eyes. It was not empty enough for his taste; so
he gradually moved away from it, until he was
quite lost in an obscure corner. Shekhar was his
one friend, so he was the only young man I could
ever get to see. And when I held my evening
court in my garden, then the host of imaginary
young men whom I had at my feet were each one
a Shekhar.—Are you listening? What are you
thinking of?’</p>
<p>I sighed as I replied: ‘I was wishing I was
Shekhar!’</p>
<p>‘Wait a bit. Hear the whole story first. One
day, in the rains, I was feverish. The doctor
<SPAN name="Page_38" title="38"> </SPAN>
came to see me. That was our first meeting. I
was reclining opposite the window, so that the
blush of the evening sky might temper the pallor
of my complexion. When the doctor, coming in,
looked up into my face, I put myself into his place,
and gazed at myself in imagination. I saw in the
glorious evening light that delicate wan face laid
like a drooping flower against the soft white pillow,
with the unrestrained curls playing over the forehead,
and the bashfully lowered eyelids casting a
pathetic shade over the whole countenance.</p>
<p>‘The doctor, in a tone bashfully low, asked
my brother: “Might I feel her pulse?”</p>
<p>‘I put out a tired, well-rounded wrist from
beneath the coverlet. “Ah!” thought I, as I looked
on it, “if only there had been a sapphire bracelet.”<SPAN name="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</SPAN>
I have never before seen a doctor so awkward
about feeling a patient's pulse. His fingers
trembled as they felt my wrist. He measured the
heat of my fever, I gauged the pulse of his heart.—Don't
you believe me?’</p>
<p>‘Very easily,’ said I; ‘the human heart-beat
tells its tale.’</p>
<p>‘After I had been taken ill and restored to
<SPAN name="Page_39" title="39"> </SPAN>
health several times, I found that the number of
the courtiers who attended my imaginary evening
reception began to dwindle till they were reduced
to only one! And at last in my little world there
remained only one doctor and one patient.</p>
<p>‘In these evenings I used to dress myself<SPAN name="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</SPAN>
secretly in a canary-coloured <i>sari</i>; twine about the
braided knot into which I did my hair a garland
of white jasmine blossoms; and with a little
mirror in my hand betake myself to my usual seat
under the trees.</p>
<p>‘Well! Are you perhaps thinking that the
sight of one's own beauty would soon grow
wearisome? Ah no! for I did not see myself
with my own eyes. I was then one and also two.
I used to see myself as though I were the doctor;
I gazed, I was charmed, I fell madly in love.
But, in spite of all the caresses I lavished on myself,
a sigh would wander about my heart, moaning
like the evening breeze.</p>
<p>‘Anyhow, from that time I was never alone.
When I walked I watched with downcast eyes the
play of my dainty little toes on the earth, and
wondered what the doctor would have felt had he
been there to see. At mid-day the sky would be
<SPAN name="Page_40" title="40"> </SPAN>
filled with the glare of the sun, without a sound,
save now and then the distant cry of a passing kite.
Outside our garden-walls the hawker would pass
with his musical cry of “Bangles for sale, crystal
bangles.” And I, spreading a snow-white sheet on
the lawn, would lie on it with my head on my arm.
With studied carelessness the other arm would rest
lightly on the soft sheet, and I would imagine to
myself that some one had caught sight of the
wonderful pose of my hand, that some one had
clasped it in both of his and imprinted a kiss on its
rosy palm, and was slowly walking away.—What
if I ended the story here? How would it do?’</p>
<p>‘Not half a bad ending,’ I replied thoughtfully.
‘It would no doubt remain a little incomplete, but
I could easily spend the rest of the night putting
in the finishing touches.’</p>
<p>‘But that would make the story too serious.
Where would the laugh come in? Where would
be the skeleton with its grinning teeth?</p>
<p>‘So let me go on. As soon as the doctor had
got a little practice, he took a room on the ground-floor
of our house for a consulting-chamber. I
used then sometimes to ask him jokingly about
medicines and poisons, and how much of this
drug or that would kill a man. The subject was
<SPAN name="Page_41" title="41"> </SPAN>
congenial and he would wax eloquent. These
talks familiarised me with the idea of death; and
so love and death were the only two things that
filled my little world. My story is now nearly
ended—there is not much left.’</p>
<p>‘Not much of the night is left either,’ I
muttered.</p>
<p>‘After a time I noticed that the doctor had
grown strangely absent-minded, and it seemed as
if he were ashamed of something which he was
trying to keep from me. One day he came in,
somewhat smartly dressed, and borrowed my
brother's carriage for the evening.</p>
<p>‘My curiosity became too much for me, and I
went up to my brother for information. After
some talk beside the point, I at last asked him:
“By the way, Dada,<SPAN name="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</SPAN> where is the doctor going
this evening in your carriage?”</p>
<p>‘My brother briefly replied: “To his death.”</p>
<p>‘“Oh, do tell me,” I importuned. “Where is
he really going?”</p>
<p>‘“To be married,” he said, a little more
explicitly.</p>
<p>‘“Oh, indeed!” said I, as I laughed long and
loudly.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_42" title="42"> </SPAN>‘I gradually learnt that the bride was an heiress,
who would bring the doctor a large sum of money.
But why did he insult me by hiding all this from
me? Had I ever begged and prayed him not to
marry, because it would break my heart? Men
are not to be trusted. I have known only one
man in all my life, and in a moment I made this
discovery.</p>
<p>‘When the doctor came in after his work and
was ready to start, I said to him, rippling with
laughter the while: “Well, doctor, so you are to
be married to-night?”</p>
<p>‘My gaiety not only made the doctor lose
countenance; it thoroughly irritated him.</p>
<p>‘“How is it,” I went on, “that there is no
illumination, no band of music?”</p>
<p>‘With a sigh he replied: “Is marriage then
such a joyful occasion?”</p>
<p>‘I burst out into renewed laughter. “No, no,”
said I, “this will never do. Who ever heard of a
wedding without lights and music?”</p>
<p><ins title="I">‘I</ins> bothered my brother about it so much that
he at once ordered all the trappings of a gay
wedding.</p>
<p>‘All the time I kept on gaily talking of the
bride, of what would happen, of what I would do
<SPAN name="Page_43" title="43"> </SPAN>
when the bride came home. “And, doctor,” I
asked, “will you still go on feeling pulses?”
Ha! ha! ha! Though the inner workings of
people's, especially men's, minds are not visible,
still I can take my oath that these words were
piercing the doctor's bosom like deadly darts.</p>
<p>‘The marriage was to be celebrated late at night.
Before starting, the doctor and my brother were
having a glass of wine together on the terrace, as
was their daily habit. The moon had just risen.</p>
<p>‘I went up smiling, and said: “Have you
forgotten your wedding, doctor? It is time to
start.”</p>
<p>‘I must here tell you one little thing. I had
meanwhile gone down to the dispensary and got a
little powder, which at a convenient opportunity
I had dropped unobserved into the doctor's glass.</p>
<p>‘The doctor, draining his glass at a gulp, in a
voice thick with emotion, and with a look that
pierced me to the heart, said: “Then I must go.”</p>
<p>‘The music struck up. I went into my room
and dressed myself in my bridal-robes of silk and
gold. I took out my jewellery and ornaments from
the safe and put them all on; I put the red mark
of wifehood on the parting in my hair. And then
under the tree in the garden I prepared my bed.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_44" title="44"> </SPAN>‘It was a beautiful night. The gentle south
wind was kissing away the weariness of the world.
The scent of jasmine and <i>bela</i> filled the garden
with rejoicing.</p>
<p>‘When the sound of the music began to grow
fainter and fainter; the light of the moon to get
dimmer and dimmer; the world with its lifelong
associations of home and kin to fade away from
my perceptions like some illusion;—then I closed
my eyes, and smiled.</p>
<p>‘I fancied that when people came and found
me they would see that smile of mine lingering on
my lips like a trace of rose-coloured wine, that
when I thus slowly entered my eternal bridal-chamber
I should carry with me this smile,
illuminating my face. But alas for the bridal-chamber!
Alas for the bridal-robes of silk and
gold! When I woke at the sound of a rattling
within me, I found three urchins learning
osteology from my skeleton. Where in my
bosom my joys and griefs used to throb, and the
petals of youth to open one by one, there the
master with his pointer was busy naming my bones.
And as to that last smile, which I had so carefully
rehearsed, did you see any sign of that?</p>
<p>‘Well, well, how did you like the story?’</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_45" title="45–46"> </SPAN>‘It has been delightful,’ said I.</p>
<p>At this point the first crow began to caw.
‘Are you there?’ I asked. There was no reply.</p>
<p>The morning light entered the room.</p>
<div class="story-title"><SPAN name="Page_47" title="47–48"> </SPAN>THE AUSPICIOUS VISION</div>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />