<h2><SPAN name="Page_107" title="107"> </SPAN>THE RIDDLE SOLVED</h2>
<h3>I</h3>
<p class="no-indent"> <span class="small-caps">Krishna Gopal Sircar</span>, zemindar of Jhikrakota,
made over his estates to his eldest son, and retired
to Kasi, as befits a good Hindu, to spend the
evening of his life in religious devotion. All the
poor and the destitute of the neighbourhood were
in tears at the parting. Every one declared that
such piety and benevolence were rare in these
degenerate days.</p>
<p>His son, Bipin Bihari, was a young man well
educated after the modern fashion, and had taken
the degree of Bachelor of Arts. He sported a
pair of spectacles, wore a beard, and seldom mixed
with others. His private life was unsullied. He
did not smoke, and never touched cards. He
was a man of stern disposition, though he looked
soft and pliable. This trait of his character soon
came home to his tenantry in diverse ways. Unlike
his father, he would on no account allow the
<SPAN name="Page_108" title="108"> </SPAN>
remission of one single pice out of the rents justly
due to him. In no circumstances would he grant
any tenant one single day's grace in paying up.</p>
<p>On taking over the management of the property,
Bipin Bihari discovered that his father had
allowed a large number of Brahmins to hold land
entirely rent-free, and a larger number at rents
much below the prevailing rates. His father was
incapable of resisting the importunate solicitation
of others—such was the weakness of his character.</p>
<p>Bipin Bihari said this could never be. He
could not abandon the income of half his property—and
he reasoned with himself thus: <em>Firstly</em>, the
persons who were in actual enjoyment of the concessions
and getting fat at his expense were a lot
of worthless people, and wholly undeserving of
charity. Charity bestowed on such objects only
encouraged idleness. <em>Secondly</em>, living nowadays
had become much costlier than in the days of his
ancestors. Wants had increased apace. For a
gentleman to keep up his position had become
four times as expensive as in days past. So he
could not afford to scatter gifts right and left as
his father had done. On the contrary, it was his
bounden duty to call back as many of them as he
possibly could.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_109" title="109"> </SPAN>So Bipin Bihari lost no time in carrying into
effect what he conceived to be his duty. He was
a man of strict principles.</p>
<p>What had gone out of his grasp, returned to
him little by little. Only a very small portion of
his father's grants did he allow to remain undisturbed,
and he took good care to arrange that
even those should not be deemed permanent.</p>
<p>The wails of the tenants reached Krishna Gopal
at Benares through the post. Some even made a
journey to that place to represent their grievances
to him in person. Krishna Gopal wrote to his
son intimating his displeasure. Bipin Bihari replied,
pointing out that the times had changed. In
former days, he said, the <i>zemindar</i> was compensated
for the gifts he made by the many customary
presents he received from his tenantry. Recent
statutes had made all such impositions illegal.
The <i>zemindar</i> had now to rest content with just
the stipulated rent, and nothing more. ‘Unless,’
he continued, ‘we keep a strict watch over the
payment of our just dues, what will be left to us?
Since the tenants won't give us anything extra
now, how can we allow them concessions? Our
relations must henceforth be strictly commercial.
We shall be ruined if we go on making gifts and
<SPAN name="Page_110" title="110"> </SPAN>
endowments, and the preservation of our property
and the keeping up of our position will be rendered
very difficult.’</p>
<p>Krishna Gopal became uneasy at finding that
times should have changed so much. ‘Well,
well,’ he murmured to himself, ‘the younger
generation knows best, I suppose. Our old-fashioned
methods won't do now. If I interfere,
my son might refuse to manage the property, and
insist on my going back. No, thank you—I would
rather not. I prefer to devote the few days that
are left me to the service of my God.’</p>
<h3>II</h3>
<p>So things went on. Bipin Bihari put his affairs
in order after much litigation in the Courts, and
by less constitutional methods outside. Most
of the tenants submitted to his will out of fear.
Only a fellow called Asimuddin, son of Mirza
Bibi, remained refractory.</p>
<p>Bipin's displeasure was keenest against this
man. He could quite understand his father having
granted rent-free lands to Brahmins, but why this
Mohammedan should be holding so much land,
some free and some at rents lower than the prevailing
rates, was a riddle to him. And what
<SPAN name="Page_111" title="111"> </SPAN>
was he? The son of a low Mohammedan widow,
giving himself airs and defying the whole world,
simply because he had learnt to read and write a
little at the village school. To Bipin it was intolerable.</p>
<p>He made inquiries of his clerks about Asimuddin's
holdings. All that they could tell him was
that Babu Krishna Gopal himself had made these
grants to the family many years back, but they
had no idea as to what his motive might have
been. They imagined, however, that perhaps the
widow won the compassion of the kind-hearted
<i>zemindar</i>, by representing to him her woe and
misery.</p>
<p>To Bipin these favours seemed to be utterly
undeserved. He had not seen the pitiable condition
of these people in days gone by. Their
comparative ease at the present day and their
arrogance drove him to the conclusion that they
had impudently swindled his tender-hearted father
out of a part of his lawful income.</p>
<p>Asimuddin was a stiff-necked sort of a fellow,
too. He vowed that he would lay down his life
sooner than give up an inch of his land. Then
came open hostilities.</p>
<p>The poor old widow tried her best to pacify
<SPAN name="Page_112" title="112"> </SPAN>
her son. ‘It is no good fighting with the <i>zemindar</i>,’
she would often say to him. ‘His kindness has
kept us alive so long; let us depend upon him
still, though he may curtail his favours. Surrender
to him part of the lands as he desires.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, mother!’ protested Asimuddin. ‘What
do you know of these matters, pray?’</p>
<p>One by one, Asimuddin lost the cases instituted
against him. The more he lost, the more his
obstinacy increased. For the sake of his all, he
staked all that was his.</p>
<p>One afternoon, Mirza Bibi collected some fruits
and vegetables from her little garden, and unknown
to her son went and sought an interview
with Bipin Babu. She looked at him with a
tenderness maternal in its intensity, and spoke:
‘May Allah bless you, my son. Do not destroy
Asim—it wouldn't be right of you. To your
charge I commit him. Take him as though he
were one whom it is your duty to support—as
though he were a ne'er-do-well younger brother
of yours. Vast is your wealth—don't grudge him
a small particle of it, my son.’</p>
<p>This assumption of familiarity on the part of
the garrulous old woman annoyed Bipin not a
little. ‘What do you know of these things, my
<SPAN name="Page_113" title="113"> </SPAN>
good woman?’ he condescended to say. ‘If you
have any representations to make, send your son
to me.’</p>
<p>Being assured for the second time that she
knew nothing about these affairs, Mirza Bibi
returned home, wiping her eyes with her apron all
the way, and offering her silent prayers to Allah.</p>
<h3>III</h3>
<p>The litigation dragged its weary length from the
Criminal to the Civil Courts, and thence to the
High Court, where at last Asimuddin met with a
partial success. Eighteen months passed in this
way. But he was a ruined man now—plunged in
debts up to his very ears. His creditors took this
opportunity to execute the decrees they had obtained
against him. A date was fixed for putting
up to auction every stick and stone that he had left.</p>
<p>It was Monday. The village market had
assembled by the side of a tiny river, now swollen
by the rains. Buying and selling were going on,
partly on the bank and partly in the boats moored
there. The hubbub was great. Among the commodities
for sale jack-fruits preponderated, it
being the month of <i>Asadh</i>. <i>Hilsa</i> fish were seen
in large quantities also. The sky was cloudy.
<SPAN name="Page_114" title="114"> </SPAN>
Many of the stall-holders, apprehending a downpour,
had stretched a piece of cloth overhead,
across bamboo poles put up for the purpose.</p>
<p>Asimuddin had come too—but he had not a
copper with him. No shopkeepers allowed him
credit nowadays. He therefore had brought a
brass <i>thali</i><SPAN name="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</SPAN> and a <i>dao</i><SPAN name="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</SPAN> with him. These he would
pawn, and then buy what he needed.</p>
<p>Towards evening, Bipin Babu was out for a
walk attended by two or three retainers armed
with <i>lathis</i>.<SPAN name="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</SPAN> Attracted by the noise, he directed
his steps towards the market. On his arrival, he
stopped awhile before the stall of Dwari, the oilman,
and made kindly inquiries about his business.
All on a sudden, Asimuddin raised his <i>dao</i> and ran
towards Bipin Babu, roaring like a tiger. The
market people caught hold of him half-way, and
quickly disarmed him. He was forthwith given
in custody to the police. Business in the market
then went on as usual.</p>
<p>We cannot say that Bipin Babu was not inwardly
pleased at this incident. It is intolerable
that the creature we are hunting down should turn
and show fight. ‘The <i>badmash</i>,’ Bipin chuckled;
‘I have got him at last.’</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_115" title="115"> </SPAN>The ladies of Bipin Babu's house, when they
heard the news, exclaimed with horror: ‘Oh, the
ruffian! What a mercy they seized him in time!’
They found consolation in the prospect of the man
being punished as he richly deserved.</p>
<p>In another part of the village the same evening
the widow's humble cottage, devoid of bread and
bereft of her son, became darker than death.
Others dismissed the incident of the afternoon
from their minds, sat down to their meals, retired
to bed and went to sleep, but to the widow the
event loomed larger than anything else in this wide
world. But, alas, who was there to combat it?
Only a bundle of wearied bones and a helpless
mother's heart trembling with fear.</p>
<h3>IV</h3>
<p>Three days have passed in the meanwhile. To-morrow
the case would come up for trial before a
Deputy Magistrate. Bipin Babu would have to
be examined as a witness. Never before this did a
<i>zemindar</i> of Jhikrakota appear in the witness-box,
but Bipin did not mind.</p>
<p>The next day at the appointed hour, Bipin Babu
arrived at the Court in a palanquin in great state.
He wore a turban on his head, and a watch-chain
<SPAN name="Page_116" title="116"> </SPAN>
dangled on his breast. The Deputy Magistrate
invited him to a seat on the daïs, beside his own.
The Court-room was crowded to suffocation. So
great a sensation had not been witnessed in this
Court for many years.</p>
<p>When the time for the case to be called drew
near, a <i>chaprassi</i> came and whispered something in
Bipin Babu's ear. He got up very agitated and
walked out, begging the Deputy Magistrate to
excuse him for a few minutes.</p>
<p>Outside he saw his old father a little way off,
standing under a <i>banian</i> tree, barefooted and
wrapped in a piece of <i>namabali</i>.<SPAN name="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</SPAN> A string of
beads was in his hand. His slender form shone
with a gentle lustre, and tranquil compassion
seemed to radiate from his forehead.</p>
<p>Bipin, hampered by his close-fitting trousers
and his flowing <i>chapkan</i>, touched his father's feet
with his forehead. As he did this his turban came
off and kissed his nose, and his watch, popping out
of his pocket, swung to and fro in the air. Bipin
hurriedly straightened his turban, and begged his
father to come to his pleader's house close by.</p>
<p>‘No, thank you,’ Krishna Gopal replied, ‘I will
tell you here what I have got to say.’</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_117" title="117"> </SPAN>A curious crowd had gathered by this time.
Bipin's attendants pushed them back.</p>
<p>Then Krishna Gopal said: ‘You must do what
you can to get Asim acquitted, and restore him the
lands that you have taken away from him.’</p>
<p>‘Is it for this, father,’ said Bipin, very much
surprised, ‘that you have come all the way from
Benares? Would you tell me why you have made
these people the objects of your special favour?’</p>
<p>‘What would you gain by knowing it, my boy?’</p>
<p>But Bipin persisted. ‘It is only this, father,’
he went on; ‘I have revoked many a grant because
I thought the tenants were not deserving. There
were many Brahmins among them, but of them you
never said a word. Why are you so keen about these
Mohammedans now? After all that has happened,
if I drop this case against Asim, and give him
back his lands, what shall I say to people?’</p>
<p>Krishna Gopal kept silence for some moments.
Then, passing the beads through his shaky fingers
with rapidity, he spoke with a tremulous voice:
‘Should it be necessary to explain your conduct to
people, you may tell them that Asimuddin is my
son—and your brother.’</p>
<p>‘What?’ exclaimed Bipin in painful surprise.
‘From a Musalman's womb?’</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_118" title="118"> </SPAN>‘Even so, my son,’ was the calm reply.</p>
<p>Bipin stood there for some time in mute astonishment.
Then he found words to say: ‘Come
home, father; we will talk about it afterwards.’</p>
<p>‘No, my son,’ replied the old man, ‘having
once relinquished the world to serve my God, I
cannot go home again. I return hence. Now I
leave you to do what your sense of duty may
suggest.’ He then blessed his son, and, checking
his tears with difficulty, walked off with tottering
steps.</p>
<p>Bipin was dumbfounded, not knowing what to
say nor what to do. ‘So, such was the piety of
the older generation,’ he said to himself. He reflected
with pride how much better he was than his
father in point of education and morality. This
was the result, he concluded, of not having a
principle to guide one's actions.</p>
<p>Returning to the Court, he saw Asimuddin
outside between two constables, awaiting his trial.
He looked emaciated and worn out. His lips
were pale and dry, and his eyes unnaturally bright.
A dirty piece of cloth worn to shreds covered him.
‘This my brother!’ Bipin shuddered at the
thought.</p>
<p>The Deputy Magistrate and Bipin were friends,
<SPAN name="Page_119" title="119–120"> </SPAN>
and the case ended in a fiasco. In a few days
Asimuddin was restored to his former condition.
Why all this happened, he could not understand.
The village people were greatly surprised also.</p>
<p>However, the news of Krishna Gopal's arrival
just before the trial soon got abroad. People
began to exchange meaning glances. The pleaders
in their shrewdness guessed the whole affair. One
of them, Ram Taran Babu, was beholden to Krishna
Gopal for his education and his start in life. Somehow
or other he had always suspected that the
virtue and piety of his benefactor were shams. Now
he was fully convinced that, if a searching inquiry
were made, all ‘pious’ men might be found out.
‘Let them tell their beads as much as they like,’ he
thought with glee, ‘everybody in this world is just
as bad as myself. The only difference between
a good and a bad man is that the good practise
dissimulation while the bad don't.’ The revelation
that Krishna Gopal's far-famed piety, benevolence,
and magnanimity were nothing but a cloak of
hypocrisy, settled a difficulty that had oppressed
Ram Taran Babu for many years. By what process
of reasoning, we do not know, the burden of
gratitude was greatly lifted off his mind. It was
a vast relief to him!</p>
<div class="story-title"><SPAN name="Page_121" title="121–122"> </SPAN>THE ELDER SISTER</div>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />