279 14 29MB
English Pages 376 [392] Year 1972
ASIF
CURRIMBHOY’S
Go
gle
PLAYS
ASIF CURRIMBHOY
Digitized
by Goc
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Original from INDIANA UNIVERSITY
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INQUILAB THE
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DOLDRUMMERS
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THE REFUGEE “DARJEELING
TEA ?””
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&
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PUBLISHING
BOMBAY
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SONAR BANGLA
OXFORD
99,
CO.
CALCUTTA
2
The Doldrummers €) copyright 1960 by Asif Currimbhoy Goa © copyright 1964 by Asif Currimbhoy Inquilab © copyright 1970 by Asif Currimbhoy “Darjeeling Tea ?” © copyright 1971 The Refugee © copyright 1971
by Asif Currimbhoy
by Asif Currimbhoy
Sonar Bangla © copyright 1972 by Asif Currimbhoy. All Rights Reserved, in part in any form. Caution
including
the right
: Professionals and amateurs
of reproduction
are
hereby
in
whole
or
warned
that the above plays, being fully protected under the copyright laws of India, U.S.A. and the British Empire, including Canada and all other countries of the world, are subject to royalty.
All rights, including lecturing, public
professional,
reading,
radio
amateur,
motion
broadcasting,
picture,
television
and
recitation, rights
of
translation into Foreign/Indian languages are strictly reserved. Permission for any rights must be secured from the author Asif Currimbhoy, care of the publisher, or directly at 20 Napean-Sea Road, Bombay.
Note:
All the names in this volume are fictitious and any resemblance between characters and events is coincidental,
Published by Mohan Primlani, Oxford & IBH Publishing Co., 66 Janpath, New Delhi-1, and printed by Kamal Dhawan at Kay Kay Printers, 150-D, Kamla Nagar, Delhi-7.
THE
COMPLETE
WORKS
1959
The Tourist Mecca The Clock
1960
The Doldrummers
OF ASIF
The Restaurant
1961
The Dumb Dancer Om
1962
Thorns on a Canvas
1963
The Captives
1964
Goa
And Never the Twain Shall Meet The Kaleidoscope
1965
Monsoon
The Hungry Ones
1966
Valley of the Assassins (scenario)
1967
The Temple Dancers The Lotus Eater
1968
Abbe Faria The Mercenary
1969
An Experiment with Truth
1970
The Great Indian Bustard
1971
“Darjeeling Tea 7”
1972
Inquilab The Refugee
Sonar Bangla
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CURRIMBHOY
vi ASIF
CURRIMBHOY
.
t
Born in a distinguished Khoja baronetcy family in Bombay, he studied in a Jesuit Mission school, graduated from California, worked in France, and then travelled extensively through India in his present job as executive for Burmah-Shell. Family man with wife and three children. Articulate, physical, liberal, remote, he is drawn to the human condition everywhere, and now plans to write on Tibet and China.
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This volume is DEDICATED
To my wife Suraiya whose love and encouragement sustained me during my difficult and disturbed years as a writer... and to our children Tabrik, Tarek and Nahed
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I remember a few friends over the years with warmth and affection whom I would like to mention in this book. They
are—
Mateo Letteunich, the first to spot my
plays almost
ago,
10
years
Porter McCray, Alan Campbell of the JDR IlIrd Fund, Ellen Stewart, mama from Cafe La Mama, Eustace (and Maude) Seligman, godfather, Ellen Neuwald, dedicated authors agent
who
ran
up
against
a stone wall,
Patricia
Newhall,
for “Goa”,
whose
devotion
involved
much
sacrifice
Faubion Bowers, who helped when needed most, Joy Michael, amongst the first to produce my plays at home. Arun Sachdev who learnt what “the right to fail” means, Swaran Chawdhury & Jimmy Hafisjee for with “Doldrummers” in Calcutta, Tarun Roy and his wife “Inquilab” production,
for
the
their
forthcoming
breakthrough first
Bengali
P. Lal of Writers Workshop who pioneers the “Indo-Anglian” movement despite envy and prejudice,
Dilip Banerjee who risked during the dangerous days property in the Bengali publication of “‘Inquilab”,
Subhas Saha, assiduous undisturbed,
biographer,
Also with affection to— my brother and father who died
my mother and sister who live.
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who
‘
left
my
life and
privacy
INTRODUCTION As someone who has spent a number of years involved in Asian theatre and delighting in any number of Asian playwrights, it is
perhaps permissible for me to be honest and say that the standard
of playwriting on modern subjects was not as good as I made it out to be publicly. My theatrical contacts go back to 1940 when I was first living in Asia, and my deep personal friendships with Tsao Yu in Peking in 1949, with Kinoshita Junji in Japan in 1956, for instance, and with stars of the likes of Alkazi in India coloured my judgements, not so much because of their enormous celebrity, but because they were such geniuses as people. I always wanted them to be better men of the theatre than they were, then, and I always wondered—with the illogical conceit of a man picking winners at a racetrack—what would become of them as professionals, since modern, contemporary, talking, straight plays were a Western innovation to Asia, in essence a colonial importation. As the years passed, it became possible for one or two of their shorter plays to be published abroad (usually subsidized), and once or twice colleges would stage a sampling. They were received with a thud. For the most part, their plays were derivative of Ibsen, O’Neill or Odets—old hat to us. Further, Asian problems for a long time simply didn’t interest us, above all the kind of American who puts up money for a theatrical production. I also found myself constantly confronted with two imponderables. There were playwrights who were idolized in their home country but unable to communicate further than a national boundary, and yet Kurosawa and Satyajit Ray were absolutely ignored, until they were successful in the West. (Kurosawa’s Rashomon ran for three days in Tokyo, and Satyajit Ray couldn’t raise a rupee from his fellow Bengalis until after The World of Apu struck it rich in London and New York. Ray still has trouble drawing box-office in India.)
In between, we had a
score
of
pseudo-Asians
washed
up on our shores who spoke for their countries and bamboozled us, despite the fact that they were malcontents unable to live where they were born, all the time earning their living from pronuncia-
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x
mentos about their native lands. obverse—Americans inaccurately.
revealing
Now
the secret
we
are afflicted
of Asia
to
with the
us—equally
In sharp contrast to our own playwrights, very few Asians have been able to be prophets both at home and overseas, especially in theatre. Rabindranath Tagore was an exception, although it was his poetry which got him the first Nobel Literature Prize
ever: given to an Asian.
Mishima was another, although not even
his bizarre love-suicide (according to the Japanese) has resulted in a successful production of any of his many marvellous plays. Another exception is Asif Currimbhoy, I think, for he has now begun to emerge more and more clearly as a playwright of international stature. Perhaps Currimbhoy did get his start in America in 1965 when, after nearly 15 years of writing without ever seeing a single one of his plays produced, the University of Michigan staged Goa
and
the Dallas Theater
Center
put
on
Monsoon.
Three years
later, Goa was produced at the Martinique Theatre on Broadway and 34th Street, The Hungry Ones at the Theatre Company in Boston, and La Mama exhibited The Dumb Dancer (with Kathakali dancers, sitar and all) and later, The Hungry Ones again, which
outraged the Village because it presented Allen Ginsberg’s
trip to
India as Indians saw it, which is a polite way of saying “like it was” or more bluntly “for what it was worth”. In this connection, there had earlier been an Actors’ Studio tryout of The
Doldrummers,
a clever-clever word coined by Currimbhoy to indi-
cate the doldrums which settle over a group
who
“‘haven’t
of hip
young
people
worked for a year of Sundays,” who live in a shack
on fashionable Juhu Beach in the suburbs of metropolitan Bombay,
who are “too close to reality to live the life of imagination,” whose “idealism has turned theatre folk was chilled by this
and
to cynicism”. That audience of hot tropics of a drama. “Why
put on an Indian play,” one director said to me, “when it could just as soon be Haight-Ashbury ?”’ Like most questions, the answer
is already
“That’s why !””
in
the question itself.
Word that something was going on
trickled
back
to India.
The only response was,
with
Currimbhoy
clearly
In 1969 The Doldrummers was put on by
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xi the Little Theatre Group in Delhi.
This, after the play
had
been
banned by the State Censors in India nine years earlier, and it took a battery of big guns to revoke the ruling. Top names in India’s writing firmament, such as Khushwant Singh aud Mulk Raj Anand, wrote letters to the Times of India editor, Sham Lal, himself a titan in the intellectual world anywhere. All this furor and flap was necessary to palliate the profound blow censorship action
had
on
since
the
the government’s
own
ostensible
encouragement
\{national indigenous theatre, absent, in any event,
golden
days
of Sanskrit
drama
at
in the
a high
of a level
8th century.
Fortunately, The Doldrummers, a deeply affecting play, was worth the candle it lit. However, the principle of censorship was so vile ‘many Indians would have fought for the cause regardless of the case, like going into Goa in 1961, the Indo-Chinese conflict in 1962, entering Bangladesh in 1971, events which are best encompassed by reading Currimbhoy’s plays, to wit, Goa, The Captives, and The Refugee respectively. Ever since the Delhi performance of The Doldrummers, things have continued to pick up for Currimbhoy, at least in one way, if not quite altogether. In 1970 Goa was chosen to open the
Indian National Theatre Centre for the Performing Arts in Delhi, the equivalent of the Kennedy Center in Washington, by the brave veteran Joy Michael.
in Calcutta,
the
intellectual,
It was followed by
cultural,
Zhe
Doldrummers
and, for political ferment,
capital of India. More recently Revolution, The Refugee, and one which he is writing now on Sonar Bangla are being translated in Bengali, a significant contribution to the thought and letters of
Bengal, which has evoked considerable excitement there.
“Revolution’’ (Inquilab) is one of those plays you read only to find the characters leaping off the page and seizing you by the
throat. It deals ostensibly with the Naxalite revolt, where agrarian Communists opt for violence. But the canvas Currimbhoy paints here is one massive dilemma composed of a hundred small ones —‘“the devil and the deep.” One of the peasants hesitates ; If he joins the Naxalites he becomes a landlord himself,
jail.
The
local government
is caught
between
or
lands
in
‘administrative
skill’ or ‘law and order”, between brutally supressing the revolt or losing their piddling power by having the Central (Federal)
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xii
or Government come in and take over. The Professor lectures to his students : ‘Processions ? Strikes ? Gheraos? Violence? Bandhs? Breakdowns of law and order? Naxal revolt, my Are there bombs in your friends ? Slogans of Gandhi or Mao? head or brains, gentlemen ?” The wife of a peasant’ talks to her When it all husband : “You seem to have forgotten your dream.
started, all you wanted was a small piece of your own
made
me
revolution.
“Why?
more.
happy.
Now
you
want
thing.
The
That makes me unhappy.”
It’s the same more
There’s
That
land.
to lead the whole nation into And the husband answers,
gets something
better man
to life than a small plot of land.”
only revolutionaries didn’t grow up, governments
could
Yes, if
cope.
In
the final scene—a horrible unleashing of blood—you begin to understand why the goddess of Bengal is Kali, the deity of death,
destruction,
murder,
in whose name and worship assassins
act, and from whose cult the word language.
“thug”
entered
the English
To Currimbhoy, ‘Revolution’ has special significance, and not merely as a peopled portrait of a city and a province. ‘The play is the nightmare and the redemption of today’s Calcutta,” he
wrote
to
me,
and added,
“Amidst
all the uncertainties, I am
still trying for what is most precious to me: a Bengali-language production in this heart of disturbed Calcutta. This is the only thing that will give my own disturbed heart some peace.” And in another letter written at the height of the Bangladesh War, he mentioned as a post-script, “The war is a tragedy. Can’t understand
why
others
the hysteria grips
don’t
see it the same way.
all opponents.”
And
The blood flows—
regarding
The
Refugee,
he wrote again, “Yet there seems to be very little choice. A mistake committed at a particular point of time seems to have a
cumulative effect, and one inevitably gets drawn into it all.” voice of sanity lost in the din of unreason.
A
Currimbhoy is India’s first authentic voice in the theatre. He has written that country’s first plays of.dissent. He presents | life as it is, not as something it should be, the age-old curse of , Indian’s classical theatre. Once again, art, that discredited wonderbox of illusions, finds itself telling the truth while politicians lie and people look the other way. I am not necessarily
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‘‘
xiii saying the Currimbhoy is a great
dramatist.
Nor
am
I saying
that he should be read mainly for his visual politics. (One of the most electrifying scenes ever written occurs in his An Experiment with Truth, a sexual biography of Gandhi that outdistances Erik Erikson, where you have as a means of torture an unwashed untouchable making sexual advances to an orthodox Hindu.)
But I am saying it is inconceivale to me to estimate what it has meant for Currimbhoy to believe in himself so fiercely, to work
for so long totally alone (in theatre—otherwise he has a devoted wife and three children, one of whom is a six-foot, 20-year old son who takes his father to college plays imported from the West on Che Guevara), to be a Bombay-born non-practising Muslim (he’s from baronetcy stock of the Khoja sect, fotlowers of the Aga Khan), to confirm and yet create, to obey society (he’s an
executive in Burmah-Shell oil company in Calcutta) and yet destroy it with death-ray words, to write plays like bullets needing only the trigger of a national event, and even to live in this
unappreciative world where fame is awarded to others so cheaply and on such a flimsy basis. I am also saying it will be a
generation before we can really take the measure of Currimbhoy’s true worth. Meanwhile, he reminds me a little—just
playwright
1 have
known,
Wu
Han,
a littlek—of
the ex-mayor
another
of Peking,
whose play Hai Jui’s Dismissal From Office started China’s Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, precisely what Currimbhoy, I suspect, is desperately trying to stave off
by
prescience
and
fore-
sight—future is in the present obviously—and contrary to what many of his audiences in India may incorrectly think when they
feel the blast heat of Currimbhoy characters taking them along catwalks over furnaces of truth and fact. FAUBION
BOWERS
[This review article has appeared in The Village Voice, New York. Faubion Bowers has written extensively on Asian theatre and is the author of a com-
prehensive book on that subject].
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Original from
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
CONTENTS Acknowledgement
viii
Introduction by Faubion Bowers
1.
ix
GOA A Tragedy in Two Acts
2.
INQUILAB A Play on the Naxalite Movement in Three Acts
3.
THE
DOLDRUMMERS
A Play in Two Acts
4.
THE
“DARJEELING
SONAR
203
TEA ?”
A Comedy on Contemporary Manners in Two Acts
6.
133
REFUGEE
A Play in One Act
5.
69
235
BANGLA
A Historical Play in Four Acts
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283
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GOA A TRAGEDY
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IN TWO
ACTS
NOTE
GOA was first produced
in India on October 24th 1970 at the Centre for the
Performing Arts, New Delhi (a merger of YATRIK and THEATRE), with the following Director, cast and staff :
the INDIAN
NATIONAL
DIRECTOR : Joy Michael CAST
Raghu Sudon Zarin Chaudhuri
: KRISHNA ROSE PORTUGUESE. ADMINISTRATOR GOAN
NATIONALIST
GOAN
HINDU
OLD WOMAN MAN
Marcus Murch
SMUGGLER SENHORA
MARIA
MIRANDA
ALPHONSO
YOUNG
Himansu Jani Pramod Kumar
Felix Sequiera Gitanjali Aiyar Anil Dang
VICAR OLD
Peter Moss/Barry John
PEOPLE
Sai Paranjpye/Joy Michael Trevor Page
Arun Dang
Prabha Gupta Tapan Haldar
Lalitha Manchanda Himmat Marwah Sunita Montero Bunny Page Janet Sealy
Inocencio and Sofia Montero
SINGERS
Tony and Loretta Furtado
Bruno and Edna D’Souza
Jose and Sybil Faleiro Raul Rodriques The Goan folk dances and music were arranged and provided by Goan community under the direction of Inocencio Montero. PRODUCTION
Stage Director and Set-Design Set Adviser Asst. Stage Manager
Lights
:
Marcus Murch Bruno D'Souza Barry John R.K. Dhingra
Inocencio Montero
Music Costumes
Bunny Page Margaret D’Silva
Edna D'Souza Prema Karanth
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members
of the
PREFACE
My friend Mario comes from Goa.
’
He often tells me: “When I think of Goa my thoughts go back to my own village, nestling amidst the green hills and valleys, the rice fields and the rivers that make Goa a paradisial land...” This is his description of a Goan village : The village square is dominated by the immense white with
a patio
facing
it...just
opposite
church
is the post-office where the
folks meet in the mornings to collect the mail, read each other’s newspapers and discuss current events. The building also houses the local administrative'quarters, the old communidades now called the village panchayat... (Mario régime.)
always
gets a bit excited
---The meetings here were always
when
loud
he
and
talks
lively,
of ‘the new
but
with
the advent of freedom of speech (after liberation) they have become violent and vociferous. The other buildings comprising the square include the hair-cutting saloon, the little tea-shop (very popular with the young) and the grocer’s, today providing a new and rare sight to the square...the sugar queue. The market place is all noise and bustle, scents and smells, a strange mixture of fish and flowers. Buxom, garrulous fisherwomen, with sweet-smelling saios in their hair, are busy enticing the wily customer to buy their delicious river fish. Business is brisk and by noon the market is deserted. After the
shouting and the haggling, to quench one’s parched throat, there’s always a glass of cold (Indian) beer available at the bar . next door.
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4
GOA
(The only disappointing thing about Mario is that he cannot cook the hot Goan fish curry, but for that he always invites you to Goa.)
The church feast, like the feast of the patron saint, is a great day for the entire village. Besides the long and elaborate church ceremonies, it means fun at the fair and fireworks, the village band, processions and the sermons in the patio. There is the smell of incense and finim in the evening air, and at home hot sara-
patel with sanam and wines awaits the revellers. Rejoice, says the vicar, for it is a “Dia de Festa”. It is always a day to remember. (Mario is temperate in his habits: few
though
sometimes
after a
drinks together his voice flows, beautifully, capturing for me this
beautiful image of what Goa means to him.)
The village band consists of five or six seedy individuals in frayed black suits playing rather ancient brass instruments. They
are at their musical best at weddings and on feast days, delighting
the crowds with their loud and booming renditions of Strauss waltzes, a rich melody of marches and mazurkas, and an occasional
tango for the sophisticated.
On feast
day
their
music
starts
at
dawn when they gather at the church patio and play the alvorada. The big bassoon and drum do their utmost to awaken the sleeping village. The band does have its more serious moments, such as accompanying funeral processions and enveloping the entire village in the melancholy strains of Chopin’s Marche Funebre.
As a matter of fact it is known that many a dying man’s last request has been that his funeral should be carried out to the strains of the macabre music of the ‘Banda Nacional’. (No
description
can
end
without
a word on the Taverna, says
Mario)
The “Taverna” is to the rustic Goan what the pub is to the English Cockney. It is a cosy spot for a quiet (and sometimes not
so quiet) little drink, after a long day’s hard work in the fields. A capito of finim or urraca, and one for the road, an exchange of
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PREFACE
5
local gossip, a talk about the crops and whether, a silent prayer the
church
bell
tolls
the
Angelus,
dreaded Prohibition, and just
worker’s
day
is done.
At
one
eight,
and “Taverna” closes for the night. way
night.
home,
as
the
village
a song or two, a curse for the
more
for the
the church
The
is enveloped
road,
and
the
bells chime again,
labourers
wend
their
in the dark folds of the
(Thank you Mario)
,
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as
ASIF
DRAMATIS
PERSONAE
KRISHNA
ROSE PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR GOAN NATIONALIST
GOAN HINDU PORTUGUESE VICAR OLD WOMAN . OLD MAN SMUGGLER SENHORA MARIA MIRANDA ALPHONSO STAGE The
scene
of the play
CENTRE of the stage.
is the
~
DETAILS patio.
An
immense
square in the
To the NORTH of the square or patio
(facing
the audience), a white church, built on the foundation stone of a temple with Hindu carvings (as some churches are in Goa). To the
WEST of the patio is the Taverna. To the East of the patio, jutting out partly on the square, a trellis balcony with a partial view of the
residence,
around
which
most
of the action of the play takes place.
Vasco
da
Gama,
the great Portuguese explorer.
minor
changes
before
the. Indian
Some benches in the MIDDLE of the square, with perhaps (statue,
throughout the play.
etc.),
this
main
scene
a statue
of
Except for afew remains unchanged
The action of the play takes place some
time
takeover of Goa (on December 18th, 1961) when
Goa was a Portuguese colony.
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.
ACT I
SCENE I
TIME : Evening
AT Risz : A few characters sprawling on the benches. exhausted after the day.
They seem
One can see that they are “regulars”
who meet every evening at the patio benches, not too far away from the tavern. Present are : The PORTUGUESE LOCAL ADMINISTRATOR from the communidades and the GOAN NATIONALIST—the OLD WOMAN with a repertory of old wives’ tales and an OLD MAN. with black frock coat and tie (worn out)—the PORTUGUESE VICAR and the GOAN HINDU—the SMUGGLER (an all-rounder). i They form several groups yet one group at one and the same time. Each individual is talking to the other and sometimes each
couple exchanges some remarks with each other.
But their voices
are inaudible to the audience. It is not as though this scene were pantomime, but merely that their voices are either not loud or clear enough to be overheard. There is a reason for this method which will be explained later. Now we come to the first single important action of this scene which introduces us to one of the main characters in the play : SENHORA MIRANDA, a fair-looking woman of about forty, splendidly dressed in the latest Portuguese fashion with colourful parasol in hand, comes down the steps of the bar-tavern (West side of stage) slightly tipsy, and walks slowly across the patio to her residence
(East
side of stage) in the course
of which
sue finds
herself
obliged to pass by the benches in middle of the square. The conversation of the “regulars” stop dead upon seeing her. They stop and share. This lasts almost fora full minute, iia self-conscious movement of time. SENHORA MIRANDA is fully aware of the effect sHE is creating. sHE walks slowly and carefully to avoid showing the effect of any tipsiness. As SHE passes the VICAR, SHE bows slightly in acknowledgement. As SHE passes by the
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8
GOA
ADMINISTRATOR,
the
latter
lifts
his
hat
and
sHE bows
coquettish smile playing around the corner of her lips. the rest : the local people.
When sHe has to
pass
the
again, a
SHE ignores SMUGGLER,
SHE almost gives a huff and transfers the parasol to cover her from his sight. But her walk is the same : a slightly exaggerated movement around the hips, a tone of feminine self-consciousness mixed with artful coquetry which sHe obviously enjoys. Immediately after sue has passed the bench-watchers, they get into a huddle of twos and fours, obviously remarking on her, looking back at her walking, then gossiping once again. Suggestion of a nudge and a smile, while the vicar pretends to look away. This is important: the long patio walk. By the end of this Act, three of the main characters will have taken this walk, before the eyes of the bench-watchers and it is their reciprocal reactions which must reveal to the audience a lot about the characters of the
three players.
.
Now, the second important action (and character) emerges from the background of the first scene. When the curtain opened on this scene, ie. right from the beginning, but not obvious
until now,
there has beén
a YOUNG GIRL sitting on the balcony
(East side of stage) and a YOUNG MAN standing on the patio looking up to her. It appears to us that they have been talking for some time, for there has been the occasional sound of the GIRL’s voice.
The Girt is dark-looking and about fourteen with a beautiful innocent face and a strange voice. The YOUNG MAN is somehow different-looking from the other GOANS around the place. As mentioned
earlier, they have been the background to this scene for
some time, but they were not particularly noticed because of the action being centered around the middle of the stage-square. Only once,
when
SENHORA
MIRANDA
is crossing the square within view
of the balcony, does the YOUNG GIRL disappear in the house, only to come back after SENHORA MIRANDA (her mother) has been in the house for some time. LATE EVENING : The REGULARS (Bench-watchers) gradually leave by ones and twos as the stage gradually begins to get dark. (In the house, underneath the balcony there is the sound of a gramophone playing, occasional laughter of a male and female voices, the clink of glasses mixed with drunken “‘hushes”’...)
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ACT I SCENE I
9
The Girt and Boy are still on the balcony like a Romeo and Juliet scene.
Now, we come to the climax of the
and
scene.
The
terrace,
much
GiRL’s
voice
is heard : clear, beautiful, yet very strange. This is the reason why no single distinguishable voice was heard earlier : it gives
further emphasis to hers.
GIRL (ROSE): (Her voice comes like a single light)
silvery
shaft
of moon-
are
unknown
It’s getting dark now. I can see your lips no longer. I do not know what you say... But may heart is full of love to me
: the more
for
you
and I would love...this secrecy... Were it not for the absolute dread of this loneliness in the dark when I can no longer see your lips and know not whether I whisper or shout
in this stifling stillness... (Her voice undergoes a strange, uncontrollable change)
But when it’s light I know for I can then see myself in other people’s faces...
T can see...what I must be saying to them
.. for they can hear... (Boy climbs up to balcony and gives her a rose) Yes...that’s my name how did you know ? Did I whisper it... or was I screaming... (Withdrawing her hand, frightened) No, don’t touch my hand
don’t touch me touch me not
stranger...
Did I hurt you ?
Is there something you want to say ?
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10
GOA
Stand under the light...the lamp-post light ...whereI can see your lips...
(Boy moves under lamp-post light) No sounds please; no sounds
nor your touch and I shall love you all the more... (The Boy moves his lips; the Girt “hears”. The darkness becomes darker, as the scene gradually fades with the BOY’s mute words and the GIRL’S strange voice.)
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ACT I
SCENE II
TIME : Following day
SCENE :
The patio with the regular Bench-sitters.
RISB; Zhe PORTUGUESE LOCAL ADMINISTRATOR and the GOAN NATIONALIST are sitting on the porch outside the tavern (adjoining the Bench-sitters) having a glass of beer. The OLD WOMAN and OLD MAN, the PORTUGUESE VICAR and the GOaN HINDU are sitting on
the benches.
.
PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR : (Slow
whisper,
deep as the light
that
grows on him) Goa...Goa... This is Goa...my home, no less than Lisbon where I was born. And when we, the Portuguese, came to India almost four centuries ago, we made of GOA an enclave...(Dim light falls on the GOAN NATIONALIST Who is sitting across from him drinking beer.)
Ah,
but
my friend here, who calls himself a...a... (Suggestion of a deprecating snigger)...Nationalist insists we made this into a...colony... instead of a small part of Portugal. (Takes a gulp of beer, looking across to the NATIONALIST, continues to talk in soliloquy—it is apparent through play of lights that his speech is reflective of his thought process and cannot be heard by others on the patio.) Then what even if we did? We feel the same way about Goa, despite our political differences...Goa...Goa...this is Goa, my own, nestling amidst green hills and valleys, the rice fields and rivers that make this paradisial land...Look at the patio in front of you. This is the heart of each village in Goa. (His arm floating across the patio and pausing momentarily across the imaginary scenery)...the white cross...the white cross...the Taverna...the trellised balconies .always surround the patio...the patio...where everyone meets...
the old and new...those alike and different...like me and my friend here. The meetings here are always loud and lively, with nothing to hide...on market days there is all noise and bustle scents and smells, a strange mixture of fish and flowers. Buxom, garrulous
Google
12
GOA
fisher-women, with sweet-smelling saios in their hair, are busy .enticing the wily customer to buy their delicious river fish...the church feast is a great day for the entire village. There is the village band, with fair and fireworks...the smell of incense and finim
- in the evening air, and at home hot sarapatel and.wines await the revellers. Rejoice, says the Vicar, for it is a Dia de Festa...
Ah, yes, it’s always a day to remember...(Pointing) Ah, Vicar
there,
isn’t
he
imposing?
He
comes
that’s the
from
Portugal too.
get the feeling...that this curious imbalance...cannot
last, beauti-
The man next to him? You mean who’s he? Oh, he’s a Hindu ...a Goan Hindu. Oh, you should hear the two of them bicker. Tm afraid of the Vicar’s being converted...(Laughs loudly, pensively, seriously)...there is therefore...a peculiar meeting point here...of cultures and religions...of different political attitudes...I sometimes ful though it is. Time...often seems to go either too fast or too slow, as though each were trying to make up for the other...I
want time to stand still here...(A break in the pensive-mood brought about by the sound of the mouth-organ and a mad little dance
by the smuggler. The SMUGGLER is playing on the harmonica and dancing a quaint little tune all to himself.) PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR: Nice day. I always enjoy a glass of beer in the sun. GOAN NATIONALIST :_ Don’t you ever work ? PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR: Certainly. I’m here to keep you out of mischief. GOAN NATIONALIST : Your days are numbered, friend. PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR : to count.
GOAN NATIONALIST:
There’s nobody here who
knows
how
Yes, you made sure of that, didn’t you.
PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR: No, I want...a glass of beer in the sun...
give
the
GOAN NOTIONALIST: Like me. I like this too. thing more. You understand.
PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR:
Yes.
PORTUGUESE
(Screwing
people
But
what
I want
they
some-
GOAN NATIONALIST : And you won’t let me have it. PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR : I’m here to keep you out of mischief. GOAN NATIONALIST : You're exploiting us. dirty word.
ADMINISTRATOR:
Google
up
his
nose)
That’s
a
13
ACT i SCENE Ii GOAN NATIONALIST:
You're exploiting us.
PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR : If you come up to my office I'll show you some figures of income and expenditure. It’s costing us more to
keep
up
this colony than
what we earn from it.
Oh sure, we
control the mining industry and all that, but it’s nothing compared to what it’s costing us. You can get up on a platform and say we're
exploiting
all are. GOAN NATIONALIST :
you,
but
you know damn well how content you
You're exploiting us, friend.
PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR:
(Wearily)
I think
we
need
another
glass of beer. Waiter...(More beer poured out, with animation) Look how it froths in the sun ! GOAN NATIONALIST: Beautiful. PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR: Like Goa. GOAN NATIONALIST; Yes, we drink to that. (They drink) Wouldn’t you like to go home sometime ? PORTUGUESE
ADMINISTRATOR:
(Dreamily)
Yes...No.
(The
GOAN
NATIONALIST nods his head understandingly. The PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR looks at him sharply) Now, what did you mean by that ?
GOAN NATIONALIST :
(Jnnocently)
PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR :
Mean by what ?
(Suspiciously) N...nothing.
(The GOAN
‘ NATIONALIST smiles to himself, quite pleased for having scored the point. The PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR continues to look at him closely) You know, sometimes when you don’t talk, I don’t trust you.
.
GOAN NATIONALIST :
(Smiling gleefully) That’s why you're
keep me out of mischief.
here—to
PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR: (With irritation) The way you talk people would think I have no work to do but to sit out bere and waste my time drinking with you. GOAN NATIONALIST:
(With anger) What
the
hell do you
think I’m
doing here! Spending my time usefully? I got my reputation too with the nationalists and it does me no good to sit here drinking with you. (Both glower at each other, not trusting themselves to say any more. The church bells chime and the vicar calls out to them from the bench...) VICAR: Don’t forget to come to church now, both of you. (The PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR and GOAN NATIONALIST wave back their
consent
to the VICAR,
Google
The VICAR turns benignly to his compa-
14
GOA
nion on the bench, the GOAN HINDU.) And when to my church, brother... GOAN HINDU: I'll worship from outside, father. VICAR: Why from outside ?
GOAN HINDU:
My temple, father.
will
you
come
You built-your church on it.
VICAR; What do you mean ? GOAN HINDU: (Pointing to the foundations of the church) See the foundation stone to the church, father ? Look closely. That ancient carved motif is the lotus flower, and my gods sublime. That
was my House of God...
vicaR: ...and still is, my son. Come inside. GOAN HINDU: No. (Conversation shifts to the OLD MAN.)
OLD
WOMAN
and
OLD WOMAN: ...and the sea waters rose like mountains around the old city of Goa, and the fires ranged, and pestilance came...
but there was no repentance... OLD MAN: ...abh... OLD WOMAN: ...who would have thought this paradisial island where peace flowed like the pure water of rain would form dread-
ful avalanches of death and destruction...
OLD MAN: ...ahh... (Zhen the SMUGGLER changes deliberately, offensively. A bright jarry tune. He joyfully, yet with a sense of the macabre, and comes to the OLD WOMAN, shaking his hips, suggestively, in imitation of SENHORA MIRANDA. Reactions of the
\follows—a GOAN
guffaw from
NATIONALIST—an
the PORTUGUESE
amused
smile
the melody, dances half prancing up an obvious group are as
ADMINISTRATOR and the
from
the
vicaR
and
the
GOAN HINDU—frozen silence from the OLD WOMAN, but a suppressed
grin from the OLD MAN.)
OLD WOMAN : Oh go away, you filthy man !
SMUGGLER : (Raising himself up with hauteur, and putting a monocle tohis eye) Me? Filthy? Why, you old crow, I give you satins and laces, genuinely smuggled at discounted rates. I lavish cigars and beers and perfumes to the...(Waving his hands)...wide, wide interior...(Indignantly) Who said I was a smuggler! I’m a... a...commission agent. Why, some of the best families...are my
friends. After all, it is I who risk imprisonment for them. Ah, but look at my clothes; the latest striped shirt from Portugal, and pointed black shoes that set me up as the first
Google
in
fashions
in
ACT
I SCENE II
old-fashioned
. Goa.
15
Certainly
I was
filthy once.
I never
came
from the landed Goan-Christian aristocracy. 1 came from the fields and wore a loin cloth. But I was smart. I can now speak Portuguese
like the Portuguese, not the locals. Yet I am more nationalist than
the nationalist.
from outside.
put
together.
and plays
I worship the Church from inside and the Temple
I can tell more old wives’ tales than all your So
madly
now
on
tales
I am filthy...rich! (Giggles like a baboon
the mouth-organ.
The bat-doors of the bar
open, and a large man stands lurching, crooked up on either elbow ‘on the bat-doors, with a genial sheepish smile on his florid red face. This is ALPHONSO, another of the main characters in the play. If one had to type him, he’d be the Portuguese beachcomber type. For once, the reactions of the entire group are unanimous. THEY~ all smile indulgently at him, for he exudes a certain charm.) GOAN
NATIONALIST
:
(Smiling)
Hello Alphonso ! Come and
have
a
drink with us. (ALPHONSO descends,. staggeringly, swoops his hand and picks up the PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR’S glass, and gurgles it down).
PORTUGUESE
ALPHONSO
ADMINISTRATOR
:
Chico!
(Puts
:
up
Hey!
That’s mine.
three fingers
Does not wait for his drink but moves on). PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR : Hey ! Come
to
the
back
waiter
and
have
Chico.
your
drink (But ALPHONSO moves on. As he passes by each of them...) vicar : Hello Alphonso (Repeats). OLD MAN : Hello Alphonso (Repeats). SMUGGLER : Hello Alphonso. (Repeat...He waves back genially at them. This is important—the sound of genuine “‘hellos’. As ALPHONSO passes by the OLD WOMAN, he bows with exaggerated graciousness (being intoxicated) to which the OLD WOMAN titters with pleasure. So he makes the long patio walk, like SENHORA ¢ MIRANDA did before him, while the BENCH-WATCHERS see him through, reacting with fond admiration, talking about him between themselves...as he walks to the end of the line...where SENHORA MIRANDA waits on the balcony, her head tossed up with pride and admiration for her man, while the others watch his drunken entry
into the
MIRANDA
down
house,
and
gets up with
gossip again poised,
the balcony inside her home.
Google
between themselves.
self-conscious
dignity,
SENHORA
and
comes
The action now is transferred to
16
GOA
the house as the rest of the patio darkens and the others are not to be seen. Once out of sight of the watchers, SENHORA MIRANDA rushes up like a little girl to ALPHONSO.)
SENHORA MIRANDA :
(Throwing
herself in his arms)
(She kisses him long and tenderly) You smell
again...(They kiss) and have another. ALPHONSO: Kiss or drink? (Laughing)
SENHORA
MIRANDA
:
(Fondling
his
of drink
Both!
passionately, then runs around and comes Ah ! that’s my girl.
Alphonso !
but kiss me
(She
kisses
him
Girl...Girl...I
am
back with bottle in hand)
bull
neck)
your girl. ALPHONSO: (Drinking) Yes. SENHORA MIRANDA : I’m your mistress and your wife. ALPHONSO: (Still deep in his drink) Mmm... Yes. SENHORA MIRANDA: (Pouring hers) But then I should Senhora Alphonso.
ALPHONSO time.
SENHORA
:
(Patting her) Allin good time, my
MIRANDA
ness) It’s not
is it ?
:
(Baiting
as though
we
him,
yet
with
were merely
dear, a
all
trace
having
be
of
called
in good
a good
serious-
time,
ALPHONSO : Of course not. SENHORA MIRANDA : (With mischievous eyes) Though I know how to give a good time too. ALPHONSO : (Catching the twinkle, dragging her for another kiss) The best screw I’ve ever known. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Acting coquettish, trying to elude him)
Now...Now...Don’t be vulgar, little boy.
ALPHONSO: (Repeating) Little boy...little boy. (Laughing vulgarly) That’s why I can call you little girl. But I know you’re whacking
big!
SENHORA MIRANDA : (Not knowing what to say) Ha...ha... ALPHONSO : I guess it’s age that gives experience. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Wincing slightly, peppering her make-up) hell-of-a-lot more
goes with it too, Alphonso.
know, my love. ALPHONSO : (Heavily) Right there. SENHORA
ALPHONSO
MIRANDA
;
Me?
:
Take for example you.
Google
Huh...we
A
should
ACT I SCENE
II
17
SENHORA MIRANDA : What gives you so much experience, Alphonso ? little girl ? ALPHONSO : (Not knowing what to say) Ha...ha... SENHORO MIRANDA : (Half-teasingly) A big hulking man like you
-you should be ashamed of yourself.
ALPHONSO : Well, you'll admit...(Stops) SENHORA MIRANDA : Admit what? ALPHONSO : Well, youth...is youth. SENHORA MIRANDA : You’re getting very profound, Alphonso. ALPHONSO : (Shifting) Where’s that drink ? SENHORA MIRANDA : (Holding the bottle) Here. ALPHONSO ; Give it to me, SENHORA MIRANDA : (Holding bottle at arm’s length, partly joking and partly serious) Huh-huh. (Negatively) ALPHONSO : I said give it to me ! SENHORA MIRANDA: (Slightly shaken, trying to carry the joke) A little bit then.
A
then.
We've
ALPHONSO: (Pouring himself a drink) long evening to go.
That’s
to go.
SENHORA
MIRANDA
:
ALPHONSO : (Nodding, spoils the fun.
little
bit
got
a
right.
long
evening
We've
got
And too much drink spoils the fun.
drinking,
repeating)
and
too
much
a
drink
SENHORA MIRANDA : Ah, be cheerful, Alphonso. I love you that way. It’s so much fun then. Be cheerful, Alphonso. For my
sake, tell me about Portugal...wonderful Portugal. Ahh, wouldn’t T look beautiful there...and young too. The climate...does things ...for your skin. Makes it firm and tight...for you, my dear. And
rosy.
ALPHONSO : (Dully) Rose ? SENHORA MIRANDA: (Sharply) I said rosy! (Then softly, trying to get back to dream-life) Rosy. Pink and red. See how white my skin is ? It would turn pink and red. ALPHONSO : Like a lobster. SENHORA MIRANDA : flushed, Alphonso.
(Artificial laugh) You’ve seen me when Then I’m like them, am I not ?
SENHORA
(Holding
ALPHONSO
:
Rouge ?
MIRANDA
tubbed out.
:
When
him)
Yes,
when
you take it all away.
Google
the
rouge
I get
gets
Hurt me so I could
18
GOA
scream...Then you see me coming...real! (She says it with such passion that it makes him stop for a moment out of his intoxication).
ALPHONSO :
Maria ?
SENHORA
(Quietly
MIRANDA
:
and not
untenderly)
(Almost
tearfully)
What
do
want
you,
I
:
you
want,
Alphonso.
You. You make me feel it. I’m in heaven. Portugal. I’m there though I may never have been there before. Walking on the patio, with my heels clicking, and the young men looking at me admiringly. Noblemen. From the aristocracy. Admiring Senhora Alphonso. You then walking
next to me, holding my pometanian dog, with arm linked in mine,
smokinga strong
husband.
cigar.
It...it
reminds
me...of...of my
He was like you, tall and strong.
former
like a bear.
Shaggy
too. Fair like you. We were to have settled in Portugal, where : his mother lived. Oh, he sang beautiful love songs. It was one long happy
there
can
moment...of
ever
be an
youth,
end...till
whisper) He died, Alphonso.
died.
And
there
was
anything about it.
when no one
never
(Softer)
it comes.
He
merely
ever
(Her
died.
believes
voice hardly a
Unbelievably
anything—nobody...who
Not
even I.
Nor
those
churches that stand like spectres in the moonlight... ALPHONSO : (Heavily) I come from a dirty little town T love this place, but one day I shall return home. SENHORA MIRANDA : We, my love, we. ALPHONSO
:
(Looking at her distantly)
No long patio walks.
SENHORA
MIRANDA
:
I dread having to cross that patio.
don’t say that!
Day in and
could
great
he
do
white
in Portugal.
What would you
The one here is long enough.
(Panicky) No,
that
do there ?
I hate it here.
night
out.
Like
something predatory. ALPHONSO: Portugal is pretty to you only because it is far and unreal.
SENHORA MIRANDA from here.
No,
:
not
{(Emphatically) Yes, because it’s far away from because
it’s
unreal.
My
mother
told
me
stories about her home, and it was real. Or else I would not have believed it. ALPHONSO : (His eyes narrowing) What about your father ?
SENHORA MIRANDA : (Unprepared) My...My...father.
from somewhere around there.
ALPHONSO :
And told you real little stories.
Google
He also came...
Bedtime ones.
ACT
19
:
I SCENB II
(Hard) Yes, like you. He was another, like SENHORA MIRANDA: you. They all come, like you. Men. ALPHONSO : How different are you...as a woman. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Looks incredulously at him for a long moment) Why Alphonso, you’re not so drunk after all. (Then bursts a gurgle of near-hysterical laughter) Ah, what’s all this sopinto
stuff about ? Let’s dance, honey.
And
Put on that record.
give
me a sip of that drink. ALPHONSO: (Getting up energetically) Ah, that’s my girl. Let’s both get drunk as dodos. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Music and drinks turned on) And paint this bloody town red. ALPHONSO : (Getting together on a dancing stride. Softly as romance must have it.) Yve got something for you love. SENHORA MIRANDA : Oh, let me guess. ALPHONSO : I'll give you a hint.
SENHORA MIRANDA : More expensive than the last one ?
ALPHONSO: Yes. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Delighted, kissing him) Of silver ? ALPHONSO : No, gold. (Squeezing him joyfully) Oh, you need SENHORA MIRANDA: than a kiss for that. Give. ALPHONSO;: SENHORA MIRANDA : First tell me what it is.
more
A_
gold
ALPHONSO:
(Removing
from
his
pocket)
ALPHONSO:
Heavenly
gates.
We
all
necklace.
A
necklace. Witha chunk of gold at the end. A cross weighing godness knows how many ounces. (Taking it in her hand and feeling ity weight) SENHORO MIRANDA: Why, it’s heavy...(Looking at the figure of Christ on the cross)...and beautiful. I'll wear it to Church. Won’t the Vicar be happy. Like me ? ALPHONSO: (Looking mischievously) In a different sort of SENHORA MIRANDA: way, I guess. want
gates. And the keys are made of gold. Why Alphonso, that’s SENHORA MIRANDA: remark. And practical'too. Like you, huh ? ALPHONSO:
Google
to
a
enter
the heavenly
very
philosophic
20
GOA
SENHORA MIRANDA:
You should know.
Oh my dear, you
should
know. ALPHONSO : I wish we'd stop talking. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Softly) Whenever you want, Alphonso. ALPHONSO : (An edge to his voice) Yes, I know.
SENHORA MIRANDA: But darling, that’s the way you want it. Whenever you want, isn’t that right 2 Or do you want me to play hard to get ?
ALPHONSO:: (Derisively) Hard to get. SENHORA MIRANDA: (Hard as nails) What makes you think you’re easy, Alphonso ? ALPHONSO: (Mumbling, not wanting to get into a fight) I’m a man.
SENHORA MIRANDA: dogs
..are
are
dogs.
made
(Laughing
And
of sugar
bitterly)
girls...(The
and
spice,
And
men
hysterical
and
laugh
everything
(ALPHONSO takes her roughly and kisses her). SENHORA MIRANDA: No. (Shoving him away) Not
drunkenly and stupidly.
ALPHONSO:
Your
ALPHONSO:
No
husband
same
evening
so that
with a whore. SENHORA MIRANDA:
and different.
men.
And
that’s
nice.
way.
Not
huh?
He
again)...girls
that
That’s not how a man should do it. used
to
do
never came home drunk. SENHORA MIRANDA: He never pretended. of course
are
not.
the
Came
it differently,
home
and
made
love
the
wife would not suspect he’d been out
(Abstractly to herself) To feel new,
Secret to the touch.
Violent
too,
and strange
yet tender.
It
comes from freshness and innocence. ALPHONSO:: (Looking at her unbelievingly) What do you say ? SENHORA MIRANDA : (Distantly) I forget. I forget. It was too long ago. ALPHONSO: (Softly) Yes, you got more than that. More than a roll in bed. SENHORA MIRANDA: (Smiling tenderly) So have you, Alphonso, so
have you. (They kiss, almost with a touch of innocence) Your kisses burn, Alphonso. But it was made of drink a little while ago.
ALPHONSO:
woman.
I
find
you...strange
Google
and
different.
Not
the
same
41
ACT I SCENE II
SENHORA MIRANDA: Is that the only reason why your kisses burn ? Must it always be strange and different ?
ALPHONSO:
I don’t know.
I do what I feel.
ALPHONSO:
Kissed the girls and made them cry.
SENHORA MIRANDA: That’s nice, Alphonso. In a way it makes it so much easier. Come, sit with me by the couch. (She sits. He lies with head on her lap) My | What a thick mop of hair you’ve got ...(She passes her hand through his hair and grips it like a mane) ...like a boy. What were you like as a boy, Alphonso ? Tell me. ALPHONSO : I was hot-blooded. SENHORA MIRANDA: (Giggles) That I know. Tell me more. SENHORA MIRANDA: More likely you made them except...when you left them I suppose. ALPHONSO: Why should I have left them ?
SENHORA MIRANDA :
laugh,
Alphonso,
Left them and came to Goa.
ALPHONSO: Oh...that. SENHORA MIRANDA: Alphonso...? ALPHONSO: ... Yes ? SENHORA MIRANDA: Will you promise me something. ALPHONSO :
(Drinking thoughtfully)...Sure.
SENHORA MIRANDA: No. 1 mean really. ALPHONSO: (Distracted...drinking to himself) Really what ? SENHORA MIRANDA:
ALPHONSO: Sure. SENHORA MIRANDA: Portugal.
Really promise me something.
That you'll
never
leave
me
and
go
back
to
ALPHONSO: (Frowning) Now why should I ever do that? I’m quite happy here. Got a lot of friends.. and comfortable here. Nothing costs very much. And it’s easy being Portuguese. You know what I mean? So I like it here. SENHORA
MIRANDA:
But it can’t be forever, Alphonso.
can’t be living like this forever.
ALPHONSO:
Why not?
SENHORA MIRANDA: Alphonso ?
Plenty to eat and drink.
I mean
you
No worries.
But...but...wouldn’t you like to do
something,
ALPHONSO: The Local Administrator gives me a job or two from time to time...and pays me handsomely. SENHORA
MIRANDA:
Yes,
Google
because
he
doesn’t
want
you
hanging
22
GOA
around with nothing and no money. It wouldn’t do any good to see a Portuguese doing that. ALPHONSO: Perhaps. SENHORA MIRANDA: Wouldn’t you like to go back home? ALPHONSO:
Yes,
when
(Dreamily)
I was
May
not
be
a boy...something
such
a
bad
idea
of your
early
sticks...but I suppose it’s never the same again.
sometime.
life always
SENHORA MIRANDA: You can always make it that way. I know, Alphonso. You have a lot of determination when you want to be that way.
ALPHONSO: You think so ? SENHORA MIRANDA: Of course I do. I know any job if you put your mind to it. ALPHONSO: Even the Administrator’s ?
so.
You
can
do
SENHORA
MIRANDA:
Why not ?
SENHORA
MIRANDA:
Why not...if you were to return to Portugal...
ALPHONSO: You mean...(Getting slightly excited)...you mean I could really take over from the Administrator if I really want to...and live like him. .in that huge mansion ? ALPHONSO :
What does that have to do with it ?
SENHORA MIRANDA:
to qualify your
home
for
his
It’s quite
post.
thought
dear.
You’d
have
It would require training and work...in
country...before
Administrator. ALPHONSO: (The
simple, Alphonso they
send
seeping
you
through)
out
Is
here
that
as
the
so?
That
servants
and
wouldn’t be too hard, I suppose. (Puffing out) After all, I’ve got a lot of experience here. But imagine, Maria! (Getting more
and more
grandness... SENHORA
excited)
MIRANDA:
The
big
house
(Emphatically)
and
Then,
all
and
the
only
then,
would
return to Goa. ALPHONSO: (Exicitedly, thinking to himself) Yes, yes, that would be wonderful. And all that cellar of wine. I’d call my friends over every day... SENHORA MIRANDA: (Jnterrupting) Which friends...? ALPHONSO:
Oh, anybody who wants to be friendly.
Consider
I
that
Watching over friends. is the job of the Administrator. SENHORA MIRANDA: (Sighing) Perhaps...the job of the Administrator
may
not
suit
your...your...temperament
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quite
so
well,
ACt I SCENE It
23
Alphonso. You're carrying me away with your dreams. ALPHONSO : (Full of self-confidence now) Me? Dreaming? do any job I put my mind to. Remember? Anything ! SENHORA MIRANDA:
Yes,
Alphonso.
I
am
sure
of
it.
I can But
let’s
start small, shall we? Anything...regular. Not when the Administrator finds it necessary...from time to time. ALPHONSO : (Suspicious) You mean a job, don’t you ? SENHORA MIRANDA : Yes. ALPHONSO: Here ? SENHORA MIRANDA: (Torn between dreams and reality) Yes...No. No, not
here.
We
can start...anywhere.
But not here.
ALPHONSO: What about...Diu or Daman ? SENHORA MIRANDA: Well...it wouldn’t be here, and if it meant a regular job..: ALPHONSO: (Teasingly) What about...Lisbon ? SENHORA MIRANDA: (Jn dreams and alnost tears) Lisbon. Lisbon. . How musical it sounds. How different I feel. Oh, Alphonso... (Her voice breaks)...don’t tease me, Alphonso. Oh, I hope so much, Icry, I cry, Alphonso. (She puts her hand on his chest and cries.)
ALPHONSO:
(Overwhelmed, not having expected this, and touched;
softly) Maria...Maria...It means so much, does it ? SENHORA MIRANDA : Ob Alphonso, I’ma woman. Woman. No different, you understand. I hope, naturally. Perhaps even more because
it sounds so unreal. But I want it so. These desires...that of youth...passed. The longings become different as time goes by,
but just as strong. bring
Perhaps...it’s
part
of my
nature.
But
you
it out, Alphonso. You with your thick hair, and your feeling
ways, as though nothing else ever mattered... ALPHONSO : (Out of depth. Back to his drinks) Whatcha -saying ? Whatcha saying... ? SENHORA MIRANDA: I’m saying that I’m common but you're not, though everything seems the other way around. Yet we find some-
thing incommon.
ALPHONSO:
Now isn’t that hilarious
Yes, very funny.
But a lot of talk.
?
SENHORA MIRANDA: Why, Alphonso, I’ve seen you talk for hours on end...with your friends. ALPHONSO : Oh, they’re different..,
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24
GOA
SENHORA MIRANDA:
with...all of them.
I should hope so.
ALPHONSO: What do you mean SENHORA MIRANDA: Oh, I mean the Administrator, or have a (Shrugging her shoulders)...of ALPHONSO: Why, what’s wrong SENHORA MIRANDA:
I wish
you
wouldn’t
mix
? it’s alright if you have a drink with chat with the Vicar...but the rest... the Goans... with them ?
They...they don’t have
the
same
background.
You understand. Oh, it’s alright I suppose if you occasionally meet them, but this idea of being too friendly with all and sundry isn’t exactly becoming. ALPHONSO: Why not ? SENHORA MIRANDA: Well,I don’t have to do I? We...We’re different, you know.
ALPHONSO:
keep
repeating
myself,
...We ?
SENHORA MIRANDA:
Yes, I remember my
SENHORA MIRANDA:
But this one
parents
telling
me...how
. it was necessary to keep the distance. ALPHONSO: Your mother and your father. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Jmpatiently) Naturally. It takes two to make parents or don’t you know ! ALPHONSO : It also takes two to make children. SENHORA MIRANDA: (Alert) What do you mean ! ALPHONSO : (Wavering) Well...you know I’ve never been conscious of colour. We Portuguese aren’t. is!
ALPHONSO : (Cautiously) That could be a bit embarrassing—for you. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Sharply) Why ? ALPHONSO:: (Trying to be evasive; wanting to change the subject) Well...well...(At a loss for words; then recalcitrant) How the hell should 1 know ! SENHORA MIRANDA: (Jnsistent) You said it would be embarrassing forme. Why ? ALPHONSO: (Sympathetically) I thought it was fairly obvious, my dear. (Softly) Why do you press me to hurt you ? SENHORA MIRANDA:
(Clasping the cross
mean...(Her voice in a hush)...Rose. Whispering to herself) Rose...Rose...
Google
around
her
(ALPHONSO
neck) Oh...you
does not reply.
25
ACT i SCENE II
ALPHONSO: (Softly) Nobody would have known it...if you had said so yourself. And I’m glad you did. SENHORA
:
MIRANDA
though she
is.
(Hushed tone) Yes,
Rose
is my
child,
not dark
'
She’s the fairest flower in all the world, Maria. ALPHONSO: SENHORA MIRANDA : (Looking up to him) Why don’t you ask me ? What ? ALPHONSO: SENHORA
MIRANDA
Alphonso,
you.
ALPHONSO:
yet
:
You
may
not
understand
me
completely,
there are few things that your instinct does not tell
My dear, I drink like a bear...
(Running her fingers through his hair and grippSENHORA MIRANDA: ing him determinedly at the hair above the nape of his neck)...with his passion...(They kiss passionately) Why don’t you ask me... whose child she is! (They break apart) ALPHONSO : I don’t like to hurt people...even when they want to be hurt.
SENHORA MIRANDA :
(Jnsistent on drawing out blood) Why don’t you
ask me...who her father was ?
ALPHONSO: You've already told me...he was Portuguese. SENHORA MIRANDA: Why don’t you ask me...who my father was ?
You've already told me ..he was Portuguese. ALPHONSO: Ah !...But it’s evident that I’m lying someSENHORA MIRANDA: where. That girl’s either got the blood of her father...in which
case he wasn’t Portuguese...or she’s got the blood of her grand(ALPHONSO is father, in which case my father was not Portuguese.
silent) Why are you silent, Alphonso 2? Would’t you like to know where I’m lying ?_ Either my child’s a bastard...or I am. (Quietly) I told you before...it makes no difference to ALPHONSO:
me.
Ah, but it does tome. Can you imagine my SENHORA MIRANDA: feelings, Alphonso ? Now you know why I don’t like coloured people. They make me feel dirty. Rose is the cleanest girl I. know. ALPHONSO: SENHORA MIRANDA: No doubt. No doubt. But give her time. She’s only fourteen, you know. Time may come when she’s no different from me. Only I’m fair, and she’s dark. ALPHONSO:: (Slowly) Rose is Goa. Goa is Rose.
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26
GOA
SENHORA MIRANDA: my
womb.
(Said with peculiar emphasis) She
from
Dark and bloody as the night when she was conceived.
Oh, the pain; the dreadful pain.
They say it should
love when it’s cut out from your own different. A constant reminder...
ALPHONSO :
came
flesh.
What a dreadful love is yours, Maria.
SENHORA MIRANDA:
My
love
SENHORA MIRANDA:
(Quietly)
about nothing. Let us forget. ALPHONSO : Who’s that ?
is
tender,
give
rise
to
But the colour is
It’s frightening.
Alphonso.
We
quarrel...
(Sound ofa strange singing voice)
Rose.
ALPHONSO: Her voice is strange. SENHORA MIRANDA : She tries to remember what a voice must sound
slike.
ALPHONSO: When...When did she...become deaf ? SENHORA MIRANDA: In her late childhood. A congenital defect.
ALPHONSO :
Who taught her to read
ALPHONSO::
(Lapsing into silence) Hmmm...
SENHORA MIRANDA :
Herself.
lips ?
SENHORA MIRANDA: (Trying to break out of it) Well ! Well ! Your drink has evapoarted fast. How about a drop for both of us ? ALPHONSO : No. SENHORA MIRANDA:
(Almost aggressively) Why
won’t
you
have
a
drink ! ALPHONSO : I just don’t feel like it. SENHORA MIRANDA : What does feeling have to do with it ? It’s... it’s just not natural your not having a drink. ALPHONSO : I find you take advantage of me when I drink. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Indignantly) 1... take advantage of you...when you drink ! ALPHONSO : What I mean is that you say all sorts of things I don’t
understand when I’m drunk.
SENHORA MIRANDA:
sober, that’s it ?
And you think you’d
if you
were
But if I were to drink...wouldn’t that sort
of...
ALPHONSO : I just might. SENHORA MIRANDA : equalize us ?
ALPHONSO:
/
I never thought of that.
Google
understand
ACT I SCENE It
‘
SENHORA MIRANDA :
27
(Pouring out two very stiff ones) Well Alphonso,
dear, that should not be difficult to find out.
(They drink it down.
She pours another) They say men love to drink each other under the table. Well, cheers, Alphonso darling...(They drink it down. She pours out yet another) What do men talk about when they drink, Alphonso? Women? (Her voice loses humour) That must be fun. (She pours out some more) Viva! Woman have greater capacity, they say. You don’t believe it, do you, Alphonso ? That’s
because
you’re a man...a Real Man...(And some more)
ALPHONSO: (Slurring) That’s the quickest I ever got drunk. SENHORA MIRANDA: (Patting him on his thighs) Never mind, one, we'll soon get to the point...of equalization...(Pours out more) They talk a lot, don’t they, at the Tavern? I’ve never in there before, you know, so if old Chico ever tells you I
he’s a bloody
liar.
(Pours
little some been have,
out an extra one for herself) Who do
they talk about? Rose and myself? Or just Rose? Or just myself ? ALPHONSO:: Nobody talks about Rose. SENHORA MIRANDA : Oh, so they just talk about me, do they ? What do they say, Alphonso ?
Do you listen to all they say, or do you,
put in your two-bits too ? Never want to hurt me, do you, darling ? You great sweet Bull. What have you got at the back of
your dirty little mind,
you Ox?
I know just screwing me is not
all you want, you innocent bastard...(ALPHONSO gets up violently sending the table and bottles in a crush.) ALPHONSO: (He slaps her) You bitch ! SENHORA MIRANDA: Haaa...that’s more like it, Alphonso. I got to thinking you were just another tame slimy prick ! ALPHONSO leave.
:
I’m warning you, Maria.
You behave like
this
and
I
SENHORA MIRANDA : (Tantalizing him) Oh, have 1 offended your inherent Portuguese nature ? You're not used to these kinds of tortures, are you ? You're full of sensibilities, you damned Portuguese. Don’t give me that about loving Goa and all. I know
what goes on...and on...and on...
ALPHONSO :
I’m leaving, Maria.
SENHORA MIRANDA :
(Becoming more possessed
now : regretting
her
outburst, apprehensive, but not wanting to change positions too soon) Leaving, are you ?’ When will you be back 2? When the beer has
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28
GOA
turned flat and there’s no more froth left 2. When your bar-chums have gone, no more man-talk left to be done; when your crude
dulled
desires hunger
ALPHONSO:
for woman’s flesh...
(Dead serious now, her remarks having gone to the
core)
I’m leaving, Maria...for good ! SENHORA MIRANDA : (Realizing he’s serious, finding herself having to change positions earlier than expected) Leaving? (Her voice goes through a strange change) Leaving ? No, no, Alphonso. (Jt becomes a whine) No, you can’t leave, Alphonso. You won’t leave. You
had promised me you wouldn’t.
Or that you’d take me alongwith
you. Take me then. To Diu or Lisbon orI don’t care where. (Sobbing) Just take me. (He is about to leave, but she grabs him) No, stay a minute. Justa minute. 1 swear to GodI won’t keep you longer if you don’t want to stay. (Calling out) Rose ! Rose, my dear ! Where are you? Where are you? (She goes out; ALPHONSO sits hypnotized. A few seconds later SBNHORA MIRANDA /eturns
with ROSE.)
SENHORA MIRANDA: Rose...(Turning ROSE around to face her)...see me, dear...Rose, we’ve got a guest. He wants to go but I want
him to stay. You understand ? (Rose nods) He talks at lot about you. Calls you an innocent white flower...(Rose’s hand goes to her heart) says Rose is Goa and
Goa is Rose.
Is terrified of me,
yet comes and often stays. (ALPHONSO cannot bring himself to look up at her) Hoping. Hoping. That’s why he comes back over
and over again. See, what he gave me? A necklace...of gold. With a cross that weighsa ton. Here, I'll put it around your neck. No, no, don’t be frightened. He’sa harmless animal. I know. (She gently puts the necklace around the neck of her daughter) Now, Alphonso. Look up. Look at her. Nothing to be
ashamed of.
She’s innocent
is perspiring,
he can’t look up) You'll
fair like you.
Look
and beautiful.
up, you dog.
Look
And she’s dark. Not
up at her!
never see her
(ANPHONSO
again if you
go for good. So see her now! Look at her! (ALPHONSO raises his eyes slowly, guiltily. Then he bursts out at MIRANDA.)
ALPHONSO ; YOU
BEAST!
YOU
HORRBILE
BEAST! (Gets up and runs
out. SENHORA MIRANDA turns her daughter's face around, and looks gravely into her eyes.) SENHORA MIRANDA : (Quitely) He’ll be back. CURTAIN
Google
FALLS
ACT
I
SCENE III
TIME : The same evening SCENE : NOBODY on the patia, except near the balcony where the Boy stands as in the first scene with the GIRL (ROSE) on the balcony. AT RISE: Under the balcony, in the house, sits SENHORA MIRANDA. She sits still for a long moment. Then she sighs and moves the curtain aside to look across the patio.. She sees the BOY.
She notices that he seems
to be moving his lips for she hears no
sound. Then with curiosity she looks up, and finds ROSE sitting on the balcony. She studies the situation quietly for a minute. Then
she smiles strangely to herself.
Taking the umbrella in her hand,
she raises it over her head, and knocks on the balcony. ROSE is immediately alert. She recognizes the communication (presumably from the vibrations on the balcony), and raising her finger quietly to her lips to
caution the Boy, she leaves
and comes down the stairs
to her mother. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Looking at Rosk’s face) Rose.
ROSE : (Her voice wavering) Yes, mother.
SENHORA MIRANDA : (Speaking slowly with pronounced lip movements) What were you doing upstairs ? ROSE : Nothing, mother. SENHORA MIRANDA: Who’s that outside? (Rose catches a sharp breath) I said who’s that outside, Rose. ROSE : (Her hand to her breast) Boy. SENOHORA MIRANDA : He looks more like a young man to me. Who’s he ? ROSE : I don’t know. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Looking closely) You don’t know ? ROSE : (Looking unblinkingly at her mother) 1 don’t know. SENHORA MIRANDA : But he talks to you. ROSE: Yes.
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30
GOA
SENHORA MIRANDA : Have you ever met him before ? ROSE: No. .
SENHORA MIRANDA : But balcony.
he’s spoken
to you
before...across
the
ROSE : Yes.
SENHORA MIRANDA : (Turning her head slightly and raising the curtain sideways so she can see without beeing seen) He’s a stranger here. Ican make it out. He’s not like the others. Dark, yes, but not
like the others. (She’s now talking to herself. ROSE cannot read her lips because her head is turned sideways as she muses, to herself,
- looking out at the patio.)
SENHORA MIRANDA : Alphonso is there somewhere. Probably in the Tavern. A good thing for him...to think things over. So also for me. (Thoughifully) Yes, it would be interesting, wouldn’t it...to be occupied instead of...available...with more strings...Why don’t you call him in...(As she says it she turns her head to ROSE. ROSE gusses that something must have been said to her but cannot make it out)... said why don’t you call him in, Rose. ROSE : (Not sure now whether she has read the lips correctly...in? SENHORA MIRANDA : Yes, dear. Call him in. He seems well dressed and respectable. He also seems to know you and I think I ought to be introduced to him. (RosE hesitates as she goes to the door) Cal! him in, Rose, call him in. (ROSE opens the door slowly, and
calls out to him.
He enters. He’s not as boyish as he looked earlier.
There’s a strange precocity about him, a distant mystery) Ah, good evening, young man...sENHORA MIRANDA at her charming best gets up and shakes hands)...my name
is Senhora Miranda, and
my daughter, Rose. I believe you’ve met her. KRISHNA : (Quietly. Looking at ROSE) Yes, I’ve many times.
seen
her
this...is
before...
SENHORA MIRANDA : (Raising her eyebrow quizzically) Indeed. KRISHNA : (Continuing to look at ROSE) My name is Krishna. SENHORA MIRANDA
: And
mine is
Senhora Miranda.
(KRISHNA
now
turns around and looks at her. He smiles, self-confidently. SBNHORA MIRANDA stiles back at him.) KRISHNA : I’m sorry. I was facing your daughter...because I know she cannot hear.
SENHORA MIRANDA ; And I can.
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ACT I SCENE Ill
31
KRISHNA : Yes (A pause) SENHORA MIRANDA : Won't... won’t you sit down, Mr. (They sit down) You're a stranger here, aren’t you ?
Krishna ?
KRISHNA; Yes.
SENHORA MIRANDA : I recognized youe
Won’t you have a drink?
that at once...the first time Some whisky perhaps ?
I saw
KRISHNA : (Looking again at Rose) Thank you, Senhora Miranda, but
I don’t drink. SENHORA MIRANDA : KRISHNA : (Turning then. (They both SENHORA MIRANDA : being...occupied. KRISHNA : (His gaze talk much in your SENHORA MIRANDA :
Maria... his look again to sENHORA MIRANDA)..,Maria smile again momentarily at each other) I don’t like...formality. It comes in the way of again reverting to ROSE) Your daughter does not presence. (Looking at ROSE) Well, Rose? (RosE looks from
one to the other, her eyes bewildered)
KRISHNA: Ah, you’re
confusing her, Sen...Maria.
She
cannot look
from one to the other so fast. (Looking steadily at Rose) It takes patience, doesn’t it, Rose? Care...and a lot of patience. (ROSE smiles shyly) It took years, didn’t it? And a strong urge...to understand. (SENHORA MIRANDA has been looking from one to the other, a strange excitement Jilling her being.) SENHORA MIRANDA : (Her voice a bit choked. Turning to Rose) Rose,
get us some
tea please.
(Rose /oaks
at her)1
said get some
tea, Rose. Some tea. (RosE leaves) (Then turning to KRISHNA) That was a very impressive speech, Krishna. Clearly said. Cleverly too. No fumbling or mistakes. Not like any boy. Nor like any man, You’re a strange one, Krishna,
KRISHNA : Senhora Miranda...
SENHORA MIRANDA : ...Maria ! KRISHNA : Maria then... ENHORA MIRANDA : No, just Maria. KRISHNA: Maria.
SENHORA MIRANDA : Does not sound like Rose, huh ?
KRISHNA : Sounds only matter to us, Maria, but not to her. SENHORA MIRANDA: What matters to her, Krishna, since you to kno
w her so well ?
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seem
32
GOA
KRISHNA : (Pauses before replying) You. SENHORA MIRANDA : (A bit staggered) You’re not a boy, Krishna. You're a man. Are you a real man? (KRISHNA smiles) Do you
ever go to the Taverna ?
KRISHNA : No. SENORA MIRANDA : Have you ever taken the long patio walk ?
KRISHNA : What’s that ?
SENHORA MIRANDA: You'll know one day. (KRISHNA shrugs shoulders. Looking at him fixedly) Then you don’t drink? KRISHNA: No.
SENHORA MIRANDA : Are we on the point of equalization ? KRISHNA : ...Then what ?
SENHORA MIRANDA : Never mind. (Pause) Why don’t you KRISHNA : ...Ask you what ? SENHORA MIRANDA : Why Rose is so dark and I’m so fair. shrugs his shoulders indifferently) Like you are dark and (KRISHNA looks at her) Like he is fair and she is dark.
ask
his
me?
KRISHNA I’m fair. (KRISHNA
frowns) Therefore, it should mean something; your being dark and
my being fair. KRISHNA: You’re mixed up, Maria. It does not always work that way. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Angry) No? Why not ? Like you are younger and I’m older. Like he’s older and she is younger. There’s a thyme to it somewhere.
KRISHNA That’s all there is, Maria.
SENHORA MIRANDA : (More angry) Like you’re a stranger
stranger.
Like
he
is not
Krishna ? KRISHNA : Not to me, Maria.
Listen:
and
she
is not.
Doesn’t
and
it
I’m
a
match,
Like I’m dark; so is she
Like I’m young, so is she... That rhymes. Like I’m a stranger; she is not Like she is; Like I’m...
That matches, Maria, that matches. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Furious) which he catches.)
KRISHNA ; I don’t hit, Maria.
Google
Why you...(Raises
her hand to strike
I don’t commit violence either.
ACT I SCENS III
33
SENHORA MIRANDA : (Quivering) You'll never get to her...(Rose enters with the tea and KRISHNA speaks looking at her.) KRISHNA : (Passionately)
Nobody’s
going
to
stop
me,
Maria.
Nobody’s going to stop me. I’ve waited for her too long. It took care and patience, and long years of understanding. You see, we had something in common. It ryhmed; it matched. Bit it was more than that. I love her, Maria. She’s tender to the touch, though
I never touched her. She watched my lips...speak through the night, afraid to close her eyes, and be embalmed in the terrifying stillness of it all. And I felt equally. Terrified that my hands should hold the uncrushed flower...so pure...and fragrant. (Both the women look at him hypnotized. ROSE stands still with the tea
tray in her hands.) SENHORA MIRANDA : (The first to
° Going up to ROSE) Thank
recover.
you, dear. I'll get the tray now. (She takes it from ROSE’S lifeless hands) How many spoons of sugar, Krishna ? KRISHNA : One. SENHORA MIRANDA : I always take two, and Rose always taken three. (She
makes
the tea in silence and then passes it around.
ROSE sits
down and drinks the tea quietly. SENHORA MIRANDA gets up, balancing the cup in one hand, and walks slowly around the room, her hips undulating
slightly
as
though
it were
the patio
she walks
behind
walk,
while
she
talks, partly before her daughter, partly behind her daughter, so that her selected bits of conversation may not be heard depending upon her position in the room.)
SENHORA
MIRANDA
:
(Said as
Rose)
Neat.
Very
neat, Krishna. Where did you learn to speak like that? Almost rehearsed, yet very moving. More things unsaid than said. And many
more
things
meant...(Said
at
she
walks
in front of ROSE)
Rose must have a sweet tooth to take three spoons of sugar. She likes things sweeter than most...(Said as she walks behind Rose) ..and
many
more
things
meant...than
said.
Dark
you
are,
Krishna; darker your thoughts are too, in spite of the light which you claim to shed on her...(Said as she walks in front of ROSE)...
I suppose that’s because she has a sweeter tooth than most. That’s how she remembers her voice; it’s a taste in her mouth...
(Said as she walks behind Rosk)...It’s not going to be easy, Krishna. (Softly) You see, Krishna, I come first, like two
before
three.
No
one’s
Google
going
spoons
of
sugar
to stop you, Krishna,,,but you'll
34
GOA
have to pass by me first...(KRISHNA laughs. MIRANDA.
She
breaks
her
slow walk.
looking at her eyes steadily, speaking,
clear
lip movements...) Hear
me,
It infuriates SENHORA
Now she approaches ROSB,
sofily hardly audible,
Rose.
with
I speak softly but you
don’t need sound. You only need me. Understand ? (Rose nods her head like one hypnotized. KRISHNA shifts uneasily) I’ve got a guest here. He wants to stay, but I want him to go. Tell him
to go, Rose. (Hardly a whisper, but the lip movements are very clear) Tell him to go, Rose. (Lip movement) Go...Go...(At first
ROSE’S mouth quivers, mouth, like the young.
then it catches the vowels of her mother’s Gradually it becomes articulate.)
ROSE: ...G...G...Go...Go...(Her mother nods her head, like instructions to a child. KRISHNA looks on, speechless and horrified) ROSE: ...Go Krishna go... KRISHNA : (Screaming to SENHORA MIRANDA) YOU BEAST ! YOU BEAST ! SENHORA MIRANDA: (Twisting around violently, with a terrible gleam in her eyes) Ahh ! What happened, Krishna ! What went
wrong ! What became of your calculations ! Slap me! Why don’t you slap me ! ...(ROSE cannot see all, nor hear anything, but
she guesses intuitively, claps her hand ‘before her eyes, her ears, her face, pathetically, moaning slightly, like some dump animal, who not being able to stand the torture, dashes away...KRISHNA makes a move to go after, but is stopped by SENHORA MIRANDA) Ah, but you'll have to get by me first. Nobody’s going to stop you, Krishna, but you'll have to get by me first...(Her hands go up to his black hair)...your hair, Krishna, it’s black and thick...(She catches him by the hair at the nape of his neck)...strong Krishna,
though you may not be violent...though...(She laughs queerly) you may be full of love, you carry the hate potential...I come first
Krishna or else you go...(Her movements becoming more passionate)...you're like a bull too Krishna...a big brainy bull that gives more promise...(Her eyes partly closed, her breath sharper, her lips closer to KRISHNA who stands tense, immobile, but under terrific strain)...me first...me ..me...me...(Her face closer as she repeats it, the veins on his neck taut as he does not bend, till she releases him, with hate in her eyes.) SENHORA MIRANDA : ...GO THEN...GO KRISHNA...(Softly)...I know
you'll be back...(Door bangs open and ALPHONSO lurches, in almost totally drunk; a high peal of penetrating laughter from SENHORA
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ACT I SCENE III
35
MIRANDA) You've come back, haven’t you?
~I tell you so, you great bull of a man...(She
he picks
her
up in a passionate
I told you so. Didn’t
goes
up
to him
and
embrace)....’ve got your finger
marks still on my face. You’ve got some swing, Alphonso, you have got some swing. Many a younger man could learn from you, if they could only use their brains, if they could only use their potential...of which you have none, my dear Ox... ALPHONSO : (Blubbering drunkenly while KRISHNA watches like a
frozen stone)...Rose...Rose... SENHORA MIRANDA (Soothingly) All in good time, you virgin. All in good time. We’ve got a lot of things to to improve on, you know, for I was. always first...(The gathering
over her face)...in that dark bloody
night,
: impatient do first... darkness
fertile
with
It takes time, but it gets nearer you come
every
horror, in that dark bloody night, fertile with horror, was I...(The darkness passing)...what was I saying ?...ah, yes, all in good time... it can’t be today.
time, so do not waste time...
ALPHONSO: (Blubbering wretchedly, while KRISHNA watches with tears in his eyes)...Now...Now...
SENHORA MIRANDA :
Patience, patience, you big
Ox.
You
would’t
like to hurt, would you? It takes time, getting used to. Therefore, I always take on first; a protection in a peculiar sort of way, if
you know what I mean, you drunken fool... ALPHONSO: (Pleading, falling on his kness, while eyes
tight,
KRISHNA
shuts his
raises hands to blot out ears)...Maria...Maria...
SENHORA MIRANDA : (Eyes satanic; herself almost exhausted through sheer victory) Ah, that’s the way I like to hear it. Maria. Maria. Not “Maria then.”
But “Maria”.
Just Maria.
Maria
alone,
like
when we're no longer formal. Then is the right time...for introduc-
tions. tion.
I’m
So that we come to know each other......well...EqualizaAlphonso, this is Krishna. Krishna, this is Alphonso, And
Maria,
without
beginning
or end—make
your
friendship,
Alphonso. Say “Hello”. I know Alphonso loves to hear the world “Hello”. 1 know, Krishna, you don’t believe in it, but it’s quite necessary. Say it now, Krishna. See my words...(Moulding her lips in a clear “ Hello” ...as though she were telling or teaching her daughter)...“Hello’’...that’s right, you’re getting it now. KRISHNA:
(Partly hypnotized,
Google
lips
quivering) H...hello.
36 SENHORA
GOA MIRANDA
:
(The
sheer
lust of victory will not leave her,
exhausted as she is by this ordeal) Abh...so sweet. But the function’s not over yet. After every “Hello”, Alphonso likes to be taken to the Taverna. I know you don’t drink, but that does not
matter; Alphonso does. And you can see the poor dog can hardly stand on his feet. A few drinks, Krishna, that’s all it will take. Aren’t we after all all victims of survival ? His feet are getting heavy.
He’s
not even once.
crossed the patio many, many times, while you have
So, take him along for the last drink
that wasn’t
meant for the road...and come back alone...along the long patio walk...for me...me...(KRISHNA gets up, dazed, but not unpossessive, of his senses. He goes over to ALPHONSO, and takes him by the elbow leading him towards the door. ALPHONSO goes with him unprotestingly, too drunk to know what is happening. KRISHNA leads him out, across the patio, which is empty, to the Taverna. The evening lights get dimmer. MARIA leaves the room downstairs and goes to her bedroom and through transparent curtains we see her changing her clothes into bright scarlet with a black scarf and dark red lipstick across her white expessionless face. Then slowly she
leaves her
sits and
room
waits,
and
looking
climbs up the stairs to the balcony where she across
the patio.
The
BENCH-WATCHERS
gather. In twos and fours and in a group, mirroring everything. The bat-doors of the Tavern open to frame one single man; KRISHNA He emerges, and takes the long patio walk. The BENCH-WATCHERS watch. Now we see the third pattern of reaction across the face of Portuguese Goa. Hate distrust, fear; of this stranger, not too unlike them, but an outsider nevertheless, an unown element, too unpredictable, yet outwardly calm and peaceful. KRISHNA takes the long slow walk, looking neither left nor right, the BENCHWATCHERS silent and pale, some reflecting the above reactions, while he walks, slowly, calmly, peacefully towards the balcony, towards
where
MARIA
sits and
watches,
enters her house, herself with across her face.)
then stands
proud
and
CERTAIN FALLS
Google
.as he approaches and
triumphant
smile
written
ACT II
TIME:
SCENE:
The
SCENE I
following day
On the patio with the regular BENCH-SITTERS.
AT RISE:
The GOAN NATIONALIST
is sitting
across
the
PORTUGUESE
ADMINISTRATOR with glass of beer in his hand. GOAN NATIONALIST : There isa change coming...inevitably. And, my friend, you will be in the midst of it. You know I’ve got my ears glued to the ground. And while you think you are trying to keep me out of mischief, you are ignoring the greater danger.
Normally, I couldn’t care less, and often I have to do what I must,
but...I’ve got used to you and would be sorry to see you go. PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR: Ahh, my good friend, it’s good of you to say so, but I’m afraid you’re underestimating me. GOAN NATIONALIST: (Shrugging his shoulders) Suit yourself. PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR : (Breaking the froth of the beer with his finger absently) Mind you, I’m not saying it can’t be done. It...it just wouldn’t be logical. Not after fourteen years. You’ve got develop a cause...and you can’t doit as a pacifist. GOAN NATIONALIST: There is a breaking point to all patience. PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR : We've been here four hundred years. We’re old as the hills. We're part and parcel of this life whether you like it or not...and I don’t see why you shouldn’t like it. It’s not as though we were obstructing you...except that there are limits of course. GOAN NATIONALIST: Ahhh... PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR : But there’s no such thing as limitless freedom. You know that as well as I do. GOAN NATIONALIST :
But there is such a thing as liberty.
PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR : GOAN
And how do you get liberty
NATIONALIST : If it is not given, then it must be won.
PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR : And how would it be won ?
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?
38
GOA
GOAN NATIONALIST : If need be...through liberation. PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR : You mean through invasion. GOAN NATIONALIST : Call it what you like. PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR : I thought maybe you were going to say say self-determination.
GOAN NATIONALIST : We tried that and failed.
PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR : I thought maybe you were going to satyagraha,. GOAN NATIONALIST : We tried that too; we tried passive resistance and
failed.
‘PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR : Liberation is
X_ exploitation or invasion!
I wonder
a dirty word
to me; like
if you will come to the same
‘conclusion if it should happen that one day I am not here.
GOAN NATIONALIST : You were
never before
PORTUGUESE
Ah,
means to an end.
ADMINISTRATOR:
°
but
much concerned that’s
because
about I
never
pretended. GOAN NATIONALIST : If there ever were any violence, I would not like to see you hurt. PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR : Nor I you. GOAN NATIONALIST : Strange that we should be on different sides of
the fence and yet have so much in common with each other.
PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR:
__ each other’s lives.
GOAN NATIONALIST ; And
I told
you ..we are part and
yet it is inevitable
:
that
we
parcel of
break
away.
There’s bound to be a reaction, of course, but that is again unavoidable. We do it for the larger good of the larger people in’ the long run. PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR : Everything you say sounds like an expediency. Like bringing in an outsider. Like an unnatural alliance. GOAN NATIONALIST : Perhaps ..but a necessary one. There’s nothing ...nothing...you can do to stop the basic desire. You could float this enclave in milk and honey and yet we would want for ourselves
that abstraction with all our hearts, and nobody, no-one
will ever
be able to stop us, even though we may be ruthless to ourselves and others in getting it. And if freedom cannot be won alone, I'd be willing to join the devil himself to get it.
Google
39
ACT Ii SCENE i PORTUGUESE
ADMINISTRATOR: That
want most. GOAN NATIONALIST: Maybe, prevent it either,
but there’s
even if I wanted
ourselves, you understand.
will
way...you
to.
lose
nothing that I can We
you
what
are compelled
do
to
within
PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR : (Wearily) Frankly, my friend, I do not know who’s right and who’s wrong, or even whether I should bring moral values into judgement. GOAN NATIONALIST : (Raising his glass) Let us drink this beer while
it lasts.
Look at the froth shining in the sun.
PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR : (Raising his glass) Beautiful. Like Goa. (Across to the benches) VICAR : (To the GOAN HINDU) When are you going to come into my
Church, son ?
GOAN HINDU : Why? Will it remove caste distinctions ? VICAR : All are equal in the eyes of God.
GOAN HINDU : Then why is it that the Catholic-Brahmin looks down upon the Catholic non-Brahmin and the Portuguese Catholic looks
down upon the Jesuits... VICAR : (Interrupting) These are social evils; not religious ones. GOAN HINDU: One thing or another, it’s all the same to me. But tell me, Father, why don’t you come to my temple ? (Conversation
shifts)
OLD woMAN : Beware.
armies.
Death
catastrophes.
Beware.
resurrected.
The wrath of God.
Thunder
and
Like invading
lightning;
limitless
OLD MAN : Abhh... OLD WOMAN: It will strike...(Waving a finger overhead to the cross on the top of the Church),..out there ! OLD MAN : Abhh...(The SMUGGLER plays the mouth-organ once again, desolately, He dances an unmerry tune, with false, unmeasured steps. Then stands, awkwardly, self-consciously, before the audience or before the BENCH-SITTERS, and points to himself...)
SMUGGLER : Me? I live off the fat of the land. And if there’s no fat, I scrounge off the dustbin like an emaciated cat with a full fish-bone stuck in her mouth...So if smuggling: should come to an
end, why then I shall stick my head in the dustbin to find other ways of subsistence...But I shall not go back loin-cloth into the fields, for I have now developed the rich taste of a parasite. A
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40
GOA
tourist guide.
A swanky hotel.
party.
A municipal campaign.
object,
I shall
Money
to me...cutting
corners
have one on
safety valve of the nation,
lism...breeds,
An industrial boom.
A
A political
prohibition era; all this means
of course...And
you...for Iam
if you
should
the necessary evil; the
where corruption, linguism, communa-
So let me free or keep me in bondage; either way
I flourish. (A harmonica laugh covering the full octave. Playing the mouth-organ first with the right hand and then with the left) You see...I’m ambidexterous. (Scene darkens towards the patio
gradually blotting
out the BENCH-SITTERS,
and
begins
to
brighten
inside the house of SENHORA MARIA where the action is transferred. KRISHNA is lying on the sofa with head on the lap of SENHORA
MIRANDA much in the same pose ds ALPHONSO was in the first act.) SENHORA MIRANDA: (Caressing his black hair and holding it in her hand behind the nape of his neck from time to time) Isn’t it nice.
I feel relaxed. Like I had surpassed the point of...equalization. Krishna, you’re a sweet boy after all. A passionate child.
KRISHNA : (Looking up and smiling) Satisfied ? SENHORA MIRANDA : (Nodding her head affirmatively) Huhhuh. I wasn’t sure to start with. Like all burning curiosities I was afraid of hoping too much. Oh, but I was proud of you; when you took that long patio walk, I was proud of you. KRISHNA : You looked more victorious than proud. SENHORA
MIRANDA
proud for you.
the vultures!
: What’s
Isaw
They
the
them look
were afraid,
difference;
KRISHNA: (Smiling) You're you. \
SENHORA MIRANDA:
No,
Krishna,
letting your Ive
myself;
got
afraid
of you.
They
They withdrew and shrunk
you !...my quiet
no.
for
at you sitting on the benches...
didn’t ‘‘hello” and act pals with you.
and evaporated, Before potential of a giant !
victorious
peaceful boy.. with the
imagination run a strong
instinct
away with too...like
Alphonso. And look at the way you handled Alphonso, That took more than imagination. It took action. KRISHNA: (No humour. in his eyes) It also took a bit of help from you...Or don’t you remember, Maria ? SENHORA MIRANDA: Abh, there's no harm ina bit of competition, is there, Krishna ?
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ACT II SCENE I
41
KRISHNA : Between who ?
SENHORA MIRANDA : Why, you and Alphonso, of course. KRISHNA : For whom ? SENHORA MIRANDA : (Innocently) Why, for me, of course.
KRISHNA : What about...Rose ?
SENHORA MIRANDA : (Unwavering voice) What about Rose? Oh, you mean the competition...(KRISHNA ‘ods)...between you and Alphonso ...(KRISHNA ”oods)...for Rose...? KRISHNA nods.) SENHORA MIRANDA : Now isn’t that strange. All along I thought you were competing for me. KRISHNA : (Sighing) I’ve got a present for you, Maria. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Excited) Not really ! KRISHNA : (Takes a small box from his pocket and chucks it over to
SENHORA MIRANDA) No need to guess.
Diamond. A diamond ring.
SENHORA MIRANDA: (Opening the box and Www...Wow ! KRISHNA : (Smiling) Like it ?
looking '
with
wide
eyes)
SENHORA MIRANDA: Like it! (Grabs hold of him and kisses him) It’s wonderful! And diamonds are more expensive than gold. They weigh less, but they’re worth more. Like some people, I guess.
KRISHNA : How do you weigh people ! SENHORA MIRANDA: I measure them first, from tip to toe, from circumference to height. Then I look at the stuff they are made
of...are they made of air...or are they made of beer? Then multiply the two, and pronto, I get their weight.
KRISHNA : (Smiling) Ingenious. SENHORA MIRANDA : Now take you ..(KRISHNA Jooks)...I put my arms
around you like this; that’s
volume; I squeeze
times you
than
you
tight;
that’s
you
remind
density...(She kisses him)...that’s your indication of weight. KRISHNA : (Smiling) Amazing. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Suddenly serious) You smile like a boy. Someme...of
seem...no
deeper
horror.
older
Then
too,
Rose.
there
Rose. Where are you from, Krishna ? KRISHNA : (Expressionless) Not far from here.
SENHORA MIRANDA : Who are you ? KRISHNA
: Anyone.
SENHORA MIRANDA : I’ve got a long memory.
Google
Sometimes is
an
I
innocence...like
43
GOA
KRISHNA : So have I. SENHORA MIRANDA : Would you ever be here? KRISHNA: Why? I like it here ? KRISHNA:
Why
not?
I’ve
always
able to
felt
take me
this...was
away from
mine.
Always
wanted to posses it. You, this house, Rose. Like I had a right to it. , SENHORA MIRANDA : Thank you for asking me. ' KRISHNA: Looking upstairs, then at MARIA) I’ve never hidden from you what I wanted, Maria. I never looked at Rose with a feeling of guilt... Now we’ve got something in common, You called it equalization. We'll get used to the rest. (Looking upstairs) Because you know there is something more I want. Patience, that’s what you said to Alphonso, didn’t you. Patience, so he would play up to you to feel secure and hopeful...Well, Maria, I’ve got patience too, but I don’t whine like a dog. And I don’t make half-way bargains either, so remember that, Maria.
SENHORA MIRANDA : (Stung) God, you’ve got density. You’re made of stone.
.
KRISHNA: You’re wrong there. I’ve got a heart that yearns. But I’ve been stopped too often. It develops callouses. Not dead callouses, but callouses that burn SENHORA MIRANDA : (Zough herself ) There’s a long way between here and upstairs.
KRISHNA : I know.
But don’t try my
take sides. You may have white It doesn’t prove a thing. .
patience too long.
skin, but
And don’t
so also have
albinos.
SENHORA MIRANDA: (Aroused) What do you mean! What do you mean ! KRISHNA: You’ve got shades of black within you, Maria. Rose wouldn’t come out dark unless there was dark blood somehere... What do you think Alphonso was talking about before he passed out at the tavern last night
2?
He was
trying to find out whether I
was your father or your former husband.
SBNHORA
MIRANDA
: (With
husband ? KRISHNA: It’s pretty obvious out dark unless
me.
incredulous
amusement)
what he meant.
either your husband
In terms of colour, therefore,
Google
.
Rose
or your father
I was either
Father
or
couldn’t come
was dark like
your husband or
ACT If SCENET
43
your father. Something incommon. You've got shades of black within you, Maria. See it right and won't be conscious of it any more.
SENHORA MIRANDA; (Looking at him meaningfully) How far...are you conscious of everything within you, Krishna ? KRISHNA : (Facing her, taking up the challenge) Tell me. SENHORA MIRANDA : You are not soft, Krishna : you’re hard.
KRISHNA : Soft...to Rose. SENHORA MIRANDA: hate.
You
don’t
have
love,
Krishna.
You
have
KRISHNA : Love...for Rose. SENHORA MIRANDA : You’re not peaceful, Krishna; you’re violent. KRISHNA : Peaceful...to Rose. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Pause) Is that...how Rose sees you, Krishna ? KRISHNA: Yes. SENHORA MIRANDA : Take care...that’s all I can say...just be careful, — Krishna. KRISHNA : (Trace of scorn) Of whom ? SENHORA MIRANDA : (After a pause)...Of yourself...of what you see... as yourself, of what you appear to me. Of what you are to Rose. (Then softly, gently) Why are you so full of opposites, Krishna ? Soft and hard. Love and hate. Young and old. Peaceful and violent. Yes, you have potential. You cover the full range of the known and unknown. But there is also that crack within you, Krishna. You don’t let your opposites come into full play. You're pushing one side too hard. So be careful, Krishna. Rose may see you as soft and loving and young and peaceful. But I know your potential is hard and hateful and old and violent. So
be careful, Krishna.
KRISHNA : Why do you worry, Maria, why do you worry? For the moment at least you are victor. That should please you.
You found...the vulnerable in me and worked it to your advantage. I am aware of that, so why worry...
SENHORA MIRANDA: Don’t cast your image too high and too wide. Everyone who falls within its range gets taken in. Perhaps that is your intention or perhaps you believe in it yourself. I wouldn’t know. It’s dangerous; that’s all I can say; it’s dangerous.
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44
Goa
KRISHNA: (Looking
MARIA full in the face,
Maria, listen to me... There is only one thing (Whispers)...Rose...And I'll have her at any SENHORA MIRANDA: (Whispering as though to moments when Alphonso was terrified of when I fear...this vision of you.
_ KRISHNA : (Herself
whispering)
\ Maria. ,SENHORA MIRANDA: No.:
No.
| KRISHNA : It comes from within. own soul.
What
you
From the
with fearful intensity)
I want out of life... cost. herself) There were me; there are moments
fear
is only
darkest recesses of your \
SENHORA MIRANDA : (Fearfully) No. KRISHNA : From all you want to hide about your real self;
XN
yourself,
you want to tear out of others.
from
all
SENHORA MIRANDA : (Terrified; shouting) No ! (Pause)
KRISHNA : (In sheer contrast to the situation,
KRISHNA smiles and says
softly) Maria, Just Maria. Not Maria then. SENHORA MIRANDA: (Poised uncertainly for a minute, then goes into his arms) You're a naughty boy, Krishna. To frighten me so. KRISNNA : I’m sorry. SENHORA MIRANDA: (Hugging close to him) I’m very...vulnerable myself, you know. I’ve got a woman’s vulnerability.
KRISHNA : ... Yes ? SENHORA MIRANDA: craving.
A
woman needs
to be loved.
It grows...differently with each person,
how it needs to be satisfied.
It’s a sort of...
depending
upon
KRISHNA: ... Yes. . SENHORA MIRANDA: It’s not likea man...turning hot and cold. A woman likes to keep something every time, like squirrels who gather nuts before going into hibernation. KRISHNA : (Looks at her quizzically and wondering what she is driving at)...Hmmm... I store, then hibernate. SENHORA MIRANDA : That’s me, you know. (Sound of Rose’s voice singing) Ah, that’s Rose singing. Wouldn’t It was an accident, oh you like to know how she became deaf? my dear, it was an accident. I’ve never got over it...(KRISHNA continues to look at her carefully) My mother...she was Portuguese She was a you know...like my father too...was very upset. She said Rose was deaf because she was superstitious woman.
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+ oe
ACT I SCENE I
dark.
Like
45
some
original
sin
had
been
committed...(Laughs
strangely)...imagine that! (KRISHNA doesn’t say a word but turns his head slightly to catch the sound of ROse’s voice) That’s why I always thought Rose’s defect was congenital, having been originally there, rather than by accident. You know what I mean. If
something
is
inevitabte,
it
becomes
congenital,
rather
than
accidental... : ‘ KRISHNA : No, I do not know what you mean. Either you were responsible for it or you were not. SENHORA MIRANDA: (Wide-eyed innocence) But my dear, that’s saying alot. It’s also saying nothing. Rose...is growing up to be an
independent child.
I’m not responsible for her.
KRISHNA: (Sighing) No...I mean yes, it’s as you say. SENHORA MIRANDA : I’m glad you agree. Though sometimes I wonder what will become of her...after I’m...gone.
No, I don’t think we'll
ever be separated. Cut out from the same flesh, we were...I saw her coming out from my womb when she was born...dark hair... it emerged like a black fountain from the impure spring...I kept wondering why they did not wash her clean, till they put her to my breast and the milk ran dry...(KRISHNA looks at her again deeply, not saying a word) The burd unfurled itself like a flower. That’s why
I called
her Rose,
the colour of blood that broke when she was
conceived. Now you understand why she’s—immaculate...Purity, ) like the rose flower, always comes from the dungfilled soil...(Sound/
of door-bell.
No one moves or seems to hear for a while.
KRISHNA
is still lying on the couch. Maria is in a world of her own. The door-bell rings again, and MARIA starts...getting up and going to the door) Twonder who that can be? (She opens the door and large ALPHONSO stands framed init. Voice like bells; not losing her composure) Why, it’s Alphonso! Hello Alphonso. Come in.
Come in,
Don’t just stand in the doorway
like some
Vasco
da
Gama statue. Come in. You know. I get a sense of repetition... and yet something is missing. Oh! 1 know now. You're sober. (Sternly) Alphonso, you are sober! ALPHONSO: (Pointing a shoulder) What’s he dojng here?
SENHORA MIRANDA : Now don’t be rude, Alphonso. Same as you.
cosy ?
And he wants to stay.
Google
Same
as
He’s
you.
my guest.
Isn’t
that
46
GOA
ALPHONSO : For whom ? . SENHORA MIRANDA: (Turning io KRISHNA) Heard that, Krishna? Who said he was dumb? He’s got the instinct of a horse. ALPHONSO : You're a cow.
SENHORA MIRANDA: Alphonso excels in repartee. Come, darling. Come and sit down. Let’s have something to drink. (Looking at KRISHNA) Or shall we have some tea, with one, two, three lumps of sugar. ALPHONSO : You’re crazy too. SENHORA MIRANDA : I am all that and more. Alphonso dear, I have mad moments of you...and Krishna. It’s flattering, you know, to be courted by both of you. Occupied...nor available. (ALPHONSO gaping looks at her) Oh ! Shut your mouth, Alphonso. You look so stupid. You should be stroug and silent like Krishna here. He may be small, but he’s worth his weight in...diamonds, Yes, that boy has a lot of...density. ALPHONSO: (Pointing a finger at KRISHNA) What’s he doing here ? KRISHNA (Coolly) I stay here.
ALPHONSO : KRISHNA:
ALPHONSO:
(Unbelievingly) What did he say
I said I stay here.
(Thunderingly
I’ve taken
red;
makes
?
your
place.
a move
to grab
hold of
KRISHNA) Why...you...little...swine...(SENHORA MIRANDA intervenes, laughing till the tears come into her eyes) SENHORA MIRANDA : (Hardly able to contian herself) Alphonso ! Don’t
spoil the fun.
Not
yet
anyway. We’ve got a long way to go. A
little drink at a time, my impatient one. ALPHONSO : (Mumbling) I’m not impatient. SENHORA MIRANDA : Oh, but you are. Oh but you were. You should have been yourself last night. I called you “the impatient virgin” ...(Beside herself in laughter)...those books at the bookstalls... ALPHONSO: (Shifting his foot in embarrassment) 1 was drunk. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Gurgling away with laughter) Drunk ! Drunk ! My dear, you were painting this town bloody red. A solo performance. (The laughter dying out gradually) Krishna should know. He was playing nursemaid to you.
ALPHONSO :
(Reminded; glowering at KRISHNA) Him ? Him
SENHORA MIRANDA :
7?
(Watchful, in her element; her eyes darting from
one to another; goading on the tournament) Yes, him.
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47
ACT II SCENE I ALPHONSO: he was.
suppose.
(Scornfully) Was he playing nursemaid ? Yes. I guess Pumping me with whisky while he was drinking milk, I
All nursemaids drink milk.
It gives them
virility.
SENHORA MIRANDA: need milk for that KRISHNA : (Quietly) drinking for both
Don’t they ? Goat’s milk.
(Egging him on) Oh, but, my dear, ! I didn’t need to drink anything. of us. :
ALPHONSO: Yes, you saw to that, din’t you?
he
doesn’t
You
were
But I’ve drunk
for
more than two people at a time before. I’ve never passed out before. KRISHNA : You were in a delirious condition. ALPHONSO: (Screwing his eyes and looking at him suspiciously) There’s something of a Micky Finn in you. SENHORA MIRANDA: Ah, you’ve got it, Alphonso. Right instincts. I always said you had right instincts. Yes, he certainly has that in him.
He can knock anyone out cold before they know it.
ALPNONSO : (Rolling his sleeves) I'd like to see him try.
SENHORA MIRANDA : (Holding him) No, no, Alphonso. Just as he doesn’t drink, he doesn’t fight either. He says he doesn’t believe in violence. If he finds you objectionable, he just won’t co-operate with you, that’s all. He’ll resist you passively...
ALPHONSO : (Mumbling tion.
again) 1 don’t
need
his bloody
SENHORA MIRANDA : Oh, but he’s so sweet, Alphonso. harm a fly. Look, how young and innocent he is. Principle
co-opera-
He wouldn’t He stands for
~T
.
ALPHONSO : For what ?
SENHORA MIRANDA : Principle ! Principle ! The rights and wrongs of life. What he wants is rights. What he can get is his. So, he wants this house, and everything and everyone in it. And he says he’s been patient, but he does not intend to be patient any longer. He says he’s waited for fourteen long years. Now, what do you think of that, Alphonso ? : ALPHONSO: Over my dead body, honey, over my dead body. (SENHORA MIRANDA takes ALPHONSO in her arms and kisses him.)
SENHORA MIRANDA : You’re my hero, you
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big ruddy
brainless
bull,
48
GOA
you are my hero.
(She.kisses him again.
KRISHNA
gets
up from
the couch, slowly, deliberately) KRISHNA : (Clearly) Well, I’m glad you had your say. Exactly what you wanted to say, leaving the real truth of the situation unsaid. (Moving slowly, treading carefully) And you're just the kind of sucker, Alphonso, to swallow it all, hook, line and sinker. She’s using you, fool, just like she’s using me...(MARIA’S eyes sparkle, snake-like) Whose idea
do you think it was, that last drink for the
road in the Tavern, across the patio, with your feet already heavy as lead, needing only that last drink to put you down 7? (ALPHONSO looks incredulously, first at KRISHNA then MARIA) Yes, it was I who took you there, more intoxicated than you yourself, more under the influence of the
compulsion than you were
on your knees like a dirty whining and
looks
at MARIA,
when
you
dog...(ALPHONSO
staggered ..)
Who
stood
begged
turns
around
triumphant at the
balcony while I took that lonely walk, spilling my guts on the road, too ashamed to stop and pick them up...for fear that I
might
lose myself further...(He
. caring about others)
is talking
to himself now,
Closing, shutting out, killing that one instinct
of pure love which had to be whored in order to get to staining itself on the long
‘both of you...
SENHORA KRISHNA Maria, should
lived
not
long way,
leaving
me
no
pure
love,
better
than
MIRANDA : (Screaming) You bastard ! You bloody bastard ! : (His teeth clenched) 1 won’t go into your antecedents, but just in case your Big Bull still appears a hero, I think I also tell you a thing or two ..(MARIA is stock-still) So, he
in this
house before me, did he ?
Well. what did he do for
you? Did he make love to you for yourself or was he imagining someone else when you wrapped your legs around him...(ALPHONSO
winces;
MARIA flushes)
charming and amusing.
And
Have
when
you
he drank, you thought he was
ever
seen
him
drink
at
the
Tavern ? How do you think he makes his friends there ?. Compar-
ing,
Maria,
comparing.
Like
game-trophies
hung
on
a
wall.
(ALPHONSO quivers with rage; MARIA withdraws) And now he comes here and you fall into his arms. Even you must know what that means...(Rapidly) Look into his shifty eyes, Maria...(Slowly)... even you must know what that means...
ALPHONSO : (Intimidatingly,
you’ve said enough.
hoarsely) You’ve
said
enough,
And that’s the last thing you'll ever say.
Google
boy,
ACT II SCENE I
49
KRISHNA: Not here. We meet at the Tavern tonight, Alphonso. At the Tavern. Tonight. : ALPHONSO: (Approaching menacingly) 1 choose my own timings, boy. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Stopping him again) No, Alphonso. Wait. ALPHONSO : (Flushed) You didn’t believe everything he said, did you, Maria? He’s a bloody liar. (Pleading) Maria, Maria, he’s a stranger. I’m not. I’ve been with you many years. (MARIA hesi-
tates.)
‘
SENHORA MIRANDA : I...I don’t know. ALPHONSO: (Talking like he’s never talked before) Lisbon, Maria. Ill take you to Lisbon. Remember the musical sound. I will take you away, Maria, away... SENHORA MIRANDA : (Almost in tears) Oh, Alphonso. ALPHONSO : 1 may not have done much for you, Maria,
but I’m used
to you. YouknowI am. And you know me well enough to see through me...to know that I never designed, never meant ill.
SENHORA love, I ALPHONSO him to
MIRANDA : (The tears coming now) Yes, yes,, Alphonso, my know, I know. : Ask him yourself. He has Principle, you said. Ask speak the truth. (MIRANDA looks at KRISHNA. KRISHNA stands
tight-lipped) Well
boy,
speak
out.
when you want to say something.
KRISHNA: (Quietly) I warn
you,
Maria.
(MARIA moves closer to ALPHONSO.)
You
Be
have
wise
plenty in
of words
your
choice.
SENHORA MIRANDA :I’m afraid. KRISHNA : Afraid of your choice ? SENHORA MIRANDA: (Abruptly) No, of you. Alphonso, tell him to go. (Before ALPHONSO can say anything, KRISHNA moves swiftly and dashes upstairs to ROSE’S room. Screaming) Stop him! (But KRISHNA is already there. He'opens the door. Stops.) KRISHNA : (Impellingly) Wait! Rose must decide, Rose. Rose. Come here, Rose. Come with me. Downstairs. To meet your
mother, and an old friend. (ALPHONSO, who was half way up, stops in his tracks. ROSE stands on top of the bannisters. Then she comes down slowly, looking around. All now face each other in the room downstairs.) SENHORA MIRANDA : (Going over and clasping ROSE) Rose. Oh, Rose.
My child.
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50
GOA
KRISHNA : Leave her, Maria.
Let here decide for herself.
She’s not
achild any more. Let her decide. (Approaching rose) Let her remember...when she first saw me...outside her balcony...whenI spoke to her for endless hours of my love unblemished...stole from her loneliness and sadness...gave her a rose in hand which said “touch me not, stranger...andI shall love you all the more’’.., (ROSE goes towards him.)
SENHORA MIRANDA: (Stopping her) Wait, Rose, wait. Don’t listen to him. KRISHNA: (Continuing with hypnotic voice)...and we did love each other all the more, in our simple pantomime, myself speaking unspoken words, herself, remembering her most precious words,
which
flowed,
likea clear shaft
of moonlight,
night...(ROSE is within touching distance of him.) SENHORA MIRANDA: (Desperate pleading) No,
Rose,
through the still no.
Don’t
-him touch you, Rose. Don’t let him take you away, my (But she advances andis almost in his arms) Wait, Rose.
let
child. Wait.
There’s something you ought to know. He lies. He said something that was a lie. Can you understand me, Rose? Can you follow what I’m saying ? He said a lie. He said...his love was unblemished. But it’s not ! It’s blemished! He’s whored his love! He said so himself ! He's stained it. He’s whored it...(Her voice breaks into a cry)...to me! (ROSE raises her hand to her mouth to stifle the agonizing scream. KRISHNA’S face contorts with fury...He Slings himself towards rose, crushing her in his arms, trying to kiss her frantically...)
KRISHNA : (Struggling with her) You're mine, Rose ! You’re mine ! ROSE: (Screaming) Don’t touch me! DON’T TOUCH ME, STRANGER ! ELSE I SHALL HATE YOU ! (KRISHNA Wont’t let go of her. ALPHONSO catches hold of KRISHNA and flings him against the wall. ROSE runs to her mother first, but before the mother can touch her, she changes her mind and runs to the other side of the room, holding on to the wall. KRISHNA gets up slowly. Blood flowing over his face, KRISHNA gets up painfully, but does not attempt to strike.)
ALPHONSO : (Spitting on him) Fight, man,
fight.
ALPHONO knocks him down again
time it takes
KRISHNA
fused, frightened.
longer to get
up.
fight ! (But
KRISHNA
with a vicious blow.
This
ROSE looks, alarmed, con-
She runs up to ALPHONSO catching his hand.)
Google
won't
ACT II SCENE 1 ROSE : No!
No!
51 No more!
Don’t
beat
him,
please.
Let...him...
go. (KRISHNA stands, blood flowing from his face. There is hate ~ in his eyes. His face is now old and hard and violent. He goes to -~ the door, then turns around, looking at all three...)
KRISHNA: (A slow closes.)
but
clear whisper)
CURTAIN
Go
gle
We...meet...tonight.
FALLS
‘
(Door
ACT II
SCENE II
TIME : It is night—J8th December 1961 SCENE : The invasion of Goa.
AT RISE: There is rain and thunder and dark ominous clouds. blows
hard,
Wind
screaming, swirling the rain across the deserted patio.
No sign of life, except a faint light
two men outlined against the
window
is the clap of thunder and lightning cing, human scream.
A scream
in the Tavern,
Silhouette
curtain of the Tavern.
of
There
accompanied by a sharp, pier-
of surprise
(N. B.:
Ifthe producer wishes to dramatize
waiting,
and
and pain
and
this further,
death.
he
can
show the earlier entry into the Tavern of one or both of the men in the dark howling night. One of the men is KRISHNA who was
the other
was
ALPHONSO
who
left the
house
of
MARIA and walked across the patio to keep his appointment with KRISHNA at the Tavern, which was the challenge that KRISHNA had flung across to him earlier.) An awful stillness of nature and man for a few seconds after the scream when all the elements die
out awaiting recognition of the awful dead.
The
bat-doors
of the
and deeply buried.
one
of surprise, the
bar are flung open and the figure of a large man staggers out, clutching on to his heart, trying to pull out the stiletto that was violently
(Since
the scream
was
dagger could equally well have been plunged in his back.) ALPHONSO collapses. Again complete silence of few moments, and again thunder and rain. Slowly another figure emerges from the door of. the Tavern. A flash of lightning reveals his identity; it is KRISHNA, his violent and hateful face distorted almost beyond recognition. He goes over to ALPHONSO, removes the dagger, and plunges it once again
into the corpse in fanatical vengeance. He gets up breathing heavily now, with bloody knife in hand. For a long time he stands, swaying slightly, the dark clothes becoming wet in the rain and the howling wind. Then he walks, again the long patio walk with nobody on
the balcony, stalking his invisible shadow, till he reaches the house of
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ACT ii SCENB it
53
SBNHORA MIRANDA. He pushes the door open and enters. SENHORA MIRANDA is alone in the room. She looks up, a momentary expression of fear flashing across her face, which she overcomes through forced naturalness... SENHORA MIRANDA : Krishna...Krishna. (KRISHNA comes in the light. Forced laughter) Why, you give me a fright, Krishna. Barging
in like that.
me remove
No?
You're soaked...soaked wet in the rain.
Here, let
your clothes...(KRISHNA raises his hand and steps back)
But you'll catch a chill,
Krishna.
What
a dreadful
night
cross) W...what
are...
itis. I...I wasn’t expecting you. (KRISHNA recedes further into the darkness, not uttering a sound) Don’t just stand there, Krishna. Come in. You're wet...and you’re shivering. I... wasn’t expecting you. Yes, I said that earlier, didn’t I? It’s this thunder and lighting; it upsets me. (KRISHNA stands alone and silent) W...why are you so quiet, Krishna? I...1 hope you're not...upset, about earlier this evening, that is. I... couldn’t help it. Neither could Rose. You...you brought it on yourself. Alphonso is a man with a terrible temper. And he’s possessive...like you. KRISHNA: (Throwing the bloody knife on the table) Not any more. (SENHORA MIRANDA : looks at the object incredulously. She stares at it, her eyes becoming large and frightened.) SENHORA
MIRANDA:
(Her
hand
what are you saying, Krishna? ...do you mean ?
holding
the
Wh...why the...the knife 7
KRISHNA : (Quietly) I’ve killed him. I’ve killed Alphonso. have her...before he. She...is...mine. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Her voice tremulous, breaking
out
What
I had
to
into hysterial
screams) No. NO! (KRISHNA comes over and holds her hand impellingly.) KRISHNA : Yes! Yes! This, and more ! SENHORA MIQANDA: (Incredulous) Y...you’re joking, Krishna. Y... you’re doing this to frighten me. You wicked boy. (Pleading) Aren’t you a wicked boy. It’s not true. (Screaming) 11’s NOT
TRUE !
KRISHNA : (With fury) Why not? Why not ? You saw the potential in me, didn’t you? What did you say then? Yes, old and hard and hateful
and violent.
Yes,
you have
strong instincts, Maria.
.
But mine are stronger ! (His bloody hand staining hers...She sees it for the first time.)
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54 SENHORA
GOA MIRANDA
: (Stunned)
You...killed...him.
My
Alphonso.
You killed him. You, who wouldn’t hurt a fly. Did not fight back. Who to Rose was young and peaceful and innocent.
KRISHNA: (Hissing) You robbed me of that, Maria, or don’t you remember ? Blemished me, with compulsion greater that my
own. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Trying to snap out of it) You killed him.
Alphonso. My...love. KRISHNA : (Hating) No better than you coming to me. She was almost in my
killed arms.
about my having whored her love...with you.
My...
mine. She kept Till you spoke...
SENHORA MIRANDA : (Pleading) Then me! It should have been me ! Not Alphonso! Not him. KRISHNA: (Softly) It is going to be you too. No, I won’t kill you, Maria. I need you now. SENHORA MIRANDA; (Distractedly) Need me? (Breaking out into a scream) YOU MURDERER! YOU KILLED MY ALPHONSO! (The realization dawning more) YOU KILLED MY ALPHONSO! (KRISHNA slaps her viciously to break her out of the hysterics.) KRISHNA (Low and soft) 1 killed him. Realize that. I killed
him.
Accept
it...I
killed
him.
Then
you
won’t
have
to
scream it out any more...for nobody here except us can hear you...(Thunder and more flashes of lightning. MARIA now crouches, shaking less, realizing more) 1 need you now, Maria. Not the way Alphonso needed you. My own way; worse than killing. It is but half-done yet. The rest...in collusion. (MARIA looks up, her deepest anxiety showing behind her fear) Blemished ! The blemish
was not only mine.
It also had
to be yours.
You
can’t
leave
when it suits you, Maria. No half-way bargains, I told you right from the start. (MARIA looks unblinkingly) You were quite right to fear me; just as right as when you saw the innocence and peace
within me. But now...now Maria ..remember your deepest - horror? (MARIA recoils. KRISHNA crouches over her, dominant) How did Rose come out? Like the black fountain from the impure spring! Why was she named Rose? Becauce she was conceived in your blood! What was the night of fertile horror ?
. It was a night such as this. SENHORA MIRANDA : (Screaming, closinp her eyes) NO! NO! KRISHNA. (Persistent, penetrating) Why was she black? Because of your
Google
ACT Il SCENE Ii husband?
Or
55 because
of
your
father?
Or because
there
neither husband nor father, but just another man like me...
was
SENHORA MIRANDA : (Whimpering) No...No... KRISHNA : (Merciless, without change of breath)...whom you came to hate. With deepest horror, Who made you impure. Who wasa
stranger like me.
blood. mouth
Who conceived Rose in your womb gushing with
WHO RAPED YOU? (MARIA looks up gasping, eyes wide, wordless, clutching on to her cross, besides herself in
distraction.) KRISHNA:
Who
‘
took
your
horror...innocence reminded
innocence,
in
that
night
only...by Rose.
fertile
Bringing
with
back
that
memory; constantly reminding. Rose. Rose. Who was born of your original sin. Rose. Rose. Dark Rose. Who was colour of blood that broke out when she was conceived. Rose. Rose.
Dark
Rose.
WHO
RAPED
you?
me,
Maria,
now.
Rose
stranger, colour of Rose, who raped Who reminded you of Rose. Rose!
Understand
Rose.
A
man,
dark,
you. Who was IT? Rose! Who reminded you of Rose.
Understand
closes her eyes in delirium, in part-consciousness, conditioned to his compulsion) Why was it Rose?
closely.
(MARIA
yet with mind Why was she
innocent ? When you were fair and blemished yourself ? If Rose was he, and he was Rose, what would be the best vengeance? A nail for a nail, and a tooth for a tooth, Maria. That which cannot remain
innocent
herself) So, you,
any
longer if blemished.
Maria, not I, started
(MARIA
the game.
is praying to
Dangled Rose \
before us, not through competition for you, but for her. Made us whore with you, not for yourself, but for her. Used us, not to rape
one who had already been raped, but to rape one who had not been
raped!
(She stops praying) Who constantly reminded you of your
former self. Whom you wanted also on your point of equalization.
Who was taught not to be touched so that experience of the rape would be a real one. (He pauses) Rose. Rose. Maria, it is Rose. Single your intentions. Use me astep further. Pour your hate not on me but on Rose. Relieve yourself of this guilt through
Rose, For she was the cause of it all. Then remember; did she scream like you? Feel your pain and horror. For then only she becomes you. (He stops dead and looks at her penetratingly. There
is a gurgle in her throat. It shapes into laughter; laughter driven to insanity. He lets her laugh insanely; to let the insanity capture her
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56
GOA
completely. Then, without a word, he takes her gently by the hand, and they climb up the stairs together to ROSE’S room. They reach up to the door. They stop. KRISHNA turns around to MARIA. There is an indescribable expression on his face ashe enters the room. A Sew moments of silence. Then...ROSE screams. She screams and Screams. MARIA’S eyes seem to turn within themselves. She collapses to her knees. There isa flash of lightning outside. It
strikes the cross
atop the church, which falls.
with pain and horror and a deeper death.)
KRISHNA’S VOICE: Now!
Now!
Come, Maria!
While Rose screams, Hold her!
Hold
her...by the black hair! See for yourself ! Feel...for her { (MARIA rises fainting, beyond herself, yet rising to his command) Come Maria! Now! Now! HOLD HER! MARIA goes in. The scream ’ itself reaches a pitch of insanity, then goes dead in the faintest sobs.)
CURTAIN
Google
FALLS
ACT
II
SCENE
III
TIME : A few weeks or months later SCENE : Revival of the patio scene. AT RISE: A mere spotlight on the GOAN NATIONALIST as he Soliloguizes, articulating to us but implying a mental process.
GOAN NATIONALIST : (The spotlight on him, surrounded by darkness, as
he sits outside the Tavern, by himself, with a glass of beer in his hand)
That was the day of the invasion of Goa: The Indian troops marched in and liberated
years
of Portuguese rule.
18th December 1961. Goa. It ended 400
At last the Portuguese enclaves of Goa,
Daman and Diu were no longer “pimples” on the face of India... herself a young Republic fourteen years old. But in the process the innocent and peaceful and moral image of India was blemished
with her first act of violence.,.tarnished was the rose worn in the lapel. (He lifts the beer glass and drinks) Some say there was great rejoicing when the Indian troops marched into Goa. I was party to it, of course, being a nationalist myself, working in collusion with the liberator to free my people from the yoke...a yoke which
many did not seem
to mind.
After
the invasion
there was
the
occasional case of rape, but on the whole the troops were very well behaved...(Sighs and drinks the glass down) The troops have
withdrawn now and we have of
choice.
There
differences, the
is
the
civil administration and the freedom
usual
party
politics,
occasional sabotage, but on the whole
the
regional
there
is, I
suppose, a sort of “progress” for the future. Meanwhile I should like to have my beer with some peace and quiet before they bring
in prohibition...(Orders
another glass of beer) I won't
hide it
from you, I miss my old friend. I said “hello” to him countless times and enjoyed the glass of beer together and enjoyed our little quarrels. It was good fun and games and we never really intended to be serious till...(He looks around surreptitiously)...they wanted the invasion. And we found we wanted it too. (Pause)
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58
GOA
GOAN NATIONALIST: I guess it was inevitable, though I wish there had been some other way out. (Slowly and seriously drinks his second glass) What will become now, I don’t know. Tourists will come and industries will develop and this pleasant sleepy town with the Portuguese atmosphere will metropolis, giving opportunities to all.
develop into an Indian But I sometimes wonder
/ (Softly)...1 sometimes wonder...what will become of that stranger, \ that invader, that “liberator”, who will now have to find his own
\ peace, within himself...(Lights open on the patio scene. The GOAN NATIONALIST is sitting where he was, breaking the foam of beer pensively with his finger. It is obvious that we have followed his
thoughts. The BENCH-SITTERS are all present, except that the PORTUGUESE are no longer there, and have been substiuted by their counterparts. . Where the PORTUGUESE ADMINISTRATOR was sitting there is perhaps the VILLAGE PANCHAYAT...another GOAN NATIONAL
~in the company of an INDIAN wearing a Congress-cap. They come over and sit down on the same table as the first GOAN NATIONALIST
who lifts his glass of beer and moves over to another table. In place of the PORTUGUESE VICAR, there is perhaps a GOAN VICAR or @ CATHOLIC VICAR from some part of India. He seems to find nothing in common with the GOAN HINDU, because although both of them are sitting
common
with
on the same bench,
each
WOMAN and the OLD
~—
other,
even
they seem
a dispute
on
to
have
religion,
MAN are also sitting mutely, with
nothing
The
in
OLD
long forlorn
looks. The OLD WOMAN turns around and looks up at the church top, where the lightning had struck the cross on the night of the
invasion.
The OLD
MAN looks up
too.
Perhaps the
cross has not
yet been replaced, or perhaps it is still under repair and is receiving ja fresh coat of white paint. Only the SMUGGLER is not there. Incidentally, the statue of VASCO DA GAMA is now being replaced by that of a man in loine-loth. There is none of the animation and gaiety of the first scene; only estrangement, and after a while all the occupants leave, and darkness settles once again, sombre and heavy. Some time passes by. One by one everyone leaves the Tavern. Time comes to close up. Once again the rain begins to fall, the clouds become ominous overhead, there are indications of thunder
and lightning, forecasting yet another night like that of the invasion.
Now the rain falls,
the thunders
The bat-doors of the bar
come loud, and lightning flashes.
open, and A
Google
DRUNK with dark
clothes and
ACT Ii SCENE Ii
59
collar turned up, with
bottle to mouth
_ bottle.
While
momentarily one
bottle in hand, reels
outside the door, putting |
and raising his head to take the last gulp from the
his face
is up
there
is a flash
recognizes the remnants
of lightning
and
of KRISHANA’S face. It is
sapped and withdrawn and degenerated, burned within its own fires of hell, and violence, drawn into itself, unable to cope with its seemingly opposite. When the lightning shows his face, he hides it, covers it withdrawing within the collar and dirty and torn clothes. He looks across to the balcony which is empty and desolate. He .
hesitates.
He withdraws into the shadow upon hearing the sound of a
mouth-organ. It is a macabre melody, played by the SMUGGLER, who dances insanely, in peculiar soliloquy, on the patio, whose once smart clothes are themselves in shambles. Unknowingly he comes close to the shadow, and gives out a help on finding KrisHNA hiding there...) SMUGGLER : (Holding on to his heart like as though he had received a shock or heart attack) Phew! Christ! you scared me. Hiding
like a scarecrow in the dark. I’m easily frightened, you know. Bad enough having this weather like that night without having you playing hide-and-seek. (Going closer to KRISHNA who slinks in the shadows) Anything left in that bottle, friend ? I’m a scavenger, you know, likea cat that goes to herself a bony fish. I’m a parasite
live off anything or anyone,
misery
a dustbin and pulls out for too, ambidexterous, who can
included...(Looking closely at
his prospective customer) Are you in need of anything, friend, because I’m here to supply at...at a fee. No more smuggling left
for me.
So, I’m the tourist guide of the seamy
side, the industrial
licensor with the greasy palm, the political promoter with promotional prospects. You see, I’ve got the talent...for survival «..(Coming closer to KRISHNA) Ill be frank, I look upon you as a prospective customer. As I said 1 trade in all. Name your...
specifications.
I know
every sewer
in town,
from the mucky
to
the sophisticated. What do you want ? (KRISHNA points across to the balcony. The SMUGGLER smiles) Oh, there. (Slowly) There. You are sure it’s there you want to go ? I’ve got many more places to show you. Gayer, better places. You don’t’ want to go there, friend. KRISHNA : Why not ? SMUGGLER : ‘Cause they’re normal any more, that’s why.
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60
GOA
KRISHNA : Who ? SMUGGLER : Sure, the young one and the old one. Something seems to have happened that night. No-one knows what. Her friend, the Portuguese, was killed in the invasion. She, the older one, went crazy.
The other...the younger one...
KRISHNA : (Holding his arms) Yes 2 SMUGGLER : (Curiously) Why do you want to know? (KRISHNA lets out a cry and clutches him by the throat) L...let go. Let go (The grip relaxes) Y...you crazy too ? KRISHNA : What happened to the girl 7 SMUGGLER : (Feeling his neck tenderly) 1 dunno. I dunno. Why don’t you see for yourself? KRISHNA : I’m a stranger.
I can take you there.
SMUGGLER : That’s alright. The stranger, the better. KRISHNA : I...don’t want to be seen. SMUGGLER : But you want fo see, huh? And you want something more...something more every time. KRISHNA : How would you know ? SMUGGLER : I know.
I know.
It happens every time.
KRISHNA : (Looking across) The lights are low. SMUGGLER: You won’t be seen. You won’t be recognized. I assure you of that. And you'll be able to do whatever you like...Whatever you like...that’s part of my business...and service. KRISHNA : (Still looking) The balcony is bare.
SMUGGLER : What
matter?
What
ghosts, they say, that whisper
matter ?
Sometimes
there
through the night, clear as a
are
silvery
shaft of moonlight, in that balcony bare... KRISHNA : (His voice falling to a whisper) The house is quiet. SMUGGLER : There is no longer the need for any words. They do not talk to each other. They only see each other...as patches of darkness. Yet, they are aware of each other’s presence. KRISHNA : I want her. I want her. SMUGGLER : Come with me. (He starts to move, but KRISHNA holds him back.) KRISHNA : No,
no.
It
They’re watching...me.
is a
long
They
walk
want me
But I can’t...I can’t any more. SMUGGLER: (Looking at him closely,
across.
to take
They’re
the
suspiciously) Who’s
(Pointing to the empty clunches) There’s nobody there.
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walk
sitting.
alone.
watching ?
ACT Ii SCENE itt
61
KRISHNA : I want her still, I want her more. SMUGGLER: Then come. Follow me, Lurk in my shadows.
You
won’t be seen. Do what you want, under the cloak of my shadow. You won’t be seen. Under my cloak. Like my shadow. Easy to become like me. Ambidexterous. An instinct for survival. No past or future. Not having found, lose yourself within me.
Walk
without
a shadow.
Perform
the essential
service
of
_
a
scavenger that nobody else will. See without being seen. Do without being caught. Hang upside down like a hat in the night..
Shadowy vampires.
‘
KRISHNA : (Looking closer, suspiciously) W...who are you ? SMUGGLER : (Whispering
brother, myself.
in KRISHNA’S
We
are substance
ear)
and
I’m
your...your
shadow.
I can
friend,
merge
myself within KRISHNA looks
you...(Darts behind KRISHNA in the darkness. around in panic as though the devil-of-the-smuggler
him)
for
had got into him. Looking
captivated you.
The SMUGGLER me...within
laughs...comes out from
yourself ?...like
some
devil
behind
.
had
Perhaps then, there is yet another dimension, yet
another potential, that does not rest...on opposites. It has some-,” thing to do...only with you. (KRISHNA looks around for him in the darkness) Look at you now. Look at you. Your face...your hands (Jutting his macabre face in the light) Like mine! (Jutting out his claw-like hands in the light) Like mine ! Look around for your shadow in the light...it’s missing! Therefore...you become
devoid of substance, were once so proud.
of the mountainous
substance of which
you
KRISHNA : (Whispering with fear) Who’re you? Who’re you? (Screaming) GET AWAY! GET AWAY! (No sound. The shadow of the SMUGGLER disappears. KRISHNA catches hold of his own throat) What’s happened 7 Where are you? Why does my voice sound «like yours ? Or is it mine really? Where have you gone...this part of me called substance? Why have even the shadows... disappeared? (Pointing out to the bare balcony) Where are the sounds of ghosts, whispering
lovers that died long ago?
through
the
night,
the
sounds
Is there then...any resurrection?
of
Did
Inot dig the grave...to take her in my arms...AND RAPE HER! (Sounds of echoes of his shout, rolling across the empty patio and
balcony) But scavengers do dig, don’t they, for pieces of tarnished bone. They pick up pimps and whores, for collusion, deception,
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.
62
- GOA
and obliteration
itself.
Sometimes they
pick up the remnants
of
their own selves...in limitless horror. (A tremulous whisper) Yes, 1 want her the more, dead though she dies within herself, living though she lies within me...(Calling out to the SMUGGLER) TAKE ME THERE ! TAKE ME THERE ! (The SMUGGLER appears as though out of nowhere, playing his macabre tune on the mouth-organ, like the Pied Piper, while KRISHNA follows, merging within each other’s substance
and
shadow,
sometimes
becoming
one
and
sometimes
emerging as two, till they reach the house.
Ring.)
lights.
the bed, but he doesn’t
SMUGGLER : (Calling) SENHORA MIRANDA !_ SENHORA MIRANDA! (The door opens, SENHORA MIRANDA Standing there, haggard and considerably aged, with an air of complete distraction about her) Ah, Senhora, I’ve got a customer for your house. (KRISHNA cowers in the corner with coat covering him) He’s shy. He doesn’t like
He doesn’t mind
mirrors around
lights. He doesn’t mind mirrors around the bed, but he doesn’t like lights. Perhaps he can see in the dark. Anyway, please dim the lights, Senhora. He must have a reputation to protect. He doesn’t want to be recognized. Yet he looks very
much like me.
He can stand against the wall...and disappear.
So,
don’t press him too much. He’s shy, like a boy, doing it the first time...(Bursts into high-pitched laughter)...Senhora. Senhora. Strange. (Awfully serious now) I’m beginning to look like you now. Atleast I’m speaking like you. (Pause, then in sensible voice) Do you mind lowering the lights, Senhora, they hurt my client’s eyes. (SENHORA MIRANDA lowers the lights to bare dimness) SENHORA MIRANDA : He’s shy, like a boy, doing it for the first time.
Yes, that’s what I would have said.
SMUGGLER : ButI said it for you.
SENHORA MIRANDA : (Bursting out into insane you did. SMUGGLER : I’m like your shadow, SENHORA MIRANDA: Relax. There with laughter) How can there suddenly—the SMUGGLER goes
Senhora, he doesn’t want you.
Senhora. are no shadows, here. (Gurgling be shadows in darkness? (Then over and whispers to KRISHNA)
He wants your daughter.
SENHORA MIRANDA : But I always come first.
I’ve got
tender?
to be
protective.
hysterical laughter) So
Is he clean?
Like
lumps
Doeshe
of
hurt?
sugar.
Is he
He has to pass by me first, picking up my innocence
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ACT II SCENE Il
63
and my dirt. (Absently) For dark you are, friend, and darker are your thoughts, in spite of the light which you claim to shed on her...(More distracted) For sometimes...you remind me of...a deeper horror. (Thunder and lightning outside) What’s that! Who did that outside? Who started the thunder and rain ? Does the lightning still streak across the sky...and strike the cross?
The
heavy
spectres
cross.
in the
sky.
Made
of gold and
diamonds?
I carry it to heaven
every night
Like white whenI
go
upstairs. To put my baby to sleep. To hold her tight. (The SMUGGLER turns to KRISHNA and taps his head lightly pointing his face to SENHORA MIRANDA.)
KRISHNA: W...what’s her name...Senhora? (SENHORA MIRANDA turns around like a flash, then the distraction over-comes her, and she looks past him.) SENHORA MIRANDA : (Part-recognition) What’s her name, did you say? Whatis her name? But that didn’t sound odd. It’s the way you called my name “Senhora” that sounded odd. Not Senhora then. Just Senhora. Senhora by itself. Her name is
Rose, Sir.
She’s
made of sugar and
spice and everything that’s
nice and it will cost you only twenty rupees for a single time. Above all, she’s a virgin, Sir. I should know. I was there. I was there when her innocence was born. You see, I taught her :
to be innocent, to fear the
horror
of love.
touch, to be
Isn’t that
afraid of peace,
to have
what a mother should do to equalize -
her love? KRISHNA : Y...you have made of her...a whore. SENHORA MIRANDA : Clean to the touch, Sir, clean to the touch. It is ...an honest living. She protects me in many ways, Sir. She tries them out first, to match my innocence and beauty. She has a feel...a peculiar feel...that tells her the truth. Most of all, she waits...and waits, and waits, lying there like some warm and
tender animal. She is Rose.
SMUGGLER: Ah,
She’s
nota
whore, Sir.
Iam
And Rose is Goa; and Goa is Rose. yes, quite, quite,
Senhora.
Now
that but not to
get
down
her. to
business...my customer is getting impatient. SENHORA MIRANDA : Is he ? Is he an impatient virgin too? Did he have to wait fourteen long years? Poor boy. Poor boy. He grew up to manhood so suddenly. Unrecognizably. Unbelievably. One moment he was offering a rose with the beauty and simplicity
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64
GOA
of young lovers; the next he was monstrous and horrible, fertilizing madness, while the blood oozed...(Her voice going up shrilly) ..in the rape, tore through me twice...twice in one life time. SMUGGLER :
(Holding her tenderly) Senhora...Senhora...Senhora...be
peaceful, Senhora.
SENHORA MIRANDA: (Breathing deeply) Peace and tranquility. Peace and tranquility, my son. What happens to one who has forsaken it? Are his tortures the same as mine and that of my daughter ? Does he listen: in silence...the awful stillness and loneliness of ‘the deaf. Does he blind his eyes against the terrors that all sight shows...was he ever a man of principles, son?
victorious, as I did once the long patio walk ?
standing on
Or does he
the balcony
return
while he took
KRISHNA : (Emerging. His emotions and expressions unknown) Senhora, he wants to return home, but does not know how. So, he chose the way to go further...not one step more, but the last step of all, this time alone, not in collusion, answerable to none...save himself. SMUGGLER
: (Saying
almost
together)
Senhora,
he
went
to church
and didn’t find peace. Senhora, he went into the temple and didn’t find peace. Senhora, he tried to make friends but no-one would
say “hello” to him.
KRISHNA:
MIRANDA
The
Girl!
takes
.
Now!
her
.
Rose!
umbrella
Now
and
! (Withouta word
knocks
upstairs.
SENHORA
They
all
wait in silence, expectantly, while KRISHNA withdraws further in the dark. The curtain in the room upstairs moves open, and ROSE
walks out slowly, wearing a bare
negligée, her slim brown legs flow-
ing bare, but her face unseen because of the darkness that falls across it. Even an she decends down the stairs, slowly, carefully,
feeling her way, the shadow persists across her face which cannot yet be seen. She stands at the bottom of the stairs, her face still in the shadows.
There is a sharp breath from KRISHNA.)
SENHORA MIRANDA : (Going up to ROSE whose hand is on the
and putting
her fingers
Do you approve?
I’ve
banister,
lightly over RosE’s hand) There she is, Sir. taught
her
everything
I know.
It was
almost like teaching myself over again. It took a bit of help, of course. A bit of remembering too. But she’s a fine girl. She’s like me, though we may see opposite. She does everything the
customer wants—everything,
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ACT II SCENE lil
65
KRISHNA : (In anger) Why don’t you let her speak for herself ? (SENHORA MIRANDA touches the daughter's hands as though it were
a code between themselves.)
ROSE : (Her voice more strange than give...everything.
ever) I...allow...everything.
I...
KRISHNA : (Tearing SENHORA MIRANDA’S hand away from ROSE) Leave her alone ! Why don’t you leave her alone? Why are you telling her all the time what to say ? SENHORA MIRANDA : (Standing in front of ROSE) Come here, Rose. Come here. (Turning to KRISHNA) You see, Sir, she cannot hear.
(Standing in front of the light and facing Rose) Read my lips, Rose.
Come here. I said come here. (ROSE does not move, SENHORA MIRANDA furns around and looks at KRISHNA.) KRISHNA: (Apprehension in his voice) Well...why don’t she come ? (SENHORA MIRANDA Stretches out her hand, brings Rose forward so the light now catches her face. There is a gasp from KRISHNA as he sees her face...unchanged except for a blind across her eyes) What’s that ! What’s she got across her eyes ? SENHORA MIRANDA: A blind. KRISHNA:
W...why ?
C...can’t she see ?
SENHORA MIRANDA : She can, Sir. KRISHNA : Then...then why the blind ? SENHORA MIRANDA: She wants...only darkness. She wants to bear... only silence. But it won’t detract from your pleasure, Sir. She
can still feel.
She can still feel from what’s
left of her.
darts across to ROSE with his hands going up to her blind.)
(KRISHNA
KRISHNA: (Shouting) TAKE IT OFF! TAKE IT OFF! (His hands almost touch her face and the blind across her eyes when he stops himself in mid-air. Whisper) No...No...She’s deaf...and now she’s blind, isn’t she. That means...she can’t recognize. She can’t know. She can’t be reminded. She can only give ..everything! Not knowing she will give, to me, like to any other... (Whisper) You
..you say she is stilt warm and tender...like
some living quivering
animal that lies helplessly in the dark, with her eyes and ears closed, unable to withhold... (Whisper) There can be no violence about it then. I revert...to my former self. AsI always wanted it, not as I was forced to take it. It could...couldn’t it then...
approach
|
pure
love,
as though
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nothing
hed ever happened...
66
_GOA
(Whisper) For all we want to do is blot out our senses and
forget.
tear off this blind ?
live...
Just as Rose is doing. Just as I took the drink before I...I came here. Leave only one sense to operate...touch. Like the touch of my hand when I gave her the Rose. (Whisper) Why should I then this pleasure...in
Why should I face...myself.
anonymity,
dreaming
of my
Let
former
me
self...like
scavengers who chew on tranished bones...(Whisper) For this heat within me drives me further, wanting to drain
the
last
vestige
of
sanity...even
if
purity, in a revival of innocence, where nothing ever mattered any more...then...to
go
deeper
and
deeper...beyond
necessary into its deepest hiorror...(A/oud) Senhora, I’ll have
her...
on her own terms of detachment...and on my own of intimacy. Would you please tell her to go upstairs, and await me? I follow.
(SENHORA MIRANDA touches her daughter’s hands.
ROSE turns around
quietly, and ascends the stairway slowly, feeling her way to her room.
KRISHNA follows, his form rising into the stairs, into the darkness, pausing for a while to look at the empty balcony, before he enters ROSE’S room. There’s now no rain, no thunder, no lightning. The sky is clear, and the balcony stands silhoueted in the moonlight... A voice is heard as though from
ROSE...incredibly
light.)
the
empty
clear and sparkling,
ROSE’E aOice : It’s getting dark now. I do not know what you say...But
balcony.
It
is
that
of
like a silvery shaft of moon-
I can see your lips no longer; my heart is full of love; the
more for you’re unknown to me...and I would love...this secrecy... Were it not for the absolute dread of this loneliness in the dark
when I can no longer see your lips and know not whether I whisper or shout in this stifling stillness... (Her voice undergoes a strange, uncontrollable change) But when it’s light—I know...For I can then see myself in other people’s faces...I can see...what I must be saying to them...for they can hear...(Pause—implying act of giving rose) Yes...that’s my name. How did you know? Did I whisper it...or was I screaming...No, don’t touch my hand...don’t touch me touch me not...stranger...and I shall love you all the more... (The sound of the voice now seems to be coming from the room) and I shall hate you all the more. Don’t touch me...Don’t touch me. Screaming) DONT TOUCH ME...MOTHER |! DON’T HOLD MBE! IT’S HIM, MOTHER ! 1T’s HIM ! (A Scream that turns hoarse. SENHORA MIRANDA
and the SMUGGLER are already halfway up, when
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ROSE
emerges, still
ACT II SCENE III '
with blind over
67
her face, the negligée torn and blood
stained,
to her
mother’s arms, crying. MARIA holding her, holding her tight...) RosE: Take the blind off, mother ! Take the blind off! I want
to
see...I want to see...I won’t have to wait any longer...(With tremb-
ling hands the mother removes the blind. Slowly, Rose disengages herself from her mother’s arms, walks back to the room, shifts aside
the curtain, as KRISHNA’s nude body falls, our, with’ heart.)
[CURTAIN
Google
CLOSES]
a dagger
in
his
Digitized by Google
Original from
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
INQUILAB. A PLAY ON THE NAXALITE MOVEMENT IN THREE ACTS
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CHARACTERS
MAIN
SUBSIDIARY
Professor DattalWife
Sarla (Shomik’s wife)
Amar (son)
Dada (Shomik’s father)
Suprea
Old Woman (Shomik’s mother)
Jain (Landlord)
Upperclass Type|Goonda
Ahmed
Inspector
Shomik
Big Wheel (Politician)
Devdas (Politician)
GENERAL Villagers]/Peasants
College boys/girls
A few months elapse between Act II and Act III Scene I. A few more months elapse between Act III Scene I and Scene I.
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ACT I SCENE I
There are basically three scenes in this play, without formal divisions or structures, i.e. there is transitional fluidity from one scene to another through lights focusing at different levels and parts of the stage where sets are built to conform with the different scenes. The sets are basically threefold (corresponding to the scenes) : The first and main scene is a classroom in one of the colleges of Calcutta. Sets show part of the college building with communist slogans
scrawled on the walls and a red picture of Mao with hammer and sickle. The second scene is the prayer room at the residence of the Professor.
Sets suggest a modest home conservatively decorated with a library containing leather-bound books on law lining the shelves and walls. The third scene is the beautiful green Bengali countryside, portion of a fertile plot of cultivable land, and suagestion of the ostentatious Zamindar’s house beyond. Because of transitions in
time and
space, the
sets have
to be both
realistically suggestive and symbolic. Framework of structures should be built, preferably at different levels of the stage, to depict this. From time to time we revert to the classroom scene and therefore there would be some merit in having it placed at the rear (if it is a proscenium stage) which can be partially or fully blanked out with transluscent/opaque curtain and lights with a range of colours and intensities. Background music in the non-dialogue scenes would also heighten the dramatic impact of certain violent climaxes. Classroom scene : Professor leaning on dias. Distinguished looking man of about 50 with a conservative air, old worldish, and the hint of a British traditionalist approach (from the colonial days when Calcutta and the Bengali aristocracy bore the stamp of the old British capital with its cultural and political values). Young students,
alert, intelligent,
at the same
The electric air of revolt surfacing from
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time bored,
time to time.
restless.
Amongst
72
INQUILAB
them the son of the Professor, young Amar. The period of time is THE PRESENT : with Naxal revolt and violence having reached University campuses. PROF. DATTA: Ah...Yes...aren’t we. all...understandably...restless... before the break of Durga Puja holidays...(Slight nervous laughter amongst students. Tension already there) Perhaps...(Voice toning down)...this is the time for...reflection over the past. The taking
of...decisions that sometimes become...historic. (Shuffle of feet) Impatient ? Let us not get carried away, young men. Difficult times, I admit. Calcutta, my Calcutta, a ‘dying city”? _ Processions ? Strikes? Gheraos? Violence? Bandhs ? Breakdown of law-and-order? Revolt? Naxal revolt, my friends? Slogans of Gandhi or Mao? (Gradually anger building up with each interrogation-that whips the students alert like repeated lashes— the under-current of vibrant anger in the older man) Are there bombs in your head or brains, gentlemen : I hear...there are some amongst you...the tyranny of the minority I call it...who question these holy institutions of learning, like our holy mother Durga... (Provoked rebellious students who start banging desks with fists, rulers and chappals, slowly at first, more furiously later, all in rhythmic unison. Shadow of a man outside the classroom window... the stranger...the protest of students is like a morse code that gets translated in stacatto teleprinter tape messages that are flashed on the walls already crowded with slogans.) Flashed on wall near stranger, voicing student slogan belief : BOURGEOIS ! BOURGEOIS UNIVERSITY ! PROF. DATTA: (Raising his voice over the din of deskbanging noise) These are institutions of democratic learning in a democratic government ! Teletype message flashed in mental telephonic reply on wall in red
letters : BOURGEOIS-LANLORD GOVERNMENT OF INDIA.
PROF.
DATTA:
Principles
founded
on
freedom
of
thought
Repeat, repeat : (THE CRYSTALLIZATION OF REVISIONISM.
HE IS...
speech by Gandhiji, the father of our nation !
and
PROF. DATA : (Raising voice louder over din) A free economy, socialistically
oriented,
ownership
of private
property
a
fundamental
right, protected by law, enforced by law, enforced by police, and if necessary, the army ! (Sounding sloganish himself.)
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ll
———
ACT 1 SCENE i Repeat:
73
CLASS
MURDABAD!
ENEMIES!
POLICE
CLASS
ENEMIES
MURDABAD! INQUILAB
MURDABAD
! JOTEDARS
INQUILAB ZINDABAD!
(The Professor is aghast. Blackout.) (Light on library with Professor sitting alone and distraught, lightly touching the leatherbound yolumes of books on law, looking up to the painted portrait of Mahatma Gandhi, feeling likea blind man trying to probe
meaning from the venerated statue of Sir Asutosh Mukherjee.
This
is a meaningful scene in itself, suggested through his soliloquy.) PROF. DATA: (either sound of tape voicing memory, or articulated through whispher) Gandhiji...Gandhiji...how to make them undersstand 2? That when you broke the law, the old British law that
you respected so much, it was because it came in conflict with your natural law of justice. The Divine Law. Gandhji...with whom I fought for our freedom...how to make them understand that when
you broke
the law,
you asked
for
punishment! Yes,
your own punishment, because you still recognized that the law of civilized society would have no exception! Gandhiji...whomI
worshipped as
my own
father...how
to
that nonviolence is an active philosophy. to fight violence.
happened then?
Remember...our
You
make
them
understand
That it was used by you
Noakhali
pilgrimage.
didn’t die a disillusioned man,
What
did you,
Bapu ? (Going up to the statue of Sir Asutosh Mukherjee, and touching his features lightly) Many were your chelas, those inspired by you
who rose to eminence, brought this great nation together...Sir Asutosh, Vice-Chancellor, Chief Justice, a true Tiger of Bengal... those humbler too...like me...(Amar enters) Ah, there you are, Amar. Comein,comein. Don’t slouch. young people slouch these days...
AMAR : Not upright like the last generation,
Can’t understand why
huh ?
PROF. : (Suspiciously) What do you mean ? AMAR,: (Shrugging his shoulders) Oh, nothing. PROF. : (Mumbling, grumbling) Nothing...Now...Nowhere.
culate mumblings.
Half-baked slogans.
Are you a rebel, son 7
AMAR : Huh ? pror.: I was...when I was young. as you call it.
Bengal has a
great
the side of the British...the Mogul to be ashamed of.
Google
Inarti-
(turning around, suddenly)
And proud
of it too.
Upright,
Empire too, earlier.
Nothing
tradition for revolt: a thorn on
|
74 AMAR:
INQUILAB The
traditionalist
revolutionary,
traditionalist. PROF. : What’s that ? AMAR: Revisionist. pror. : I don’t know what you mean. AMAR: You believed in rules of the game, game
of cricket.
.
the
father.
pror.: If you mean that we didn’t indulge terrorism and violence, you're right. Ours and we fought the right way. Amar : Oh, yes, moral conscience. The right before. There’s another side too, father, proletarian internationalism. pror.: (Equally sarcastically) Ah, I’ve heard front paw of India’s revolution”, they say.
accent
being
on
The old British
in senseless acts of was a national cause, way. I’ve heard that that fights today for that before too...“the
Radio Peking, isn’t it 7
AMAR : It’s not the v.o.a. ! PROF. : (Suddenly tired, finding argument fruitless) In the classroom. Isaw youthere. With the others. Banging on the table with the chappal... AMAR : (Unexpectedly smiling)...like old Khruschev at the U.N.... PROF. : (Smiling wryly)...like Khruschev...yes...(Looking at him) you smile at the most unexpected times, Amar.
AMAR : True, father. pror. : Do you think I lack a sense of humour ? AMAR : Sometimes.
PROF. : It takes more than a sense of humour to deal with so many “rowdies” in college. AMAR : (Smiling) I guess there must be less hazardous professions. PROF. : (Meeting the smile, momentarily you do respect some of us.
close to each other) Ah, then
AMAR: Of course I do, but that doesn’t mean I agree.
. Pro. : Would you rather agree to disagree 7 AMAR : No. . accepting You’re Amar. pror.: But surely that’s sensible, fundamental democratic doctrine if you agree to disagree.
AMAR : (Suddenly passionate) I don’t. to it.
Norules
the core.
of the game.
Google
No
I disagree.
a
That's all there is
present system.
It’s rotten
to
ACT I SCENE I
75
pror.: Why, Amar, why ? I don’t understand ! AMAR : (Going up to him, almost pleadingly with a sense
urgency)
Listen,
father,
disagree.
There’s no
understand.
of profound
I'll say it only once.
This
is my passion, my poetry, my cause. Look around, father, open your eyes: the poverty, the terrible poverty. People dying of hunger, father. Look at the gap between rich and poor. It’s growing, father, dangerously...and unfairly. It’s true, the city’s dying, your old beloved city of the privileged. Do you feel the stranglehold ? The bustees growing, enveloping the city with the strench of faces and dirt. Trams coming to a halt, burning burning, the extra2 paise increase in fare more than the dying man can bear. Not logical, is it? Not the game of agree to
time for that.
We’re drowning
under
the
Hooghly, silting up with doomed humanity. The processions will grow, like nightmares, death processions of the 10 million around the funeral pyre of the burning city. (Shouting) And you talk of
EDUCATION,
father {
Institutes of
education
that
have
now
shackled us for generations and generations. What for? WHAT FOR, 1 ASK. So that there can be more unemployed millions 7 So that your bourgeois hierarchy remains intact! So that you’ve doped the masses sufficiently into complacency and resignation ? You can have it, father, you can have it, but don’t stuff it down
our throat ! You were the Gods that Failed, father ! (Father slaps
him, breaks up the hysteria.) PROF. : (Quietly, not untenderly) A moment ago you were smiling, Sane. I can hardly believe it. I can hardly believe you’re my son. AMAR: (With equal deadliness) 1 belong...to the cause...of the revolution. (Zhen whispers almost to him) and my guru...outside... (suggestion of shadow of the stranger? Blackout. Light and scene shifts to the prayer room, the Professor’s wife decorating a statue of Durga, ten armed, with sword and spear carrying traces of blood.)
PROF. : (Looking at her from a far, again in meditative soliloquy) Whom do you wait for, dear wife, dressing the statue of Durga, or
is it horrific Kali, with strand and straw, and clay from the depths
of Ganga, infinitesimal strand and straw, Penelope who wove by day and unravelled herself destroyed, while she waited patiently Grieve no more for the elder son who was hills, wait no more for his home-coming
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patiently waiting, like by night, created and for beloved Ulysses... lost afar in the Mizo at Durga Puja, thou
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INQUILAB
Mother of Earth with fertile ilons, for your child was lost long ago and will never return again. Bring back to your distraught mind...sanity, for it is like a fever that grips all of us...(Enters prayer room aloud) Mother.. wiFE: (There is a strangeness ‘about her distraction) Is it you ?
PROF.: WItE:
Me. (Returning to her work) Oh.
PROF.: WIFE:
Whom did you expect ? No one.
wie: PROF. : now,
Did 1? (Jntent on drawing blood) Yes. (She turns around—face him with steady withdrawn eyes) You're waiting for your elder
PROF. :
But you turned around with expectation.
son’s return, aren’t you ? (Pause) He’s dead. (Turns back and starts working on the statue) Every year it’s the same thing. Every
Puja you dress that damned statue, then drown it in the Ganga. Homecoming. Homecoming for the Puja holidays... WIFE: (Quietly) It’s true. I wait. PROF. : (Stifling his anger, unable to contain-himself) He’s dead, don’t you understand ! (She turns around, her eyes in tears. He wavers...) My dear...it was so long ago. And none was to blame. It just happened. It was one of these tragedies. How far are you going
to draw it through
your life ?
And
how
deep...
? There are
others too. Your husband, your son. I’ve been talking to Amar. Sometimes I think he’ 's as crazy as...He needs guidance. He needs a home.
wiFE: There’s nothing won’t cure,
wrong
with
the
boy...that
understanding
PROF.:
(Stung) Nothing wrong with him!
Understand?
I under-
PROF.: WIFE:
(His eyes widening) Shakti. (She continues with the statue.) (Softly) Yes...
stand him very well...very well indeed. He believes in force... wire: (Adjusting the spear arm) Does he... ?
PROF.:
(Almost to himself) It’s true...you came
side. Picked up...the superstitions...
WIFE: pror.:
...superstitions ? ... ...beliefs without logical
foundation.
from
Yes,
the country-
your
son
has
inherited his passions from you. And so...(comes closer and touches her) I was attracted by you too...(for the first time we see
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ACT -
I SCENE
I
71
her intense form and vitality. Much younger than her husband, there is a definite sensuality about her)...fearing at the same time... (Whispering)...your demanding sensuality. wire: You wouldn’t know. You came from the city. Had western education. Everything for you...has to have a logical foundation. PROF.: (Smiling) My dear...I suspect divinity in your motherhood
too.
WIFE: (Attending Durga) Do you know...what it means...to have a child torn out from your womb! The cry of the mother that is at once a relief and a despair too. For the child that is born is the child that is lost. PROF.: (Shaking his head) 1...1 don’t understand. wire: And then one day he returns and demands all that life had promised but never fulfilled. All that the Mother had instilled when he was born as child, and returned as man.
PROF.: (Withdrawing; whispering) Witchcraft and demons. from the pantheon. Madness. WIFE: (Shadows darkening over blood red clay) You'll see...
Gods
(Jadeout )
(Feast at home: ware receptacles
diya lights—cotton wick in kerosene with earthendecorating Goddess Durga; thalis of food being
eaten squatting on cbhatai at Professor's residence with wife, Amar, and two visitors : Zamindar Jain and daughter Suprea.)
son
JAIN : (Licking his fingers) No one can cook, my friend Datta, better
than your wife. Delicious. (A slurping lick) Absolutely delicious. (A little belch; nudging his daughter) Hub Suprea 2? When will you learn to cook like this ? Your mother, bless her dead soul, was equally good. Made me fat like this...(Showing his big tummy and laughing easily; all laugh : mood of cordiality) But you watch
out,
young lady. Love husband first, then love food. Youth...ah youth is like...the overripe mango... ? ...feed it too much and it falls ! SUPREA: (Embarrassed) Father ! JAIN: How beautifully she blushes. The quality of a true bride’s innocence.
SUPREA :
Jain:
(Almost in tears) Father !
Oh, well.
restraining hand.
I’m sorry. Get carried away, you know. No wife’s
Only pride for the daughter.
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_
INQUILAB
pror.: And nothing could be better, Jain. You look after her well. Much better than I can, my son. Huh, Amar 7 What do you say? , : AMAR: (Busy eating, mumbling) I can look after myself. PROF.: By the same token are you suggesting that Suprea cannot look after herself? (There a distinct pause now, while Amar looks ot Suprea and she looks back at him.) AMAR :
(Grunting)
Huh.
-
PRoF.: What’s that supposed to mean ? MOTHER : (Who has been serving the food) It means she can look after herself too. (All laugh, except the two self-conscious young ones who smile wryly.) PROF. : (Jn a change of subject)
jain:
pror.:
How are the crops this year, Jain ?
(A bit slowly, careful) Oh...alright.
You don’t sound very convincing.
JAIN: Nothing’s wrong with the crops, with the men.
pror.:
Jain:
Datta.
Something’s
wrong
What do you mean ?
You know we’ve been having trouble with the labourers. (Shak-
ing his head) Can’t understand it. They’re part of my...family. Yet
suddenly
they’ve
turned
around...viciously
! Like
damned capitalist ! AMAR: (Quietly) To be a benefactor is the same thing. JAIN: (Surprised) How do you mean 7 AMAR: they
Tell me, they’ve been with you for many years, haven’t ? Possibly their fathers and grandfathers were serfs to your
ancestors ? JAIN: Yes.
AMAR:
I were some
And you looked after them, like one big family.
problems
were
your
problems.
And their
In fact you were like a father to
them, indulging yet correcting them, with a firm and gentle hand. jain: Yes, what’s wrong with that 7? I’ve seen lots worse landlords. AMAR: (Still with a trace of sarcasm) In fact you were one of the more
you.
progressive
In
being
ones.
absolute
. No
adhiyar system of contract labour for
master
you
could
charities, and still keep them in their place. JAIN:
(Still uncertain about him)
I still don’t get you.
wrong with that ! (Amar doesn’t reply.)
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measure
out
What’s
your
so
ACT I SCENE I PROF.:
79
(Dryly) He thinks you're a revisionist, my friend.
JAIN: A what? PRoF.: Revisionist.
Revisionist.
A pdcifier for maintenance of
existing order. An order of vested interests.
an
Jain: Show me one better. AMAR: Land to the landless. Collective farming. Community holdings. A distribution of surplus land to be done immediately. JAIN: (Nodding his head slowly) Ob, I see...you’re one of those.
(turning to Professor Datta) Haven’t you been able to knock sone
sense into him, Datta ? PROF.: The distribution of surplus Government objectives.
JAIN:
lot
Jand
is one of the accepted .
I didn’t mean that ! I mean the other thing!
of young people take to it, but it’s dangerous.
and underprivileged, Datta.
He’s my friend’s son !
Oh,
I know
a
He’s not dirty
AMAR: (Standing up, spilling the food, in anger) Now, you look here, old man. I’ve had my fill of you. Yes, I’m one of those, and I’m here to stay. Like your dirty landless underprivileged, labourers, who are also your friend’s sons by your own definition...
pror.: AMAR:
Amar ! No, Dad, let me have my say.
whether
he believes me or not.
And I mean it for his good,
Time’s changing.
Jainji, time’s
changing. And you'll be swept with the change unless you change too. Listen, listen to me. It’s no longer a question of distributing surplus land. You’ve flauted that law, laws that well-intentioned men like my father made. It’s too late now...(With deadly earnest) We'll grab the land, old man, because the young like me are impatient and hungry. Then there'll be no distinction between the
good and the bad landlord, because being landlord is bad enough ! (Jain gets up in anger.)
Jain: Enough ! AMAR: (Measuring his shout) That’s what I say ! Enough ! You have enough land { Don’t go putting it in your brothers’ and sisters’ and dogs, names. Don’t go on having captive labour through complusion or reward. The land belongs to the tiller ! JAIN: (Quivering with anger) It belongs to me ! Me ! Me ! My father, my grandfather, son, my grandson! No one’s going to
grab it from me! I’ve worked as hard, harder than my labourers...
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80
INQUILAB
Look at my hands, son! Look at the callouses { Just because I’m fat and rich doesn’t mean I don’t sprout theories like you, nor write law books like your father. I work with my hands. (Passionately) That land’s mine, son. I’ve tilled it, and I shall reap its harvest
till I die. (His teeth clenched, this man who grows in stature
till he’s a gaint) And I shall kill anyone who lays a hand to grab it. Even my friend’s son, be he the labourers or men with whom
I break my bread ! (Amar looks at him with furious hate, then leaves
the house...presumably
leave after him.)
to the garden
outside.
Mother
about
to
JAIN: (Softly, tenderly) No Ma-ji, let him go outside. Cool off. (Raises hand to Datta who is apologising) No, Datta, my dear friend, the fault’s mine. I’m older. Hisis the young passion. I should have restrained myself. I’m sorry. Go, Suprea, bring back your young hero. He'll respond...to you. (Slapping the old Professor on the back affectionately, yet somewhat disturbedly) My God, Datta, what a son you have! A real mastaan, and I mean it in the best sense of the term. What I wouldn’t give to have a son like him...(Lowering his voice)...though he does need breaking in...Cheer up, Ma-ji, I...(Looking around to make sure Supreais absent)...perhaps I..we shall have grandsons by him. Oh, I hope
Suprea’s
not
listening.
She’s
always
pulling
me up....(Scene in
garden outside. Amar pacing restlessly, kicking stone, plucking flowers, throwing to ground. Suprea comes behind him. Just stands for a while. Suddenly sensing someone’s presence, he wheels
around.)
AMAR:
.
Ah...it’s you, (She merely looks at him,
knowing
why) Come to spy
on
my
thoughts,
belligerent
I bet.
without
(She still
doesn’t reply) I...I bet those...people sent you here...to pry the secrets out of me. (No reply; angrier without knowing why) Isn’t that true ? Isn’t that true?
SUPREA: Yes. AMAR: (Victoriously) Ah, I knew it ! sUPREA: But I would have come anyway...to with you. AMAR:
around see.
(Uncertain, glowering) 1...1
have
share
no secrets.
your
secrets
(Then turning
defiantly) Yes, I have them, but they’re clear for anyone to
Iwrite them on the walls, I write them
the destiny of the nation,
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on
the
streets.
It’s
ACT 1 SCENE I
81
SUPREA: But what about us, Amar 7? AMAR: (Fumbling, avoiding her eyes) Us? Us? SUPREA: ‘Yes, you and I. AMAR: I...I have a mission. It’s dangerous. It leaves...no room .-for other things. SUPREA :. (Her eyes clouding) I see. . AMAR: No, you don’t. I’m possessed, Suprea, don’t you see’! My heart and soul go out to everythingI see in life. The poor, the needy, the down-trodden.
I walk the streets of
Calcutta
and
the
for
me.
hands of the beggar tear at my insides. I roam the green acres and the tiller’s sweat touches my brow with the taste of salt on my tongue. I say then...that my life does not belong to myself. Do...do you understand ? . SUPREA: (From the docile to the defiant) No...no, I don’t ! I see life that was meant for us to live! Not sacrifice. I see the earth and the sky same as you, Amar, but to be shared by us. Not lost and wasted...Amar...Amar...take my hand...(She touches him)... and put it to your heart. Let the fever drain out. It is your passion that I love...and I beseech
(Amar
others
boyish.. pulls at Suprea’s hand...)
SUPREA AMAR: SUPREA AMAR: SUPREA: AMAR: SUPREA: AMAR.:
you
keep
some
takes her hand and smiles) Ah....you smile so easily, Amat.
Why then do you make
AMAR:
that
:
weep
?
(Amar
relaxed,
smiling,
Come, we play a game !
(Laughing) No, no...they may be seeing us. (Dragging her) Oh, come on. : (Suspiciously) What’s the game ? A kiss. No. Yes. (Suprea disentangles and runs behind the tree.) Do you call that a game ? (Chasing her and laughing) ‘Yes.
SUPREA: Are you solving the problems chasing a poor defenceless girl ?
of
the
world,
Amar,
AMAR: (Just missing her) Playing games. SUPREA : (Almost allowing herself to be caught) Where will it end ? AMAR: You know where. SUPREA : Not till after... AMAR:
(Stopping)
After...what ?
SUPREA: . Run, Amar,,,my turn
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to
chase
you.
or
82
INQUILAB
AMAR: (Playing the.game fully; turning tail and running while she chases him) After what, my love ? SUPREA: You know what, you rogue! Ah! Almost caught you ! AMAR: Hush! Our parents may be watching. SUPREA: Damn them ! : AMAR: (Eyes twinkling mischievously) What did you say 7 SUPREA: (Returning the same look) I said damn them! (Both laugh and fall into each other’s arms.) SUPREA: (Jn his arms) Oh, Amar, let’s not laugh any more...or else Ishall cry. (She turns her face to kiss tenderly. She does cry. He touches her face lightly.) AMAR: (Softly) It’s true...you cry, my dear. supREA: Oh Amar, Amar.. (Concern, joy, anxiety all written over her face) AMAR: (Protective, consoling) Hush...Suprea...all will be well... eventually...but I must realize myself first, you
understand.
SUPREA: (Showing her character, will and understanding) Yes, yes, Amar, I understand. If I ask you to be careful, you still may not. So, I’ll only ask you to care...care for me. This my faith. You.
AMAR: (Sincerely) I promise, Suprea. always will. Come, let’s go inside. (They enter, and the three elders look at JAIN: (Putting his arm cordially around prodigal son returns,..tamed, if I may AMAR:
(With
a smile
in
his
I more
than care...and T
them.) Amar’s shoulder) Ah, the say so, by the maiden...
eyes)...temptress...(Whispers
aside)
...and spy...(Earlier tension broken, everyone laughs.) MOTHER: Come and finish your food now; it’s gone cold. JAIN: (To Mother) The Durga statue, Ma-ji, it’s beautiful. MOTHER : (Absently) Yes 7 PROF. : It’s a good occupation, Jain. It keeps one’s mind away... away from...(Voice tapers off.)
JAIN: Each year the intensity of the statue which form it will take.
MOTHER:
Autumn
(Eyes afar) comes, I
I wait.
still
smell
The
the
grows.
monsoon’s fresh
wet
I never
end.
know
Puja’s here.
earth, longing for
planting of the new seed...(Al/most sharply) for it’s all barren { The
new harvest, the new green.
new
generation.
The food for survival, turning of the
It needs to be planted with crre.
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For the earth
ACT
I SCENE I
83
is fresh and fertile. Only the seed must be strong...like the growth of new revolt ! (Everyone is taken aback; even she is not _ conscious of what she has just said.) AMAR: (Quietly) I’m...I’m expecting a friend to come shortly... MOTHER: (Absently) What...what did you say ? AMAR: I said I’m expecting a friend soon. MOTHER : (Awake, flustered) But...but you didn’t tell me. Is he coming for dinner ? AMAR:
No.
PROF.:
Who’s he ?
AMAR:
Oh, just a friend.
PROF.:
What friend ?
AMAR: (Smiling, mysterious) We call him Guru. PROF.: That doesn’t say much. AMAR : He doesn’t speak much either. PRoF.: Who’s he? Where’s he from ? AMAR: I don’t know. He has an ease of...association, and yet he’s very far away. MOTHER: When...when is he coming ? AMAR: (Looking out) I...1 think I see
enters. His face is resemblance to Amar, in partial darkness. at anyone else. She come in, Ahmed. Let
him
now...(The
stranger
care-worn and deeply lined. A remarkuble though older. An indefinable age. His figure He comes in quietly. Looks at the mother, not stares at him, unknowingly, afar.) Come in... me introduce you to my family.
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ACT
I
SCENE
II
Same as beginning of the first scene, i.e. the classroom the
important
except
with
difference that this is a clandestine night study with a
Sew student-Naxalites and the man tionary leader, Ahmed.
standing
at the dias
is revolu-
One of the students present is Amar.
AHMED : (Cool, soft) Gentlemen...or should I say my “rowdy”? comrades...(Snigger from students)...what better place to hold our secret meetings...our own classrooms...than here... But remember: revolutionary theory without revolutionary practice means nothing. Everything that you learn here, must be put into practice outside. Marxism-Leninism holds that “force is the midwife of every old society pregnant with a new one”... (Flashes of light, stacatto-like, on wall, subconscious messages, as in early first scene: sound of table
tapping,
intence
and
prickly)
MAO’S
THOUGHTS.. MAO’S
THOUGHTS.,.PEOPLE’S WAR...PEOPLE’S WAR.. PEOPLE’S WAR...PEASANT MASS ACTION...PEASANT
MASS ACTION...(Students
in
rapt
attention.
No shuffling of feet, no banging of chappals on table; these bright alert passionately intelligent faces, all absorbed; lights dimming and brightening to indicate passage of time...)
AHMED : Parliamentary democracy is not an effective weapon for socialist revolution: an armed struggle is inevitable... A revolution in backward countries can only be brought about by peasants : start organizing peasants for militant action...
Flashes ; GUERRILLA SQUADS...GUERRILLA ++. VILLAGE MILITIA...
SQUADS...VILLAGE
MILITIA
AHMED : I repeat, “without the poor peasant, there can be no revolution, To reject this is to reject the revolution”. Remember the
four commandments : One, we must go among the masses and concern ourselves with their weal and woe. Two, the mobiliza-
tion of the people will create a vast sea in which
to drown
the
enemy. Three, seem to come from the east but attack from the west ...avoid the solid, a‘tack the hollow...deliver a lightening blow, seek a
lightning decision.
Four, the only way to
the strategy of protracted war.
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final
victory
is
Act 1 SCENE II
85
Flashes : THE RED BOOK...THE RED BOOK...THE RED BOOK... AHMED : (Voice steely, hard but still cold, chillingly dishing out the hot words) Establish peasant bases. Appoint area committees to launch violent struggles...As Mao put it bluntly, ‘‘It is necessary to bring about a brief reign of terror in every rural area”. Learn to combine persuasion, terror and aid...Organize the Peasants’ Union, the Krishak Sabha... (Semi-darkness) Your weapons : bombs, spears, knives...yes, the sickle too, for these are peasant armaments «(The students lay them down
on
the desk for
examination...more
darkness, dim lights, as though they were in the background learning and preparing...perhaps a semi-transparent screen, while the action changes to the front...in the front are two scenes: first, a Peasants’ Union taking place in the village farm-land, and the second is a peasant’s home... First scene : Peasants’ Union, a clandestine meeting of peasents with an outsider, the Naxalite organizer, young
man
who
might well have been one of Ahmed’s students.) YOUNG MAN : (To villagers squatting around kerosene lamp) You get what you deserve : disease, hunger, want and death. You give your children an even larger share: scurvy, slavery, deprivation and death. Every bigha of zamin you toil for, you'll make them toil harder. For whom? For whom, I ask ? (Rustle of discontent amongst peasants; shouting) For the demand, bloody, greedy zamindar ! who never worked a day in his life! who sucks your
blood
like leeches, grovels in food and luxury!
What gives him
the right to own, and you to suffer! Peasants ! (Spitting) Peasants (Protest noise; all want to speak together, but one of the older holds up his hand.)
VILLAGER : (Older but not too old) Ah, hold on, young man ! Brothers, may I speak for you? (Others nod; turning to the young man)
You're from the city, aren’t you 7
YOUNG MAN: Yes. VILLAGER: Well, I suggest you go back and learn some coming here to teach us.
more
before
YOUNG MAN : (Taken aback) Huh? (Villagers smile at his astonishe ment.) VILLAGER :It isn’t quite like what you say. As it happens, our landlord is not atyrant. He is also working wirh his own hands. And for your information, we do not starve. YOUNG MAN : (Disappointed) Oh ! (Villagers nod consent.)
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INQUILAB
86
VILLAGER : And we're not ignorant peasants either. The literate amongst us are fully aware of ceilings on land holdings, and the political workers of the present Socialist State Goverment keep us informed about reforms being introduced by them. YOUNG MAN : (Completely dejected) Oh... VILLAGER: (Kindly) Byt don’t be downcast, young man. We would not have asked for someone to come from your side if we were content to let things be. (Laughing dryly) After all...we have our firebrands...(Turning to one of the young villagers)...huh, Shomik ? {As though by understood invitation, Shomik stands up and the villager sits down.)
SHOMIK : Comrades, both sides are right, but our cause is the only cause that matters: liberation through revolt! (Af once a new electric feeling.
Here is a natural
leader
amongst
men.
Murmer
of consent) Nobody denies that our landlord, Jain, is just. No» body denies that the works as hard as we do. (Raising his voice effectively without shouting) But he’s working on our land and not we on his ! (Cheers; animated consent amongst villagers) We want our law! Not the landlord’s, and not the Government’s ! How long have we heard the political workers come here and tell us about land reforms. Our fathers were serfs, and even if we’re not, we're not free either ! (More cheers, hot consent to this persuasive
firebrand) No...No...No
more
waiting.
The
law
cannot
work
equally for both of us. It’s either ours or theirs. At the moment it’s theirs, so we have to reject it. But the only means we know: fight ! Ficnt! (Picking up his lathi/spear. People clap him on the back, Applaud. Shomik holds up his hand. Calls the young man and embqaces him) Brother, we. agree with everything you said. (smiling) We only wanted to bring you down a peg or two. Now we need your help. You need ours too. So, let us clap with two hands...tell your people...we’re ready, (Fadeout, with peasant Shomik
returning
to his
village
home:
old father,
blind mother,
anxious wife, playing children. Children run out to greet him, at doorway; relieved, smiling, in the privacy of their house, he touches her face...) SHOMIK : Worried ? (Wife nods, turns her face away) About what 7 SARALA : I...I don’t know. SHOMIK : Then why are you worried. (She turns away) You couldn’t be worried for nothing.
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87
ACT I SCENE 1 SARALA SHOMIK in his no.
: (Looking at him gravely) No. : (Trying to change the subject) Ah, so it’s something. (Smile eyes) Another woman ? (She looks back reproachfully) Ah... (Staring beyond) That’s nothing new. What's left ? Money?
Maybe, it’s drinking.
No, that couldn’t be; I don’t drink...much,
that is. (His hands going up subconsciously 10 the light iron rods lying on the ground which he picks up and twists in his powerful hands) What could it be? (More restless, using his strength and
sweating over the iron rods) What could it be ? (His wife looks at his
hands, SARALA : SHOMIK : ing to
he does: too, self-consciously.) It’s there. A strong...cruelty. A fierceness that frightens. (Laughing artificially) Don’t be absurd. You’ve been listenMother’s nonsense. Her blind visions. (She looks at his
hands) Oh, this? It’s...it’s like the plough. I have to use my strength to furrow the ground. Plant the seed. Grow the food +680 We can give most of it to our landlord !
SARALA: Ah! I see. sHOMIK : You don’t see, my dear woman. frightening, so you blot it out ! SARALA : ...at nights, in bed... SHOMIK : (Touching her hair, the same strong
you, doI...?
You blot it out.
hands)...
don’t
It’s
hurt
...these cruel hands... (She kisses his hands in tears.)
SARALA : It’s not what you doing to yourself.
do
to
me, my Jove.
It’s what
you're
SHOMIK : (Looking outside, eyes afar) I’m rightinga wrong: something that should have been done long ago... Unlike our city friend, I’m involved. Because I am poor, but, not humble, unlike my father...and I believe. I am teaching myself to think, Sarala, the thoughts that great men have on equality...and revolution. SARALA : (Shaking her head, not understanding, trace grief, swaying slightly) What are you saying? saiyng ?
of apprehensive What are you
SHOMIK: Our children. Our children, Sarala, I’m doing whatever I’m doing for our children. SARALA : (Like a flash) You're doing this for yourself ! (Shomik recoils; anger breaking through desperation) Yes, for your own power
and glory; I don’t want you to be their leader. I want you to protect this house; bring safety for yourself...and your children.
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INQUILAB
SHOMIK : (Angry, raising voice) You don’t know, ignorant woman, you don’t know anything outside of this house. How we work, what we do... A dog...you want me to be a dog the rest of my life. Or hike those animals ploughing those fields... I’m aman. I’ve gota soul, I earn my bread. I work hard. I want my respect, RESPECT | . SARALA : (Slowly, trying'to understand) You...want...your...respect.
SHOMIK : We’re not starving. God Almighty, in spite of all the propaganda, we’re not starving. What we have is not much, but the hunger that consumes me is not food. It’s me, my self-respect, my freedom. — . SARALA : And you'll have it with your...your...revolution 7 SHOMIK : (Clenched teeth, : twisting iron rod again) 1...want...my revenge ! SARALA: Revenge 7 Why ? What for? Has anyone harmed me, your children? Your parents? This I don’t understand. SHOMIK: (Unreasoning) Others have been harmed. Do you know thost of the peasants still live almost in a state
of cruel slavery ?I
can speak for them. Ours is a common cause. I must show it. : SARALA : (Jnsistent) I what way have we been harmed ? : SHOMIK : (Angry again, eyes burning, looking afar) 1 want my revenge:
A leader of the people. One of them. They believe me. No city men can lead the revolt : they need me. My hunger and theirs is the same. Some for food...some for the things beyond. And I shall get it...the only way I know...(7he iron bar now lies out of shape, Shomik sweating, his wife frightened and quiet. Another part
of the house; Jain and Politician enter to meet the old man and his blind wife)
JAIN : (Clasping the old man) Ah, Dada, how are you? looking more fit than ever; more than my father ever: did age. DADA : Your father worried about others too much.
You're at your
JAIN : (Laughing, going up to old woman and folding hands respectfully) Ma-ji.
(The blind woman touches his head)
Ah,
Dada, I'd like you
to meet my good friend, Devdas...(‘‘nameste”) politician... papDa : A good friend, you said...?
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Devdas
is a
ACT I SCENE if
89
JAIN : ...as good as many politician can be, Dada. (Smiling at Devdas)
Not like you and me, of course.
DADA: I’m a poor old man...(His wife tapping her stick as she moves blindly around)...with a blind old woman. DeEvpas : You have a very...fiery son. papa : Ah! But all young people are hot-headed. MA-JI : (Stops tapping her stick ; her ears alert) Has he done anything wrong ? JAIN: (Almost together) Of course, not. DEvpas: Not yet. JAIN : (Covering up) The young still have to learn in life, huh Dada ?
DADA : (Shaking
more,
his head)
JaInN : Don’t worry.
tant man, you know.
,
They
don’t
listen to old people
any
Devdas here is very persuasive. He’s an imporBelongs to the present Government.
(Looking
almost slyly at Devdas) Keeps me abreast of all happenings. Finds
ways out. DADA : (Almost pathetically)I don’t know anything about politics. JAIN ; (Patting him reassuringly) And you don’t need to as long as
I’m here. Tell me, how’s Ma-ji keeping ? DADA : Oh, the usual ailments. You know old people... JAIN: (Interrupting) Yes, yes. You should get her some medicine. Here...(Stuffing some money in the old man’s breast pocket in spite of his feeble protests; the old woman taps the stick and laughs
weirdly.)
,
MA-JL: (Like cracking dry stick) He'll spend it on food. DADA : (Angrily to wife)
How can you say that ?
JAIN : Don’t you have enough to eat ? DADA: Yes, we do. Don’t listen to the old feeble as her eyes.
woman.
MA-JI: (Spurt of vituperation) Not so feeble as to hear Dada! Yes, Jainsahib, there’s enongh to eat, but the right things. My husband has lived longer because he’s eaten roots and barks of trees in the died through too much rich food and wine. My for that any more ! DADA : (Raising his voice) Shut up, old woman
Google
!
Her you not than old son
-mind
is
eat greedily, enough of your father days; yours won’t stand
90
INQUILAB
MA-JI: (Stick tapping, going away) Plenty of time for that...when I’m
gone...(Her voice fading)...because my bones ache so... DADA : (Resignedly) I apologise. We old people... JAIN : (Gesture of quietening him)...Yes. I konw, Dada. (Nodding his head) I know.
DADA: T’ll go and fetch looks at Devdas.) JAIN: Well?
my
son.
(He
leaves.
Jain turns
around,
DEVDAS : He gets his ideas from the old man.
JAIN: Wrong.
He gets his ideas from politicians.
DEVDAS : We wouldn’t put him up to this kind of thing. JAIN: I’m not saying it’s you. It’s the others: those
who
broken away from you. , DEVDAS : I can’t be held responsible for every politician’s views.
JAIN: Sure, you can be held responsible! You’re the Government! You are responsible for law and order ! DEvDAS : Nothing’s happened here yet.
have
present
,
JAIN: But it will, unless you watch out, I can feel it...in the air. There are secret meetings, 1 hear. Today it’s me here, tomorrow it’s you there, in the seat of power.
DEvpAS : (Wringing his hand) What can Ido? What canI do? JAIN : Stop placating them. I’m not blind enough to believe that I can have larger and larger holdings of land. But what I have is mine, and I shall be protected by law...and if necessary you, Devdas, if you can’t stop them, I will !
DEVDAS : Be careful.
There’ll be no end to it if you
JAIN : (S/yly) You’re
no Gandhian,
your own hands too. things you’ve done.
Devdas.
DEvDAS (Pricked) What do you mean?
force!
take
1 warn
law
I’ve seen the kind
into of
What do you mean ?
JAIN: Come now. Now-a-days neither the peasants, nor the landlords, are ignorant, Each of us..are important voters, quantitatively and qualitatively...(Devdas looks at him attentively) Peasants form
large votes.
I can buy
Until I have a trouble-shooter. quiet. DEVDAS: How ?
Google
them,
or
most
of them.
And then it’s for you to keep him
ACT I SCENE II JaIN: You have
91 your
own
ways, I’m sure.
(Carefully) Inier-party
conflict is not a new thing...(Devdas is sweating)...That’s how you came into power. Yau stood for constitutional change, the other for revolutionary overthrow. Not only of me; of you too ! Devdas
quiet, watching) Why are you telling the police to soft-peddle them! Are you afraid of losing your peasant votes? You're under-estimating me...(Laughing humorously) My good friend, (Devdas stockstill) Do you know what I carry in my pockets ? (Removes from one a purse with coins, and removes from the other a revolver) Power? From the barrel of the gun? Or from the purse of gold ? (Laughs and leaves. Devdas wipes his brow with the handkerchief, the tap-tapping of the old woman's stick being heard, the sound of voices as the old man reappears with the son.)
DADA : Here...but where’s Jain-ji ? DEvpAS : Er...he has left. DADA : Oh! (Ruefully) I wanted to give him a cup of tea. In my humble home. But never mind. You'll stay? You wanted to meet my son, didn’t you 7
DEvDAS: Yes.
(Both men look at each
other, sizing up; casually) 1
was wondering ..(Shomik looks at him) How the two of you could be so different. Father and son.
DADA: My son is not too different from me. DeEvpAS : Oh, I wouldn’t say that. DADA :I’m old, of course... DEVDAS: ...of course... DADA : But when I was young... DADA: ...yes... ? / papa : (Sighing) Er...(Trying to recollect)...Hum...(sighing again) 1 guess I was different. DEVDAS: (Smiling) Ah. (Turning to Shomik) No opinions on this, young man?
SHOMIK : You didn’t come to see me to talk about the difference between father and son. DEvpDAS : Abh...quite. Quite. (Then suddenly) But when I saw your father taking money I somehow thought you would be different. (Father yelps fearfully, indignantly too. Son turns to father with angry eyes.)
DaDa : It wasn’t anything like that !
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92
INQUILAB
DEvDAS : Oh, I didn’t suggest it was bribery. It was...a gesture of friendship, gracefully accepted. SHOMIK ; (Stretching out his hand, steadily) Give it to me, father. DADA : (Moaning) It’s mine. He gave it to me. His father and 1 were old friends. SHOMIK : (Unwavering, hard) Give it to me, Dada. DADA: (Almost pleading, yet trying to maintain self-respect) It was for Ma-ji. Her ill health. SHOMIK: (Palm extended, whiplike) Here! (Old woman appears as though from nowhere, in and on the way out.) MA-JI (Cracking voice) Give it to him, old man. Or he’ll thrash the life out of you. (Laughing weirdly)! know my son. (Old man almost has tears in his eyes as he waveringly and reluctantly puts the money in his son’s hand. The son looks at it, spits on the money, throws it out.)
SHoMIK : (Shaking with fury) Charity! He should be begging your mercy, father, instead of giving you charity! (Old man leaves, bowed, with wife.) DeEvpas : (Calmly) You don’t respect your father much, do you ?
sHOMIK : Wrong
there.
I respect
him
in
ways
you
understand. DEvDAS : (Nodding his head) 1 thought you were different. SHOMIK : Wrong again.
Devpas: SHOMIK: DEVDAS: SHOMIK:
around.
wouldn’t
He and I are the same. Both peasants.
Ah, you have your unity... ...and strength. But not everybody feels the way you do. Many of the young people do. Those that don’t will come
DEVDAS : How ? SHOMIK : We have our ways, Devdas-ji, same as you. DEvpDAS : Wouldn’t it be better to pull together 7? Instead of different
directions.
SHOMIK : As long as you work
together with landlord Jain, there can
be no meeting in our ways. DEVDAS : (Shrugging his shoulders) I have to keep up with him, understand, but peasants,
SHOMIK : I see.
the real
people
I’m
interested
in
are
you...the
You'd be ready to cut his throat, wouldn’t you 7
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you
ACT I SCENE II
93
DEVDAS : Only metaphorically. either.
I can’t
afford to believe in violence,
SHOMIK : You don’t or you can’t afford to. DEVDAS : In practice,
it’s the same thing.
As
long as you
represent
Government, even if it is made up of a coalition of parties with different views, you can’t afford...outwardly...to condone violence. SHOMIK : ...outwardly... 7 DEvDAS : Correct. Even the maintenance of law and order, you admit, involves force.
SHOMIK : Yes. DEvpAS : So, if I’m faced with a difficult situation, I might, ultimately, have to resort to it.
SHOMIK : (Shrugging his shoulders) 1 don’t blame you. this concern me ?
But how does
Devpas : (Nonchalantly) Sometimes, even outside of my control, there
are inter-party conflicts. SHOMIK : So 7 DEvpaAS : A lot of people get eyes)
killed.
(Shomik looks at him with cold
Good men who could have worked for us...get deflected, you
understand...So, violeace meets with violence, so prevail. (Suddenly laughing) Ironical, isn’t it? would never have believed it...(Shaking his head)
SHOMIK : (Quietly) Are you threatening me? DEVDAS : (Feigning surprise) Good lord, no. the people
here.
Ihave to.
You
Swayer of passions, the
that peace can Ah, Gandhiji
Shomik, champion
of
village messiah...Me...
threaten 2? Good lord, no. (Again sudden change) Look Shomik, let’s be practical. I’m not here to bribe you, or threaten...unless want more wages,
better conditions of work,
give it to you. SHOMIK : 1 want land, my own. DEvpas: If you work for my parfy. even going to be distribution of waste... SHOMIK : Not waste! Productive! DEVDAS : ...productive land.
is possible.
There’s
I’ll see to it that your name comes
Your father is the oldest tiller here. arrange it. SHOMIK : (Coldly) I want this land... DEVDAS: ...this... ?
Google
that
It may
take time,
I'll
but
up.
I'll
94
INQUILAB
SHOMIK : ...now ! (Fractional pause) DEvpas : (Angrily) Oh, come now, too soon !
SHOMIK; (Catching Devdas by his Devdas. Generations! And have? Ceiling of 50 acres? make the loopholes to play use me.
No, Devdas,
no.
Shomik !_
You want
too
much,
coat) I’ve been waiting too long, tell me, how much land does Jain I know he has much more, You his game...and now you want to
You have
your friends...I have
mine
too...Ah, I think I see them coming now. Yes, you should meet them, Devdas. They come at the right time...(Enter Ahmed and
Amar; clasping Ahmed’s hand, nodding greeting to Amar) Ab, Ahmed, good to see you. Come in, both of you. I want you to meeta good friend of my landlord. Politician Devdas, Jack-ofall-trades, come to offer me party-membership, who says “join
me...or else”...(Devdas flushes;
turning to Devdas) That’s what my
father felt like when you trapped him. DEVDAS: (Flushing) Insolent man ! You've pushed me too far !
SHOMIK:
DEVDAs: there’s
Yes, and what are you going to do about it ?
I’ve got my ways, as you so discreetly put it. I suspect more talk than muscle with you and your friends. (Hot-
headed Shomik catches hold of him to beat him up.) SHOMIK: Did Jain leave his pistol or his purse with you ? Or did you think your political position will save you? Let’s see now ! (Pulls him up)
AHMED: (Very softly) Leave him. (Shomik is ready to beat him up; purring even more softly) I said let him go, Shomik, (Something in his voice stops Shomik) Shomik, not that kind of muscle. Give me a few minutes with him. (Shomik lets him go. Devdas tries to recover courage and dignity, and fear is quickly replaced with indignation.)
DEVDAS: (Foaming in the mouth) You’ve gone too far, Shomik ! I warn you. (Turning to Ahmed) You're in this goonda-gang too, aren’t you? I'll remember all of you ! (Then looking at Ahmed again. Coming closer.) You...have I seen you before? (Looking closer, the thin prickle of fear starting.) I have ...a long memory... (Then breaking it) A few minutes you wanted, to show me real muscle. What is it ? AHMED: (Approaching, looking him in the eye) Yes, Devdas, we met
long ago, in your old days of struggle for power,,-when you didn’t
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ACT I SCENE II
95
care how you got it...But
there was
a weak
point
within
you,
Devdas. Fear. Fear, Devdas...terrorists and counter-terrorists, do youremember ? When violence came slowly and stealthily... There were traitors, of course, to the cause. Easier to compromise when rewards are so close at hand. That was your other weak
point,
Devdas,
greed...Greed.
(Devdas
to ward off the compelling fear.)
is again sweating, unable
DEvDAS:
(Unsteadily) 1...I stood for socialism as much
AHMED; DEVDAS:
You stood for yourself, Devdas. The...the socialist revolution will come,
else.
done constitutionally. AHMED : These are opposites,
DEVDAS:
Devdas.
It...really is absurd that we should fight.
but Ours
as
anyone
it must
common cause. It’s just that the methods are different. AHMED: As between heaven and earth, Devdas.
is still
be a
DEVDAS : Your way won’t work. You're too few. We can achieve more through votes. : AHMED: In order to get votes you are following the same old dirty path, having to pander to people like the landlord, who in the last analysis still controls the Government. DEvpAS : Is your path any cleaner ? It’s washed with the blood of innocent people. AHMED: As innocent as yours, Devdas, remember that. DEvDAS:
AHMED:
Are you...are you threatening me ?
(Approaching) Look
closely,
Devdas,
and remember... In
the Mizo Hills...long ago. A para-military party was sent out, by you...to catch a terrorist, one single terrorist who was single-
handedly bringing about a revolution. None returned, your party .-all dead, all hideously tortured, and murdered...because they dared to turn the inevitable tide that was ordained on that man, who was planting the seed of violent revolution. (Devdas literally. shrinks
with fear on recognition.
His eyes become wider, his mouth
goes dry, and without a further word, he turns and leaves quickly, Shomik and Amar look at Ahmed, quietly, respectfully, and no one mentions a word. A long movement of silence.) SHOMIK :
(With quiet confidence and friendship) Good to see you out
of that damned
classroom,
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Ahmed.
(Ahmed
smiles; there isa
96
INQUILAB
quiet understanding between the two men) Why
did
you
send
that
raw recruit to meet us here ? AHMED : (Still smiling) Because he’s good material, and I wanted him
to learn something outside of the classroom. AMAR: There’e nothing wrong with the classroom. Revolt starts from there. It must be taught to grow, fed with ideas and ideologies of the great men.
SHOMIK: There were no in the field. AMAR: Nor were there minds of men with quiet humour from one SHOMIK: Balls !
great men
who
did
any revolutionaries that indelible pen. to the other.)
not
prove
themselves
who did not fire the (Ahmed is looking with
AHMED : That has its place too, my friends. (All laugh.) AMAR: But seriously, Ahmed, 1 do think we are laying too emphasis on the rural areas. The real unrest industrial complexes : strikes, lockouts, bundhs,
much
starts from the gheraos, That's
where we should flame the fires of discontent...(Amar raises his hand to stop Shomik from interrupting) No, Shomik, let me have my say. Half of Bengal lies in Calcutta and the Eastern Coal & Iron Belt.
Here we have the real boiling pot ready to burst. You’re spreading out your revolt too thin in going into a relatively peaceful countryside. SHOMIK: (Like a tiger) Nonsense ! There’s nothing peaceful about
the countryside, Amar. It’s lurking there, under-neath our skins, revolt against this unspeakable tyranny we’ve suffered on the lands .. Listen to me, Amar, you’re like a blood-brother to me, but your place really is in the classroom and those ineffectual bombs you
keep
throwing around the city to frighten a few people.
real revolution starts here, here Amar,
on
the
and spreads...till it engulfs the whole country.
land...and
The
spreads
AHMED : (Raising his hands, wanting to both encourage and stop this Sriendly duel) Hold on. Hold on, both of you, my true mastaans. Of course, both of you are right, because revolution carries no
separate
or individual ideology.
true test is still to come. survive...
But, my friends, let’s wait.
The
What stuff we’re made of, and who shall
AMAR: You...you’ve seen action before, Ahmed. And much more. Neither of us really have, What is your...individual...thinking ?
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ACT I SCENE II
97
SHOMIK : (Also turning to Ahmed) Yes, Ahmed, you’ve never really spoken your mind before. (Ahmed in deep thought. He moves over to the bagful of rice, takes it in his fist, walks outside the door, presumably in front of the fields.) AHMED: (Softly, distantly) There isa personal meaning in it for all of us, you in the classroom Amar, you in the fields Shomik, others in the factory, those who have gone undergound, the martyrs who have died, the search and cry that calls out to all of us, who refuse to stay unmoved...Such is our mould, sometimes heroic, sometimes
selfish
too,
in those
obsessive
human
ideals
of the
future, the frantic struggles of the present, that moves us on and on and on until death and fulfilment...So, I search for the ultimate : the cause and effect. Thecycle of generations that revolt. The great burning desire within us that is prepared to kill and recreate. Build the new world that is as close to God’s image as Man is...(Opening the palm of his hand and seeing the rice) It’s all here. Inthe seed. The urge, and longing. The creation that rebels the moment it’s born. And there...(Looking at the fields)... the earth lies fertile. Me What do I want out of life ? (Laughs peculiarly) There ! (He flings the rice seed to earth beyond...) THis ! ‘
(shutout darkness)
Google
ACT
Daytime.
II
Classroom, Professor lecturing to students
PROF. DATTA : ...Some have described land-grabbing as moral, legitimate and legal. I am not here to contest the moral aspect of the problem : this is purely subjective. I will give you...my legal opinion...(Goes up to the black-board; writes : INDIAN CONSTITUTION,
ARTICLE 31 SECTION (A)(1), ARTICLE 19. As he writes, he speaks)... our Constitution guarantees...all citizens...the right to hold or dispose
therefore
of
private
to grab
(messages flashing
property ... including
land on.
is an
the
wall
land...any
attempt
attack on this fundamental right... as
before : BOURGEOIS LANDLORD
GOVERNMENT...PEASANT UNION...MASS ACTION...PEOPLES’
WAR...)...if
excess land held by some persons is to be made available to those who are deserving and desirous of using it for agriculutre, our law provides the power to acquire land for this purpose...But it also
protects
the
owner.
...under
Article
31,
no
person
can
be
deprived of his property save by authority of law. Section 31 (A) (1) (@) provides that any law, providing for acqisition of any estate or any right therein or the extinguishment or modifica-
tion of such rights, cannot be void...(4 loud yawn from one of the
students : general laughter : Prof. taps on the tion)...cannot be void on the ground that it or takes away or abridges any right conferred ...(Louder yawn of tiresome protest and longer
Boys! Attention
please.
This
is vital,
the
dias to restore attenis inconsistent with by Articles 10 and 31 laughter) Gentlemen !
point
I’m trying to
make. Look at the board. What does it say? It says that in a democracy where the rule of law prevails, the action must be through appropriate legislation...(Teletype messages : CLASS ENEMIES
MURDABAD...INQUILAB...INQUILAB ZINDABAD...) ( fadeout)
Scene shifts to field with two peasants Typically laconic. Equivocating.
Google
sitting
on
their haunches.
ACT
99
Isr PEASANT : Well, what do you think ? 2ND PEASANT : (Taking out a pan and preparing it) Difficult to say.
1st : Should we or should we not join ? 2nD : (Offering him the pan, taking one himself) Yes. Ist: On the one hand, we could become landlords (Benign smile)
2nD: (Chewing slowly; then faster) Yes. Isr:
ourselves...
Yes.
...on the other hand we could land up in jail. (downcast gloom)
2nD: (Chewing slowly once again) Yes. (Long silence; shifting pan from one cheek to another) There’s another side too.
the
Ist: Yes? 2npD : If we do join, we’re brothers...all united.
Ist; Yes. Yes. 2nD : If we don’t join, we’re outcasts...victimized. Ist: True. (Shaking his head) Only too true. 2ND : (Raising his finger) But... Ist: Huh ? 2nD : But there’s a third side to it too. Isr: What 7 2nD : The Politician and the Police. Isr : (Shooting out a spitful of juice in reply) 2nD: No. No. Don’t forget them. Just because they haven’t taken any action yet does not mean they will not. Ist ; They’re afraid. 2nD : Of whom ? The terrorists... ? Ist: No. They’re afraid any action against us will upset their votes...or at least Shomik says so.
2np : Ah, Shomik ? (Shoots out a spitful of pan in disdainful reply) 1st : No, no, my friend, don’t underestimate him.
2np : Bah ! Ist: He has friends. They don’t talk; they kill. (2nd peasant carefully silent; no reply. Another long pause.) 2np : So, we're caught between the devil and the deep, are we ? Ist : E don’t know...(Then thoughtfully)...’ve been thinking... 2nD : (Surprised) Yes ? Isr: (Ignoring the facetiousness...there is an underlying humour about this scene) Are we ?
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100
INQUILAB
2npD : (Now irritated) Are we what ?
1st : Are we between the devil and the deep ? _2ND : (More irritated) That’s the question I asked you ! Ist : You did ? 2ND: Yes.
1st : Well, I’ve been thinking... (Second one in quiet exasperation, keeps quiet; thinking away, repeating for the last time) I’ve been thinking that we should join. Look, we've really got nothing to lose. Land-grab is taking place everywhere. Even this State government has a sneaking sympathy for it. 2np : What if they jail us ?
lst: What if they do? Our greatest leaders were once in jail fighting against the same sort of unfairness. All this means is that they’ll change the laws faster, or make sure there is less delay in seeing that the laws apply to us fairly.
2np: Yes,
they won’t keep us long in jail if we're fighting for a just
and moral cause, ' Isr : There’s only one thing I don’t like. 2nD : What 7 1st : Where to stop. Oh, you know and I know, or think we know, how far to go. But when leadership is in the hands of...of extremists, I’m afraid it may not stop with the land-grab.
2np : What do you mean ?
Isr: I don’t know...yet. But I’ve got a strong feeling something’s going to happen soon. Therc've been secret meetings held of late : an inner group that seems to control and guide.
2np:
As long as I get the extra land, I don’t care.
1st : I hope so... (Darkness.
Scene
shifts back
,
to college...corridor
with 2 or 3
boys and maybe a girl grouping around for a chat.) 1st Boy : I don’t know how you feel about it, but I’m quite fed up. 2nD Boy : Fed up with what 7
1st Boy : Oh, the whole bloody thing. doesn’t
know
how
This damned University that
to teach or what to teach.
They’re a hundred
years old . backdated in their ideas. 3RD Boy : Still...a degree here can land you with a job.
GIRL (Butting in) : How many and whom ?
3RD BOY : What are you worried about?
You're a girl.
GiRL ; (Not to be put down) Who do you think you have for a Prime
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ACT It
101
Minister today ! (Everybody laughs) Though my ideals are different.
I'd rather be a Leila Khaled or a Angela Davis today.
2nD Boy : Who’s that ? Isr Boy : (Dryly)...Palestinian commando...Black Marxist... . 2nD BOY : (Quiet, slightly awed, slightly frightened) 1...1 see. ...never quite thought of girls that way. (Others laugh again. There is a humorous freshness, a pleasantness about them, which can immediately become serious and frightening.) You ..you... mean you’re a Naxal. (The girl does not reply; she opens her compact and begins to put on lipstick.) Ist Boy : (Looking at her and winking) Naxals don’t talk. They do. 3rD Boy : Look, Let’s not get carried away. Being a Naxal sympathiser is not being a Naxal. A lot of us in College are sympathisers...for various reasons, not all of it political. Ist Boy : For once I agree. GIRL: What difference does it make? Activist or sympathiser ? It’s the same cause.
Overthrow of this present rotten system.
3RD Boy : What’s so rotten, for argument’s sake. GIRL: Anil said a little while ago they were antiquated. 1 can add afew more. Would you say they’re...honest with us ? Or purposeful? Have they done anything to fulfil their promises, either with us or themselves ? Ever since they grabbed power 23 years
ago, they just kept perpetuating British colonialism.
. Ist Boy (Anil) : Right. 3rp Boy : Oh, it’s not as bad as all that. Mind you, I think the College could do with a lot of improvement, but to throw it all overboard saying that it’s bourgeois or rotten to the core does not solve the problem. 2nD BOY : (Yawning) Me? I love holidays. GIRL: What do you do? 2np Boy : Oh, at first I just wait in queues. Queues for trams, queues for cinemas, queues to thake a pee. But there are so many of us
who are not prepared to whether it’s the tram, fight for survival...(From them are moved by the none.)
wait... So, when we see the end we rush, the cinema ticket or the w.c. Then it’s a the humorous to the deep thought. All of philosophical content, which has escaped
1st Boy : What about the poverty ?
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2np. Boy : What about it? It’s disgusting, that’s all. Girv : Disgusting that it’s there, or that it is allowed to remain ? 2ND Boy: Never thought much about it. GIRL : (Softly) Amar often talks about it.
set-up.
Blames it on the
present
3rD Boy: Amar? He’s a poet. Deeply moved, emotional. Not the stuff that activities and politicians are made of. Isr Boy : (Looking at him; it is clear that each student respects the
other,
despite their honest
agreements
think so 7 3RD BOY : (Looking back steadily) Yes.
‘GIRL : (Pensively) Some
say he belongs
Being a poet may be a pose.
Isr Boy : You
never
know.
3RD Boy: Still
it must
Till the
or disagreements) Do you
to the
“inner
sanctum”’.
police start gunning.
the suspicion gets deep, the real ones go underground.
Prof. here.
be awkward
When
for him to have a father as a
Or rather the other way around,
2ND BOY : I smell trouble. My nose...is intuitive. GIRL : Why don’t you give it a holiday too sometime. 2nD Boy : (Lumbering up to her) Then how will I “sniff” “sniff” you. (All laugh as she gives him a playful push) Gosh ! I'd hate to fool
around with you never knowing when your couple of bombs go “bang” “bang”. (Ogling her, others laughing louder, she somewhat embarrassed and angry now.)
GIRL : Oh, you ! (She whacks him on the head with her
baghand
and
runs after him as he disappears zig-zagging out of the corridor, to the genial laughter of the groups.) (Blackout) (Another quick scene, this time the suggestion of two prisoners in a cell being interrogated by an Officer [Intelligence] and a policeman. One of the prisoners looks like a real goondaand the other a slightly upper-class type. The latter could be the same young man who was talking to the peasants in one of the earlier scenes. All these peasant and plebian scenes of course are in the vernacular or regional
language : not English)
GOONDA : (Lying down, smoking the Char Minar) Well...look who’s here. (As the Inspector and Policeman enter, closing the iron-barred
door.)
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“ACT It
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UPPER-CLASS TYPE: Reception Committee. GOONDA: Where’s the Mayor, and those ladies with fat arses and fatter purses.
I-o-v-e-l-y
fashionable
POLICEMAN: Shut up!
INSPECTOR : (To Policeman, coolly) I presume it’s the other one. GOoNDA : Oh, so you've come here to question my friend. I-n-t-e-rT-0-g-a-t-i-o-n. (Jo the U.C. type) That’s another word. For beating you up, chum. POLICEMAN ; (Jo Goonda) You're itching for it, aren’t you ! GOONDA : (Scratching his balls) I got only one itch. INSPECTOR : (Jo U.C. type, ignoring others) So, you look upon him as your friend too, do you ? U.c.T : (Steadily looking back) I know you're not mine. INSPECTOR : (Coolly taking out note book, reading...) Name: Ashok Chandra. Family: the Chandra Group...(Looking at him significantly) Occupation : Post-graduate...drop-out...Correction: Present Occupation : No more the armchair intellectual : the active Naxal caught red-handed in the act of throwing a petrol-bomb on a police-van...
U.C.T.: (Coolly) As
up your arse...(He
my
friend would
cannot complete
say, too bad it wasn’t shoved
the sentence because the police
Inspector has slapped him hard across the face; hair and turning his head to face the goonda.) INSPECTOR : (Turning
angry
fist) Look
here,
you
then
catching
his
fucking bastard!
Look what you’ve become ! A bloody goonda who only knows violence and hate! (For a mesmeric moment to Goonda and U.C. type stare at each other.)
v.c.T : (Softly) For a purpose.
For a purpose you
wouldn’t
under-
stand. . INSPECTOR : I understand all right. That’s the trouble. We've been too patient. Too kind. Too understanding. Maybe it was political. Idon’t know. But you’ve gone too far. And you don’t change. You’re worse than the criminal type. What I can’t understand is why you do it. You're privileged. Alright, so you’re inspired. For the good of mankind, you're prepared to kill. It’s the same thing. There’s no difference between you and he. You're worse. GOONDA: (Raising himself with facetious dignity) Now don’t you go
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INQUILAB
casting
aspersions
on me,
police
Inspector
sahib.
(Policeman
raises his baton and he cowers giggling away in the corner.)
INSPECTOR: (Not unkindly) Now listen to me, young pressures on many
sides.
Building
up.
Your
man.
my boss is gunning, the political party is gunning.
I’ve got
father’s
gunning,
Still I have to
do my job. And my job is first and foremost to protect my own people: the policemen on duty. One drop of blood from my brother and Pll cut your throat. (Then earnestly, trying his last)
Why the policeman, you idiot, why the policeman !
v.c.T : (Softly, almost hypnotically to himself) Symbol of law-andorder. It didn’t matter earlier : you didn’t come in my way. We
stepped up our activities.
Now you do, so you better watch out...
(Stands up, looks out of bars, back to others) No use being armchair intellectual. Universities... Armed Police...all the same... (He is almost talking to himself, so his words almost appear disjointed as
he rationalizes to himself)... Symbol of Authority...of Government
built on preserving the Good and the Rich and the Powerful. But there are others too...humanity that suffers...reaches the point of
no and of can to
return...then retaliates !_ (Nobody interrupts his almost sacred passionate discourse with himself) The overthrow...involves use all methods...most of all terror and violence. Leadership... only come from the intellectual few...to stir up the masses in-
revolt...organized
so that
they
replace
the
present
corrupt
administration when the time is ripe. I...must be actively involved...or withdraw into cowardice and abstraction, believing but doing nothing like the older generation...(Then suddenly coming back to the present, turning around)
lay off! Lay off us, or we'll kill you.
Ym warning
you,
Inspector,
INSPECTOR : (Laughs dryly, the cold killer glint in his eyes too; softly) There’s nothing...I love more than a direct confrontation. I tried my best with you (Rolling up his sleeve and baring his knuckles, shoving the policeman and goonda aside
fearfully,
while
his opponent’s) But you've brought out
on!
who
moves
away
me.
Come
the Inspector’s muscles build up to twice the size of
Fight, you fucking bastard
!
the
brute
in
(Blackout) (Shift of scene again to main-line story : light sharply focussed as
narrow
beam
a
on a cultivable field, and then the sudden plunge of a
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ACT It
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spear...gradually circumference of the light enlarges to reveal a large
group
of peasants, armed with lathis and spears and sickles asserting
themselves in the process of the land-grab. The spear is of course the inarticulate assertion of their claim. Shomik the leader.)
SHOMIK: (With raised challenging voice) Any man ..who removes this spear...gets it in the throat. (Wild cheers; an excited crowd) We have staked our claim, brothers. On the same spot where your fathers worked as slaves, you will earn your freedom . (Cheers again; men with measuring tapes busy demarcating...) That’s right. Each man an equal share.
VILLAGER: Jainsahib carries 4 revolver... SHOMIK: (Raising a lathi) Let him try! (applause) ANOTHER: The police carry lathis... SHOMIK : (Raising the sickle; laughing) Let them try ! (More Gaiety mixed with nervous excitement) ANOTHER: Politician Devdas... SHOMIK: (Interrupting, glowering) Ah, as for Politician (Leaves sentence unfinished, but that is enough) Brothers, ago was it that Politician Devdas gave us promises of tribution... VILLAGERS: ...long, long ago... SHOMIK: And how many promises has he fulfilled...? VILLAGERS: ...nothing, nothing...
applause. Devdas... how long land dis-
SHOMIK : How long are we going to what, huh? Till we grow old and infirm ? Meanwhile he makes deals with landlord Jain and others like him who control the Government (Nod of consent and approval) Let’s not fool ourselves. We are taking laws into our own hands...because this is the only law that produces results ! (Nods of wide approval, the measurer of land whispers to Shomik. Shomik turning to crowd.) SHOMIK : The measurements of land are complete. As I said before, each one equal share. But I have an extra person to suggest for equal share.
crow: Who ? sHOMIK: Landlord Jain. ONE OF THEM: Huh? SHOMIK : I want landlord Jain to share alike because he is prepared
to work
with his hands.
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Let it not be said that we do not
106
INQUILAB
dispense justice ! (New idea; crowd still baffled) I also want him to feel...a sense of humiliation. This is our revenge, brothers. . No more will he order us around. He will grow his own...and stand on his own feet. (Drift of crowd in his Savour; pretty soon all agree; cheering) If he resists...if he resists, my friends...( Again, leaves sentence unfinished)...we shall have to try him out, according to our own laws...(Others puzzled again) Every revolution has its own laws. Its Courts and Councils of justice...(Laughs) All of you needn’t worry. Leave it. to our inner Council. Meanwhile, let us have your expression of confidence ! crowp: (Slowly at first; then louder in volume and anger and collective threat) JOTEDAR MURDADBAD ! INQIULAB ZINDABAD !
INQUILAB ZINDABAD
SHOMIK: again. crowD: first
!
(Jn frenzy) Again. Again and again. Louder and louder . / (The volume growing to frightening proportions; this is the
occasion
when
the
words
are
collectively uttered; the earlier
ones were silent written ticker-tape flashes) JOTEDAR INQUILAB ZINDABAD ! JOTEDAR MURDABAD !
SHOMIK:
villages,
(Real demagogue)
Right ! Now let us
march
to new fields! To grab...and call our own. (fadeout)
MURDABAD on,
to
new
(Again sharp transition back to college scene with sound and flash of
sudden
sion,
which
explosion
: a
bomb planted or thrown...a cocktail.
Confu-
shouts, screams presumably on road adjacent to college campus has
its immediate
repercussions
on
the
excited
students.
Students running helter-skelter, forming animated little groups.) IST STUDENT: ...bomb thrown... : 2ND STUDENT:
...police van...
3RD STUDENT:
...one dead, two
. 4TH STUDENT: STH STUDENT:
injured...
...pedestrian too... ..-assassin unknown...
ONE OF THEM: ...presumed Naxalite... ANOTHER: ...Who else...? YET ANOTHER: ... warnings... ANOTHER: ...and counter threats... AND SO ON: ...confrontation...
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107
ACT Il BOUNCED BACK & FORTH: ...bound to explode... FRAGMENTS OVERHEARD : ...wonder if it was a student... AGAIN: ...Who else...? ANOTHER: ...easy to get lost...
BACK AGAIN 3+ ...amongst us...
ANOTHER: ...blood everywhere... AGAIN: ...land-grab becoming violent too... ANOTHER: ...building and property grab to start
AGAIN:
...good thing.
I’m sick of monopolists...
too...
ANOTHER: ...the rich make me vomit... AGAIN: ...but wait. Violence no answer... ANOTHER:
...nO time to wait...
AGAIN: God! The blood I saw... ANOTHER: ...it’s quite another thing to theorize... AGAIN: ...that’s all we learn here. Theories, and theories, and theories... ANOTHER: ...s0 you want to go out and bomb too... AGAIN: ...not that far! Not somuch! Protest that must stop. ANOTHER :_ ...Where...? AGAIN: ...I don’t know... ANOTHER :_ ...do you doubt ?... AGAIN: ...I[ non’t know... ANOTHER: ...do you doubt ?... AGAIN: .. God, no ! ANOTHER: ...No God? Do you believe in God ? AGAIN: ...what atime to ask! ANOTHER: ...What a time to die. AGAIN: ...I believe in nothing... ANOTHER: ...I believein a New World... AGAIN: ...a Brave New One ? ANOTHER: ...anything better than the old one...
AGAIN:
...yeS...
AGAIN:
...1 feft sick seeing so much blood...
ANOTHER: ...and then what ? Are we going to commit mistakes... AGAIN: ...at least it will be our own... ANOTHER: ...ones we are prepared to suffer for...
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the
same
108
INQUILAB
ANOTHER: ...serves them right... AGAIN: ...as long as it wasn’t your own... ...I am prepared to die... ANOTHER: AGAIN: ...but what if the man you kill is innocent...
ANOTHER:
...too bad.
ANOTHER:
...bloody hypocrites...
...no! It matters very much. It...bothers...me AGAIN: ...conscience 7 You suffer from conscience 7 ANOTHER: ...vote of conscience, they say in politics... AGAIN:
AGAIN:
clean.
ANOTHER: anyone
AGAIN:
thinking
is
You'll learn to become as dishonest
as
IS THIS GOING
TO
We maybe wrong,
...yeah.
...give it time.
else...
but
Talk for yourself {
at least
ANOTHER, ANOTHER, ANOTHER : WHEN THE HELL END ? AGAIN, AGAIN, AGAIN: NEVER, NEVER. NEVER!
our
,
( fadeout)
(Same scene. Fadeout on students, brighter light on Amar, dishevelled, restless, pacing, waiting for someone...until Suprea comes.
Dashes up to her.)
(Holding her hand, almost with sense of urgency) Suprea ! AMAR: (Wide-eyed, fearful, almost hysterical) Where have you supREA: been, Amar 7 I’ve been frantic searching for you. AMAR : I...I was...caught up in the rush.
Imagine SUPREA : Close. It was just next to our college building. ...this happening in broad daylight. Nobody’s afraid...and yet of course they are. AMAR: the...the... supREA: How terrible ! How terrible ! Did you see dead and injured... AmaR (Eyes afar) No. Just a blur... (Her excitement lessening; returning more to normal)...just SUPREA: a blur... just That’s how life is, Suprea. It travels fast and deep... AMAR: a blur...and before you know it...it’s over. supREA: Is it...? life Like the moths who are born in the day, cover their AMAR:
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ACT
IL
109
span in a few hours, and die by evening. SUPREA: ...unless they are drawn to the flame... AMAR: Meaning ? SUPREA : Meaning you can destroy yourself earlier too...
AMAR:
It’s what you do during those few hours
that matters.
SUPREA: Yes,even moths propagate before they die, and in so doing, learn to love life. Indeed, find it beautiful too... AMAR: (Facetiously banging his head on the wall) Oh, that I were a moth. Dear God, oh that I were reincarnated a moth ! SUPREA: (Laughing, and cupping his face in her hands, the transition from fear to love to laughter so easy for the young) I'd ask to be born a mothess then...(Both laugh) but seriously, Amar, here we are laughing in the middle of horror...a tragedy. Something must be wrong with us. AMAR : (Knocking on her head) Yes, Vl have to get your head
examined.
SUPREA: (Pushing him away) Oh, silly ! (Then looking at each other, the glee in their eyes suddenly fading, her eyes gradually becoming clouded, coming in his arms with her head protected by his chest) Oh, Amar...Amar...
AMAR:
SUPREA:
You're not going to cry again.
(Looking up) I’m worried, Amar, I’m worried sick. ‘T want
you to protect me like this...always.
AMAR:
SUPREA:
It will pass.
It will pass.
But I’m
worried.
Oh, you should have seen them, lying in the pool of blood,
moaning with pain...
AMAR: ...the risks of being a policeman... SUPREA: (Separating from him) What are you saying ? Amar... ‘they’re...they’re human beings...with flesh and blood like you and I... AMAR: JI... was merely suggesting...that theirs is a dangerous profession...
SUPREA:
It didn’t sound that way
were justifying...
AMAR:
It’s a war.
It’sa
war,
to me...almost
Suprea.
That’s
as though
what
they
Any attack on a policeman is a war with the Government. fair in love and...
SUPREA:
No. Amar, no, It’s not fair.
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you
claim.
All’s
Because it’s not human,
110
AMAR:
SUPREA:
INQUILAB
Both sides are prepared. And the innocent
ones...?
AMAR: None are innocent. None can abstain. We're all involved. SUPREA : Even the poor woman who died on the footpath near the police van, and the child who was injured ? AMAR: (His composure shaken for the first time) C...child 2? Woman ? SUPREA: Yes. These things happen in a blur. There are innocent bystanders in life, Amar, or don’t you know ? AMAR: (Repeating) I...1 didn’t know...there was a...woman and child... SUPREA: You don’t know a lot, Amar, and yet you’re prepared to pass judgement. AMAR :
(Angry, retaliating without
knowing
why)
As
though
do !. What would you know living in that well-protected
your father.
SUPREA: I know a
lot !
AMAR :
(Blurting out) Well, do you know your father is
AMAR:
N...nothing.
AMAR:
Y...your father carries
SUPREA: SUPREA :
farm
you
of
in danger !
(Silent, shocked, realizing) Wh...what are you saying ?
(Jnsistent) What did you say just now, Amar
inviting trouble.
a gun.
That’s
!
dangerous,
That’s
SUPREA: (Holding him, urgently) What do you know, Amar ? AMAR: (Harassed expression, undecided, moved by his concern for
her) His
suPREA : AMAR:
resist.
land is being taken...forcibly.
(Turning around to
leave) Ob!
(Catches her) Wait ! Wait, Suprea.
The mood’s bad.
Tell...tell
Anything could happen.
him...not to
.
SUPREA: (Alarmed) He will resist. I know he will { AMAR: (Holding her with greater urgency) Tell bim he must not ! Let
things cool.
supREA : (Wanting to tear herself away) Let me go. AMAR : (Holding on) In a moment. (Trying hard) Suprea...Suprea...
supRBA:
(Apprehensive,
not
moving,
What’s it, Amar ? AMAR: (Steadying himself) Suprea...I
while...
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not won’t
resisting, be
seeing
sensing
him)
you...for
a
————”
ACT Il
111
SuPREA:
(Afraid now) What do you mean?
Why ?
AMAR: (Holding back in spite of himself) 1...1 can’t tell you...now... supREA: D...did it have anything todo with the bombing now 7? (No reply) D...does it have anything to do...with my father’s land ...) (Amar opens his mouth, but no reply. She turns around, crying and dashes away, whilst Amar stands helplessly, alone.) (Blackout)
(Scene moves to Professor’s residence. ...dim light on table with light.
Professor Datta in his study
wife decorating the statue. Professor working on He has a troubled, distracted air. Shadow fall,
stranger, Ahmed. Professor looks up with a start, trying to focus his eyes through glasses; momentary disbelief and apprehension.) PROF.: ..A...Amar ? (Ahmed steps into the right) AHMED:
pRoF.: AHMED
(Quietly) No, it’s me, Professor Datta.
:
(Abstractly) Oh...I thought for a moment... (Repeating firmly) No, it’s me.
pRoF.: Ahh...yes, Ahmed. I...we...were expecting...hoping for Amar’s return. (Ahmed does not reply) He...he’s disappeared. Perhaps you
may
know
something.
You’re
his
friend.
very highly about you...too little though... AHMED : If he’s missing, why don’t you call the Police ? PROF. AHMED PROF. AHMED _
Spoke
: (Stammering, hesitatingM...1... : It’s their job to find missing people. : (Helplessly) They...they were here, ; Oh...in that case they’ll be searching for him.
PROF. : They are.
(Ahmed looks at him.
He falters again, they blurt
out.) They...they think he’s connected with the police slaying! AHMED : (Deadpan) I see. PROF. : You don’t think he’s responsible for it, do you? I mean...I
mean it’s one thing to theorise, quite another...to...kill.
the type, Ahmed.
He’s not
He...(Almost pathetically). he’s like me...invol-
ved in his own abstractions... AHMED : You don’t seem very sure about your own son. pro. : He...he always was remote. Poetic by nature, I said. But there was a ferment within him I could neither understand for control.
AHMED : (Softly) Perhaps you didn’t try...
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112
'
INQUILAB
PROF. : (Awakened from reverie, provoked) Try? To understand ? His mother said that too. Have you thought of it the other way around? Did he try? To understand me? The inner lawr and philosophies that the older live by. The young can be selfish. AHMED : (Softly)...sometimes shy to show themselves, sometimes resentful at being discovered...
PROF. : (Mildly surprised) Strange. You seem to know his qualities well. Like someone close. Yes, he is that. AHMED : Then there was not any deep confict between you. pror. : Are you asking me whether there was love between us?
The
answer
is yes.
But
if you’re
asking whether there was any
conflict the answer is still yes. We stood poles apart. AHMED : (Hard smile in his eyes) 1 understand.
pRoF. : He’s seen me...over the years...engrossed in teaching. rationalism of laws.
it.
He willnot.
In objectivity and fairness.
However much
Yes.
he tries.
In the
He cannot escape
(Ahmed quiet) That’s
why I cannot believe he’s guilty. AHMED : He might have his own standards of action and judgement. PRoF.: No doubt. But mine are bound to wear off on him...somewhat. AHMED : You might be right. Perhaps that’s the source of his own trouble...a sense of doubt... pror. : (To himself) Maybe...I was...too rigid. Too inflexible outside, too weak inside...(7o Ahmed) Where do you think he’s gone ? AHMED’:
Underground.
Probably in the countryside.
PROF. : (Again introduction) effete...to cope with
Sometimes...I
everything.
Too
feel...too
close
to
the
detached, end,
too
unable
really to understand. His mother.. his mother is the opposite. A strong instinct...all consuming...And I too removed...(Ahmed Stiffens imperceptibly.) AHMED : (Very softly) ...his mother... PROF. : (Unbroken mood)
His mother...suffered
terribly...the loss
her first child. Somehow never forgave me, as responsible. He was lost...lost, you understand.
of
though I were
AHMED : (Co/d) You never...search for him.
pror. : (Weakly, lamely) How? Where? Oh, yes, the usual things ..-Police, friends, enquiries...But she expected me to turn the whole
world jnside out,
She was like some mad beast, possessed.
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ACT II
113
frightening passion.
I felt paralyzed...paralyzed, you understand !
AHMED : (Hardly audible) No. PROF. : (Intent on convincing himself) him out. Out in the wilderness?
She kept insisting that I search Where there was no chance for
survival...in those primitive hills...either for
him
or.me?
There
was no proof that he was alive. How wasI to convince her, a primitive superstitious woman, who unreasonably drained me... AHMED : (Softly) You began to wish him dead, didn’t you. PROF, : (Self-hypnotised, his eyes wider) Yes, yes! I began to wish him dead! For she was killing me. Every day...(His voice rising) -every night I wished that some evidence would turn up...bloodstained
clothes,
a torn
doll...teethmarks of a wild animal or the
bloody knife of a savage !...(Closing his eyes, controlling himself)... forgive me. Forgive me...these demons of the night, which she creates from clay and fleseh, make me wonder, drive me frantic, how insane her desire, how craving her fertility, that she takes from me my last vestiges of manhood, and then keep searching on and on for her lost sons... AHMED: (Gently pushing him aside) 1 will see her now... (Professor
tired, slumps back in chair, saying nothing. Ahmed enters her prayer room. Some of the horrentous expressions of the faces of the victims...the slain devils, evils in fatal combat, animals, man in combat...are taking shape. So are the weapons of destruction... clubs, spears, knives, axes...and the determined, serene face of
Goddess Mother with her full voluptuous figure. Ahmed enters. The Mother looks at him without saying a word, one hand to her heart and the other tremblingly stretching out to touch him.) (Blackout) (Scene shifts go field at night with
kerosene
lamp and “Council
of
Justice” squatting on the ground in a circle. This is the “inner sanctum” meeting, with peasants giving summary justice, along the
methods adopted by the Maosit revolutionaries. Tied in the center is landlord Jain, mouth muffled, Ahmed, Amar and Shomik are there. Ahmed one hardly sees, but his presence is always felt. He is not an active participant, but his authority is unquestionable. Surrounded
by peasants, excitable, rebellious, thirsting for blood.) AHMED ; (Raising his hands to hush them) Friends. Landlord Jain trespasses. Yet he calls this Jand his own. Some have called
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INQUILAB
him friend: others enemy. must prevail.
Who’s to judge?
The laws of society
You.
But fairness
one such as we have created in
our midst today. Jain’s on trial. His freedom or punishment is for you to decide. Is he guilty, or isn’t he? I nominate...Shomik as prosecutor... (Cheers) To find a defence is difficult. Perhaps we are as biased on this side as they are on the other. Absolute justice...there is none. So, we shall try and come close...examine the doubts that there are...by one most suitable: young Amar here...(Slight restlessness and comment; softly) I withdraw...(He
disappears into darkness.)
SHOMIK : (Getting
up,
coming to the centre, pointing finger at Jain) 1
accuse ! (Pause; abruptly) He’s guilty. That’s all there is to it. AMAR : (Intercepting) This is a trial; not a verdict. SHOMIK : I’m giving him as much chance as he gave us.
AMAR:
You’re giving him none.
SHOMIK: Exactly. AMAR : (Turning to the Council) Look, I’m not one of you.
But I’m
with you, you understand. We decided on something: a trial. Let us have the honesty to persue it. (Nods from Council members)
SHOMIK: So, the first round goes to you. Alright, we'll play it your way. I hear you’re the son ofa teacher, a lawman. Friend of*
landlord Jain, they say. AMAR : (Flushing) That has nothing to do with it. SHOMIK: We'll see. . AMAR : (To Council) Let us judge Jainji as an individual; not a class enemy. Everybody admits he’s been fair in his dealings, and a hard worker. Look at his calloused hands if you don’t believe me +-(Jain’s
eyes flicker with new recognition at Amar)
father if you don’t believe me... SHOMIK : (Flushing) That has nothing to do with it !
Ask Shomik’s
:
AMAR : We'll see. SHOMIK : (To Council) Don’t be misled by his cleverness.
forked
tongue of the privileged class.
never die within us. For him, the loyalty to his us the hatred that burns for generations.
AMAR : That’s not true ! We’re looking for justice. On
reason.
They
amount to the same thing.
today are the laws that will survive tomorrow.
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He has the
There are some things that own
people;
for
Laws are based
The laws we make
Let us not start
ACT
115
on the wrong footing.
SHOMIK : Jain must be judged as a class enemy and not an individual. Every
cause,
AMAR:
time
you
make
excuses for the individual you weaken the
(Sweating) There is no such thing as a system.
only individuals that find themselves caught in it.
There
are
sHoMIK : Anyone that perpetuates is as guilty as the doer. What are you fighting for ? Your right, or Jain’s charity? The charity is meant to humiliate us, deprive us of the will to oppose. AMAR: Oppose by all means. Change through opposition. Be careful before you overthrow...(Distantly)...harmless lives may be involved...
SHOMIK:
Constitutional change did us no good.
We
waited...and
waited. Until hope died and the new life withered. Cruelty... (Reminiscing)...is inevitable. Let us suffer it no more than we have to. Enjoy it no more than we must. AMAR: There is no summary justice. It must come painfully. Once you use a revolt to your own ends, it destroys what could be most meaningful. SHOMIK: Enough ! No more platitudes. We’ve come here...not to learn...from the son of a schoolmaster, but to take...corrective action ! (Sounds of consent from crowd; aside to Amar) Hear them, Amar. They’re judging you too, you know. It’s one thing to be defence counsel, another to be...defector ! AMAR:
(Aside to Shomik) You're using this for your personal
Shomik !
ends,
SHOMIK : (Aside back to him) What’s your loyalty, Amar! If you’re willing to do this for your father’s friend what wouldn’t you do for your father and the other bourgeois.
AMAR:
(Aside reply) I’d do what I think is right.
AMAR :
(Whispering) Jain. No time now.
SHOMIK : (Aside again ) Even break up what your father stands for ? AMAR: (Sweating) Yes. SHOMIK : (Aloud to Council members) Comrades, the real test lies outside, for all of us. Come, let us reach a decision. Is Jain willing to repent ? Or is he going to be stubborn 2 (Amar goes up to Jain. Removes the cloth from his mouth ; whispers urgently to him.)
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No after-dinner discussion.
116
INQUILAB
This is it. Listen to cannot be...unmoved.
doubt
doubt...myself,
me. Possibly...1 break my principles. Justice...cannot operate in...vacuum.
too.
my...father
For my sake, your own, hers too, Plead guilty. I’ll seek your release.
Only Suprea
I I
I believe.
do one thing : plead guilty.
JAIN: (Looks at him steadily in his eyes, a look of concern and care, more for the young man than himself) NOT GUILTY. (Blackout)
(Now from low tempo to high climax. The tension should be felt reaching a crescendo. Scene switches to politician Devdas, the Police inspector, and the big-wheel politician from the Centre.) BIG-WHEEL POLITICIAN FROM THE CENTER : for yourself, Devdas. DEVDAS: (Slight subservience difficult situation. BIG WHEEL:
before
What do you have to
Greater
(Dryly) I’m aware of that.
Authority)
say
Difficult, .
But we each have our
own
jobs to do in the party. Me in the Centre, you in the State here. It’s a tight-rope walk...with us on either side of the balancing pole.
DEVDAS:
(Wiping his brow with handkerchief)
I'm
aware
of
that...
T’m aware of that. B.w.: Well, the situation is getting out of hand here. No law and order. Or rather no semblance of law and order. DEvDAS: I called the Inspector here to give you the latest report. B.w.: Well, Inspector ? INSPECTOR :
Sir, I can only go as far as you allow meto.
to wait for trouble, then it’s bound to precede me. special powers...for preventive detention.
B.w.:
Easier said than done; Inspector.
B.w.:
I’m
Our leftist
IfI
have
I need to have
colleagues
will
tear me apart in the Centre if I ask to invoke the P.D. Act. INSPECTOR : (Shrugging his shoulders) Then how can you expect me to stabilize things ? (Pensively) Behind every garbage-dump there’s a goonda, and behind every college desk is a potential Naxal. I’m no magician. afraid
you'll
Central Reserve Police balancing act too.
DEVDAS:
have
to
to
come
be
on
one...unless
top of you.
you
What does the C.R.P. have to do with this ?
Google
want
the
You're in the
ACT I
117
B.w.: It’s not only the C.R.P, Your own neck’s in the noose, Devdas. If the situation gets any worse, the Centre will intervene. DEVDAS : (Bewildered) What do you mean ? B.w.: President’s Rule. (There is a moment's stunned silence.) DEvDAS: (Sweating) But...but they can’t do that to me. B.w.: (Humourlessly) Can’t they ? DEVDAS : (Stammering) Th...they can’t strip me of my po...position. Yo...you must stop th...them. Th...that’s your job in the Ce... Centre. B.w.: (Almost wearily) Don’t be naive, Devdas. I don’t want it
any more than you.
We’re caught between the devil and the deep,
A revolutionary left that’s taking the wind out of our sails: a conservative right that’s trying to edge us out...(Laughing bitterly) Ironical, isn’t it, that in trying to be constitutional we appear the greatest villains. True, we’re important in the Centre, but not that important we can have a ruling say...At best we play the
game of checks and balances...
INSPECTOR :
B.w.:
Yes, Inspector ?
INSPECTOR: tion... B.w.:
(Coughing apologetically) Sir ? This...this is outside
my...my
sphere...but
Yes, Inspector ?
INSPECTOR :
The problem at its roots is not one
and
order.
(Giving the Inspector a nasty stare) Easier said than
done.
It’s...(Coughing)...one of administration.
B.w.:
a sugges-
(Turning to Devdas) Well, Devdas
DEVDAS :
of
law
?
We’ve got fourteen splinter parties in Government here.
you were the minority in the Centre;
here, but it doesn’t vying for a vote here.
back.
We're
You said
well, we are the majority
make the problem any simpler...Everyone’s And everyone’s climbing on each other’s
jockeying...with
the lead now, but there are a pack
of wolves behind me. I handle the situation too tough, and the Political doves flutter; handle it too soft, and the hawks start
pecking. (Laughing bitterly too) So, you see than you. INSEPCTOR :
It seems we’re forgetting the B.w. & DEvDAS: (Together) Yes ?
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basic
: I’m
no
problem...
better off
118
-
INQUILAB
INSPECTOR : (Takes a deep breath, shuts his eyes, saying all that he’s ever wanted to, once and for all) Poverty. Unemployment. Injustice Refugees. Corruption. Filth. (Opening his eyes to see them both) Politics, Shall 1 continue? (Both stare at him murderously, momentarily too astonished to reply) (Before anyone can reply, Suprea comes in, breathless.)
SUPREA: Devdas. wrong.
DEvDAS:
Devdasji.
Father hasn’t come yet.
Something’s
I know something’s wrong !
Sit down, Suprea.
Take it easy.
SUPREA: (Urgently) No, please come. I heard Inspectorsahib was with you. (Looking at the Inspector) My father’s in trouble. I know. (Before her affirmativeness both men waver) Please don’t question me.
You're
the fields... know
wasting
where
he
time.
went.
(Inspector briskly makes a decision.)
Precious
Bring
INSPECTOR: (Picking up his cap)’m coming. look at him. Then decide to follow.)
time.
the
.
There...in
torch
along.
(The two politicians
(fadeout) (Three men and a girl out in the field. Darkness. The glow of the flashlight, and its beam cutting through the night. Silence. Hard breathing, the cold of the night. Is the shiver that of the cold? The three plod silently, purposefully, in the certainty of a find that nobody dared guess. Unusual. Almost psychedelic. Another part
of the stage : separated in time and space: an eerie mystique : the
statue of Mother Durga, now complete. 'The Durga statue in darkness too: but flashes, pops of light...technically done through ordinary camera flashbulbs fastened at different points on the statue...flashing the blazing face now, the demonic cries then, the whirring arms with weapons of destruction, all leading to one arm carrying something not yet clear...Meanwhile, mesmeric teletape on wall,
on
blackboard,
everywhere
: RED
TERROR...RED
TERROR...
BATTLE OF ANNIHILATION...ANNIHILATION...ANNIHILATION...CHAIRMAN...CHAIRMAN MAO...CHAIRMAN. MAO...DEATH TO CLASS ENEMIES ... ANNIHILATION... ANNIHILATION...JOTEDAR MURDABAD...ZAMIN-
DAR
MURDABAD...A
scream;
Google
a penetrating
horrifying
scream:
ACT Il
119
Suprea’s; shattering, completely shattering...Simultaneously two images : the tenth arm of Durga carries a bloody severed head of clay and together the beam of the torch shines full on Jain’s severed head hung on two poles, eyes dilated into death, hair dripping with
blood.)
(Blackout)
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ACT III
SCENE I
A few months later.
In the beginning of earlier acts the scene opened with either Professor Datta or Ahmed lecturing to the students. Beginning of this scene is again the classroom but with a difference; both Professor Datta and Ahmed are standing on two separate daises under beams of mellowed light, as though separated from each other in timing and event but with a singular connection. In place of the full-classroom-daytime-students, the present meeting is a hardened-inner-core-of-Naxalite-students-in-clandestine-night-time-meeting, with a distinct similarity with the peasants’ ‘inner council’. This is important : the parallel between the ‘inner council’ of the earlier act, and the
students’ ‘inner
council’ now
because both
are in the
act of passing judgement. (Incidentally, there is no communication between Professor Datta, Ahmed and the students. It is as though the two were silent and subconscious witnesses to events which will involve them later.) The student Naxals. ONE OF THE LEADERS : Is Amar guilty or not ? SECOND: Defector. THIRD : No, loyalist. AND SO ON: To whom ? . ANOTHER: That’s the purpose of our meeting. To pass judgement and punishment. YET ANOTHER : Let’s reconstruct.
BACK TO LEADER AGAIN: Amar is chosen to defend landlord Jain ih
the peasant trial. He defends well. perhaps too well. His integrity’s suspect. Why? Because he is the son of his father ? Because he has his own doubts? God! If only there were God left to pass judgement, it would be so much easier for all
of us.
SECOND : Let’s forget God for the moment. THIRD : If I start to defend him...Amar that is...J’// become suspect.
AND SO ON : I always had doubts about you.
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———
121
ACT Ill SCENE I
? This is no peasants’ ANOTHER : Are we going to degenerate swayed by ideological meeting. Worse, we should not be propaganda. onceived notions : YET ANOTHER: Yes, let us dismiss all prec ) yes, even flower capitalists, power, peoples’ power...(Smiling judge Amar as one power, it’s all the same : a blind dope. Let’s put in a difficult of us, with honest conviction, who was perhaps .
position.
AT RANDOM Now : That’s the acid test. you react ?
Under pressure, how would
That’s when your true colours come out.
come by it. So, why ANOTHER : Temporary insanity. We're alll over not a man who stops to think ? dangerous: thinking. You're AND ANOTHER: That could be cally) implying a freedom...(Laughs cyni are ruled by terror ? ANOTHER : Are you suggesting that we
YET
ANOTHER: I don’t know
you, but 1
about
As though the situation had gone
sometimes.
frightened
get
out of hand,
and
don’t mean to catch. we're chasing something we really A spell in the action squad BACK AGAIN ; You just lack conviction.
would do you
good.
veteran by now. AGAIN : Surprisingly
That’s one
the
police
thing I'll say
don’t
for Amar:
have anything
on
him
he’s a yet.
thing. They haven’t been able to prove a to go U.G.? He’s just BACK : Then why the hell did he have arousing suspicion. pause) AGAIN : On which side ? (Slight is assumed innocent until one: (Clearing his throat) 1n law ..a man proven guilty. y
two : It’s the other way
around with around with
us: man’s guilt
. Summary justice. until proved innocent. How would you like it ? THREE: It might be your turn next.
FOUR : This is an emergency.
A sort of...military trial.
t anyway ? Five : Whose law are we talking abou
SOMEONE : The natural law of justice.
are talking of the SOMEONE-ELSE : There is no natural law...unless you faw of the jungle.
voice:
Is
jungle 2?
this then...the
concrete
jungle: worse : the classroom
Grown on foundations of great men.
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122
.
INQUILAB
ANOTHER : What do you think of the statues of great men ? ANOTHER : They should be smashed. Decapitated. Unless of course it’s the statue of a worker. YET ANOTHER: Can’t stand this cult of the great men any more. They give me a pain in the neck...(Smiling crookedly) looking up, that is. ATHIRD: Yeah. Statues should be at eye leval. Made of you and
me.
FourTH : What about Amar ? ANOTHER : Yes, getting back to Amar... ANOTHER: ...this classroom... ANOTHER : ...his father... ANOTHER : ...resolve his doubts... ANOTHER : ...and ours... (Momentary silence) CHIEF : (Getting up to close meeting, looking around) I think we under-
stand each other.
Know what we’re going to do.
him to the test.
Let us...put
(Blackout)
Scene shifts in dim surrealistic light to blind old woman (Shomik’s mother) and Amar’s mother. OLD WOMAN : (Scraggy laughter) You have finished with the statue of ’ Mother Durga ? A’S MOTHER ;: Yes. OLD woman : (Blindly feeling for her stick) And you repeated the
works I told you ?
.
A’S MOTHER : Yes.
OLD womaN: (Finding the stick) Ah, here it is. In the dark, who but the blind can see. And in life, the dark shadow... of death. A’S MOTHER : You think of death, old woman; I think of life. OLD WOMAN : Can one exist without the other ?
A’S MOTHER : I don’t know.
I think of Mother Durga...
OLD WOMAN : ...Kali... ? 4’S MOTHER : Most of all the wound within me... OLD WOMAN: It heals. It heals. Time... A’S MOTHER : And the expectancy. Oh, the burning expectancy... OLD womaN : And then the realization, my dear. All the doubts
* and uncertainties of life.
All the fears...
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1
ACT lil SCENE I
123
A’S MOTHFR : (Amazed) How did you know ? OLD woMAN : How did I become an old woman? How doI come to love death...without having loved life at one time ? A’S MOTHER : (Shaking her head) 1... cannot think of becoming old. OLD WOMAN ; Your husband ? A’S WOMAN : (Faltering) My...my husband ? What about him 7 OLD WOMAN : He lives in the past, doesn’t he ? He’s reached...the turning point...whereas you still have a long way to go. A’S MOTHER : (Reflecting) I was young...village girl,
He, much older,
when he married me...
OLD WOMAN by.
: City dweller.
Didn’t
believe
in
the
things
we
live
A’S MOTHER : Old woman ? OLD WOMAN : Yes ?
A’S MOTHER : When my first child was this world. Did he...did he...?
born.
You brought him into
OLD WOMAN : Yes ?
‘A’S MOTHER : Did your blind eye see something mine did not ? invisible identification.
A certainty that would
A vision of the future... OLD WoMAN : Give me your read.
widen.
hand.
Old woman utters a scream.
(Hand Stick
dispel
stretched.
drops.
A’s mother steps back triumphantly.)
Her
An...
all
doubt.
Felt.
Lines
blind eyes
(darkness) (Scene
Centre.)
shifts to Politician
Devdas and
the Big-Wheel from
B. W.: I told you to watch out. You brought it on yourself. DEvDAS : We’re regrouping for a fresh election. B. w. : (Laughs hard) You won't get it. President’s Rule is here stay for a while.
the
to
DEvpDAS : (Sarcastically) Can’t say there’s been any improvement in the law-and-order situation since the Centre intervened. B. w. : How much can you do through remote control ? DEVDAS : So, how are we better off ? B. w. : The rate at which you were going, there would revolution...
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have
been
a
124
INQUILAB
DEvDAS : (Interrupting)...which you would not
as you were on the right side.
B. w. : Oh, come now, Devdas.
have
Speak for yourself.
we're office-bearers mean, we have a responsibility
minded as long The
to
the
fact that
existing
order... (Devdas laughs bitterly in reply; the voice hardening)...so, why don’t you join them? Isn’t there a saying that if you can’t lick them, then join them 7
DEVDAS : I got over madness in the early years of the political arena. Besides, I don’t think they’re going to win...ultimately. B. w. : I can’t say they’re even winning now. What with Act and C.R.P., we'll have normalcy pretty soon.
the
P.D.
DEVDAS : There won’t be any “normalcy” ever in Bengal. And you robbed us of it, friend. Exploited this state through taxes without ploughing any of it back. B. W. : There was the rest of the country to be thought of. DEvDAS: At what expense! Do you know, I think there was something to what the police Inspector said the other day. These root causes of unemployment...and politics... B. w.: Look, who’s speaking. DEVDAS : We put you there in the Centre. To represent us. NowI find you burrowing your own hole there. B. W.: Well, at least I didn’t make the mess you did here. DeEvpAs : How do you expect me to control millions of unemployed poor? Why, every boy coming out of college expects. a whitecollar job and often ends up being a labourer. Come down from your pedestal and work here one day with us. B. W.: (Softly) I’ve been through it before. We’re...veterans—or have you forgotten, Devdas ? DEvDaS : (Removing his Gandhi cap) Oh, hell I haven’t. What are we arguing about anyway. We’re both trying to make the best of a
bad situation. (Unlocking his cabinet) What we need, friend, is a drink of the good old Scotch whisky. (Both laugh.) (Blackout)
(Shomik and his wife Sarala. He is hastily packing his clothes.) SARALA : How long will you be gone ?
SHOMIK ; I don’t know. SARALA : Where ?
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ACT lil SCENE I
125
SHOMIK : I don’t know.
SARALA : What will you be doing ? SHOMIK: (Turns around irritably) I don’t kuew. I don’t know. I don’t know. (Sarala catches her breath, the tears in her eyes. He softens.) Sorry. I’m sorry, Sarala. You wouldn’t understand. And if you did, it would be dangerous for you to know. SARALA: Why do you have to run? What’s become of your friends
the hundreds
SHOMIK:
that were there behind you...
They’re still there.
The real ones...they’re
unseen.
And
SARALA: You seem to have forgotten your dream. When started, all you wanted was a small piece of your own land.
it all That
they’ll always be there, as long as there’s discontent. made me
revolution.
happy.
Now
you
That makes me
want
to lead the whole nation into
unhappy.
SHOMIK:
Why ? It’s the same thing.
SHOMIK :
There’s power.
SHOMIK:
It's greater.
The
better man
gets some-
thing more. There’s much more to life than a small plot of land. SARALA: Is there ? Is there ?
There’s undreamt of power in the plough.
You can then possess men who possess land. SARALA: Is that better ?
Or
even
to
crush,
lawyers.
Much
ideals that men
greater
speak
than
ownership
you
money.
of...It’s greater than poets...or
When you revolt, you’re never defeated. revives
or
all the more.
Every
attempt
It’s made from strong men.
Yes, even the ruthless. Someone said once you had to be cruel to be kind. I was much impressed. SARALA: JI...1...don’t understand. SHOMIK : (Touching her tenderly) But you love? SARALA: (Kissing his hands) Yes. SHOMIK: (Whispering) Yet you fear my violence. SARALA: Yes. ‘ SHOMIK: It’s the same thing. I wouldn’t know how to love...without
being
violent.
In
a
way,
it’s
like cruelty...and kindness...
(Leaving) Don’t worry for me. I'll be back. Look after my children. I'll be back. They'll never catch me. As long as I have the
breath of life in me, Ill return. I promise, my love. (Laughing suddenly) Revolutionaries like me never die or give up.., (darkness)
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126
INQUILAB
(Amar and Suprea) AMAR: (Trying hard) S...Suprea...(Suprea sits with her head bowed, a look of sadness and distraction) Suprea...(She turns around to see him, almost listless; he tries again) Suprea, you must get over it. It’s
been months now since he...he...died. SUPREA: (Softly, recalling yet supressing) It was...horrible. AMAR: (Tenderly) Yes...I know. SUPREA: (Searching) Monstrous, Amar. How could people things like that ? AMAR:
(Distantly himself) Yes.
do
I know.
SUPREA : (Turning to Amar) How much did you know Amar ? (Amar does not reply; repeats) How much did you know, Amar ? AMAR: (Hesitating) I...1 knew some. Dreaded to know, all. SUPREA: And yet you didn’t do anything to stop it. AMAR: I couldn’t do anything to stop it...(Suprea turns her head away) I couldn’t do anything to stop it, Suprea. You must believe me. SUPREA: I.,.don’t know what to believe.: My...my father looked upon you as his son. Felt that one day we...we’d be married, and that you’d carry on the tradition. AMAR: Weill. We will, Suprea. SUPREA: (Bitterly) But then you don’t believe in marriage or traditions, do you, Amar? No, you believe in causes, and martyrdom
...and endless
suffering...
AMAR: Don’t say that, Suprea. SUPREA: What do you expect me to say? right
thing,
and dearest...
AMAR:
you’re
Go on, you’re doing the
peace and happiness to your nearest
bringing
Stop, Suprea, you’re not
being
fair.
SUPREA: How fair were they with my father ? to the man and the father that he was ?
Did they do justice,
AMAR: They ..they didn’t see him as an individual; but a system they hated. suprEA:
And you? You too
as
part
of
?
AMAR: I...I don’t know. I saw him...I think...as your father. I +I recognized him...as an individual with the right to live, yes,
¢ven make mistakes,
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127
ACT III SCENE I
SUPREA : He was prepared to recognize your mistakes : so, why not you his ? . AMAR: There’s something merciless about a cause, Suprea. It leaves no room for mistakes,or even someone as near and dear as your own father. SUPREA: Are you speaking about my father ? AMAR: No, I was speaking about mine. SUPREA: What do you mean ? AMAR:
know.
I don’t know!
Don’t question me too closely!
I just don’t
There’s something wrong in our society, our teaching... just
as there was something wrong in the way your father...was
supREA:
What are you
saying,
killed.
Amar ?
AMAR: (Almost in agony) I can’t find my way, Suprea. It’s as though I were suddenly blind; after coming soclose. I was never ...traitor. They now want me to prove...my loyalty. Loyalty ? (He laughs harshly) To whom ? To whom, I ask ? SUPREA : (Concerned, moves, broken from her earlier withdrawal and reproach; touching him tenderly) Are there...so many to whom you owe loyalty ? What about...yourself ? AMAR:
(Tortured)
AMAR:
(Sheedishly)
Tm not sure.
I’m
not
sure,
Suprea.
I ‘keep
driving myself...to believe, but can’t make it there. I hear my father saying the same things over and over again, at home, on the dais in the classroom, and I feel like tearing the whole world apart... SUPREA: (Caressing his hair) My dear... laugh
at
me now.
My
hardened...revolutionaries,
would
SUPREA: Is that why.you don’t want to give it up 7? AMAR: (Withdrew, pride slightly offended) Ym not playing Suprea. This is a matter of life and death. SUPREA:
AMAR:
There must be some midway answer in life that is complete.
know...for
sUPREA;
games,
(Steady) I should know.
No, not really
really
acompromise.
save
A belief...that others can share. Do you
a moment...when
I
tried
him, I almost had it there.
to save
your
Then why do you persist in this madness ?
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father,
yes
128
INQUILAB
AMAR: Because...I’m coming close. Very close. It comes...from a pull...in opposite directions, My mind and heart are taxed...to the extreme. The next...will be the most revealing. The ultimate
test or loyalty and guilt.
SUPREA : Are you going...to hurt more people...to prove : yourself... AMAR:
things
to
(Looks at her, troubled, worried) 1 don’t know.
(Blackout) Back to Professor Datta, alone, contemplating fondly on the books in the library, rearranging carefully the statue of his venerated Sir Asutosh...Sudden violent invasion by a band of Naxal students, well organized and planned like commando tactics, who burst into the room and start fury of the active alienated. It’s like a blitzkrieg of anarchists, dedicated to the, total cause of destruction. The change from Professor’s quiet academic contemplation to violent revolt must be stark and startling. Amongst the leaders is Amar. Professor’s face incredible with alarm and amazement. Shout from the boys : DESTROY ! DESTROY ! OVERTHROW ! OVERTHROW ! BOURGEOIS ! BOUREOIS ! BOURGEOIS LANDLORD UNIVERSITY | BOURGEOIS LANDLORD
GOVERNMENT ! REVISIONIST EDUCATION
proressors! (/f the director wishes,
blackboard
walls
since
thesecould
| REVISIONIST
be flashed on
the
the shouts are really quite confused and one
can only hear the smattering of sounds and words.)
PROF. : (Protest rasing to a scream) BOYS! BOYS! ORDER! ORDER ! DEMOCRACY ! DEMOCRATIC FREEDOM ! PROTEST WITHOUT VIOLENCE ! RATIONALISM! SANITY ! REASON !| CONSTITUTION ! THE ULTIMATE ! MAN'S LAW IN SOCIETY ! LAW AND ORDER ! (Again, these
are random shouts on his side, and these could equally be flashed on the opposite blackboard walls; one piercing scream) AMAR! AMAR !
(Amar freezes, his face and body under considerable strain and sweat
faced with the crisis within himself and around, pretends not to hear his father, and furiously applies himself to destruction.) SHOUT FROM NOW !
ONE OF THE
BOYS: THE
LIBRARY!
No!
(Shelves ransacked, books torn
BURN THE BOOKS !
PROF.: (Aghast, alarmed) and flung, bonfire)
BOYS : GET GANDHI {
No!
THE GANDHI BOOKS !
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GET
THE
LIBRARY
ACT III SCENE I
129
PROF. : stop ! (He is flung back, becomes conscious and alarmed for the first time of physical impact.) BOYS : AND NOW ASUTOSH’S STATUE! TAR IT! BREAK IT! (Professor shouting “‘No\” gets up to protect the statue, is flung down again, his glasses broken, the blood now showing on his face and clothes. Amar is nowhere to be seen.)
BOYS:
AMAR! WHERE'S AMAR?
(Amar’s taken a bicycle chain and
swiped it across the face of the boy who pushed and hit his father.) AMAR : (Softly) Touch him again and ll kill you. (Dead silence. All looking at him, encircling him, with knives, chains, sticks.) AMAR : (Turning around and shouting, breaking desk, tables, fan, books, the whole lot; in frenzy) 1 WANT TO TEAR THE WORLD APART! (Cheers. Cheers from the boys, who attack property around with abandon.)
ONE OF THE LEADERS : I APPOINT...AMAR AS PROSECUTOR, JUDGE AND JURY TO CARRY OUT VERDICT IN THE EXECUTION...OF SIR ASUTOSH ! (Cheers, then pindrop silence; each student shuffles quietly to his desk, takes out his chappal, and start pounding it systematically in rhytm till it reaches a crescendo. Amar in sheer sweat now, axe in hand, approaches the statue of Sir Asutosh, father looking on horrified. As he walks up to the statue, there are flashes on the screen /wall] blackboard of Jain’s decapitated head with blood, Kali’s victim. The beat of chappals is like the beat of the drum reaching the climax. Amar is like a man hypnotized, working on a conditioned reflex with a look of insanity in his eyes. Flashes of blood and Jain’s head. {Memory recall] He stops in front of the statue,
gradually raises the axe.)
PROF. : (Screaming) NO AMAR! falls, breaks apart the marble
NO! MYSON! My SON! (The axe head from body, as the students shout
and scream in victory, take hold of Amar in exhilaration
and leave.
Dead silence. Loneliness and dead silence. Professor Datta alone lying on the floor, feeling for his glasses, slightly bloody, putting them on, trying to wipe the tears from his cheeks, blinking unbelieving, like being confronted with disillusioning, shattering nightmare. Darkness and silence, faint perceptions of light, same scene, with shadow of man, a stranger, yet not, too unlike Datta himself : Ahmed standing in the shadows. He does not move. Stands as though he had been there all along: a silent witness.
Professor Datta peers, tries to see beyond darkness to recognition,
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130
INQUILAB
, @ recognition that goes back over the years, a cry within himself too poignant to describe. Professor staggers up. Ahmed still unmoving in partial
darkness.
Exhilaration,
fear,
love,
all
written
in
Professor's face as he staggers up to Ahmed, practically falls and clasps to his breast.) PRoF.: (Hardly a breath) It’s you...you...(Ahmed’s face expressionless, unmoving; Ahmed slowly disentangles one arm. It holds a peasant’s sickle. With a jerk he buries it deep into Professor’s back whilst still in the embrace. No scream. Just a gasp and a deep pain. An undescribable expression on Professor’s face before he falls lifeless, still in Ahmed’s arms, the moist kiss drying on his cheek through which serpents a streak of red blood. Pitch black darkness and silence.)
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, ACT IIT
SCENE II
A few months later.
Last scene: Amar and Ahmed, outside of Professor Datta’s house. Heavy silence for long time as though both were in deep personal
thought and silent dialogue. AMAR : It’s all over, isn’t it 7 AHMED : For you? Forme! For them ? AMAR: No, I was speaking for myself. I was wondering for you. As far as they are concerned, it continues, as it always will. AHMED: Do you mean you’ve given up...the cause. AMAR : No, I still believe in the socialist revolution. But I disagree
with their methods.
AHMED : Meaning ? AMAR : (A faraway look of sadness) 1...1 think...my father was right.
I mean...his approach was right.
That...that change should come
through the will of the majority...expressed through a free vote...That society...such as we live in, must follow certain norms...of law and order...to make such democratic expression
possible...(Suddenly conscious, then almost shyly) Am I talking like my father...a bourgeois...
AHMED
: (Smiling) You always
geois. ~
did,
like your
father,
not
a bour-
AMAR: I... fell reponsible for his death. Suprea...Suprea warned me beforehand...that in finding myself... would harm others
...Closest to me...I...I didn’t realize then...
AHMED : (Almost sharply) You had nothing to do with your father’s death. Remember that. It happened after the Naxal raid.
That’s all. AMAR : (Looks at him puzzled) They harm my father.
AHMED : Yes ?
AMAR: (Shakes
different.
Nor
swore to me
they would
(Ahmed doesn’t reply) My mother...
his head,
not understanding
the same
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person
I knew.
again)
She’s
not
become
True, she grieved for
INQUILAB
132
father.
I think she thinks of him But
she wait expectantly. No brims...with new life... AHMED : (Softly) Yes.
more
less now.
Durga statues.
does
more
No
She sometimes
AMAR : It’s all over, you see. I’ve found my path...and the same as that of my father. (Ahmed is silent.)
it will
be
AMAR : Do you think I’ve betrayed the cause ? AHMED:
No,
Amar.
The cause
is larger
than either
of
us.
And
each of us still continue to follow it differently. Our friend Shomik is bocoming a great leader. Perhaps, one day, you'll battle each other again, on the methods, but not on the cause, because both of you believe in equality and social justice, and who’s to say who’s right and who’s wrong...
AMAR : (Softly) Ahmed? AHMED : Yes ?
AMAR : (Looks up, meeting his eyes, a permanent bond between the two)
What
about
you?
I...1 never
did
understand.
thought your...revolt...was not political at all.
AHMED : Whose was? struggle. Each of
Sometimes
We were all caught in the vortex us searched the ultimafe in our
emancipation... Yes, mine
had turned
full circle,
I
of a own
or so I thought.
People, events, this life, meant nothing to me. Only the root cause of revolt and liberation...Where passion reaches furthest, the unrealizable becomes true, and life...life is reborn in a desire that defies all fulfilment...So, revolt is conceived. The seed thrown in the fertile soil. There is the harsh inevitability about it, the struggle for birth, for survival, where one has to kill to live again...(This is almost likea soliloquy as the light dims on him. There is the sound of Suprea’s voice calling out ‘Amar’, “Amar”, Amar leaves silently. Ahmed is alone for a moment. Then, in the balcony of Professor Datta’s house comes his wife, witha tray of rice from which she is picking out the healthy seeds...She looks at Ahmed with profound distraction, recollection and desire. There is the faint sound of shehnai music, much like a marriage, very faint; very suggestive...Ahmed looks back at her as she flings the rice into
the fertile green soil...)
[DARKNESS & END] Google
THE DOLDRUMMERS A PLAY
Google
IN TWO
ACTS
NOTE THE DOLDRUMMERS was first produced by I. L. Dass of the Little Theatre Group
and directed by Popo Pruthi at the Fine Arts Theatre in New Delhi on October 16, 1969 with the following cast : TONY
Raju
RITA
JOR
Peter Lugg
LIZA UNCLE LOLIPOP
Naini Nanra Mahesh Sahai
DRUNK
Popo Pruthi
FIRST BOY
Anil Robert
SECOND BOY POSTMAN MORON MOE
Christopher Lugg S. V. Balaram Pramathesh Rath
POLICEMAN
Anil Kapur
Set designed by
THE DOLDRUMMERS
directed
by
Swaran
Marwah
Shalini Singh
Inder Dass
was presented again by Jimmy Hafesjee of the
Chaudhry
1971, with the following cast :
FAT & BALD DRUNK MORON MOE
Cedric Spanos
+
MAN
POLICE OFFICER
Sumita Dutta Godrej Engineer Renu Khanna
Pradip Roy Chowdhury Jimmy Hafesjee Howard Hurst
Mihir Bose
Sets by Malik A. Omer Music by Bobby Roy Guitar Instruction by Flavien Beaucasin
Poster by Ratan Pradhan
Stage Management by Om Prakash Mehta
Google
and
at the Kala Mandir in Calcutta on January 9,
TONY
RITA JOE LIZA
Oskars
CHARACTERS
Tony Jor Rita Liza
Fat & BALD MAN Drunk Two Scxoor Boys POSTMAN (PASSER-By)
FRIEND (Moron Moe) POLICEMAN
ACTI
Scene1 Scene 2
— —
the first day a few months later
ACT II
SceneI
—
a few months later, late evening
Scene 2
—
the following day.
SCENE A Shack at Juhu Beach, in the suburbs
of metropolitan
Bombay.
The shack is made of thatched cocoanut-palm, and one section of it is
visible on the stage.
This is one of the less fashionable areas, comp-
rising of the local inhabitants (an English-speaking community),
live in this colourful but poor environment. The flooring has fine sand, and distantly one can hear
sometimes monotony.
who
the waves,
lulling and at other times irritating in its intensity and The sea-breeze is similarly erratic and either blows hard
or is terribly still in consonance with the tides. At night the kerosene lamps cast shadows on the curtains and one sees the pantomine of life, mutely played. Somewhere, the rasping sound of an old (hand) record player churns out a tune.
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136
THE DOLDRUMMERS
There is a hammock tied to two cocoanut trees. Init liesa man in shorts and nothing else, except for a guitar that forms very much part of him. tony is a pleasant, easy going young fellow, with a
slightly vacuous smile, and a magnificent torso.
The barefooted girl
leaning on’ the tree and fondling with his hair is ntva. She is a young thing, fully physical, and very much in love, Sitting at the foot of the opposite tree, ogling at Rita’s legs and things, is another small young man, with ratty intelligent eyes. This is JOE. - Tony is singing.
There’s a magnetic aspect
to
his
singing.
It’s
raw. He beats his guitar, strums, hums, talks and yells. It’s not a “rock”, and it’s certainly not Victor Silvester. It’s something quite original to him, but he makes the mood and meaning felt, and it holds... , He has now chosen for the song one of the current film hit tunes, but has improvised on it with his own variations. As soon as it comes
to an end, Rita claps enthusiastically.
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ACT I SCENE I
RITA: That was wonderful Tony. Really wonderful. tony : Thanks Rita. I'll play you another.
(Joe snatches the guitar from Tony and starts to plonk on it) -
JOE : No, it’s my turn now.
Listen all of you.
Satyagraha, Satyagraha Hurrah for satyagraha
This passive resistance Tickles our existence.
One day we lay on railroad tracks
Protesting that it hurt our backs When old Bhovani Junction expressed along It flattened us a good furlong: One day we met a Dharma Bum He came from America and called us Chum Swore every night he slept with Nirvana Smoked a weed he called...Mirajuana. One day we just...non-cooperated Sat around and merely waited Others came and waited too
Not knowing what, where or who. One day we felt...activated Mounted old Everest uninitiated There maiden Yeti did us assault Took us without a pinch of salt. So disturb not our ho-hum
In this Satyagraha Ashram
Leave us alone friend, just leave us alone
For we...we were fashioned from immortal stone.
(Brief silence)
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138 Jog : Tony rivA Jog : RITA
THE DOLDRUMMERS (Softly) Right, Tony ? : Right. : I didn’t follow it all. That’s all right. Tony here didn’t follow it none. : But he said right to you.
Jog : Oh, sure he understood, but that doesn’t mean all.
he followed it
RITA : (To Tony) What does he mean, Tony ?
TONY : (Smiling, he strums the guitar) I can’t read notes, but I certainly can understand music. RITA : (To Tony) I'm one sfep ahead. I understand you, honey. Tony : That’s "cause I hear music when we kiss. RITA : Let’s kiss. (They kiss.) Tony : Ho-hum...again. (They kiss again.)
RITA: Not bored are you ?
TONY : (Grunting negatively, in-between kisses) Hub-huh.
Jor: Aww, cut it out! TONY : (Pre-and-post occupied) girl ? JOE : It’s no fun having one... Tony : Then get yourself two.
Why...don’t
you...get
yourself a
JOE: The problem’s not mathematical, Tony. Like one and one makes two. My mind doesn’t work that way. It gets deeper and
deeper, word,
and
Jove
becomes
no different from any other four-letter
TONY : Spell it out.
rita : Oh, don’t pay any attention to him, Tony.
difference between love and making love.
To him there’s no
JOE: (To Rita) How would you know. You haven’t made anyone besides Tony. RiTA : Naturally. I love Tony tony : And Tony loves thee...ta-ra-ra-ra-ra-ra-ra-ra-ra
(In melody) RITA : Oh, you’re sweet Tony.
Jor: You both sicken single lollypop.
me.
love
to
You're as messy as two children with a
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ACT I SCENE I
139
rita : And we don’t intend to share it with you either. Joz: Goon. Make pigs of yourselves...till surfeiting the may sicken and so die.
appetite
Tony : What’s that.?
rita : Don’t listen to him, Tony. Tony : But I want to listen to him Rita. brains. . RITA: But he’s got no girl. That’s what
crooked.
Tony : He’s not trouble.
crooked.
He’s my
pal.
Joe here’s got makes him And he’s
a lot
of
think so...so never
been
in
JOE: She doesn’t mean crooked that way, Toay tony : No?
Jor : No, she means my mind’s
crooked.
Get
thing to me straight and I see it upside-down.
Tony : That’s ’cause you’re a Professor.
He’s studying for his Ph.D.
Rita : I’ve heard it before. TONY : Now who do we know who’s do we know who’s got his Ph.D.
along.
it?
You
Do you know
put
that, Rita ?
studying for his Ph.D?
Nobody.
Till Joe
So, what if he sees. things upside-down.
when I’m sozzled. Joe : What-do-you-say Tony-boy, we get sozzled. TONY : Good idea Joe. I got some booze around myself. Bathroom jin. (Passes it over to Joe) JOB : (Screwing up his nose) It stinks. .
any-
here
Who
come
I get that way here.
Made
it
Tony : Aw, squeeze some lemon in it.
riTA: (Anxious) Be careful. There area lot of prohibition squads around these days, (Tony twangs the guitar and begins reciting...) Tony : Pro—hi—bi—tion. Pro—hi—bi—tion. ’Twas... JOE: (Interrupts, taking outa pair of scissors from his pocket, and snips it around airily, calling out...)
Snip!
Snip!
Snip!
Snip!
Tony : (Starts again) Pro—hi—bi—
JOE : (Interrupts again) Snip! Snip! Snip! TONY : (Angrily) Say, what’s all this ‘‘snip !—snip !’ mean? Jor: I’m the little man with the large pair of scissors. I’m kill-joy
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140
THE DOLDRUMMERS
and kill-truth put together, and when Ican’t cut any more, I cut my own nose to spite my face. I’m the public that has no opinion,
because I can’t bring myself to care a damn. I’m...spineless, because it’s easier to crawl around that way. Damn you! I'd
like to spit in your eye...(Then weakly) only I don’t salivate enough (giggles). But I’ve got a pair of scissors...and with this little axe, IT can lop off all the big shady trees in my Pap’s garden. TONY : (Like an ox) Huh ? JOE : So, let’s sing together friend. Tony :) (Together) Pro—hi—bi—tion. JOB : Snip! Snip! Snip! Snip!
TONY : Let’s sing it over again and have another drink.
Jon: O.K. (They sing it again and drink.) TONY : And now once more.
JoB : Let’s cut out the song and just have the drinks. Tony : O.K.
(They drink) Joz : What about you, Rita? RITA : No.
Jog: Rita won’t drink.
Have a drink !
Let’s drink to that.
Tony : O.K. (They drink.)
JoE : Say Tony, that’s a lovely watch.
RITA : Oh, lemme see. Tony : (Half hiding it) Let’s drink RITA; Don’t you think you’ve had Tony : (To Joe) Which one are we JOE : Never count’em. Tony ; Yes, bad for health. RITA: What time is it ? TONY : (Looking at his watch) Four
OB : Nice watch, Tony.
-
©
to that. enough, Tony. on, Joe ?
o’clock.
Where did you get it ?
RITA : (Of-handedly) Oh, that! time ago. RITA: I haven't seen it before.
It was given to me by a friend some
Tony : (Retorts with unexpected abruptness)
everything I own, dol?
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I don’t have to show you
ACT I SCENE
141
I
RITA : (Taken aback) No. No, of course, not.
it to me
TONY : (Sullenly) As I said before, a friend of mine gave sometime ago. AS...aS A token of friendship.
a...a8
That’s it.
a...token of friendship.
Jor : Well, it’s obvious you didn’t work for it. Tony : How do you mean.
JOE: We know you haven’t worked for a year of Sundays. TONY : (Ignoring Joe’s remark and now exhibiting the watch proudly) Iv’s lovely, isn’t it. 17 jewels. All-proof. Why I once forgot to take it off when going for a bath... JOE : (Interrupts) You haven’t worked for a year of Sundays.
TONY : (Aggressive) So, I haven’t worked for a year of Sundays. So, I haven’t worked for a year of Sundays. What’s it to you huh?
What’s it to you.
JOE : (Shrugs his shoulders) Nothing.
That’s if Rita doesn’t mind.
TONY: (Angrily) Why should Rita mind it.
mind!
After all, I’m not married to her !
What right
has.
she
to
RITA : (Softly) But I don’t mind, Tony darling. I really don’t.
TONY : (Still sulking) Just because she gives me
board and
lodging
doesn’t mean I should work for it. What do you expect me to do? Sweep the floor and wash her lingerie ? Joe : Well, you need not make her wash yours. tony : (Yelling) I’m not the type you think I am, you...you . egg-
head.
JOB : (Shouting) You're a slob ! TONY : (Yelling louder) You're a swine! A filthy swine ! JOE : (Shouting louder) You're a son-of-a-bitch ! An S.O.B. (By now they are getting ready to fight with each other.) RITA: (Her hands to her ears) Stop it! Stop it! Every time
drink you end up with fighting. Jor : (Blinking his eyes drunkenly) Drink 2? Drink ?
What
you
do-you-
say we drink to that, Tony-boy. Tony : Sure, Joe. (They both drink.) TONY : Say Joe, what makes you and me pals. We're sort of different, you and I. JOE: (Thumping his heart with his fist) You’ve got it there, Tony. And that’s all that counts, One meets fellas everywhere that have
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142
;
THE DOLDRUMMERS
Tony : You’re a swine? A filthy swine !
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Original frorr
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
ACT i SCENE I
143
a lot of things...money, big cars, dresden-china chicks...you know,
the whole lot...but if they don’t have it in there (Thumps his heart
again), it doesn’t mean a thing. (Enters uza. Liza is a technicolour doll : everything about her is painted. And just in case looks misunderstand, she confirms it with a “come-hither” walk.) JOE : (Big ogles) Yeeow, Liza ! LIZA : Oh, hello there. (Then softly) Hi ya, Tony-boy. | Tony : (Casual) Hello, Liza. (The two women nod inarticulate greetings to each other.)
LIZA: Play me one of your gorgeous tunes, Toniee... JOE : (Fast) I can play too. Liza: (In a hi-pitched octagonal giggle) He’s cute, isn’t he ?
Jor : Yeah, like a doggie.
“Bow-wow”.
TONY : (Thwnping on the guitar, sings)
Let’s “bow-wow”’ said the bitch,
Let’s...Let’s...(Stumbles at a loss for words) JOE : (Buts in)...sandwich.
(Peals of laughter from Liza)
RITA : Oh, stop it, Joe. L1ZA : Oh, don’t be a spoilt sport Rita. Jog: You heard that Tony.
Carry on Joe.
Carry on, she said, carry on.
(He winks at Tony and they start on one of their duets) Carry on Jeeves, she said, carry on. (now don’t look so love-lorn) It only takes a butler to put Lord Haw-Haw to bed,
But it takes a whole lot of man to work on me instead.
(This is greeted with a shriek of laughter from Liza). Liza: (With tears of laughter) You boys really kill me, you really do. JOB: She finds us funny, Tony.
She finds us funny.
Now isn’t that
funny. I’ve always thought our lives were anything but funny. Let’s give her another laugh so she finds us funnier. Like the tragic clowns.
I’ll pull your nose and you pull
each other bloody
mine.
Let’s
swines, because that’s what we are.
interrupts grunting pig-like “‘snort, let’s tickle each other.
snort’)
Liza,
just
(Tony
for laughs,
(He jumps upto her like a monkey and begins to tickle her.)
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call
144
‘
JoE: You know,
THE DOLDRUMMERS
that’s what makes
such a good guitar player. the guitar.
Digitized by GOC
Tony
He doesn’t just play
He Jays the guitar.
gle
Original frorr
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
ACT I SCENE I L1zA : Oh,
stop
amuses me.
145 it, silly
boy.
That’s not the
kind
of tickle
that
JOE : (With a mischievously quizzical eye) No ? L1zA: No. Decidedly not.
JOE : Tony what kind of tickle do you think would “amuse” her ?
(Tony replies by giving a hot strum on the guitar; then starts blowing on his fingers as though it had caught fire) You know, that’s what makes Tony such a good guitar player.
He doesn’t just play the guitar. He Jays the guitar. rita: And what do you do, Joe. Talk for him,
Tony : Who says I can’t talk. JOE: Ido. Yes. I talk for him, Rita. The things he’d like to say, but can’t. RITA : (Laughs derisively) You and he ? JoB : He and me. RITA: Why there’s nothing you could say that could come anywhere near touching what he thinks. Joz: Tony? Thinks? His thoughts are only feelings. He’s as brainless as a banana. . TONY : (Raises his guitar menacingly) One more quip out of you, Joe, and Ill brain you. Jor: With what ? That guitar ? Those ham fists ? Or those pea-nut brains ?
(Tony throws down the guitar and catches Joe ina and squeezes.)
wrestling lock,
RITA : (Trying to separate them) Stop it, Tony ! Stop it ! L1zA: That’s it, Tony ! Squeeze him tighter ! Make him scream ! JOE : (Hissing under the pain) Why don’t you tell him to pull out my tongue, you bitch ! LIzA : (Screaming) Me, bitch? Why you pimp! You no good bastard ! Break his arm, Tony ! Break it ! RITA : (Hysterically) Stop it, Tony. Please. Please (Softly) For my sake, Tony. (Tony lets go.) JOE : (Recovering, feeling if his arm is broken) Women! You're all mixed up. Who saves and who condemns. It’s Rita who should have been yelling to have my arm broken. It’s she who despises me. No, she bas to act a saviour...a Goddamn saviour !
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146
THE DOLDRUMMERS
TONY : (Who’s now cooled down) Sorry, if I hurt me mad sometimes.
you,
Joe.
You get
JOE : Forget it.
TONY : Let’s drink to it. JOE: No. TONY : Aww, come on, Joe. It was all fun...all in the game. Jon: Yes, it was for us. But not for them. They were like the savages of the old days who saw the Christians being eaten up by lions. Do you know what they did, Tony? There were those like Rita who knelt and prayed to the Almighty. There were those
like Liza.-who drank the grape and laughed over
the sufferings of
others. Each one no different from the other. Both the same. But it was those wretched guys like us being eaten up who felt the fires of hell. LIZA : (Puzzled) What’s he talking about. Jor : If Tony could speak, he’d tell you. riTtA: Why do you always fight, you two. You could be such friends. Tony : We are. Liza : The way you two talk, you could be queers, if I didn’t know ...know...(Rita and Joe look at her questioningly)...(Liza falters)... well, you know what.
rita : What Liza ?
.
L1ZA: Well, you know, Rita, Tony’s such a big man. Jon: I’m asmall one. Liza: (Bursting out
why ! that’s why ! (Pause)
So, what ?
It doesn’t prove anything.
spontaneously) Because Tony
is
a
man,
that’s
JOE : (Quietly) I think that answers it adequately.
RITA : (Unusually intense) he is that matters. And (She looks defiantly at TONY : (As though braking LIZA : (Casually) Oh, you admirers. More than I Jon : Try me, baby. I’ve 11zA:
And
they
this necklace.
No, I don’t think it does. It’s whose man he’s mine. Mine ! Liza, who cannot face her burning look) a mule) Whhooaa... can have him, Rita. I’ve got too many can handle. got a good grip.
shower me with presents.
Touch it.
Google
Feel the rocks.
See this bracelet.
And
Go on, Rita, feel it.
ACT I SCENE f
147
RITA : I don’t think I care to. (Joe goes up and feels the necklace...and the neck.) Jog : Pure?
Liza: You God-damn right.
Pure cultured pearls.
RITA: They look hard, and heavy. L1zA : Not as long as they cost money. Then they have a soft, rich touch, like velvet. And they make you feel gay, and secure. JoE : Just like what one reads on the greenbags : “I promise to pay the bearer the sum of...”
,
’
Tony : I remember the time I used to play marbles as a kid. One day a little girl bought me a bagful of lovely little marbles, with colours of magic.
I stuffed my pockets with them, and I
a King. rita: And the little girl who gave them to you. Queen ?
felt like
Did she feel like a
Tony : I don’t remember now.
Jog; She must have had a bigger bagful of marbles, like Liza. Tony : She was very rich. She used to wear a starched white frock, and red-buttoned shoes. Jon : I bet she had a soap-sudden face. jony : She did. Jor : It might have been Rita ? tony : No. Jor : It might have been Liza ? Tony: No. Jog : Then who was it ? Tony : To tell you the truth, I don’t know. Maybe she didn’t exist.
JOR: (Laughs peculiarly) Tony. You really take the cake. Of course, she didn’t exist. I should have guessed it right from the start.
Everybody
imagines
that asa
child they knew a little girl with a
starched white frock, and red-buttoned shoes.
TONY :
(Puzzled) Maybe she did exist.
Jor : Of course, she did exist. She was as real to us as...Liza here. Except that soon you will be forgetting Liza, whereas you'll forever remember the little girl. LIZA: This means Cuckoo. Tony: (Jndignantly) He’s a Ph.D.
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THE DOLDRUMMERS
148
Liza: Alright. He’s a P.H.D. Cuckoo. You women are all dumb. Tony: Joe: Repeat it friend. Tony: You women are all dumb. JOE: Say it again. You women are all dumb. Tony: JOE:
RITA:
(Turning to Rita) See?
11ZA:
You're awful, Joe.
They should have put you in the Zoo.
JOE: Now that’s an idea, 1 remember an old song of Bing Crosby which said : Now all the monkeys aren’t in the Zoo, Everyday you'll meet quite a few... RITA: But the song ended : You can be better than you are, You could be swinging on a star. Christ, you give me a pain in the neck, Rita. What are you soz: trying to do? Reform us? Put us ih jail ? No better still, put ‘us in the Zoo?
So, you can laugh with
the
rest
hyenas.
of the
Those ones with the red bottoms and the curly tops. I see them everyday around me. They wear hats and ties and carry umbrellas and work from ten to five. I see them in tram-cars with their long snouts burried in the papers.
handkerchiefs
neat and tidy.
and
let their
and
pay
four
annas
They blow their noses in clean
to the boot-polish boy.
But have you ever seen them when they
hair down.
go
All
home
They look for lice in each other’s hair.
They can’t be bothered to pull the fiush after dirtying the pot. Their blood-shot eyes are full of murder and rape as they read the cheap papers.
RITA: (Slowly) You're twisted, Joe. You're no better, if they are that, because you realise their thinking. JOE: (Looking at her hard) That may beso. That may be so. RITA:
TONY :
Just don’t make Tony think that
He talks very clever.
way.
He’s educated.
joz: Never fear, Rita. Tony’e a natural born boy here. His mother had: pangs of child-birth before he was born. He’s clean. Not me. I just slithered out with a lot of muck. My Ma never went to the hospital. They didn’t take her in, because Pa wasn’t
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ACT I SCENE I
149
around to register her. the
RITA: JOE:
smell remains.
(Softly) Joe...
Don’t Joe me.
I just came off in the street.
I can smell a ditch half-a-mile away.
I’m neither sorry for my mother
self. I’m sorry for my him all the same.
Liza:
That’s why
Say what’s going on.
old
man
nor
for
my-
who didn’t know that I’d love
Don’t let him soften you, Rita.
He’s
sly as they come. I bet half the story’s cooked up. JOE: Sure baby. I can see I haven’t. made you cry. If you did, both your fathers wouldn’t recognize you. LIZA: (Indignant, but not sure) What do you mean? What do you mean ? . .
Joe:
If there’s anything worse than not having
JoE:
I could call you a French name, but you wouldn’t know
have two. LIzA: (Angrily) You bastard !
one father...it’s to
it means anyway.
what
LIZA: (Sputtering) You...you... Joz: Bastard. Why don’t you say it again. Your vocabulary doesn’t go past one word anyway...nor your actions. (Liza catches hold of the first thing within her reach—the guitar— and
TONY:
smacks
Joe
with it, breaking it.)
(Alarmed) Liza!
(Liza looks at the broken guitar) Liza ! Damn you, Liza! See what you’ve done
LIZA:
I’m
sorry, Tony.
Tony : (Bawling guitar.
plaintively) Sorry
(Rita bends down to pick up the
uza: Tony: LIZA: gone TONY: LIZA:
Liza:
broken .
You’ve
pieces.)
my
O.K., O.K., so I'll stick it up. You can’t stick up a guitar. It’s broken. Gone. (Irritatedly) Alright, so it’s gone. Don’t bawl like you'd impotent or something. It’s just a guitar. It was my guitar. So, I’ll buy you another...a better one. See. So, you can dry
up your tears.
Tony:
nothing.
!
(Perulantly) It had better be a good one,
A new one.
Have I ever given yoy anything second-hand,
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*
.
THE DOLDRUMMERS
150 Jor: Yourself. RITA: Tony doesn’t want a guitar. Tony: No,I can’t. RITA:
We'll get one
Tony can do without a guitar.
then.
You’ve got the money. tony: How? RITA: We'll get it somehow. L1zA: (Mimicking Rita) “Tony doesn’t want a guitar. do without a guitar’. Rita: (Angrily) Tony won’t accept it. LIzA:
rirA: Liza:
Tony
can
privileged
to
Oh, he won't, will he ?
No! He’s...what-cha-call-it...privileged;
yeah,
receive gifts only from you ?
He doesn’t take anybody’s gifts. He works for it. (Liza RITA: crackles with laughter.) LizA : You're damn right he does. TONY : (Indignant) What do you mean. What do you mean. Can’t a man run out ofa job without all of you ganging up upon him. Thad a first class job before. LIZA: (Scornfully) What ? TONY: I was a...what’s it called, yeah, a personal assistant to an executive.
Said he wanted to build me up.
JOE: Don’t get so excited, Tony-boy. Tony: Unfortunately, he...he...died. Nothing more I could do. Nothing more anybody could do. What can you do when a man dies. He just...dies. He lives no more. JOE: (Softly) And some things within us also die. For while nothing’ in the dead can live, something in the living can die. Do you know what they teach in Physics, Tony. They say that matter is indestructible. You burn up refuse, and it goes up into smoke. But you collect all that smoke and you'll get back the same weight as that dirty refuse.
You see, matter isindestructible.
Everything
reincarnates, except the lives within us, which is alone completely destructible. (Pause) That make sense to you, Tony ? TONY: I understand. Jon: I thought you would. Now you can make Liza understand the trifles she talks about.
TONY:
Nothing more to gay,
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151
ACT I SCENE I
JOB:
RITA: Tony: uzA: Tony:
Excellent.
That leaves no room
for discussion.
It’s none of Liza’s business anyway, how you make a living. Right. (Cooing up to Tony) Now don’t get cross with me, Tony-boy. I’m not.
LIZA : You are, and you know it.
Tony : I am beginning to. LIZA : It wouldn’t be right to get cross with little Lizzie. Tony : You broke my guitar, you clumsy idiot. L1zA : (Looking at his watch in feigned surprise) My ! What a lovely watch. (Tony nods vaguely) All-proof?
I bet
you
can
have a bath with it, without a teeny-
weeny bit of water spoiling it. (Tony shakes his head desperately, trying to think of something, The others look from Tony to Liza and back again.) Bet, you didn’t have to work too hard for that. In fact it might well have been...a pleasure. And it doesn’t look second-hand either... RITA : (Bursting out) Get-out !
Liza : Why, what did I say, honey ? RITA:
(Crying in anger) Get-out !
LIZA : Cool down, honey. As Tony says, it’s all in the game...you know... fighting and...loving. RITA: (Picking up a stone menacingly) Getout I said! Go ! LIZA : (Beating a hasty retreat: calls out from after) ‘Bye Tony. Come up and see me sometime.
(She leaves the stage.)
RITA : Can you leave us alone, Joe ? JOE : (Strolling off not too far) Sure thing, Rita. (Rita looks at Tony, her breasts heaving in anger. Tony vacillates between looking defiant and cowering down.) riTA : A token of friendship, you called it. Given by a friend.
Tony : I didn’t say it was from a boy friend. RITA : No, you didn’t.
TONY : Well, then what are you getting mad about. RITA : Just that you didn’t say anything.
Tony : What ifI had?
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152
THE DOLDRUMMERS
RITA : But you didn’t. You made it appear as though it had been a token of friendship from your...your...executive friend or some-
one,
.
Tony : (Stubbornly) I didn’t say it was from a boy friend. RITA: Oh, stop repeating yourself. Tony : Well, it wasn’t !
RITA: Why did you do it Tony? Why did you do it { Isn’t my love enough for you? I’ve given you all of it. ‘Why shouldn’t I expect all from you. Woman’s no different from aman. Why did you go to her? Was it for her, or the watch 2? Did the watch mean so much for you. Tony : Everybody’s got a watch, I like to have a watch too.
RITA: At what expense 7
Tony : How should I know what the watch is worth? I didn’t ask her the price. But it’s got 17 jewels. And it’s all-proof. A watch has got to be expensive to be all that. (Rita looks at hima trifle dumbfounded)
Why do you look at me like that.
Like I’d done something wrong.
You got no claim over me, like we were married or something. (Rita looks down and tries to suppress her tears) So, what if I got a present. I wouldn’t object to your getting a
"present.
RITA : (Tearfully) Don’t you
see,
Tony,
it’s
not
the
present
that
matters. It’s what you’ve done to get it. Tony : I wouldn’t object to your getting a present, so why should you object to my getting a present. RITA : Don’t say that, Tony. Tony : I mean it. RITA: A present wouldn’t mean so much to me. ToNy : Well, it does to me. I’d do anything to get a present. A woman does it, so why not a man. : RITA : (Tormented) You're not serious, Tony. Tony : I like the feel of a fancy silk shirt, or a sporty tie, or...or...
one of those nice pointed shoes for dancing that I can polish and see my face in. Same way as a woman likes a bunchof flowers or a diamond bracelet. So, if someone likes you, and gives you something, why it’s fair exchange.
riTA : If a woman did that, I’d call her a strumpet, and if a man did that..,
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—————
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ACT I SCENE I
153
Tony: There’s nothing wrong with it, man you speak as though
a
stranger.
Liza
You
speak
was
or woman.
Aw
heck,
as
though she was paying me money or something. Next thing you'll be calling me names for living off you.
RITA : Oh, Tony, don’t say that.
Tony : (Trying
to
arouse
her
sympathy through self-pity) Well, I do live off you. I do no work. I’m lazy, and good-fornothing. RITA: (Coming close to him) You’re good for me. AndI’m not nothing.
TONY : (Kissing her) You're tops, Rita, really
you
are.
You’re
passionate, without being dirty, or pretending. And you give
me all, the way I want it. What I mean is that you’re you,
natural and true, and it affects me the same way.
that feeling
I never
with anyone
get
else,
and there’s always something I'll do with you that’ll show
it.
I squeeze
ready, and I know you're ready too, sides. RITA:
you
tight
That takes doing.
when
On
I’m
both
(Melting completely) Oh, Tony.
(They kiss passionately.) Tony : Still mad with me?
RITA : (Shaking her head negatively) Huh-huh.
Tony : As Joe says, if a man could live by love alone, there’s nothing more a man would want from you. RITA : (Trying to draw him into another kiss) Forget Joe. TONY; But man doesn’t live by love alone, Joe says.
RITA : (Still under passion...absently) Does he ? Tony : He’s got to live by ideas too. He’s got: to reach out to them,
viszea ty GOOgle
154 RiTA:
THE DOLDRUMMERS Reach out to me, Tony.
TONY: (Preoccupied, with ideas) ‘Tony reach out to ideas’, he says, Joe does. He talks to me about Plato sometimes. He says that somewhere there exists a perfect world of ideas.
It gives me goose-
flesh just thinking about it.
RITA : Don’t listen to everything, Joe says.
TONY : Sometimes I don’t follow him very clearly, but I know
what
he means.
RITA : How do you mean ? TONY: Well, it’s difficult to explain.
you how I felt about you. and woman.
Just a little
while
How we feel things together.
Well, there’s a different way1 feel
understand things together. same flesh.
about
Like twin brothers, cut out
RITA: Like twins? You and Joe? have in common with Joe.
Tony
ago
I told
Like man Joe.
from
We
the
there’s nothing at all you
TONY : I know it. But it doesn’t matter. RITA: Friends should have something in common. TONY: Joe once told me we had you in common.
RITA: (Amazed) What ? Tony : I don’t know.
(Laughs) Me?
In what way ?
RITA : (Quietly) He looks at me very strangely
sometimess...and
it’s
not the way he looks at Liza or other women. (Then with a change of mood, back to reality) What do you see ia Joe ?
Tony : We sing songs together.
RITA : Dirty little poems.
I bet the words come from Joe.
TONY : The voice is mine.
The music is mine.
I give
give it life. RITA: And he gives the ideas, is that what you mean ?
TONY : I guess so. (Joe comes strolling in.) Jon: Excuse me, Rita. Tony there’s something Liza has
it the
beat.
sent
along
and asked me to give it to you. Tony: What ? Jor: (Removes his hand from the trouser pocket and dangles in front of Tony’s eyes a gold plated watch-strap) She says your watch strap has worn out,
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ACT I SCENE I
155
RITA : (Furious) Why the cheek of that woman !{ (Joe continues to dangle it before Tony’s greedy eyes. are silent)
Both men
Take it back to her and throw it in her face.
(Joe makes no move. Tony utters no word.) Take it back ! TONY : Whoaa... RITA : Don’t touch it, Tony ! (Joe says nothing, but turns it enticingly before Tony’s @ strip-tease object.)
gaze
like
Tony : Wonder if it'll fit. RITA : (Horrified) Tony! (Joe stretches the strap’s spring joints to
indicate
it’s
adjustable
quality.) ° Tony (Angrily) Nothing wrong in taking a look at it, is there ! RITA : You've seen it long enough. It can go now. Tony : Woman, you're as bad as those preachers who say that staring at a woman that way is committing adultery. (Looking at the strap again) Do you think it’s real gold ?
(As though in mute reply, Joe rubs it lightly against a piece of stone, spits on it, polishes it, and begins dangling it before Tony's eyes.) RITA : (Screaming) Take it away, Joe! Take it away! ToNy : Stop screaming, Rita. No harm in my trying it on...just for
a moment...to watch.
see how
RITA: (In tears) Don’t Tony. TONY : Stop whining, Rita !
it looks.
It sure
I beg you.
does match with the
Don’t.
RITA: (Hard) Alright, Tony. You touch it and you don’t touch me, tony : You talk as though I were touching her.
RITA : It’s the same thing. Tony : (Anger building up on both sides) You threatening me ? RITA:
Yes.
Tony : And if I touch it. RITA; You go.
TONY : Like I were fired from my job.
RITA: Yes.
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156
THE DOLDRUMMERS
Tony : But then you don’t give me a thing, so how can you fire me. RiTa : You accept that present, Tony, and we’re through ! Tony : (Undecided but defiant, like a recalcitrant school-boy) You threatening me 7
rita: Yes!
Yes!
(Tony grabs
to Rita.)
I’m threatening you.
the strap from Joes’s hand and shows it victoriously
TONY : (Defiantly) See! See! I've taken it. There! it for good. Don’t try and tell me what to do.
I’ve
taken
RITA : (S/owly) I want you to leave now, Tony.
Tony : Sure. All in good time. RITA: Now, Tony. Right away. tony : Huh? RITA:
I mean it, Tony.
‘
You leave now.
Tony: Alright. Alright. But don’t call back for me. You want me to go; alright I'll go. But don’t call me back when you’re in heat. RITA: (Screaming)
Go!
(Tony leaves.
Go!
Rita covers her face in her hands
watches impassively.)
Joz : Man always pins a woman ’neath him.
beautiful
wings,
spread
out
and
pinned.
crucifixion. RITA : (Looking up) Why are you staying Joe ? JoE : I’ve got plenty of time. :
Like a
For
and
cries.
Joe
butterfly,
with
a woman,
RITA: I’ve just sent Tony away. You’re his friend, not mine. JOE: Tony will be alright. RITA: And me? JOE : You'll be lonely. RITA : So, you want to stay and give me company. JOE : No advice. RITA : (Laughs bitterly) You’ve really got things mixed up Joe. It’s Tony who listens to your advice, not me.
not Tony.
he’s got to receive it from other people.
He’s right
There’s no sense in advising a person that cannot change. got a fixation for nice presents. But he won’t go out and them,
so
today
You can, andI can, but
JOE : But Tony cannot change. for
it’s
when be said that he felt like a king when
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He’s work
he got that bagful of -
157
ACT I SCENE I
marbles, but he can’t remember whether the little girl who gave it to him felt like a queen. He couldn’t be bothered thinking about her. He’s happy he got that two-bit watch strap from Liza, but that doesn’t mean he’s concerned about her. RITA: (Brightening) Do you think so? Do you really thing so ? JOB: I’m sure of it. RITA: Will he be alright, Joe? Where will he go ? Jor: Probably to Liza.
RITA:
(Recoils) But...but...you just said he’s not concerned
about
her. JOE: As long as she feeds him with nice little trinkets and aftershave lotions, he’ll be glad to stay with her. She can never look after him the way Ido. She’ll never love RITA: him the way I do. Joe:
I dare say that’s true.
RITA: Then why will he remain with her. JOE: (With slow emphasis). Because she’ll give him nice little things which you don’t. RITA: I can give it to him too. When his shirt is torn, I mend When it gets worn out, I replace it with a new one.
JOE:
RITA:
it.
A silk one ?
No, a cotton one.
Jor: But he’d rather have a silk one, Rita. You understand ? RITA: It doesn’t mean all that much to him. Joe: But it does. He showed it to you just now in accepting the watch strap. {Rita is silent.) JoE: Tell me, Rita, how much money do you have ? RITA: How does it matter ? Joz: It costs money to buy presents continuously. RITA: I refuse to buy his love if that’s what you’re suggesting. Jon:
Stop over-simplifying the situation, Rita.
You know very well
you wouldn’t be buying his affections. You already have them. By giving him an expensive present now and again you are merely making sure that you retain it, by keeping him happy. Now tell me, how much money do you have ? RITA: (Slowly) I make some money on stitching dresses. It’s barely enough to pull on with.
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158
THE DOLDRUMMERS
JOE: Man always pins a woman ‘neath him. Like a butterfly with beautiful wings, spread out and pinned. For a woman, it’s crucifixion.
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gle
Original frorr
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
159
ACT I SCENE I Jon:
Hmm...
(Rita is silent, waiting for the cue from
Joe)
Liza...
rita: Yes ? Jor: Liza...has many rich friends...admirers as she calls them. RITA: She’s a slut. JOE: Is that what Tony thinks she is ?
RITA:
No.
Jon: Why? RITA: Probably because he’s blinded by those presents. He thinks there’s nothing wrong as long as two people are friends and there’s no exchange of money. JOE: What do you think about it 7 RITA: I think it’s wrong. Jor: Isn’tit a pity that something that Tony thinks is alright
should
be considered
Tony cannot change.
RITA:
JOE:
(Searchingly)
wrong
by you...and that by our admission
What do you mean ?
(Shrugging his shoulders) Nothing really.
conclusions.
It’s for you to draw
RITA: I.don’t follow you, Joe—and you never say anything without meanings attached to it. Jor: Alright, Rita. Let’s face it. It’s basic syllogism. Rita loves Tony. Tony loves gifts. Liza has gifts. Tony can’t change. Rita can change...
RITA: (Very softly) Go on... Joe: Rita has no money. But Tony can’t change. Liza gets presents from admirers. Rita thinks that’s wrong. Tony thinks that’s alright. But Tony can’t change. And Rita can change... Riva:
I...
Jor: Alright, let’s try it again. Rita change to Liza 7 RITA:
crazy.
Ill hit dead centre this time.
(Gasping in realisation) Joe!
You must be crazy.
You
Can are
joz: No more than anybody else, Rita. It’s just that I get crazier quicker than most. I see how their minds work, and bloat it on a screen. Sure, it looks ugly, like little Gulliver noticing the warts
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160
THE DOLDRUMMERS
on the breasts of the female giants, but it’s there. It’s large as life, wearing the shackles of the original sin. So, why blame
me.
RITA: You are suggesting that I change and become like Liza so that I may be able to afford to give presents to Tony and keep him to myself. Joe: Think it over, and the situation will suggest itself. RITA:
Jor:
RITA:
Never.
Are you prepared to lose Tony ?
No.
Jon: Do you admit that Tony would go to any lengths to get a new guitar. RITA: Yes. JoE: Liza said she’d give him a new guitar. RITA: Stop torturing me, Joe. Jor: I’m not torturing you, Rita. If my words didn’t mean anything, it wouldn’t torture you. So, even if you disagree with what I say, you admit to yourself the reality of its meaning. RITA:
Tony wouldn’t allow me to take presents from
riTA:
(Huskily...to herself) No, in fact he said
Joe: He wouldn’t? so? He
said
he
would
others.
Are you sure he wouldn’t, Rita? Did
not
object
he
say
just the. opposite.
to my receiving a present; so why
should I object to his doing so...after all, he said, we weren’t married or something...so what’s wrong in receiving a token of friendship...from a friend. (Joe says nothing. He wants “the situation to suggest itself”, and
wants to give her enough rope.)
Why don’t you say something, Joe ? Jor: There’s nothing more I can say. RITA: Is that how you want me to become Joe? Like Liza. Jon: (Almost fiercely) Don’t bring me in, Rita. I’m out, and I want to
stay
out.
Rite
or
Liza, you’re all the same to me.
with something nice between their legs. RITA:
Joz:
There’s something hateful you,
No more.
Joe.
Yeah. That’s the closest I can get to any
it satisfies. RITA: (Shakes her head helplessly) 1 don’t
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Women
woman’s
know
what
love. And to
do.
I
ACT I SCENE I
161
don’t know what to do. Tony. JOE: I know arich friend. rules of the game, he is also him his friend.
RITA:
God, I don’t think I can live without . If it means playing according to the known to Tony. You might even call
(Covering her face with her hands) Go
on.
Joe: Ican introduce him to you. RITA: (Laughs hysterically) What will you get from him. A commission ? JOE: (Continues impassively) He'll take you out and buy you presents.
RITA: (Still . deal? Or JOE: I'll sell ever Tony
hysterical) What’s it going to be! A straight business should it have trimmings ? the presents, and with the money you can buy whatlikes. .
‘RITA : (Cynical now)
It would be
simpler to
receive
cash, wouldn’t
it? And it would be simpler to procure strangers, wouldn’t it. But no. We must play the game according to the rules. It has to be a friend, and it has to be presents. Whom are we fooling, Joe ? Certainly not me, or you. Do you think Tony will swallow it ? JOE : Tony won’t object. RITA:
Then he won't
respect.
Jon:
(Angrily)
Love!
love me.
You can’t
Respect!
Love!
love someone you What
don’t
does it mean?
get sick hearing people talk about it all the time. And what does love have to do with respect anyway. They’re the very opposite, You think of the word love like something from a fairy book, patented and germ-free. Like it had to have respectability. Well, it’s not. It’s love that the whore dispenses around the street corner, and it’s the most respectable that pay its price. RITA : Joe, from hating you I’m beginning to hate myself. Jog: It will be a respectful introduction. A “blind” date. What about next Thursday. RITA: Tony...
JOE : That’s the day Tony goes to visit Liza every week. (Pause) RITA ; (Quietly) I accept,
CURTAIN Google
I
ACT I
SCENE IE
A few months later. Tony, Joe, Rita and Liza are sitting around, playing listlessly in the sand. The evening breeze lies cool and nice. The entire focus...cocoanut palms, thatched shacks, cry of birds...is very beautiful and stirring. Joe, Tony and Liza pass a bottle of fire-water around, gulping straight from the bottle. Out of the four of them, Tony is the only one who looks different from the first scene. He is beautifully dressed and carries a brand new guitar which he
keeps pawing every now
on the guitar now like a maestro about
and
to begina
them.
He plucks
symphony.
winks at Joe and they begin, sometimes solo, sometimes in duet.
TONY/JOE:
We two, sit and puke Don earmuffs, Play blind-man’s-buff. We gotta go
(N’est pass Joe 7)
To the never never land So, give us a hand.
Make us a boat A real Noah’s ark And stuff a goat, Down Noah’s a—e. We'll sail the seven seas, Flying dutchmen to the breeze, Forever bound,
Never to run aground,
Better still let’s get shot
Like an as-tro-naut,
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He
ACT 1 SCENE
163
Suspended in space
In this dooms day race.
We'll eat atoms for breakfast
Hydrogen for lunch
And when it’s time for dinner
We'll chase gals like the old sinner. So why worry, Make haste in a hurry, For when you get there, You'll only meet a shaggy old bear. (Liza claps her hands and says...) LIZA ; Encore, encore. (Joe immediately takes the guitar from Tony and starts to sing.) Jog : Encore, she says, encore. That nymphomaniac whore... (Tony snatches back the guitar, stopping Joe from continuing.) TONY: Hey! What do you want to do! smashed again. Give her the old melody...
Get
my
new
guitar
Jor & TONY : Encore, she says, encore (Oh what a bore) Life’s got us dead beat And she asks for a repeat. Jog : I still think my verse was better.
Tony : As long mind.
as Liza
doesn’t lay hands on
LIZA : (Touching the guitar
my
guitar,
1 don’t
lightly, as though to determine its texture
and price) It’s a beautiful guitar.
TONY : (Excitedly exhibiting it, like a toy) Brand new. Not even shop-soiled. No price reduction either, like they give for defective disposal things. I’m proud of it. It’s the best thing I ever got. Liza : Yes, it must have been very expensive. Rita got it for you? RiTA : (Quickly . in a slightly high-pitched voice) It’s from the money Tony earned for himself, Liza : I bet. Tony : It’s my guitar,
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164
THE DOLDRUMMERS
Jon : No one’s going to take it away from you, Tony. Nor smash it. It’s valuable because it’s hard earned, so remember that, Tony. Sing your lullabyes with it, Tony, and crow like the cock with it at dawn. Sing merrily on finicula rides, not forgetting to keep it aside at times for dirges. But most of all, play it when Rita needs it most. ‘ Tony:
Sure.
Sure.
me, did’nt she.
I'll
play it for her.
After. all she
gave
it to
Liza : Out of your hard-earned wages, sonny-boy. RITA: (Strained) As a matter of fact, Tony, it was given by a...a...a band-leader whom I met a...a...a couple of times, who’s been
insisting that...that...I induce you to work with Says you’re a first rate guitar player, and thought the guitar might help you make up your mind. LIZA : Is that who he is! RITA:
Who?
LIZA:
Oh,
his band. He this present of
Liza: The fat bald man. Uncle Lollypop. RITA : (Coldly) I don’t know what you mean. you know
what
I mean
dearie.
Nothing
having a boy-friend...as long as Tony doesn’t mind. TONY : Watcha talking about ?
wrong
with
(He takes another drink and passes the bottle to Joe.)
Jog : She’s talking about is.
the band-leader, band-agent, or whoever it
What do you say, Tony.
won’t really be like working. take you on.
Tony:
You willing to work ?
You'll be playing.
After all, it
Any band would
W-e-ll. W-e-ll. I don’t know.
JOE: Nothing to it, Tony. the day, and you play
scream and adore you.
You get called in for rehearsals during at night, and a whole lot of people will
.
TONY: Jesus, I Wouldn’t know what to do. I’d be be...ewildered. Yeah bewildered. I don’t know how to read notes. RITA: You can learn, Tony. You can learn. There’s nothing wrong with working. Tony: That’s the first time you’ve told me that, Rita. You want me to work. RITA: Not unless you don’t want to.
Tony:
Well. Tdon’t know.
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I hate the idea of being all cooped up.
ACT I SCENE If
165
Being told what to do and what not todo. With that maestro harpooning me with his hand. He’d be needling me all the time with it. 7?
L1zZA: Don’t you get needled at home, Tony Tony : Here ? Why should I get needled ? rita: Don’t pay any attention to her, Tony. doesn’t have a man around the house. Tony : I refuse to be needled. you.
She’s just jealous, she
RITA:
Nobody’s needling
LIZA:
Oh, I wouldn’t know about that, Tony.
After
Nobody’s going to needle me.
Tony: You're damned right. all, I’m free, amI not?
Any man
who stays
in one place foo long gets immune from needling, He can’t even feel it, like the old sadhu on the nail mattress. I got a nice new mattress, not like the flea-bitten one you TONY: sleep
LIZA:
thing
on.
(Angrily) Aren’t you a snug-bug. nice and new, huh 7
Yeah, and it fits me fine. TONY: tion. Right, Joe? JOE: (Quietly) Right.
So, you’re
getting every-
I get a feeling like...like exhilara-
LIZA: im
(To Rita) You must be daing your sewing overtime to afford all these things.
RITA:
None of your business, Liza.
LIZA:
(Casually) Oh, if Tony don’t mind, why should I 7
TONY:
What’s wrong with you, you old crow (Mimicking) “If Tony
don’t
mind, why should I?
Squawk.
Jor:
Squawk.
Squawk.
If Tony don’t mind, why should I ”
Squawk.
Cheers, Tony. (Gulps a drink and throws
Don’t
let
the
old
cockroach
get away.
the bottle
to Tony)
Stamp on it. Stamp on
it. See there it’s flying past, Liza. It’s crawling out of her throat. (Joe jumps upto Liza and pretends to catch the cockroach. His
words and actions bizarre, but very real, make her scream as though
there was a real cockroach.) Black feathers, crooked poky legs, and an oily ugly head.
ones, scroungy them up.
It’s coming out in s-t-r-e-a-m-s. Fat ones,
lean
ones, the dead beat ones. See that lizard gobbling
(He points to Liza’s feet,.and Liza gives another
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‘Eek’’)
166
THE DOLDRUMMERS
He’s gobbling them all up. As fast as they come. Cheers, Tony. Cheers. LIZA: (Jumping back all the time) Oh, you horrible man. You harrible man. Jozp: Me? Why? I speak only of truth. LIZA: You're crazy. The whole bunch of you are crazy. You're not like real people. Joe: Ah, that’s very profound, Liza. I must give it a thought. Don’t you think we ought to put our heads together. After all, two heads are better than one. Don’t you think we’d made wonderful schizophrenic lovers ? LIZA: (Suspiciously unsure) What’s that dirty word. JOE: It’s not a dirty word. It’s a scientific word.
L1zA : Oh, well, then it’s alright. (Then smelling a rat) What’s it mean ?
Jop: Schizophrenic? It means a split personality. LIZA: Oh. (Then awakening) Oh! Do you need me for that ? JOE: (Soberly) No, indeed. LIZA: I get a feeling the three of you are in some sort of league. Jon: We
Yeah, we’re like birds of a feather. Rita here, Tony and I. belong to different species though. But we’re birds of a feather
LIZA; Why are you all against me ? Jog: We can’t help it. Nor can you. And else. But we couldn’t. RITA: Joe’s right.
uzaA:
Tony?
you
could
be
anybody
—
RITA: He drifts alongwith us. LIZA: Is that right, Tony ? TONY: Like they say. LIZA: (To Rita) How come you’ve become so friendly with Joe of a sudden.
RITA:
He’s been Tony’s friend a long time.
RITA:
You're repeating yourself,
Liza: And any friend of Tony is a friend of yours, huh ? long as Tony doesn’t mind...
Google
as
Liza.
Liza: Yes, without much impression I’m afraid. riTA: - So, why don’t you take the hint, or have you
insensitive...
Well,
all
also
become
ACT I SCENE It
167
oy
[ais \. Wr nay REAM
y Liza
LIZA: So, now you want to gang up against me, huh ? Almighty, what a smug little world you three have created for yourselves. You look down on others because they all have, as Joe says, hyenalike red bottoms and curly tops. Well, what the hell do you think you have ? Turn the mirror upside-down sometimes, and you'll see yourselves no different. No different, you understand.
Digitized by GOC
gle
Original frorr
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
168
THE DOLDRUMMERS
Joz: ...like the pin-cushioned sadhu. Liza: (Flippantly) Oh, well, as long as... TONY :
(Interrupting in unison) Yes, we know, “as long
rira :
as Tony doesn’t mind, why should I ?’”
EB:
LIZA:
me,
.
(Pretending to be hurt) So, now you want to gang up against
huh
?
All because I wanted to give some good little advice.
But then one should never give free advice, I am told, because it’s much dearer when bought. Isn’t that so, Rita? Alright then, Since you’ve got so much money, buy it! But each one had better
be bigger and better than the last.
It’s junkie habit, I know. And
Tony here is the right sap for it...or perhaps
it’s
you
(Looking at
Rita)...but it’s certainly not you, Joe, you sly old weasel (Looking at Joe.) You know you're all crazy, the three of you, you know it. You're all...somewhat schizophrenic as Joe calls it...and you know it and can’t be bothered even to allow it to change. God Almighty, what a smug little world you three have created for yourselves. You look down on others because they all have, as Joe says, hyena-like red bottoms and curly tops. Well, what the hell do you think you
times
and
understand.
you'll
have ?
Turn
see yourselves
the
mirror
no different.
upside-down
some-
No different, you
(She turns around and leaves dramatically. The three are silent for a while, sort of ruminating over what Liza has just said.) RITA : (To Joe) Some of you seems to be wearing out on Liza. tony : (Nodding)
JOE : (Heavy)
She certainly spoke a mouthful.
Yeah...yeah.
(Same pauses between the remarks)
RITA : (Zo herself) Didn’t know she could give advice too. TONY : (Ina repetitive tone) She kept repeating herself. JOE: (Depressed) Yes...yes. (Same pauses...each to himself{herself)
RivA : I used to think I was different from her.
Tony : Blabbing, blabbing, blabbing, that’s what she was. JOE: No...no...(Softly) (Repeat pauses)
rita - We three, like blind mice, or better still, like three monkeys, see nothing, hear nothing, do nothing...
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~
: VLIT
*““Zurqjou op ‘3uryjou svoy ‘Suryjou 9as ‘skayuour
9914} OY! ‘[]!IS 19}39q JO ‘sorU pul] OYT] ‘oomy) OMA
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
from
Original
'y Google
169 II I SCENE ACT
170
THE DOLDRUMMERS
TONY: (Pretty soused by now) Huh?
Huh?
(Imitating the 3 traditional monkeys)
hub (Apishly)
JOE: Live in the DOLDRUMS, (Joe moves aside. He talks to himself on a level just beyond incoherence, and barely audible to the audience. Rita and Tony take no notice of him since each are preoccupied with their own thoughts. As Joe speaks...he seems to grow, as though in symbolic (transformation...into something mysteriously greater.) JOE: (With awesome quietness) Are we no different, Liza? Then what’s all this shouting and yelling about if we’re no different. Does the inverted mirror make us so hideous that we see each other as...identical ? I remember...1
remember...many
years
ago
when
we
were all
different, moulded closer to nature’s heart, fighting rightly for survival. Satyagraha was then also a different word. There was...there was a young boy... whome I once knew...who was a flag satyagraha.
He passively resisted all oppression, and never let
the
flag
down.
They came with batons...they bludgeoned him... beat him down bloody and broken...but even as he fell down head, he buried the flag upright...let it fly in the freedom of the rising wind. The flag, like some tender plant, found root in the fertility of the soil, and blossomed into a giant tree. It was a memorial created from the blood of martyrs. We were proud, satisfied. The cause fulfilled. Mirrors straight. Identity...found. But something was still missing. A distortion in the seed. They chose to ignore it, resting on past laurels. Gradually, unknowingly,
the tree decayed, the landscape changed:into desert, fot survival...was inversed. We became monsters.
Reptilian. With venomous spittle.
scales insensitive. With Since the mirror showed
and
the fight
breaths of fire and almost everyone the
same, they all thought they were the human, and we...we...the half ones. Those with heads human and bodies like monsters.
We...we...became the still-born ones. Partial monsters all the more horrible, because we still retained the basic elements. Was
the natural the distortion, or the distortion quite knew.
But
because
we
were
different,
and
we
the natural.
Nobody
were few, we had to be
wrong. Everything we did was taken to be wrong. I...I tried to complete the circle. From being half to being whole. This seemed
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ACT I SCBNE II
171
all the more horrible to them. I could not do it alone. It had to be done through someone...to reach out to whole ones...and it was you, Rita. I chose to comp-
lete it with...you, Rita, cleanest of them
worst, before issuing the whole ones...
riTA : (Absently, me, Joe ?
all,
to
go
through
the
as though in a trance) You...you said something to
JOE: Did you hear...? RITA : (Distantly) Yes...yes... Jor: Then...(With a firm clear voice, back to reality)
Enter...a fat bald man.
,
(As though at his command, a fat bald man enters, and surreptiously moves to the shack, signalling out to Joe who alone sees him. We return to the normal state of things...)
Joe : Rita uncle Lolo has to see you. RITA: Who? Jor : Uncle Lollypop : our esteemed band-agent. RITA : (Frowning) His appointment was for next Thursday. Jor: He must be getting impatient...to get Tony signed on. TONY : (Blurredly) Who...who wants to see me ? RITA: Nobody, Tony. You just take it easy, and leave it all to me. Excuse’ me.
(She leaves. Joe and Tony are silent fora while. They mutely pass the bottle (flask) around to each other. Joe is careful not to drink too much. Tony takes a big swig every time.) Jor: Rita is a great gal. She can handle most everything... TONY : (Nodding his head drowsily) Yup.
JOE:
...and everyone.
JOE:
.. you and Uncle Lolo, and God knows who else...
Joe:
...like it came to her naturally and not forced...
JOE:
.. an action initiated finds its own meaning...
TONY: ...yup.
TONY:
...yup.
TONY : ...yup.
TONY : ...yup.
JOE: ...but does everything have to have a logical conclusion... TONY : ...yup (Almost dropping off to sleep)
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172
THE DOLDRUMMERS
JOE: ...we shall see... TONY : ...(Snoring) 2zzz2z... (Joe gets up and slaps Tony hard) JOE: Get-up you louse !
-
(Tony gets up with a start. He is bewildered, but still drunk.) TONY : What...wh...what? You...you hit me. JOE : That’s right, chum. Want to me back. (Tony raises his fist unsteadily, but Joe pushes him back.) JoE : Enough of games, Tony. Now you listen to me, you clot. (Tony looks at him vacuously.) JOE : (Drawing a deep breath and speaking out) Keep your flap ears beamed on me like a radar, Tony-boy. We’ll soon be shooting off to the stars. (Pause) Rita is a good girl, isn’t she? She buys you lovely toys and kisses you goodnight whenever you want her to. She never forces you to go to work, and worships you like God Almighty. Well,
doesn’t she 7.
(He shakes Tony’s neck like he were a dog and Tony can do all, but nod) She’s nature’s own child, sweet and loving. Her heart is pure, and she lives for you alone. There’s nothing she wouldn’t do for you, would she! would she? (Shaking Tony by the neck.) (Tony looks at him pog-eyed, and nods vigorously.) She’d even whore for you, you filthy dog ! (Tony gapes incomprehensively) What do you think she’s doing for you at this moment ? Signing contracts ? That fat man full of pig’s lard is signing out a cheque for her to complete a contract. Do you know what the consideration is, Tony darling
?......Herself.
Do you
know whom
she does
it
for, Tony dear ?...You ! (The drink is evaporating fast out of Tony. His silly face begins to take on a glimmer of understanding.) She is selling her pound of flesh neatly cellophaned. It comes in beautiful boxes, with gardenias and jewels. With these she buys
you first-hand
guitars and
hair like Rudolph Valentino.
lavendered vaseline that grooms your
(Tony swings a punch at Joe that connects and bowls him over.
Joe gets up grinning, with blood dribbling from his mouth.) JOE : (Continues softly) Don’t tell me you didn’t know, Tony-boy. (Tony almost doubles up covering his face. His body goes through
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ACT I SCENE II
173
mute conclusions, in the agony of one who feels, but cannot speak.) : Joe : (Continues mercilessly) Why don’t you hit me again, Tony-boy ? Beat the truth out of me. It doesn’t hurt meat all. Or better still, since I speak for you, hit yourself. (Tony is whimpering and beating his head on the tree.) That’s right, beat your head on a stone wall. Beat your head on astone wall. See what gives. (Tony turns around desperately and faces him.) Tony : (Jn an inexplicable voice) Joe... JOE : I’m listening, Tony. I hear you speak and it says you want me to speak. Well, listen then, at what you're saying to me. Ycu’re saying that you knew it all along. Yes, you’re saying that you knew itall along. And that you admittted it to yourself. But that you weren’t man enough to do anything about it. That
guitars are better than bags of marbles, and
who the hell cares
how you came by it. That you put up a first class pretence when Liza said : ‘If Tony doesn’t care, why should I?” (Then softly)
But then we all don’t care,
and what makes you so sure that
Rita
does 7 TONY : (Flashing) That’s a lie! JOB : (Continues unabated) What makes you so sure that Rita is not...enjoying herself. If you can enjoy your Thursday with Liza, what makes
you think
she does
not enjoy
Aer
Man
Thursdays.
Don’t look so surprised, Tony. Just because a man’s fat and bald doesn’t mean that he’s not a man. TONY : You’re not me, Joe. You're a beast. JOE : Tell you what, Tony-my-friend, let’s drop by and see them. Tony : Huh? Jor: No, better still, c-r-a-s-h in like the indignant husband, and catch thern in the act. Tony : I'll ring his ears alright. Jon: Atta-boy Tony-boy.
long drink.
But before
Here take this.
we do that, let’s have another
(Tony stares at the bottle that’s been chucked over) Let’s give them enough time so that it can be more incriminating.
(Tony takes a gulp.
another gulp.)
Before passing the bottle to Joe, he takes
Tell you how we'll work
Google
jt out.
I'll peep through
the
window
174
THE DOLDRUMMERS
and give you the signal. You hurl yourself against the door and break it down. Then you...flash open this switch blade knife...(Joe throws over the knife, snapping it open through the spring action) ...just in case you want to work him over... TONY : (Taking another gulp) Vil cut him to ribbons. Jor : Then Rita’ll fall into your arms, and everything will be hankeydorey. . TONY : (Gets up lurchingly) Let’s go. JOE : (Leaving the stage) Now you go up to the front door, and I'll peak-a-boo
from the rear so’s to let you know.
(Tony staggers upto the door of the shack. He stands there, swaying, waiting for the signal from Joe. Just then, the fat and bald man emerges with Rita. The three look wide-eyed at each other.)-
FAT &
BALD
Antony !
MAN:
(Pointing
a jewel-studded fat finger
at Tony)
TONY : (Rubbing his eyes) Ye Gods !
¥F & BMAN: What the hell are you doing here, Antony, you lazy bum. Found another job yet? My reference must have helped you out.
TONY : (Stammering) N...n...0 Sir. Not yet, Sir. F & B MAN: Do you know this chap, Rita? First class fellow. Used to be my servant. RITA : (Thoughtfully) Joe told me you might call him a
F & B MAN : (Wincing) W-e-l-l.
friend.
RITA : He was, of course, technically correct. F & BMAN: (To Tony) You look pretty prosperous Antony. Must have hitched on to a good job. : Tony : Ahhh... F & B MAN: What are you doing here anyway ? RITA : I give him “paying-guest”’ accommodation. F&BMAN: Him? You don’t need any P.G’s honey. Hope he does not annoy you or anything. Tell me if he does, and Ill put
him straight.
RITA: Why don’t you ask him ? F&BMAN: Look here now, Antony. I hope you don’t bother this young lady. I have a special...er...interest in her, You understand!
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ACT I SCENE II RITA: He understands. didn’t, but he does, ¥ & B MAN:
175 He
understands very
Ob he does, does he?
well.
I thought
he
Does he help out too.
RITA : (High-pitched, neurotic tone) Why don’t you speak out, Tony. The gentleman asked you a question. He wants to know if you help me in procuring friends like your friend here. Say something Tony. For God’s sake say something! (She is crying now) If you can’t speak, take your guitar and smash it on his fat face...
and I’ll buy you a thousand more...
:
(Tony stands like a helpless animal, crying.) F & B MAN: (Surprised) Oh, I say.. what’s gone wrong. RITA: (Hard) Nothing. Your time’s up. That’s all. F & B MAN: O.K., O.K. you don’t have to be so god-damn mercenary about the whole thing. I was just bringing you a present, that’s all. (He takes out a small ribbon-bound packet from his pocket) Of course, if you don’t want it, I can give it to somebody else. RITA: (Bitterly) Why don’t you give it to Tony here. Oh, but it’s meant for a girl, isn’t it? Perhaps Tony can give it to his girlfriend. Presents for a friend. That would be wonderful, wouldn’t
it.
It must be nice to receive sometime
instead
of giving all the
time. F & B MAN: Give it to Antony ? You must be daft. RITA: Oh, he hero-worships you. Called you an executive. Said you were grooming him into higher positions in life...as though it mattered. F&BMAN: Groom. Groom? He was no groom. But I can see he’s been doing well. By the same measure, you must be doing better. Now you haven’t been cheating on your Pappy here, have you, honey? I thought I was the only one. You know it comes as quite a shock to me that Tony might have other... “friends”. If you don’t watch out, Tony might take advantage
of you himself one day. (Winks at him lewdly)
That
RITA : Come on, Tony. Come Don’t you feel at all. Not don’t you kill him. I'll say 1 (Tony falls to his knees,
will be the day,
huh, Tony...
on, please. How can you stand it. at all? Just once. Just once. Why did it myself. clutching on to the knife now in his
hand, but does not move, as though an invisible chain were holding him down.)
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176
THE DOLDRUMMERS
(Rita runs back to the shack, crying...) F & B MAN: (Taken aback) I say...I say...What’s wrong with her...she balmy or something. I took her for a nice normal girl. And nice normal girls don’t say such things. Maybe they do bit of it now and again, you know, for laughs, but there’s a limit to things. What are you doing with that knife anyway. You look goddamn silly. Here give it to me. (He takes it) Say, Antony, do you ever get a piece of you-know-what, on the side. Lucky fellow, you. How do you afford it? Do you know my opinion of you has gone higher and higher. May be you'll make class one day. But you gotta start right from the bottom, yes right from the bottom, right here. You get it? Say, incidentally, it’s alright you and me being friendly here, because you know, you get me
so to speak with my pants down, but you won’t talk
it outside,
will
you?
Of course,
you
receiving orders from me, aren’t you ?
won’t.
You’re
about
used
to
TONY : (Hypnotically obsequious, back to being the servant) Yes, Sir. F & BMAN: That’s good. Here take this...(Hands over some money) and get yourself a drink. Go on...off with you. TONY: (Mechanically) Yes, Sir.
(He
leaves.
The
F
&
B
Man
is
about to go back to the shack, then changes his mind, and leaves.) (Joe appears from behind the shack, where he’s been listening to all that’s been going on. There’s something almost absurdly melodramatic about the way he appears and disappears, and one
might almost laugh except for the reminder that there is something appalling about Joe. He stands for a moment lost in contemplation, working out his next move. Then he goes up to the door of the shack and knocks on the door.) JOB: Rita. Rita. It’s me, Joe. (The door opens and Rita comes out. The rest of the scene can possibly be played in the porch of the shack, or within the shack if the producer can arrange it that way.) RITA : Joe? ~ (She is still on the verge of hysteria.) JOE : Beastly interruption, wasn’t it 7 RITA: (Controlling herself) Yes.
JoE : Couldn’t be helped | suppose, later.
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He'd have found out sooner or
ACT I SCENE II
177
rira : Yes.
.
Jog : Of course, there’s a possibility that he knew about it already. RITA:
Yes.
JOE : Did he kick up a hell of a scene ? RITA: Who? ‘JOB : TOny, of course, RITA: Oh, I thought absently.)
you
were
talking
of...(Her
words
taper off
JoE: Don’t tell me you didn’t know whom I was talking about. You could hardly expect Uncle Lolo to kick up a scene. After all, who was the compromised party. RITA : Joe you’ve taken the words right out of my as though you were here all along. Almost as here all along. Almost as though you engineered JOE : Except of course that I can hardly act like said before, we’re different from each other.
RITA:
mouth. Almost though you were it through. Tony. As you
Yes.
JOE : Did Tony beat him up. RITA: No. JOE: Did he beat you up ? RITA: No.
JOE: That’s a bad sign. But then perhaps he felt like self up for making you do the things he has.
beating
him-
(Pause)
RITA JOE: RITA JOE : RITA
: Joe? Yes. : He knew it all along, did’t he ? I don’t know. : You said so yourself !
JOE: Maybe it did’t quite strike him. Maybe he never stopped think out how you could afford to give him expensive things, RITA : But there was no getting away from it now. JOE: No. RITA : He could have stopped me, here and now, if he wanted to.
OE : I guess so.
RITA; But he seemed...completely dazed,
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to
.
‘
178
THE
JOE : (To himself) Tony...is pure reflex.
His Master’s Voice.
He was face
DOLDRUMMERS to face
with
RITA : (Covering her face with her hands) Oh, Joe! Joe! He just stood there, Joe. Doing noting. Absolutely nothing...while I begged him...to kill the man. I wish to God he had killed me instead. But he just stood there... Jog: Kill the goose that lays the golden eggs ? RITA: But, Joe, I want Tony to live for me too...not only for himself. Joe:
He can’t . not yet.
JOE:
(Smiling hard) You're catching on now, Rita.
RITA; Then there’s no meaning to it all, is there 2 We each live only for ourselves...and self-sacrifice has no meaning except to satisfy one’s own vanity.
RITA: And Love... Jon: AsI said before, it’s like any other four letter word. RITA: And Hope... JOE: Hold on to it while it lasts, but no longer... RITA: And Faith...
JOE: There is no God in Man. RITA: These are mere words. Prove it all to me.
(Joe puts his hand in his pocket and takes out a diamond ring.) jon: A present from a friend, Rita. RITA: (Confused) From whom ?
Joe:
Me.
jog:
Not asa friend of yours, but as a friend of Tony’s.
RITA:
RITA:
Joe.
Joe.
I don’t understand.
Jorn: The rules of the game. (Rita understands, She is flabbergasted.) RITA: (The words strangle her throat) Joe! Joe! What are you saying. What do you mean?
For
God’s
sake.
Jog: We started a game, don’t you remember? As long as it was a present, and it came from a friend of Tony, it was mutually acceptable. Tony wouldn’t mind...you saw for yourself he didn’t, right in the face of it. So, we started the game with one party,
and now I offer myself as another candidate. There’s no difference,
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ACT I SCENE II Rita. Tony.
RITA:
Jor:
It’s my
179 right,
as
much
as it is his, as long as we are not
(Still unbelievingly) You, Joe, you ?
(Viciously) “Et tu Brute?’
words,
Rita;
this
is
the
proof.
Et tu Brute! These are not mere The
proof to all our existence.
Love, Hope, Faith, Friendship. It all boils down to one thing alone. Me. Me. That I live, God knows how. That I shall die, that I know. This act of mine is what we all live by. Even you
who
Rita.
have failed to realise it yet will find itso. It carried the witchcraft
for a while.
of humanity.
Wear the ring,
But wear
it only
It has to be passed on to others so that everything
still-born may live in its transfiguration.
(Rita wears the ring.
RITA:
Then she removes it and returns it to Joe.)
(Metallically) You have given me the proof, Joe.
Now
you
can have your ring back. JOE: Meaning? RITA: Meaning that we don’t need to play the game, Joe. Not any more. It’s open house now. Lay your money on the table, Joe.
It does not have to be a present any more, and
it need
not come
from a friend either. Tony won’t mind. As you just said, he didn’t. He just stood...doing nothing. (Voice rising) Come on Joe, what are you waiting for? You're being clocked. For God’s
sake let’s stop talking and get down to it !
(Joe springs upon her in a passionate embrace. RITA: (Moaning softly) Tony...Oh, Tony...
CURTAIN
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She acquiesces.)
ACT II
A few The
months
guitar
has
later.
Tony is lying
been placed near
at the sky wilh his hands folded away
look,
as
SCENE
though
in
I
the
hammock,
immobile.
the tree, and Tony is looking up
behind his
head.
He
has
a far
he sees aad hears nothing, but is living in a
world of his own. The smart clothes of a few months ago seem crumpled and unkempt and dirty. He has a stubble on his chin and a bottle at his side from which he takes a drink now and again. Suddenly the door of the shack (at the other end of the stage) Slings open, and a drunk topples over the stairs and falls to the ground.
No sooner he tries to get up, a light cane chair
is
thrown
at him from the porch, and he reels over and falls again. Rita is standing in the porch. For a moment she looks as youthfully attractive as she ever was. Then one notices the almost
imperceptible changes that have come over her in the last few months. The voice is harsher, more metallic; the eyes are harder,
more
lusterless.
The
body
has
lost
its taut ferociousness.
Her
movements are no longer eager and spontaneous, but are slow and calculated, occasionally breaking under the strain of a tremendous nervous tension.
RITA: (Screaming to the drunk) Button up that fly and outa-here. (The wobbling drunk tries to mount the stairs again,
and
_get-the-hellRita
gives
him a hard push that sends him “biting the dust’ again. All this while and up to the time the drunk leaves, Tony gives no indication of knowing what’s been going on, although he’s only a few feet
away.
He continues to stare unblinkingly at the sky.)
DRUNK: (Slurring over the words) Tiss here iss the right address issn’t it ? RITA: Gohome. Drink acup of hot Jo. Sleep it off.-Get up. Have
a bath
and shave.
Then...then...come back.
DRUNK:
it?
Put on some of that nice smelly lotion.
(Still seeing double) Tiss here iss the right address, issn’t
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ACT If SCENE fi
181
RITA: Want me to write it down, and put it in your pocket ? DRUNK: (Toying with his belt, trying to unbuckle it) Sure, I'll take off my pants so’s you can reach my pocket. (Giggling) Hee, hee. RITA: If you don’t go now, I'll hit you with this stick, nice and hard. You're drunk and you’re sick. DRUNK: My friend told me you were clean...up to the time he knew you. Then he palmed off the address to me...second hand,
but not loose yet...
What are you talking about 7 Which friend ? RITA: DRUNK: (Giggling again) You know which one, or have
you
lost
count since. He told me you thought he made lollypops. (Giggles) Hee, hee. Lollypops { Imagine that. He said you weren’t over yet, but speeding down the hill just the same. Like the steam engine you know. That old mechanical ‘‘chug-chug”’. RITA: (Diamond hard) How much longer did he say I had. An old experienced hand like him should know, no doubt. DRUNK: There’s no saying. Each chick’s different from the other. Some work it like a businees...they last. Others work it like a passion...they don’t. Personally I prefer the latter ones...as long as the passion lasts.
rira: Christ! Another philosopher. DRUNK : What’s wrong with philosophy. The drunker I am, the more philosophic I get. I like anything that gives me a d-r-e-a-m. Whether it be tea or the needle, (Giggling) or just plain booze: RITA: How long do you think you’ll last. DRUNK : No longer than you, friend. No longer than you. RITA : So, we got something in common, huh ? DRUNK : Yes, we might hit it off together.
RiTA : No, there’s only one man with whom I hit it off together, and it won’t be you.
DRUNK : Oh, I see...you’re one of those types. rita : I didn’t know they had types for “those ones” too.
DRUNK: Everything repeats itself. Everyone repeats becomes a habit. So, we get a type. RITA : Like different blood types, huh ? DRUNK : Thass right. RITA : Sit down, and talk to me. DRUNK : I didn’t come here for no talk.
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himself.
So, it
THE DOLDRUMMERS
182
RITA : Sorry, I’ve broken the rules again. DRUNK : That’s alright, baby. I like a little talk too...provided the rest follows. It makes it seem...natural. Yeah, I can take it easy then, likeI had a ready-made home, without having to pay the dues. RITA: Wrong there, friend. You'll have to pay the dues...you’re being clocked, you know. =~ DRUNK : I didn’t mean dues that way. There won’t be no...bambinos. No? RITA : (Suddenly morbid and silent) No. You can go now. DRUNK : Go? But we were just settling down to a friendly chat. riTA : (A bit hysterical) No. No. I don’t want to talk. DRUNK : Well, then will you take me in. I Promise not to talk. RITA: Go away. I don’t want you now. Can’t you understand ? DRUNK: No. [’m notat home that youcan tell me to go away. You’re not my wife
You can’t trade by
at my convenience.
that you can tell me you don’t
saying now and then.
You
want me now.
gotta be available
RITA : (Almost sobbing) Go away. I beg of you. (The Drunk looks at her incredulously.) DRUNK: You’re raw yet, Ican make it out. That’s good. I'll be back, honey.
Ill be back.
Now
don’t
become
different
while
I’m gone. Youcan still feel. You’re not dead yet like me. I gotta get that spark before you die too. It won’t get me alive, but I need it badly, because then I can d-r-e-a-m. (Giggling) Hee, hee. (He goes.
Rita covers
her face with her
hands, and tries to hold
her body tight, because she finds it shacking involuntarily. Tony is still lying in the hammock, looking straight at the sky, like a mummified mummy. There is deep silence for a minute.)
RITA : (Calling out) Tonee. (No reply)
Tonee...
Tony. You deaf or something ? TONY: Yes, RITA:
Tony!
The drunk’s vomited all over the room.
Will you clean it up.
Tony : (Wearily getting out of the hammock) Yeah. RITA : Imagine, coming in here drunk.
Tony: Yeah.
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- ACT Il SCENE f
183
RITA : Play me a tune on the guitar, Tony-boy. -TONY: You just told me to clean up the mess.
RITA: That’s right.
That’s right.
Clean it up first, Tony.
TONY : (Mumbling) Women can never make up their minds.
Do this,
they say. Do that, they say. Get down to doing something, and they want you to rest. Don’t do nothing, and they want you to work. RITA : You said something, Tony ?
Tony: Nope. RITA: I thought you said something.
Tony : (Angrily) 1 said nothing ! RITA: Oh, alright. You said nothing. But away something all the same. TONY : (With usual stubborness) I said nothing.
RITA: So, you said nothing. TONY : (Mumbling again)
you
were
mumbling
Alright ?
Never satisfied, you women.
You want to
gobble us up, I know. Like toads gobbling up flies. (He looks up at her and raises his hand arrestingly before she can say anything) Yes, yes, | was saying something, so don’t argue.
RITA:
But, darling, I wasn’t going to say anything.
Tony : (Zestily) You were! You mumbling something. RiTA : But I already said that.
were
going
Tony: (Angrily) No...I mean yes. a second time.
I mean
to say
that
I was
you were going to say it
rita: I already said I wasn’t going to say anything. TONY : (Flinging up in his hands)
Aww
shut-up, will you !
RITA : Can’t understand what’s got into you, Tony. at each other all the time.
Just look
We’re snapping
at your clothes, Tony.
You
used to be so proud of them. Why every time you sat down, you'd hitch your pants up ever so lightly so as not to spoil the crease. Now take a look at them. It looks like crumpled blotting-paper. TONY : (Mumbling again) You don’t wash and iron them good enough now. > riTA : You used to play the guitar all the time. Sing to yourself like some beautiful bird. (Softly) And you came to me without my having to call out to you. What’s wrong, Tony-boy ?
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184
THE DOLDRUMMERS
TONY : (Almost sulking) Nothing.
RITA: Tell you
Nothing.
what: let’s go out for a dance.
There’s
a good
band playing tonight at the “Circus Inn”. You get some of that posh crowd there. O, I know it’s expensive, but we can afford it. You can wear those nice pointed dance shoes I bought for you the
other day.
:
Tony : I don’t like the crowd that hangs around around like vultures, the lot of them. us a mile off, the rich bastards.
They
there.
They hang
can spot people
like
rita: Why Tony, you never used to care about other people. Tony : Well, I do now. I can’t stand their smugness. And their talk, each one telling the other...all giggling like little school girls... riTA : Oh... Tony : It’s got nothing to do with you, Rita. RITA : Of course. Tony : It’s not as though I were ashamed or anything. RITA : Of course, not. Tony : But they do get me hot around the collar.
RITA : Nice to know.
TONY : Besides I’ve been feeling Jost of late.
Same as you.
RITA : (Surprised) What do you mean ? TONY : Joe. RITA: What about Joe ? TONY : He’s gone. RITA : Yes, I know he’s gone. TONY : Well, nothing’s been the same since.
rita: Why?
TONY : Because it was fun: you, he and I. Like Liza said, we made ateam. Oh, we didn’t do anything much, but we sorta got along. He was like one of my hands. You know what a man with one arm feels. Sometimes he forgets the other hand is not there, and he stretches it out to grab hold of something...and finds it isn’t there.
RITA : Joe was no friend of yours. Tony : I’m not speaking about friendship. (Pause) Wonder Did he tell you why ? left like that, all of a sudden.
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why he
ACT II SCENE I
185
riTA: He said something about having started a situation in motion, and that his presence was no longer necessary for its natural conclusion. Hence he felt he could be dispensed with. TONY : He was crackers alright. Yet everything he said gave me the feeling that there must be a meaning. RITA: Yes. Tony : You miss him too, don’t you Rita ?
RITA : I don’t know what you mean.
Tony : Well, whenever I speak of Joe you clamp up. RITA: Sometimes I think Joe never existed. That he was only part of you and I. Something evil hidden within us. That it appeared one day as an apparition, and called himself Joe. That his absence does not mean that he has been exercised, like the devil, because he’s already set into motion a train of events...and knows where it will end.
Tony : You’re talking like Joe now.
RITA: As I said, he may have been part of us. TONY : I wonder if he’ll ever come back. RiTA : Perhaps he knows he hasn’t really gone. Tony : What did he want from us anyway.
He never really belonged
to our background. RITA : You'll find a Joe everywhere. He really does not belong anywhere, but he exists all the same. Lift any piece of rock and you'll ' find a lizard like him crawling...eating up his own eggs... Tony : You never liked him, did you ?
rita : No, and yet the fire in him blazed, making ness, and exposing the nakedness of it all.
light out of dark-
TONY : (Getting up wearily) T guess I'd better clean up the mess.
(Just as he is about to go, Rita stops him.)
RITA : No, Tony, wait.
Tony RITA Tony RITA
I'll do it.
: (Shrugs his shoulders) If you want to. : (Conciliatory) It’s not fair that I should give it to you. : Alright, you do it. : (Running her fingers through Tony's hair) Tonee. Tonee.
TONY : (Jmpassive) Yeah. RITA : (Cooing) Let’s be by ourselves tonight.
Tony: (Unresponsive) Alright.
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THE DOLDRUMMERS
186
He really does not belong anyRITA : You'll find Joe everywhere. where, but he exists all the same. Lift any piece of rock and you'll find a lizard like him crawling...eating up his own eggs.
Digitized byGoogle
Original from
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
ACT Il SCENE I
187
RITA : Like old times. TONY: Yeah. RITA : Nothing’s changed, has it ?
TONY: No.
RITA : You don’t really mind, do you ?
TONY : No. RITA : I need you more than ever, Tony. Tony : Hmmm. : Rit : I mean if you really did mind, you would have told me then and there when you met the old man you used to work for. TONy : That’s right. . RiTA : We can both shut our eyes to it.
Our love is something quite
apart.
TONY: Yes. RITA: Even afterwords, you never
had said with it.
some
really
time ago about
objected to it.
Liza,
Like
there’s nothing
you
wrong
Tony: Yes. riTA : And it’s so silly to play if around with parents and friends instead of getting down to brass tacks. Tony : Yes. rita: After all, it takes money to buy nice things, doesn’t it, Tonyboy.
Tony : Yes.
rita: And you Tony.
do like to receive nice things from me, don’t you,
Tony: Yes. Yes. Yes. RITA: Well, then kiss me, Tony. I’m tired. So tired. (They kiss. She with passion and he without.) What’s wrong Tony ? Tony : The room still smells of vomit. rita : (Nervously irritated.. flings a piece of cloth to him) Well, clean it up. TONY : Clean it up yourself. You said you'd do it. RITA: Tony. Tony are we going to quarrel again ? Tony : You started it.
you.
The whole place smells
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of vomit,
then
including
188
:
THE DOLDRUMMERS
RITA : (Aroused) Me? I smell of vomit? And what do you think you smell of ? You’ve still got Liza’s odious perfume of last week cloying over you. , TONY : She doesn’t at least change brands like ‘you. You smell of two-dozen kinds of sweat. RITA : (Screaming) You never seemed to mind it before. Not as long as you could cover it up with some of that fancy perfume I bought for you...with my sweat mixed in it. Tony : So, what ? I sweat for my living too. You don’t think it’s a pleasure for me, do you? I got to drink myself drunk to face the ordeal every time. RITA: (Wide-eyed with shock) Tony ! What are you saying, -Tony ! This is me...Rita. Not the bawd you picked up last week. This is me...whom you called tops. We always hit it off together, don’t you remember ?
TONY : (Defiant, but afraid) I was pretending. RITA: You can’t pretend that, Tony. I can’t pretend it either. I might with everyone else, but not with you, Tony. Yon said I knew the right moment, and gave it to you evey time. TONY : I can’t remember. I don’t get the same feeling. RITA : (Desperately) You do, Tony. You do. I know you do. Kiss me Tony. I’ll prove it to you. Kiss me. ~
(She attempts to kiss him but he turns his face away.
She stares
at him incredulously. Then an expression of awful rage passes over her face. She spits full on his face. Tony slaps her with a heavy hand that knacks her to the floor.
He turns around and leaves.)
RITA: (Cries out pleadingly) Tonee...Tonee...come back, Tonee... (He is out of sight. Rita remains prostrate for a long while. Liza comes along, and seeing Rita on the floor runs up to her and helps
her sit down.)
u1zA: RITA: LIZA: RITA: LizA:
Rita! Rita! What’s happened? Are you hurt ? (Her hands shaking as she covers up her face) N...No. What happened ? Tony slapped me. Tony ? Why ?
IZA:
You...you look overwrought and tired, Rita.
RITA:
JI
RITA:
No reason, Liza.
No reason. There’s never any reason.
am.
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189
ACT Ii SCENE I
LIzA: Sit down here, Rita. Take it easy. It will pass. (Rita sits down, but a moment later she grimaces with pain and her hands clutch on to her stomach. She feels sick, and dashes to the bath-room to throw-up.) Why are you sick ? Shall 11zA: (Concerned) What’s wrong, Rita? I call a doctor ? (Rita shakes her head negatively and sits down) Look Rita, if something’s wrong with you, tell me for heaven’s sake. that.
In
of everything,
spite
you
can
tell me, Rita, you know
(Quietly) P'm getting a baby, Liza. Liza: (Taken aback) No! You sure ? (Rita nods her head in reply) I’ve known it happen You could be mistaken, you know.
RITA:
time
being rita:
LIzA : RITA:
Liza:
(Then
and again.
mistaken.
I’m sure,
quickly) Not having a baby of course, but
Liza.
For Pete’s sake, what are you going to do Rita Nothing. Have the baby I guess.
Just like that.
to me
Look, honey, this is serious.
?
Let’s not play
the stork game with each other. I’m a woman, so I understand. Maybe I don’t feel the same as you, but I’m a woman like you, so I understand. Now tell me: who dun it ?
RITA: (Bitterly) You're back-dated ony our news, Liza, or don’t you know. Visit the “Circus Inn” sometime, and catch up on the gory details. They must be betting there on “which one dun it”. LIZA: rita: L1zA: RITA: LIZA:
(Concerned) Oh, Rita baby, don’t pay any attention to them. (To herself) But no one knows; no one knows, save I and... 4 Have you told Tony about it yet ? No. Well, aren’t you going to tell him? He can’t be slapping you
around like this. RITA: What do you suggest I tell him Liza? That
he
should
us part.
LIzA:
Why not?
That it’s his child ?
hereafter love, honour and obey me, till death do He’s been as much responsible as anyone
else.
RITA: (Laughing harshly) ‘Ena Mena Mina Moe..,” And if he cries should I Iet him go-..?
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DOLDRUMMERS
THE
190
L1zA: Look, Rita, I’ve got a far more practical solution. Listen to me. I have a friend. He kept reassuring me that I was completely safe with him, because he claimed to be a doctor. At first I thought he meant safe the other way...you know, a plutonic friendship...until I found out that he meant otherwise. It turned out he really was a doctor...and what’s more a practising doctor. He told me if I ever knew anyone in trouble, he could fix her up...
you know...
RITA:
.
(Her hand involuntarily goes
neck) No, Liza, No !
to
the
cross
hung
around her
LIZA; Honey you've got to be practical. You want the child ? rita: Yes! Yes! It’s mine. It grows within me. I cannot deny it life, for better or for worse.
LIZA:
Be reasonable, Rita.
RITA: LIZA: RITA:
The child will be born. ...without a father...? It shall have a father.
LIZA:
me,
Well, now.
Rita,
him ?
RITA:
why
is
I hadn’t
it Tony
It would be better for both of you. It will be cared
for...and
loved.
realised. That’s different. (Pause) Tell never
He never got the chance.
ing in the way.
realised
how
much
you love
There were too many others
com-
LIZA: Meaning...me? RITA: Yes, you tugging from one side, and...Joe from the other. Liza: (Laughing) Oh, Joe. Joe. That idiotic magpie. I hear he left some time ago. You all certainly look lonesome without him.
Like one of the front teeth missing. Oh, Joe, Joe. He was certainly
a bellyfull of laughs. It used to infuriate him that take him seriously. RITA: He had no effect on you at all then.
L1zA:
Him? Joe ? Naw. Of course, not.
RITA;
(Belligerently) What kind ?
I could
never
Why the silly bean didn’t
have an ounce of brain in his head. Oh, sure he sprouted some big words he got out of books, but that didn’t affect me any. He made quite a big impression on Tony. RITA: Liza: Tony’s impressionable. RITA: (Thoughtfully)...and on me. uiza: You’re that kind of woman.
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ACT §1 SCENE I
191
LIZA; Oh, the kind that Joe would make a play for. The hard-toget, the real you. rita: And he wouldn’t make a play for you ? LIZA: Sure he would. But he wouldn’t talk Almighty with me. It would be like water off a duck’s back. No, he’d find shorter cuts with me.
He’d
behave
like
ordinary
Tony
with
me,
but
with
thought
you
you he’d make out like a super-Tony. He’s like one of those comedy actors in Shakespearian drama. RITA: Only he isn’t funny. L1zA: No? What do you take him for then 7 riTA: I don’t know. Whenever I met him, I got the feeling that I had known him before. Little bits about him I saw in a lot of people...including myself. Most of everybody had seen his face, or heard his name, or felt his presence. There was something frighteningly real...unreal about him. uizA: You feeling alright, Rita? My God ! You talk about him as though he were the Missiah himself. He was nothing buta punk...a crazy hipster with hallucinations.
RITA: LizA:
Maybe so. Maybe so. You did not take to him, did
disliked him.
you
? I always
RITA: I always keep coming back to thinking of it. Like one hates oneself at times, but cannot avoid living with since it forms part of oneself. LI1zA: Me, I’m different. I love living with myself. RITA: That’s just like Tony. He gives me that feeling. Liza: It’s a good feeling to have, Rita. And a good man too. Do you know I’ve always felt a wee-bit jealous of you all the time. I’ve
somehow...always
all.
I know he gives it to you.
because
I was
never
felt...that
the right one.
Tony...never
When
gave
me_
And a woman always wants
well you have your man. (Rita smiles) (At that moment a couple stroll by whistling nonchalantly.)
that comes
of teen-age
involuntarily, school
LIZA : (Getting up) Well...Rita. (Rita gets up on an impulse and kisses her on the cheek.) rita : I'll be alright. Liza : "Bye, Rita,
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ll...
boys
192
THE DOLDRUMMERS
/
RITA : "Bye.
(Rita gets up from the porch, and goes into the room.
She crosses
over to the window and stares out for a while. The school boys return, looking around furtively, not aware that she is standing at the window above them, within earshot.)
Isr SCHOOL BOY : You're sure this is the right place ?
2np scHooL BoY: I said I came with the fellows didn’t 1? 1st Boy : You ..you...did it (Awesome tone) Boy Bory BoY Boy
other night
I’m a man, she said, a big one.
2np Boy : (Expensive voice) Sure.
1st 2np 1st 2np
the
: Oh, go on. Fred said you got scared and did’t go. : I did too. See, no more pimples on my face. : Alright you go first. : (Hesitatingly) No, you go first. (Then quickly) You're my
pal, so I’ll give you the first turn. Ist Boy : Which of the two girls was it ? 2np Boy : The small one, (Gestures) With them standing out high.
1st Boy : She’s so pretty. It hurts me that I should want to do it to her. I feel I could fall in love with her.
2np
Boy:
money.
Better
watch
out.
vamps
They’re
when
it comes
to
1st Boy : What’s vamps.
2np {st 2np 1st
Boy Boy Boy soy
: Something to do with vampires, I guess. : I don’t think she’s a vamp. : Who says she’s not. She could be...Jean I : Well, she doesn’t look like a vamp.
think I’d die
of shame if Jean would
I...1...feel I’'d die if she didn’t.
2np BOY : She’s not like Jean.
1st Boy : But she could
I'd like to ask her if she’d be
be like Jean.
willing to take the place of Jean.
if Jean and I were married.
let me do it to her, and yet
You know, sort of pretend...like
2np Boy : Why don’t you play the game
with Jean herself instead of
coming here ? 1st Boy : Jean wouldn’t let me, even if I wanted to. I...I...wouldn’t know what to do. What does it feel like...the first time.
2np Boy:
It feels
awfully...secret.
secret,
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Like
two
people
sharing
a
ACT ‘Il SCENE I
193
Ist Boy : How do you get down to it. I mean...I mean...what does one do ? 2ND BOY : I guess it comes naturally. _ Ist Boy:
I wonder
what
made
her...become
so...natural looking, like the other girls. 2npD Boy : She was disappointed in love, Ist Boy : Then if she had not been disappointed
never have become like this.
this
way.
She’s
in love, she would
2nD Boy : Say, what’s all this talking about ? We're wasting time. Go ahead, and knock on the door. Isr Boy: (Hesitating) I don’t know... don’t know...do you think Jean will mind ? 2nD Boy : Not if she doesn’t know. 1st Boy : But what if she comes to know ? 2ND Boy : Then I guess she’ll mind. 1st Boy: I’ll buy her something nice so she won’t mind. 2np Boy :
I think she’ll
still mind, but
she won’t say anything.
1st Boy : ( Playing for time) Why shouldn’t
she say anything if she
2ND BOY : I suppose she’ll feel you wanted nothing she could do about it, Ist Boy : I hate to hurt her.
it so
does mind,
‘
badly
there
was
2ND BOY : She’ll get over it.
1st Boy : But I don’t want her to get over it. I just don’t want to hurt her, 2np Boy : (Thoroughly exasperated) Dash it? Why don’t you make up your mind ? If you’re not willing to go, I'll go. \st BOY : No, no, no. I want to go. 2npD BoY : Well, then go, and stop arguing. 1st Boy : (Looking around wildly) Maybe we ought to come back later. 2nD Boy : For Pete’s sake we’ve been doing that the last two hours ?
1st Boy : What if we get caught, or catch the disease. It’s a terrible disease I’m told. First your nose drops off and then your
ears. 2np Boy : I’ve got something here that’s quite safe.
It’s called by a
long French name that sounds something like one of those tooth-
pastes,
.
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194
THE DOLDRUMMERS
Ist Boy : Give it to me. (Sound of footsteps) 2ND BOY : Someone’s coming. Duck. (Both the boys scramble away as though the devil were after them. In the rush, the Ist boy’s cap fies off.) Ist Boy: Whoops! My cap’s fallen. (As he has already run part of the distance before the cap fell, hehesitates in deciding whether he has the time to retrieve it.)
2np Boy : (Pulling him along) Forget
it.
Well!
come
back
for it
later... (Both bolt away) (A few seconds later a postman, whom the boys had seen, passes by. Rita appears on thé porch and looks in the direction in which the boys have gone. Then she sees the cap on the ground, and stepping down she takes it, brushes the sand off it, and brings it to the porch, all the while looking at it in contemplation. She sighs, then gets her portable record-player...which is a
hand-winding
78
r.p.m.
with
playing the song “Pretending”
a scratchy
vocalised
needle...and
by “Nat
King
starts
Cole’’.
Now she enacts a pantomime to the melody, pretending to be the wife of the Ist school boy...the girl by the name of Jean. She
does this with the help of the school cap which represents the boy-husband, and on her part she performs the sacred rituals which to the boy would represent the ideal-wife, starting with
getting the
slippers, filling the pipe, etc., ending with
perhaps
a
waltz that swerves in the direction of the bed-room. Her movements, tender and affectionate asa dream (hers as well as the
boy’s), must
be interrupted with sharp break-downs
(voice cracking, (vis-a-vis Tony), and with
to reality
sobbing, etc.) for the Rita-Jean that she was she isno more. The record comes-to an end,
it...the fantasy.
A few
moments later
one
hears
the
sound of drunken singing and Tony emerges swaggeringly drunk on the scene accompanied with a more-drunk idiotic-looking
friend.
He has a chain like lasso tied around the neck of his
friend, and brings him along like he were a dog. His friend completely plastered, and merely stares with glassy eyes.) RITA:
Tony.
Tony
you’re back.
Thank
sit down, I have something to tell you.
Tony.
tony; (Lisping) ’'m not Tony.
Google
I'm Jog.
God, you’re back.
Send your -
is
Come,
friend away,
(Pointing to his friend)
ACT Il SCENE
I
195
He’s Tony. And hecan’t go. I’m going to tie him down here. RITA: Tony you’re drunk again. You don’t need to be. You don’t need to be...not any more. TONY : (Raising his right hand solemnly) 1 swear I won’t drink again. I won’t need to any more. RITA: I’ll make you some hot coffee. Tony : No, wait. You haven’t met my friend here. His name is Tony.
Say, hello, Tony.
FRIEND : Wolf!
Wolf !
TONY : That’s right, Tony. You've got a flea behind your ear Tony, scratch it. (The friend gets down on all fours and pretends to scratch behind his ear with his foot.) Tony : That’s right. Now sit and beg, Tony. (The friend doesn’t move) _ (Tony yanks the ‘‘chain’’, and raises his voice commandingly)
Beg, Tony!
Beg!
(The friend. crouches on his toes and lifts his two hands gingerly.) That’s right. Now you can have a little present...a lollypop ! (He takes out a lollypop, and chucks it to
his friend,
up
who, snaps
on it like a seal and eats its paper and all.) TONY : (Turning to Rita who's been watching, too astonished to speak. He bows like a dog-trainer, who’s completed the performance) You
see I’m Joe.
RITA: (Hysterically) Tony! Stop it! Stop it! It’s not funny. TONY : (Turning to his friend) It’s not funny, Tony, she says. What do you think of it, Tony ? (His friend does a ‘‘Hee, hee’’ laughter) (Turning to Rita) Tony thinks it’s funny. (Rita turns to go, but Tony catches her violently by the wrist, and turns her around to face him. There is an impelling sobriety and fury about him now.) No, stay! Stay here and watch, until doomsday itself. RITA : Let me go! (Tony slaps her violently.) Tony: Stay here and watch I said! And listen { Listen” to
the dog
whine.
He’s
Google
got no tongue,
but
he can still whine.
196
THE DOLDRUMMERS
I got me a_ substitute now. I’m not Tony any Joe. This here is Tony. He'll serve you well. taught
him
to
play
louder.
She
the
guitar.
And
more. I’m I’ve even
he
is the hottest thing in
name,
and the darkness and
bed. He-doesn’t talk much. He doesn’t even feel much. He’s almost like a portable, do-it-yourself kit. He'll take my place well, and Ill be gone far, far away. RITA : (Screaming) No, Tony! Please, I beg of you. TONY : (Turning to his friend) Tony! She asked you to beg. Beg, you dog ! (His friend does the begging act again.) RITA : (Walking, crouching back slowly, hysterical, wide-eyed) Tonee... Tonee...my Tony-boy...my only love... (She turns around and flees. The sound of the waves seems to grow
is
repeating
his
the sound of the waves become painfully intense.)
TONY’: (With a sudden burst of realization and agony) Oh, God ! Rita! Rita! No! direction.)
No!
(He
falters,
CURTAIN
Google
then
FALLS
runs
desperately
in
her
ACT
The following
looking policeman.
morning.
II
SCENE IT
Liza
is talking
excitedly to a bored-
She is absolutely over-whelming in her narration,
and does not give the policeman a chance to put in a word As the scene opens, she is midway through her discourse...
edgewise.
LIZA: ...it was a farce; that’s what it was...a farce. You'd never guess what happened, Officer. But then all you police people are terribly clever, aren’t you ? You could guess just about anything.’ I’ve just
finished
reading a detective novel where you could never
have guessed...
POLICEMAN : (Intefrupting) Miss, I merely...
LIZA : (Interrupting)...yes, yes, I’m sorry. I’m wandering off the point. ‘Now where wasI? No, don’t tell me, don’t tell me. Ah, yes. The farce. Well, there wasn’t a single life-saver or bodyguard or whatever you call him around. They’re never around when
you
want
them.
They just love to strut around during the
day like little Charles Atlas, you know like see on the last page comic
books,
who
develop
into
big
big
men
from
90
of
pound
weaklings... POLICEMAN : (Wearily) Look, Miss, all I want... LIZA: (Interrupting again) Yes, yes, don’t keep interrupting me. You merely distract me from the point. Now where...yes, asI was saying, and I say from hearsay, because I wasn’t here, you understand. I was out last night dining and wining and dancing ...Oh, but that wouldn’t interest you, would it ?
(The policeman is too tired to reply by now, and so merely shakes
his head negatively) I thought not. All you...detectives are so cut-and-dried. how you behave at home with your wives.. (The policeman gives her a belligerent stare) So,
as
like
this
I was
frightening.
for
Wonder
saying before you interrupted me, it was all terribly
Rita was all wrought some
time.
Google
up
Tense...very
and
nervous.
tense.
She’s
been
As though some-
198
THE
thing within her were going to break. Well, of a man does the dog-and-monkey act (that and it has an impact on her like a hundred slaps her, and says he’s leaving her. Adding
DOLDRUMMERS
it did. That brute I told you of before), hells-bells. Then he injury to insult, after
hitting her, he wants to leave old Moron Moe behind
to take his
place while he struts off into the blue yonder like Pal-Joey. Well, what do you expect her to do? Yes, you’ve guessed it, she wanted to drown herself in the sea. Before you could say “Jack
Robinson”, she turned around and dashed into the open sea... POLICEMAN :
All this is very interesting, but...
LIZA : (Interrupting) Youre damned right, it’s juicy. Now hold your horses, Here’s where we come to the farce of it all. (She takes a deep breath before continuing, and finding the policeman open his mouth to say something, she snaps out first) Now listen and don’t interrupt me.
(The policeman
take it’s own course)
dashing to the sea.
slumps
back
wearily
to
let nature
Picture to yourself. Rita turning around and
Tony is at first resentful, then bewildered, then
it strikes him like a sledge-hammer that Rita intends to drown herself. He cries after her like some desperate banshee and runs to save her. By now she’s already far into the sea. Tony follows recklessly to the rescue. But...(She raises a finger for attention and the Policeman looks up, because shé expects him to)...the poor sucker What do you expect happened then? Rita is at can’t swim. first indifferent to his cries, but pretty soon she finds that he’s in trouble. Tony, the courageous idiot, realises too late that he can’t swim. Like a child bawling out for his mother, he cries out to Surely you can Rita for help. And Rita isan expert swimmer. guess the rest.
Before you could say ‘Jack
Robinson”,
she
does
the life-guard act and drags the half-drowned boy ashore. (She pauses to take stock of the dramatic effect on the policeman, who continues to regard her nonchalantly. He cautiously then opens his mouth to see if he is permitted to speak, and since she remains momentarily silent, he manages to eek out half a word of something-or-the-other before she interrupts again.) She’s suffering from shock and exhaustion now. The doctor’s given her a sedative. And between you and me and the door-post she didn’t lose her child, Miraculous the doctor called it. So, all’s well that ends well. But let me tell you something : If it weren’t for Tony, Rita would be dead today. (She ends with finality. The
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Act fi SCENE It
199
"policeman says nothing. something,
She looks at him expectantly.)
That's what you came here for, didn’t you ?
Well, say
POLICEMAN : I’ve been trying to tell you, Miss, that that’s not what came here about.
I
Liza: What ? POLICEMAN : If you'll give me a chance to explain... Liza:
(Interrupting)
Certainly
not.
You
come
here...and...and
extract information from me under...under false pretences. POLICEMAN: (Authoritatively) Now look here, Miss. I've got a job. to do, and I'll do it the way I want to. I’ve come here to make an enquiry, and I was directed to you. Liza: To me? POLICEMAN : Did you know a man called Joe ? Liza: Why...yes. What about him? POLICEMAN : How well did you know him ? Liza: Casual-like. Why ? POLICEMAN : Did he have any friends...or ¢nemies ? Liza: Afew. Why? .
POLICEMAN : He left here a few months ago I understand. Why ? LIZA: How am I to know ! He wasn’t on confidence terms with me.
Say, what’s all this questioning about ? What’s Joe been up to ? POLICEMAN : His body was washed ashore yesterday. Liza: What ?! Joe’s 7! POLICEMAN : That’s what the identification papers said. Someone who knew him also identified him. There’s no doubt that it was
him. LIZA: Joe.
Joe.
Can’t believe he’s dead.
POLICEMAN : There’s something strange about this case.
L1zA : How...how did he die ?
POLICEMAN: He was drowned. Coroner says around high tide last night. By the way do you know if he could swim. LIZA : Drowned ! POLICEMAN : Did he know how to swim ? L1za : Joe...couldn’t swim; (Then to herself)...not could Tony... POLICEMAN: (Mumbling, more to himself) Something strange about this case. Can’t lay my finger on it. No sign of struggle. Cause unknown. Motive unknown. Witnesses none. Never seen such
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200
THE. DOLDRUMMERS
an expression on a dead man. Blissful : like he had laid down: sleep forever. All curled up like a baby. Chief said... (Liza,turns rapidly to go.) POLICEMAN : Hey ! I haven’t finished. LIZA : I have to go now. Can’t I see you another time ?
POLICEMAN : Well...alright.
See you then. (He
leaves.
Liza
a
I’ve got some
dashes
up
to
work
to
here tomorrow.
the shack calling out “Rita” !
“Rita” ! Rita is lying on a sofa, and looks up startled at Liza.) Liza : (Breathlessly) Rita! Rita! I’ve got the most awful news. The most awful thing has happened. Joe’s drowned ! RITA : (Starts violently) Who?
Who?
LIZA : Joe, Joe. The policeman was just here, and was questioning me. At first I thought he wanted a report on what happened here last night, but I found out later that he had come here to investigate about Joe. He said Joe was drowned. Drowned Rita! Last.
night !
RITA : (Closing the cross involuntarily, and repeating the words slowly) Drowned... last...night. God. Oh, God! (Softly) Joe...Joe...he knew how it was going to end, Liza : The policeman said it was the strangest case he’s ever known. RITA : When did...it...happen ? LIZA: Last night, at high tide. . :
RITA : That must have been around...9,30...I remember it was tide...the
Liza: He
same time...are they sure it was Joe ?
was identified.
high
They said his expression was peaceful
as
a baby, curled up in sleep. ' RITA: ...as a womb...so Joe’s presence was no longer necessary...
L1zA : What do you mean? What do you mean ? RITA : It’s Joe’s child I’m bearing, Liza. And Joe knew it.
Liza : Joe’s?
You're crazy, Liza.
You're mixed up with last night.
RITA:
thinking
nights
You're tired. No, I’m
:
of many
f
ago.
It was then that
conceived...it shall have a father...and the ring shall be the proof...
(She raises her finger which has a diamond ring...)
Liza : Rita!
Rita!
What’s the ring got to do with...
RITA: It belonged to Joe. He said that it should be passed on so that... what did he say...yes, so that...everything still-born may live...
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I
ACT if SCENE It
201
The whole ones... (Her voice tapers off.) L1zA : He gave it to you...before he left. RITA : (Quietly) No...I found it today...on someone had left it behind. Liza : My God, Rita!
the
What are you saying?
table...as /
though
You found the
ring
...today. But Joe died...yesterday, and he had the ring. Did it really happen? Are you sure? Are you very sure 7 riTA : (Slowly) I don't know. I really don’t know. Perhaps...perhaps it never happened...and perhaps we never existed. (From the hammock comes the melody of a guitar, It is Tony, rocking in the hammock gently as
the breeze.
The
women
hear
on
dol-
him sing...) . Tony : (Softly, very softly) Joe...Joe...Remember the one drums. Let’s sing this one together...for the last time. Let’s go my friend, We'll go together, my friend,
To where the doldrums end,
Never fear, old man, That’s where it all began, Blind though we be, There’s nothing left to see,
I'll lead you after,
Beyond you immortal star, So hold iny hand, Cause I understand,
Cause I understand...
(CURTAIN
Google
CLOSES]
Digitized by Google
Original from
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
THE
REFUGEE A PLAY
Google
IN ONE ACT
CHARACTERS
SEN GUPTA WIFE SON DAUGHTER REFUGEE
"prop.
REFUGEE &
OTHERS
Google
Baba/Prakash Ma/Sarla
Ashok Mita Yassin
Mosin Ramul
SCENE
Time:
Shortly after March
25th
I
’71,
when
talks
between
Yahya
Khan and Sheikh Mujib broke down, the initial massacre of intellectuals at universities in East Bengal took place, and the first flight of a few thousand refugees occurred across the border into West Bengal.
.
PLACE: One of the border towns of Malda or West Dinajpur District in West Bengal. An upper middle class household. A confident looking middle aged man of about fifty brings along a somewhat diffident, emiciated young man in his twenties, to the house. OLDER MAN SEN GUPTA: Here, Yassin, Give me your bag. YASSIN :
(Clutching on the small tin case) No.
SEN GUPTA: (Tuking it away) Oh, come on. we’re already there. (Approach the porch) My wife’s been waiting to meet you. ‘ are they gone ? (Calling out)
No.
Also
It’s
the
not
children.
Ma...Ma .. All of us...anxious. Concerned...for your safety. this is home, Yassin...and we are your family. (The young man smiles weakly, his eyes still afar.
heavy, and
Where
Remember...
Sen Gupta’s
wife
comes. She’s middle aged too,-heavy, benign. She looks at Yassin with a touch of sympathy) Ah, there you are. This is Yassin... (Affectionate hand on his shoulder...) wirE: Your mother... We...(correcting himself) ...1 SEN GUPTA (With softness): Ru...Rukaiya. I...(Returns to present) well of course.
knew
her
We...we’re sorry...she died. Can’t believe it.
wire: (Gently)—Did tragedy.
it have
Google
anything
to do
with
the
recent..,
THE REFUGEE
206 YASSIN :
(Looks at her blankly) No. ' (Short silence)
SEN GUPTA: (Trying to get the warmth No time for the past. Lots to be standing. Come, Yassin, rest. Some active, restless man) Where are the
back) Ah, come on now! done...Ma...our guest is still tea, mother. (He can be an children 7 Out, as usual...
(Mother leaves to get some tea) (Energetie Sen Gupta holds Yassin’s arm before he can sit down) Come, ¥assin, I’ll show you to your room. Used to be my study. It overlooks the pond and green fields and palm trees. Reminds me of...Comilla... «(a quick questioning look from Yassin)...yes, where you were
born. Rukaiya...your mother and I grew up together as children... (Enter the room. This is Sen Gupta’s dream world) On a clear night, heavy with the scent of the Mahua flowers and my own
loneliness, I can feel the (Turns around and faces
presence...of Yassin)
the
past.
You see why we’re one. The East Bengalee, whether Hindu, always yearns for his old home town.
YASSIN: The refugee... SEN GUPTA: ...ah... YASSIN: ...leaves against his SEN GUPTA:
Muslim
or
-
will...
...true.
YASSIN : ...in bitterness. SEN GUPTA: (Softly) It depends on what he makes out of his life. His new home. YASSIN: (Unsure) Meaning ? SEN GUPTA: (Simply) I came here myself a refugee when partition tore
us apart 24 years ago.
(Yassin stunned to silence).
(Out of the blue) Tell me, Yassin, what did your mother die of 7 yassin: (Blankly) A broken heart. (silence) (Mrs. Sen Gupta comes with tea.) SEN GuPTA:
ing.
Some
deception
Ah, thank you, dear. (Taking the tea) We’re...reminisc-
7
thoughts
bitter...some
(Laughs not unpleasantly)
Google
sweet.
Life’s never ending...
SCENE I
207
WIFE: (Smiling reproachfully) Yassin’s too young for that. SEN GUPTA: (Turning to Yassin) 1s that so 7? (Yassin doesn’t know what to say.) wiFE: (To her husband) Stop it, You’re embarassing him. Yassin’s don’t pay any attention to him. Half the time he’s joking.
YASSIN : (Quietly) You're doing much...to make me feel a home. wire: It’s nothing. You aren’t much older than my children.
...it distresses me to think...what you must have been through. YASSIN: It was’nt so bad for me. Much worse for the others.
SEN GUPTA:
Was’nt bad!
It
I havea pretty good idea what happened
at the University. The intelligentsia...the Awami League’s future leadership...were all wiped out barbarously.
wiFE:
(Raising her hands) Hush !
SEN GUPTA: It makes my blood boil! Why only last week they were acclaiming their newly found Bengla freedom and friendship.
Now...they’re being hounded
wirE:
tion ?
out...
Are...are there many...refugees
?
Is there
much...persecu-
YASSIN: (Eyes afar) It’s just started. I cannot say—Not all of us... were politically involved. Some...preferred to remain uncommitted. SEN GUPTA: (Angrily) Uncommitted ? What does that mean ? YASSIN: The university...learning...offered a way of life...nonpolitical, non-party; scholarship became an end in itself. Do you understand ? SEN GUPTA: No! wire: (Patting her husband) Hush, dear. The important thing is that Yassin is safe, and here with us. SEN GUPTA: (Mumbling, grumbling) Almost missed me. If I had’nt searched him out...(Leaves sentence unfinished. Sound of boisterousness, teasing and laughter as the two young people enter—boy (Ashok) and girl (Mita) about 19 and 20 years old. They stop suddenly upon seeing Yassin with their parents.) SEN GUPTA: Ah, there you are! About time. Ashok...Mita...this is the young man I spoke about. Yassin...my son and daughter. (Mutual nods, shy but responsive to each other as youngs are.) ASHOK:
(Bursting out) 1...1 hear the Mukti Fauj
Pakistani Army out.
Google
are
throwing
the
208
THE REFUGEE
(Yassin looks at him in quiet amusement, then turns his eyes to Mita
who becomes self conscious.)
wirE: My daughter does voluntary social work center. MITA: (Quickly, wanting to speak for herself) At are concerned with refugees rehabilitation. YASSIN.: (The smile still in his eyes) Indeed. MITA: (Blushing) Oh...I did’nt mean you. yassin: I did’nt think you did. ashok: And...did you have a...rough time. It very...heroic...to resist a well organized army.
Yassin :
(Suddenly turning cold) Most of us were
for safety. SEN GUPTA : ' (Forcing laughter)
,
with the
the
youth
moment
must
have
we
been
busy...scrambling
, Ashok is more busy with the libera-
tion of Bangla Desh, then with his studies. He could learn something from you, couldn’t he, Yassin 7 (Yassin’s face expressionless. He does not reply.) ASHOK : Professor Mosin... SEN GUPTA: Ah, did you ask him to drop by this evening (Turning to
Yassin)
Forgive
me for rushing you, but I thought you would
be interested in meeting him. Prof. Mosin is one of our most distinguished teachers here. A grand old man. He happens to be on the Town Advisory Council with me, and is a good friend too. I thought you would find much in common with him. YASSIN: (Spark of life) Thank you. I would very much like to meet him. MITA:
put
(Catching on to her father’s arm)
father on our Youth Committee...
YASSIN: (Interrupting refugees.
SEN GUPTA:
with
a_
Don’t you.think we
smile)
... For
should
rehabilitation
of
(All laugh)
(Affectionate hand over Yassin’s
shoulder)
You're welcome. As friends and neighbours, you’re all welcome. As long as there’s enough room to live in and food to share,I
promise you there will always be shelter who
‘tion.
need
in life,
our help.
Many
in this
town
for those
of us came here uprooted after parti-
Settled down, worked hard, built proudly our own positions
but
not
without
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a sense
of responsibility. and. social
SCENE
I
purpose.
209
What we do is equally for you...as for
ourselves.
(Ashok claps, all laugh.) (Sheepishly)
Did I sound as pompous 7?
WIFE: (Patting him) always say it well, (There is a touch ASHOK : (Bantering, Mayorship, Baba. + SEN GUPTA:
you never say what you don’t mean, and you my dear. . of genuine pride in her voice.) but half serious too) You should run for town
Too busy making a
living,
son.
MITA: (Also playing the game) You should work for Ministership, Baba. SEN GUPTA: Too much of dirty politics, daughter. WIFE: (Shooing them) Leave him alone, will you, children! He has his hands full already...as responsible citizen and father of two very mischievous children. (Yassin has been looking and smiling, and feeling more and more at home.) . SEN GUPTA: (Seriously) Well, maybe I’ll run for office. The Town
Advisory Council have put up my name. As soon as Ashok graduates, takes over the business, I can gradually move...to other
responsibilities.
Man
can’t live by bread alone.
WIFE: True. SEN GUPTA: At the moment what bothers me is the political situation across the border. (Emphatically) What is really happening there, Yassin? What is the size of the problem ? How serious is it ? The newspapers exaggerate; the radio is pure propaganda, and the Army have imposed a cloud of secrecy on their entire
operations there.
(All look at Yassin.)
YASSIN: (Quietly) I don’t know. SEN GUPTA: (Impatiently, trace of anger) You don’t know? Don’t you live in Pakistan? Are’nt universities the hub of all political activity? Or do you lock yourself up in an ivory tower ! ys ssin: What I do ..or don’t do...is a matter of personal choice. {t’s the interference of people that bring about tragedies.
SEM GUPTA : It’s the help of people that solves it {
YASSIN ; What you call help someone else may call interference !
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210
THE REFUGEE
SEN GUPTA : (Looking at him astonished) I can’t believe it. For you to say this. YASSIN: Let me tell you something, Baba. A little story. First, there were elections and the Awami League won. Then, those who held elections were not prepared to transfer power and the trouble began. Where did it start? I don’t know. Some say the Bengalees, angered at being deprived of their right and smarting under the
Bengalees,
exploitation
of West
and killed some.
it interfered—and
Pakistan,
revolted
against
non-
Others say the Army helped—or was
retaliated barbarously
in
mass
extermination.
I became involved—through no choice—and now I’m searching for a way...to abstain. SEN GUPTA: Am I Bengalee brother, or outsider ? Are you not refugee and insider 2? There can be no...abstaining...for either of us. (Yassin has a worried and wearly look.)
wIFE: (Tenderly touching Yassin) Was it so terrible? Was—what happened to you—so terrible that you even want to forget what side you were on? (The light darkens around whispers, almost to himself.)
Yassin.
He
talks,
YASSIN : In Comilla University we have a tradition for learning. also have a tradition for revolt.
We
The twin paths of contemplation
and action—if you like. But politics sees all people in shades of the same colour, and the military rulers considered it dangerous to _ give us the liberty of thought and future leadership. Students,
Professors,
Teachers
alike
in all forms
of studies
and
became the target of their attack...(As he speaks the white
research
bearded
_old Prof. Mosin steps in, and listens silently at the doorway) were lined up along the walls of the football quadrangle, and to dig the earth. I must have known it was my grave I was ging, but the thought left me strangely cold.
...(His face darkens,
breath)
almost
There were my loved ones
emotionless
too—my
I was already beyond
while
mother
We told dig-
others
who
had
catch.
died,
their but
whose memory and existence was precious to me; amongst the living, my old Professor, my young student, weeping besides me...
(Yassin looks across vaguely at the old man, Prof. Mosin.) The rattle of the machine guns is all I remember. A shattering reality that erased all that followed blocking pain suffering and
death.
I survived, miraculously,
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if living means
surviving.
A
SCENE
I
211
reflex action, uncalculated, brought me here...(His eyes are deep and expressionless) to continue living without passing judgement, interfering or helping.
(Back to present, looking at mother)
I took no sides, Ma, neither before nor after, though sometimes... sometimes I question...what makes man...do the things they do... (A deep, deep silence, almost reverential) SEN GUPTA : (Noticing Prof. Mosin) Ah, Prof. Mosin, I did’nt realize ...(Stops as he notices the expression on his face)...why...what's wrong Professor...? PROF. MOSIN: (Pale) The refugees are coming. The floodgates
have been opened. Thousands and thousands...look out of the window...(All look out instinctively, and one imagincs there are in
the distance the presence grow
despair.
millions
upon
of growing
millions,
hungry
hungry,
masses)...which
lost...in
howling,
The refugees are coming...in a growing unending
(Softly) where are we going to keep them, my friend...?
(Blackout)
Google
will
silent
stream.
SCENE
II
A few weeks later. It’s hot, heavy and oppressive. Occassional suggestion of rain to relieve steaminess. Sombreness and shadows when it comes to the refugee scene. There are three actions that emerge almost simultaneously.
The first in the refugees outside the house, some under tarpaulin covers/tents, some under tin shacks, and some in large water pipes. The second scene or action takes place in the living room of the household with Sen Gupta and members of the family. The third is Yassin’s room which overlooks, overhears the refugees
on one side, and the family
presence is felt when
the
living
action
room
takes
on
place
the on
other.
Yassin’s
either
side,
and
should be suggested through continuous light in hisroom. The refugee scene grows with early dawn or evening shadows like an
ominous
prehistoric
beast’s
death
pangs.
Groans
and
wails,
madness...whenever
I get
skeletoned men and sunken eyed babies suking on to shivelled breasts. Maimed human beings reduced to inhuman existence, robbed of dignity and essential life. An eerie baboon-like mad Jaugh from Ramul, lurking in pipe— then suddenly jumping out like a herrenous monkey.
RAMUL:
Madness...and
madness...and
disgusted with myself...(Pointing to the drainpipe)...why I flush myself out...(Bathroom flushing action)...through the drainpipe...
(Laughs madly.)
(Then suddenly serious, he scurries over to the widow with child) Mother, how’s the child 2? Dead? Then why do you put her to
your breast. Ah...to remind you...(Slithers over to the man with leg missing) .
Now, how did you
lose that leg brother ?_ Begged too hard, prayed
too hard, or was it heroically lost in the defence
land...
(Then opens arms, dramatically to all)
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of your
mother-
213
SCENE II
all my refugee sons and daughters and mothers: do not despair. I shall form the family...(Pointing to the Sen Gupta House) much
’ like the household there.
In unity...will lie our strength.
(Continues and some gradually surround him.) Food, clothing, shelter—our urgent need. Take all the help we get now. As our numbers grow, the warmth and welcome will cease. The heart and home will grow cold. And they will want the refugee to move on and on; out of sight is out of mind. But where can millions go...(Laughing queerly)...I ask you...where can millions
go? (Restlessness, consternation in crowd) (Whispers surreptitiously) Let us make a good clean start by occupying...(Pointing with right hand) the school building there...and (Pointing with left hand) our neighbour’s garage there...(A cynical laughter) (Action shifts to Sen Gupta and his wife in the living room. Sen Gupta has been peering and presumably listening to the talk outside. So also has Yassin in his room, but he has pretended not to notice it.)
SEN GUPTA : (To wife) That’sa laugh. It takes me a lifetime to build this house and garage and that refugee out there points a finger at it...and occupies it. (Wife of course concerned, but at the same time tries to suppress laughter)
What are you laughing at, Sarla.
.
I don’t see the joke.
wire: (Ruefully) Sorry. I know it’s quite serious. help thinking what you said the other day...
But
SEN GUPTA: (Not lacking a sense of humour himself, raising pompously and speechifying) Yes, I know.
As long as
there
refugee is welcome to have it. wiFE : (Smiling) There.
SEN GUPTA : But, damm it!
is any
Ididn’t mean
room
in
my
own
my
I could’nt his finger house,
garage.
the
Next,
they'll be moving into my stud...(Stops halfway from saying “study” and guiltily lowers his voice) Shhh...do you think he heard me.
WIFE : Hope not.
SEN GUPTA : Of course Yassin’s not a refugee. wire: No ? SEN GuPTA : Well, not in the real sense of the term.
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214
THE
REFUGEE
I mean...I mean...he’s not like those outside. wire;
No ?
SEN GUPTA: No. Of course I feel sorry for the refugees outside, but look at what a filthy mess they’ve made of things: Where’s my open field and cocoanut palms and pond. They...they’re encroaching. How long are they going to stay there? When will they
turn...anti-social 2
And they’re growing in numbers all the
We've called an emergency meeting of the town elders. goon. We’ll...we’ll seal the borders.
wiFE : (Worried too) One thousand soons ?
miles,
or
more?
time.
This can’t
and
in
mon-
SEN-GUPTA : We’ll push them back. wire : Prakash ! SEN GupTA : (Flushing, embarassed) Well, alright we'll find a place for them. But not here ! wire : Have you forgotten the time...when you were a refugee. SEN GUPTA:
That
was
different.
We were Indians. (Pointing out) Do you realize
We...we
they’re
God knows who they’re harbouring.
wiFE : I thought you said the bours.
other
day
had
come here
Pakistanis they
were
out
to
stay.
there.
And
Bengali
neigh-
SEN GUPTA : (Flustered, raising his voice) But there are many Bengali Muslims there ; (Then suddenly realising that Yassin is within earshot) Shh...do you think he heard ? (Although serious, there is an edge of ironic comedy i in this scene.)
wie : I don’t know. SEN GUPTA: (In confiding whisper) He’s a bit...strange, is’nt he ? WIFE: Strange ? SEN GUPTA: Well, maybe strange is’nt the right word. Can’t quite put my finger on it. wire: He seems happy with Prof. Mosin. SEN GUPTA : Mosin found him a job at the university. He’s settled down very well. wire: Why that’s wonderful. SEN GuPTA:
Yes, it is.
Only...
wiFE : Only what ?
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SCENE It
215
SEN GUPTA : (Frowning) It’s
as
though...nothing
That he were back at Comilla University. to the past. Never talks about...politics
ever
He’s closed his mind or refugees or his home.
It’s...unnatural. Even suggested the other day that he paying-guest—AP.G.! In my house ! wire : Don’t you understand, my dear, he wants to be
Shrug off the stigma...of being a refugee.
It’s perfectly
understandable.
happened. become
a
independent.
Forget the past tragedy.
(Pause, then looks at her husband)
He’s also...a young man who’s lost, and needs our sympathy.
SEN GUPTA : Yes, yes of course.
I had promised
after him if anything ever happened to her.
wire : You did ?
.
SEN GUPTA: (Unnecessarily aggressive)
would do.
wire:
Even
his mother I’d look
Would’nt you?
give
up
your
study
Well,
room.
that’s what That
must
any
friend
have
meant
something. SEN GUPTA: (Touch of exasperation, but cautioned with appeasement) We grew up together as children. Ruk...Rukaiya and I. wikE : (Dusting, feigned indifference) You told me that before. SEN GUPTA : (Angry at himself for finding himself
explaining)
That
across a bundle of clothes, stashed away in an inside drawer
which
was all there was to it ! wife : (Testily) I have no doubt. The East Bengalee’s always harbour a dream...of their hometown of course. SEN GUPTA: (Pouting like a child) That’s because the West Bengali is so unromantic ! (Wife opens her mouth for a retort, but at that moment she comes
she’s casually opened.) WIFE : (Exclaiming)
What’s
this!
(She unfolds the bundle which looks like a para-military uniform.) SEN GUPTA ; (Quietly) I think I know what it is. (Calling out) Ashok, Ashok ! (Ashok appears, sees his mother with the uniform)
What’s the meaning of this, Ashok
!
(Ashok does'nt reply) Well, speak up, boy! Speak up 1 ASHOK:: It...It’s a uniform, Baba. SEN GuPTA: I know that! What’s it for ?
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216 ASHOK
wire:
THE REFUGEE :
Combat.
(Paling)
Combat
?
You
mean...it’s
used
for fighting
7?
What’s it doing here ? SEN GUPTA: It’s the uniform of the Mukti Fouj, and your son has a bit of explaining to do. Well, Ashok 7 ASHOK : It’s true! I’m trying to join the Mukti Fouj. Someone has to do the fighting.
wiFE:
ASHOK:
But...but Ashok...you’re just a child. (Indignantly) I’m not !
SEN GUPTA:
The Mukti Fauj ar’nt our problem, Ashok. They belong
across the border.
.
ASHOK : (Angrily, victoriously) They are our problems, Baba. We've got to help them. Where do you think they get their arms and ammunition and training. Here...across the border...in West Bengal. Everyone knows it, except you of course. No, you’re too busy talking about town elders and meetings and elections. The crux of the problem is to throw the Pakistan army out—with guerilla assistance given to our Bengali brothers ! (He’s had his say. He looks defiantly up to his parents. Sen Gupta is silent. The wife is alarmed, confused. She looks from father
to
son and son to father.)
wiFE: (To her husband) Well, say something, Baba ! SEN GUPTA: (Quietly) What can I say. What he says is true. wirE:
(Angrily) You...you mean to tell me
you...you
approve
of
your son joining the Mukti Fouj! SEN GUPTA: No. I maintain it’s not his job. Sure, we must give all moral and material support, but it’s for the East Bengali to fight his own liberation... (He goes over to the cupboard. Searches something inside. Pulls out a rifle.)
...(To Ashok) ..loaded 7...(Ashok shakes his head negatively.)
Ashok you don’t have to keep anything from me. Listen...listen and obey me, son. I don’t want you to volunteer. There are other able bodied men from East Bengal who should do so...Go now...(He carefully places back the rifle where he removed it from, sits down carefully, and looks straight across to Yassin’s room.) (Fadeout)
Google
SCENE
III
A few weeks later. Refugee scene again. There is more organisation and efficiency around the place with slightly better facilities provided by govt. and private agencies— both Indian and foreign. But old quizzical Ramul is the same. He
still lives in the water-drainpipe, and like some bat or vampire,
only emerges at night to dominate his own nether world. RAMUL: (Marching around, inspecting as though he were the commander of the camp, followed by his sychophants, stops bya blind woman and gives her the stick she is groping for.) There, old woman, there...there...(Softly and consolingly) The night is dark, and there are no shadows. It is then that I appear, to soothe your pain, to search for my distressed soul that can no longer distinguish between good and evil... (Then prancing like a joker, spreading his arms wide)
Abhh...what a large expanding family I have...(nudging
panion
under
his
breath)...n0,
out the able bodied,
and
Nirodh
send them
won’t
back
his com-
help...we must seek
to fight ! (Imitating
household head Sen Gupta) That is what our father-figure would do there...(Pointing to household)...so we must mobilize. Set up field units, my friends, disperse, and get me intelligence information of other refugee camps. But don’t disperse too far...don’t let them disperse you
...for once out of Bengal we’ll lose our identity and strength. (Suddenly raising his fist and shouting)
Nobody’s going to throw us out. We're here...to stay ! (Cheers from followers around) (His lieutenants scurry over to him) LIEUTENANT :
Two visitors here to see you,
Ramul.
(Sitting down on a chair, putting up his legs on the box in front of
him,
smoking
his “Biri”, flicking out the ash stylishly.)
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218
THE REFUGEE
RAMUL:
Send them in.
(Two fishy looking characters
FIRST:
RAMUL :
SECOND : RAMUL:
FIRST:
(Zo Ramul)
come
in.)
We hear you’re the
Of sorts.
leader.
It ‘must be in secret.
Incamera,
no less.
We have a law and order problem in the big city.
RAMUL::
Do you?
RAMUL:
You do?
SECOND : First:
RAMUL :
First:
,
And we don’t want it to be solved. :
You allcanbelp.
You have nothing
to
lose.
Is that so?
(Slightly menacing) You're pretty non-committal, are’nt you ?
(Ramul bursts into hysterical laughter till the tears stream down his face). RAMUL: (Still gasping for breath) Non...non-committal. (Looking to the others) He said I was non-committal. (Others
SECOND:
laugh
too.)
I think he’s mad.
First: Yeah, no sense of responsibility. SECOND : (Scratching his head) Well, he’s not a typical refugee. FIRST:
(Scratching his chin pensively) There’s something
l can’t quite put my finger on. SECOND : He seems too satisfied for his
own
about
good.
(Ramul looking from one to the other with glee in his eyes.) FIRST: Wait till he gets restless. How long can you remain in
without purpose. SECOND: Yes, after all he was a “‘miscreant”’ out there.
reason why we can’t make him “Anti-social” out here. (Ramuls alert, intelligent
to the other.) FIRST:
SECOND: FIRST:
Big drain to the
eyes dart out chimpanzee
taxes to
Still. We’d better carry him.
like from
SECOND : Let’s go. (Both turn tail and go.)
Google
dodge.
He might come
life
There’s no
country.
Yeah, that much more
him
in use.
one
SCENE III
219
RAMUL: (Hyena like, weird,. turns we're not altogether unwanted.
to his
companions) You
(Action shifts back to Sen Gupta’s house. Livingroom
with
see... Yassin
alone. A few seconds later Mita comes in, an air of weariness and distraction, does’nt see him until much iater.)
MITA:
Oh!
YASSIN:
Sorry, did I startle
MITA:
you.
N...No. I just thought...I was
YASSIN:
alone.
So did 1. (After a pause) You...you seem
MITA:
tired.
(Sitting down wearily) 1 am, Oh, I am.
YASSIN:
(Softly) It’s no more just...social work,
is it.
This
of displaced persons...it’s a grinding, tearing reality.
MITA:
(Busting out) How would you know
(Yassin is stung. He does not sorry. I meant... YASSIN:
I know what'you
reply.
mass
!
Then
apologetically)
1....’m
meant.
MITA: (Looking at him) You...you avoid the refugees. You don’t talk about them, or help them. As though they did’nt exist. (In Yassin’s eyes a haunted expression) (He still does not reply, then softly) Why don’t you
.. With me, Yassin.
YASSIN
:
with
me
No.
MITA: There is so much you can problems better than the others. rehabilitation.
YASSIN :
come
do. You'd understand You could help...in
their their
4
No.
Mita: (Hard, angry) disappear.
Do
you
think by ‘closing
your
.
eyes,
they’ll
YASSIN: (Bitter smile) They don’t. I assure you. MITA: Don’t they have as much right...as you, to find themselves a home. YASSIN:
They’re being looked after very well from what I can see.
miTA: (With some anguish) Oh, what’s wrong with you ! YAssIN :
(Moved, miserable, yet
Google
what’s oblique,
wrong removed)
with
you, Yassin,
220
THE REFUGEE
It was an accident, Mita. It was all an accident. I should have been killed. Perhaps I was and the part you see now, was’nt. All pain comes from attachment, all wrongs come from selfinterest. That is why we should each...lead our own lives... MITA: No. No,I don’t agree with you. Life for me means involvement, means action. Leave it alone, and you commit wrong. YASSIN : (Surprised, affected for the first time) What do you mean ? MITA:
being.
Oh, Yassin, Yassin, touch me, Can’t you see I’m
Can’t you see I’m real.
Are’nt you
moved.
a human
(She touches his face tenderly) The refugees exist the same way. They’re alive, and oh, only too real. They bring tears to my eyes, their suffering touches my heart. I can’t bear to leave them alone. All of life draws me...the human condition. The need and its recognition.
If...if all of us were to abstain the way you do, we’d be doing harm, don’t you see, the kind of harm that is deliberately done through neglect. Do you understand, do you understand me, my dear... YASSIN : (Troubled) I shall try, Mita, I promise you I shall try. MITA : I must leave again now. There’s...some trouble in the camp. Think it over, Yassin; don’t dream like my father’s love for...Comilla. Think it over, Yassin, and make your choice. (She leaves.) (Fadeout—change to Prof. Mosin & Sen Gupta.) SEN GUPTA : I’m worried, Mosin, my friend, I’m worried about the whole thing. It all started as a small thing—a few refugees across the border—it happens
every
year.
Now,
it’s
a
holocaust,
and
we're completely unprepared for it. Why there are more refugees today in this town than local inhabitants. Our development projects have come to astandstill. The refugee, with his minimum rations, is better fed than the local unemployed. Something’s going to explode soon. PROF MOSIN : (Shaking his head) True. SEN GUPTA: They cry for help, we give it. After all they are Bengalees. And we can’t send them back to be killed. But we’re going under ourselves. And nobody’s coming to our help.
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SCENE III
221
PROF. MOSIN : (Nodding) Yes.
-
SEN GUPTA : Incidentally how did you manage to get young Yassin
job?
PROF. MOSIN : I don’t Rnow It has naturally created unemployed...besides. the are not enough to support SEN GUPTA ; (Suddenly) He’s
a
how much longer we can hold on to it. some resentment amongst the other University Grants Commission funds the problem as a whole... an odd character, is’nt he ?
PROF. MOSIN : (Awakened from reverie) Who ?
SEN GUPTA: Yassin of course. PROF. MOSIN: (Musing) Odd ? No, I would’nt say odd word. SEN GUPTA : He’s opened up with you, has’nt he ?
is the right
PROF. MOSIN : I suppose I remind him of his old professor in Comilla.
Not that he talks about it of course. He’s closed. sen GupTA : Ah, that’s the word I meant. | Closed. PROF. MOSIN : (Hesitatingly) Well, maybe ‘‘closed” is not, the right word either. Can’t put my finger on it. SEN GUPTA : (Triumphantly) Ah ! PROF. MOSIN: (Continues) He does not want to get involved in politics. SEN GUPTA : (Grumpily) That’s why he does’nt like me. Thinks I’m a politician. PROF. MOSIN : You’re imagining. politics that is.
But he has a point of course, about
SEN GUPTA : My dear professor, the affairs of men are all dictated"by politics... Even the problem of refugees and Bangla Desh must have a political solution. We all know that...(Smiling) Besides, as the old saying goes, bring two Bengalees together, and you'll have three political opinions. PROF. MOSIN: (Seriously, pensively) True. Politics is the inescapable reality of our lives. Yassin must find out for himself that there is no getting away from it. And we...(Turning to Sen Gupta)...in universities and town Committees and Parliament...must learn to strike a balance ourselves. SEN GUPTA : (Frowning) Meaning ?
PROF. MOSIN; Meaning there’s too much
Google
hysteria.
We're trying
to
222
THE REFUGEE
whip up too much
there.
frenzy
on
this
SEN GUPTA : (Acidly) I can see the
side
the
same
way
they
are
in
India
has
Muslim community
been remarkably restrained. (The old man is stung.)
PROF. MOSIN : (Quietly) Vl pass that, my friend.
SEN GUPTA : (Angry at having hurt
his friend,
self.) Well, you can’t deny it, Mosin!
but unable to stop him--
There’s a massacre
place out there—in a Muslim country—and
keep quiet here ! PROF. MOSIN : (Tight lipped, controlled) SEN GUPTA : (Changing from anger
the shoulder)... Mosin, my friend,
you
know
threat posed by the refugees. whose coming in? No longer
politicians
and
Pakistan!
If
defeated
Bengal
their
Islamic brothers
What would you have us do ?
to friendship,
as
taking
well
as
touching
I
do,
Mosin
on
the
greatest
They’re
Hindus
Listen: as every week goes by, university intellectuals, persecuted
Rifles.
No!
now—minority Hindus being exterminated and driven out to purge this
pressure
keeps
and
the
hoardes
of . Hindu
refugees grow, bow much longer will we in India remain secular. PROF. MOSIN: (Shaking, his voice quivering, agitated) I know...1 SEN GuPTA: (Continues passionately)
My
house
is
breaking
apart,
Mosin. My son wants to join the Mukti Fauj; my daughter’s killing herself working for the refugees and my...my Muslim friend
seems influenced by a...peculiar pascifist. (Whispering to himself, momentarily obsessed) Son of Rukaiya, who cast her Muslim spell,
upon one who loved too well...
PROF. MOSIN: (Feeling old
us do? SEN GUPTA: aggressive Pakistan.
and week) What...What
would
you
have
Huh? (His reverie broken) Do? Adopt a more posture. The refugee exodus is an undeclared war by (Yassin comes in
unnoticed)
We’ve
wasted
too
much
time already. It’s costing us money and lives anyway. A quick kill, that’s what we need to do. Declare war and march in! YASSIN : (Enters) No !
SEN GuPTA : (Whipping around, surprised, say ?
Google
aggressive) What did you
SCENE Ill
223
YASSIN : (Clear firm standing up) T said stop killing by more killing.
And
no.
Since when
can
you
what makes you so sure it will
be a quick kill. Killings like dying: it comes and it always hits the innocents.
slow
and
grows,
SEN GUPTA : (Hissing through teeth) Whose side are you on ?
YASSIN: (Losing his temper now) Nobody! But if you’ll push me, T’ll tell you. IT was born in Pakistan not India like Mosin here. If I am anybody, I have to be Pakistani !
SEN GUPTA: Traitor! YASSIN: Traitor to whom! To Pakistan, to India, or to this household !_ Who should I owe allegiance to? (Then softly) Who brought me up, gave me love, taught me life... SEN GuPTA : (Lost) Ru...Rukaiya.
Your mother...Bengal.
YASSIN: (Somewhere the tempers have cooled, softness comes anew) Baba. (Softer). Baba understand me. I will never be traitor to my mother’s love...or to Bengal. It flows through my veins as hot
and
pure
as
yours.
No
more
accusations...or
judgements.
would not break bread with you...and be disloyal. But you must allow me . freedom ef thought and action, or else you deprive me of refuge in this very house of yours.
I
SEN
GUPTA: (Looks up, embraces him) I...’'m sorry. (Somewhere earlier Sen Gupta’s wife has come in. Door opens, and Mita comes in wearily, rests against the wall, almost crying...Everybody looks
up at her.) MITA : (Uncontrolled voice) Chole...ra! Cholera’s broken out in the refugee camp ! (Subconsciously everybody looks accusingly, apprehensively at Yassin, as though he who personifies the refugees, brought it in. Yassin Slushes, feeling
guilty and
oppressed
once
again;
without
knowing
why, without being able to escape his identity, the indelible stamp of the unwanted refugee.)
YASSIN: (Inadvertently busting out) I:..I had the cholera crossing...(He stops, realizes, feels acutely embarrassed.)
shot
on
WIFE : (Softly) Nobody meant you, Yassin...(But of course everybody did look at him.)
MITA
: (Continues) Refugees
(Breathless) Trying
dying...like
hard...to contain
Google
flies.
it.
Disease...spreading...
Much
sympathy...from
224 outsiders,
THE REFUGEE (Looking straight
at Yassin, the
tears at last streaming
down her face.) They...at last...(Laughing and crying hysterically) ...the conscience of the world is aroused. At last in crises. The
conscience. THE what a meaning.
CONSCIENCE. Whata word, oh, my Don’t tell me it escaped us all along.
God, The
commitment
matters; it’s the
does.
morality of it all. Here we are talking about politics and rescue and refugee and war and even taking sides. It’s not the lack of* that
lack
of
morality
that
And we must...both for aggressor and giver of shelter...search for our own conscience. (Silence and darkness)
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SCENE
Night.
Yassin meets
Prof.
IV
Mosin
outside
house.
They
walk
towards the refugee camp. PROF. MOSIN : Are you sure you’re doing the right thing. YASSIN : I don’t know. I’mconsumed by doubt ..and a sense of hopeless failure. PROF. MOSIN : Then why this. Why visit the refugee camp now, at night when all along you’ve avoided it. YASSIN: (Hard smile, sarcasm too) I’m searching for my conscience, Prof. Mosin, or don’t you know ? There may be others...amongst the refugees...who have lost their soul. (Prof. Mosin shakes his head) Besides, everyone
seems so damned
keen that I visit
They keep reminding me all the time that J am one.
PROF. MOSIN : (Shakes his head again) They
don’t.
don’t...can’t allow yourself to forget it. YASSIN : They throw on mea guilt, and indirect what I don’t believe in. PROF. MOSIN ; Then why do you do it ?
the refugees.
You
do.
You
compulsion, to do
YASSIN : Because they. are not wholly wrong either. (They come to the refugee
misery.
Yassin and
camp.
Mosin stop
and talk to
only with food and safety,
and shelter,
“Where are you from?”
stories
of repression
and terror,
by from time
scenes of pain and
to time
them.
helpless creatures, concerned
Unspeakable
‘Why did you wanting
only
come?’
to
get
Pathetic
back
their
breath from the horrible tragedy. This should be shown, fragments of dialogue in Bengali or Urdu to suggest this condition.)
PROF. MOSIN: Well, Yassin, was it too close? The tragedy and pain. Did you expect to see it...so magnified 7 YASSIN: (Pale and drawn) Yes. But the urgency, the immediacy, does come as a shock.
(Moving
amidst
the
refugees,
Google
whispering
to
himself)
The...the
226
THE REFUGEE
brutality ... and its ... inhumanity ... to what end7?... Why 7... Why ? (The shown word, the action, rather than the spoken one, should
come across.) PROF. MOSIN: Have
personal meaning. YASSIN: No.
you
found
what
you're looking for ?
‘ The
PROF. MOSIN: Let us search then. The night is long...and impenetrable. (They trudge deeper into the night and the refugee camp, till they reach Ramul in the old drain pipe.)
YASSIN: (Holding back the old man) Wait, Sbh...let us hide under I see...someone familiar...
the shadows...and listen.
(There is an element of surrealism about Ramul.
partly in the followers.) RAMUL:
although
(Finger they
ears like mine.
drainpipe, partly
to
don’t
his
lips)
out,
Shhh.. the
exist...have
ears.
He’s
squatting,
surrounded by his unholy walls...(Looking
(Wobbling
his
around)
ears) Big
Now, listen : Floods, famine, pestilence; we have it all in Mother Bengal; Add to that refugees; Eight out of ten refugees coming in today are Hindus. We must protect them...against Pakistani
infiltrators... Let us take a leaf out of the old Yahya book. Form “caretakers” like the local Peace Committee and the razakar high command to weed out the undesirables from the refugee camps
(Laughs cruelly) Ruthlessness mixed with rough, justice...
(Commotion. A man being dragged. Babbling, pleading for mercy.) Ah ! Our first victim. (Vaults upon the pipe) Now I’m the commander of the Jeep with machine guns all around me. Bring the prisoner. Who are you? Maslim or Hindu ? What did you say 7? Pull down his pants ! (Pants pulled down from the quivering man) Ah ha ! (Victoriously) He’s Muslim. Now tell me—what did you do...or not do ? Enough, I’ve heard enough, men, put the noose around his neck ! (Noose made, rope thrown over) (Yassin steps into the light.) RAMUL:
(Looking up suspiciously) Who’re you 7
YASSIN;
Refugee, like you,
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SCENE
IV.
227
RAMUL: (Circulating around him, looking up and down) You pretty well clothed and fed. YASSIN: So do you. RAMUL : (Laughing madly, pointing a finger at him) He... (Choking with laughter)...he’s funny. (Then suddenly threatening and serious) Are you trying to save this man ? Yassin: RAMUL:
Yes. Why?
RAMUL:
No.
YASSIN:
That’s...that’s preposterous
RAMUL:
Js’nt it.
YASSIN: RAMUL : YASSIN:
He may be innocent. Is that all. Is’nt that enough ! We
also
kill
innocent
people.
!
Now take you.
YASSIN: RAMUL: YASSIN: RAMUL :
Me? What have you done since you’ve come here N...Nothing. How do we know you’re not a Pakistani spy.
RAMUL:
But you might be...without
YASSIN: RAMUL:
Meaning ? ‘They also serve, who stand
YASSIN: RAMUL: Yassin: RAMUL:
ButI have’nt harmed anyone. Depends on how long you do nothing. What do you mean ? You negate life.
RAMUL:
You become guilty through default.
YASSIN:
YASSIN:
look
I’m
not.
knowing and
It’s
being buried.
like someone
dying
it.
~
wait”.
And then ?
pectedness)
?
(Then with soft unex-
of broken
heart.
And
not
(Yassin cries out, and grabs the man by the throat with unexpected
strength and ferociousness.)
YASSIN: RAMUL: his
neck
What are you saying! (Screaming) Nothing! tenderly)
Find
out
Tell me! Nothing!
for yourself!
(Turning to his lieutenants) Release the
Google
What do you know ! Let me go ! (Rubbing Now, leave us alone.
prisoner.
Let him roam,
228
THE REFUGEE
Give him enough rope : he’ll hang himself. I know the type. Now, turn him loose. (Turning around and smiling at Yassin) We were just playing a game, see ?
(Yassin and Mosin trudging back home) PROF. MOSIN: What did you see ? YASSIN: It could have been a nightmare. I lost distinction between reality and non-reality. PROF. MOSIN : Tiredness? The effect of the night ? (Yassin shrugs his shoulders. They reach the door of the house.) YASSIN: (A feeble, cynical smile) But Ido know one thing, Mosin. I did not find my conscience. Goodnight Professor, and thanks for coming
with
me.
(Yassin goes to his room.
Puts
on
the
light. Paces
back
and
Jorth deep into the night. Passage of time. He is groping toa solution. Leaves house again, and goes alone to outskirts of the
camp, a rough graveyard. There he sees a young woman with a spade in her hand and her dead mother.)
YASSIN:
(To girl) Is she dead ?
Your mother ? What did
of ? Broken heart, cholera ? (All that the girl can do is nod, tiredness
beyond grief’)
her
sarrow
beyond
she
die
tears,
her
(To himself) And then they told me to dig my own grave...It’s the only positive thing I did in life before they shot me... Here, girl, give me that spade. We'll bury your mother...and pray
for my salvation.
(He digs and digs, till the eeric moon sets, and the first rays of the sun touch the new day. He stands, exhausted but alone, the new meaning finding its way, surging through his being. Then turns, and goes home unhesitatingly.)
Google
.
SCENE
V
Yassin packing to leave in his room with curtain slightly Mita passes by, and sees him. MITA: (Coming into room) Yassin. What are you doing ? YASSIN: (Continues packing) Packing. MITA: Why ? Where are you going ? (Yassin does’nt reply) Answer me, Yassin. What’s happened ?
ajar.
YASSIN: (Turning around and smiling expressionlessly) 1 almost said “nothing” through force of habit. But something has. The inevitable. Man really has little choice in life. He is often forced into a situation...where there is no way out. A decision, an action...gets destined, almost involuntarily. MITA:
(Puzzled) I...I don’t understand you.
(Yassin shrugs his shoulders and
continues
packing)
Does...does this have anything to do with me. YASSIN: (Turns around now with charming genuine smile, and holds her hands tenderly) Mita love, how do I put it. Of course you have nothing to do with it...these are the dictates of my own...
conscience
?
Mita
dear,
of course
with it. You’re warm and lovely, full you gave me the choice last night.
you
have
of moral
something to do purpcse
7?...and
MITA: (Tears in her eyes) You’re making fun of me, Yassin. YASSIN : (Then quiet, sober) No, Mita. Like your father I suffer from the...madness of the other love, the love of ones
border.
I
accepted your
favour, and hence I must MITA: YASSIN:
Why?
choice last night,
leave.
(Fervently) Why
Because I want your
were my own.
decided
across
in
the
your
7 respect.
(Mita cries)
Google
ideal
It’s
as
important
as
if it
THE REFUGEE
-
230
(Her head to his chest) Hush...Hush...the night is deep, the longings are far, and one evening in the loneliness of my study room
in Comilla,
heavy with
dream of you...
the scent of flowers and memory, I shall
(She leaves, crying, unable to bear it any further.)
(Prof. Mosin comes in.)
PROF. MOSIN:
(Quizzically)
cannot be sorrow.
Yassin:
a young
From
Tears?
Alas, Professor we become students of human nature
it’s too late.
PROF. MOSIN: And responsibility on YASSIN:
bility.
you’re too young your shoulders.
man
to
carry
It
woman?
the
-
when
world’s
But, Mosin, I’ve always been accused of avoiding responsi-
PROF. MOSIN : Each man’s path is different, Yassin. YASSIN : Still...society expects it to be recognizable. If it does not follow their norms, then man is an outcast, a refugee. PROF. MOSIN : Society have its...conscientious objectors.
YASSIN: (Laughing
bitterly)
“Conscientious
objectors”.
What
an
academic term to use, Professor. So euphemistic...and acceptable. PROF. MOSIN : There are limits to my own liberalism, Yassin.
YASSIN : So I see. PROF. MOSIN: Man has to function...I use the word deliberately... function in society. Problems...loom large. They must be tackled...forthrightly. Take the problem of the Muslim in relation to the refugee. YASSIN : Go on.
PROF. MOSIN: There is a natural...delicate
balance in society.
The
Indian Muslim asa minority has learnt to co-exist, sometimes precariously. Along come the refugees, mostly persecuted Hindus,
and throw off the balance. YASsin : What point are you trying to make, PROF. MOSIN:
The
same
you
made
Professor.
yesterday,
Yassin.
There
is
a
difference between the Indian Muslim and the Pakistani Muslim. YASSIN: (Hard) You mean...there is a difference between me and
you.
(Prof. Mosin shrugs his shoulders.)
Google
SCENE V You
231
also mean
the presence of the Pakistani Muslim, the refugee,
jeopardizes the position of the Indian Muslim in India.
(Prof. Mosin raises his hands in feeble protest.) No. No. Professor. I know you mean this. Very subtle, very delicately put. (Spitting out) Like a placard saying : MUSLIM
REFUGEE
! GO HOME.
PROF. MOSIN: (Flushing) You’re choosing to misunderstand me, Yassin ! . YASSIN: No, I’m not! Tell me, has’nt my presence affected your ...relationship, disturbed your friendship...ever so slightly with the Sen Gupta family. And who amI? A bird of passage. Whereas you have to live your life-time here. PROF. MOSIN: You make it sound very selfish. YASSIN : No, no, Professor. I thank you...for your liberalism,... your frankness. Our friendship matters to me too, and I would rather it were on a realistic basis. PROF. MOSIN: (Looking at his watch) As you wish. I have to leave now, Yassin. See you later...(He leaves.) YASSIN: (Nodding his head slowly, gravely) Maypbe...maybe...though
I doubt it, my friend.
(Removes the tin bag from under the bed, snaps it shut, the living room, bumps into Sen Gupta.) SEN GUPTA : Ah, Yassin,
there you
are!
leaves for
Spent a somewhat restless
night, did you? Saw the light in your room. YASSIN: Y... Yes. SEN GuPTA: What are you doing with that bag in hand. (Joking, laughing) Not leaving, are you ? YASSIN ; Yes. SEN GUPTA : (Jaw dropping) What ? YASSIN : I thought you expected it. SEN GUPTA : Yes...No ! YASSIN : I’m leaving anyway. SEN GUPTA: But...but what made you change your mind. YASSIN : I did’nt change my mind. I was making it up. SEN GuPTA : (Still dazed) Making it up ? Yassin : You might say what took me so long to make it up. SEN GUPTA : You're not serious. YASSIN : I’m afraid I am.
Google
.
232
THE REFUGEE
SEN GUPTA : But...but where are you going ? YASSIN:
Does it matter?
Are’nt we all
,
interested in...the dispersal
of refugees. SEN GUPTA : Well, since you put it that way.
YASSIN : It’s always difficult...for a host...to be indelicate. SEN GUPTA : We have done our best. YASSIN : I know. I am appreciative of it. SEN GUPTA : Then why do you want to leave 7 YASSIN: Because I want to...preserve our friendship.
to me.
It means a lot
SEN GUPTA : Does it, Yassin. I...I’m sorry there were times when I misunderstood you. YASSiN : You did’nt. In fact you helped me make up my mind.
SEN GuPTA : I did ?
YASSIN : You showed me the
SEN GUPTA:
I did?
way...very clearly...very forcefully.
Yes, I did.
Yassin you must let us knqw where you’re going. Why I was a refugee once myself.
How you
are.
YASSIN : I’ll drop you a post-card.
SEN GUPTA: That will be nice. I must tell my wife you're going (Calling out) Sarla...Sarla...Oh, there’s something I wanted to ask
you before you leave.
You said...Ru...Rukaiya, your mother, died
of...broken heart. Did she...(Coming up to Yassin, holding his shirt with a sense of urgency, almost whispering)...did she say anything before she died.
Did she?
(Almost pleading) Did she ?
YASSIN : (Expressionless) She said...
SEN GUPTA : (Breathless) Yes? Yes? YASSIN : (His eyes a distant glaze) ...Nothing.
(Sen Gupta’s shoulders slump. He seems a defeated man. He leaves. A few seconds later his wife comes in.) wIFE : (Calling out) Prakash? Prakash? (To Yassin) Oh, where is he?
YASSIN : He’s gone. wire : (Wiping her hands) Oh, I was so busy in the kitchen. Wonder, why he called me. ° YASSIN : To tell you that I was leaving. wire: Leaving?
But why ?
Google
Where ?
SCENE V
233
(in reply, Yassin goes up to the cupboard, removes. uniform and the rifle) (Her
eyes
become
wide
with
alarm,
the Mukti
astonishment
and
Fauj then
understanding) (Then comes softness and motherliness in her voice.) (Tenderly) Yassin, my dear, you don’t have to join the Mukti Fauj to prove anything. YASSIN : (Almost with bitterness, reproach and resignation) No? But is’nt that what everyone wanted me to do all along.
wire : Not if you did’nt want to. YASSIN : I failed to see the distinction after a while. I could’nt make out whether others were pushing me or I was pushing myself. wire : What can I say, Oh, Yassin; What canI say. (Clutching her heart) I don’t want you to go. I don’t want you to risk your life. I don’t want you to be harmed. YASSIN: (Quietly) Would you rather see yourson go? Your own
son. As he said, someone has to do the fighting. wire : (Weeping silently) Oh, Yassin. Yassin you’re heart. (Yassin goes up to her, and kisses her farewell.) YASSIN : Goodbye, Ma. (At the door)
wire
: (The
last minute
anguish)
Wait.
seeking
the
sure...sure you're doing the right thing.
YASSIN : (His
know. (He leaves.)
eyes
afar,
[THE
Google
Wait,
absolute
END]
breaking my
Yassin. once
again)
Are
you
1 don't
Digitized by Google
Original from
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
DARJEELING
TEA
A COMEDY ON CONTEMPORARY MANNERS IN TWO ACTS
Google
CHARACTERS
MAIN
Big Mac Bunty
Jennie Didi
OTHERS
Thapa Hugh Sally
Marwari Young man
GROUP
Planters’ Families (Mclouds & Jenkins)
Club Staff (Bartenders & Waiters) “H.O. Types” (Chairman, MD,
V.I.P. & wives)
Band (H.H. Musicians) Group
members can reduced/eliminated
Google
be as
increased required
or
ACT
I
Scene : Somewhere near the pretty Darjeeling Hills, where the most delicately flavoured tea in the world is grown. Basically four sets: (1) The Planters Club, typical of the Clubs scattered over the vast isolated acres and acres of tea estates in North Bengal and Assam where the entire focal point of social life for the planters’ families is the Club. Onlya portion of the Club is visible, the bar in fact, with the portrait of the Royal King and Queen on either side and the Indian President in the centre. It is of course
a
bit
of
old
England
with
dart-boards,
obscure
coats-of-arms, hunting pictures and immense moose-heads or whatever-you-have. It is alsoa bit of old India with portraits of Maharajas and old-lace, souvenirs bagged from hunting lodges and
aristocratic garden-houses.
It is also
obvious that the Club is not as
prosperous as it once used to be, with maintenance and upkeep not quite up to the mark. Equally, there is a suggestion of tenacity, the will to survive, and more so to preserve a way of life singularly outdated, but very real and necessary for the planters whose attitudes have resisted all changes. The period of time is the turn of the seventies. The other three sets, consistent with this period, are: (2) the living room of the garden manager’s bungalow. To get an idea of what the garden manager's bungalow must be like is to imagine an Englishman’s country-home, except that he was complete master here
in an almost feudal way until just wooden shack on stilts, cute, almost
a few years ago.
like a doll’s houses,
(3) A small resembling
the wooden houses hand-built by hill-tribes on the slopes of the Himalayan foot-hills. It should be made to appear that this plain little one-room house is in the manager’s garden. (4) Perhaps a shadow screen in the rear suggesting miles and miles of tea gardens, with
the
dwarf-shaped
teashrubs
umbrella-ed
all planted to design, beautifully maintained, the evening play of sun and shadows.
These four sets are the planter’s complete life.
Google
by
slim
tall
a magnificent
trees,
sight in
238
DARJEELING
Action
begins
Planters
and
tables | bar
with
stools
their
the first scene,
with
wives.
following
Men
the Planters
groupings : (a)
are
in
the
Club.
Sets
TEA
of
two expatriate
late forties,
both
tremendously big built, from the “old school’, with pretty, sociable wives. (b) A “Marwari”, that .shrewd breed of businessman
originally from Rajasthan with the taint of a carpet-bagger reputation, together with a younger man and union leader. Others are all the planter | garden
types, young
Assistant-Managers
with
wives and children, giving a slight tauch of animation to the Club, with tennis-racquets and swimming apparel. Despite an effort to gaity, there is a slight air of dejection and reminiscence, particularly with the two expatriate garden managers...
BIG MAC : (Calling out) Bearer, do burra peg please. BIG HUGH: ...(As though continuing)...Yes, not like the old days, Mac. No more fun left. Garden’s not the same either. Pluckers goddamn lazy... BIG MAC: ...Remember the time we played merry bell around here, Hugh?
The only thing
it all up...Gardens
bigger than us was the
then were
the size
sky, and we filled
of my hand...(Raising
big
paw)...we built them into oceans of tea-bushes, cutting the jungle...
BIG HUGH : No rules to the game then, us.
The
Now...
Mac. Head office left it all to
M.D.’s were only too happy, warming the seats out
there.
BIG MAC: ...productivity fallen...
BIG HUGH : ...interference grown... JENNIE (Mac’s wife) : (To Sally) Club’s dead, Sally. Just take a look around. Never seen so many ordinary strangers before...(Looking
suspiciously and rather haughtily at (b) and looking over the club) It all looks so shabby, this Club. Why, if it weren’t for Big Mac and this Bar, I think the
Club
would fold up.
Of course half his
salary goes on booze. Doc. said the. other day...(Tapers off, saying no more) SALLY (Hugh’s wife): (Partly in abstracting herself) Brown’s left the other day. Just packed up, and left for good. Children were growing too big for the Darjeeling school. They were getting out of touch with home...
HUGH : (Reverie catching on, subject partly overheard, continuing his wife’s train of thought, from man’s point of view) Of course I don’t
blame Brown.
Though if chaps like us leave, what’s
Google
there left?
ACT I
239
Where was he going, did you say 2 Not heme; no, he’s too young for retirement; wouldn’t be able to stand the stuffiness of England. Got the warm blood and wanderlust of the overseas type. He’s full planter, Mac, like you and me. Off to New
Guinea or Africa, I'd say, with
low taxes and the high sun,..
(Elbowing Mac slyly) coolie women and
pure water of the Highlands; huh; accent)
scotch that flows like the
Mac? (Imitating Mac’s Scotch
BIG MAC : (Simply) I tike it here. JENNIE: (Catching Mac’s train of thought) So do I. So did I. I know I shouldn’t, but I keep dreaming of the old times. Remember the parties at this Club, Sally? It was like a big Christmas tree...and now I think of home...and the awful loneliness here...in the midst of these incredibly beautiful hills.
SALLY : (Each almost to themselves) Children do fill up a lot of time. It fills up the gap. You...(Stumbling)...you never did have any, did you...Jennie...? BIG MAC : (Calling out) Or do, bearer. JENNIE : (Trace of concern) Mac, do you...
BEARER : (Calling back) Han, Marwari and young man.)
Burra
Sahib.
(Conversation
shifts
to
MARWARI : (Mood of reverie continuing, introspective, introduction-like)
The white Marwari.
relatively
enlightened,
That’s
what they call me.
Marwari
for
being
the
White
for being
money-maker.
Flattery...with a touch of insult. Mark my words, the days of the big Managing Agencies are over...(Sneeringly surveying the Club and the expatriate)...like this Club “and its old...cronies 7...we’ll buy over the gardens, one by one, proprietors like me who know how to cut wasteful overheads... YOUNG MAN: (Respectfully) Han, Sethji. Actually they don’t have enough direct contact with buyers. Their system is very old fashioned of going through traditional Managing Agency Houses and Brokers... MARWARI: (Interrupting) ...all of whom get a cut out of the same
Sterling pie.
Inthe
past they could rig their prices. They had a
cent-percent monopolistic control. Not any more... YOUNG MAN ; (Obsequiously) Han, Han, Sethji. Even the international
prices have come tumbling
Google
down, but their costs have gone higher
240
DARJEELING TEA
and higher. Aid we know how to cut costs, don’t we, Sethji ? MARWARI : (Suddenly cold) So we do. And as Manager of my new tea garden, you’re going to be accountable for it. (Young Man silent and contemplative; conversation rotates back to the planters. Big Hugh and Big Mac get up from the table, and go over to the bar.) HUGH : But we aren’t going under, are we, Mac? No fucking wog is going to take over my place. MAC : (Looking him steadily over) Depends upon how much man you are, Hugh. 1 got nothing against them. HUGH : Nothing against them ? They'll be squeezing you out pretty soon. Live like pigs, they do. Milk the goddamn gardens till * there are no leaves or wood left. And when they sell-out there’s nothing but waste land left...
mac: Why do you let them buy and sell? Hold on to the gardens, Hugh. Convince those Calcutta egg-heads that we’re doing fine...
HUGH : Look, Mac, we’re between the devil and the deep sea. These carpet-bagging proprietors on the one side, and those slit-eyed knife-happy labourers on the other. — MAC : You’ve got to fight, man.
There’s no
other way
out.
(Then
after a pause) Oh, come on, Hugh, let’s have a drink...(/nviting a change in mood)...think back, friend...(Bantering, challenging)... the old rivalry, huh ?...(Softly)...the Jenken Group verses the Mcloud...
HUGH : (Sipping, dreamy-eyed)
Yes...yes....Wasn’t a man who
out-drink and out-fuck the Jenkens... MAC : ...till the Mclouds came along.
could
HUGH: (Swelling chest out, bragging, rivalry with humour and affection)
Wasn’t a garden who could produce more leaves than us, bag finer shikar than we did, stand up to our golfing team...
MAC : HUGH MAC : HUGH MAC :
...till the Mclouds came along. : (Aggressive, but smiling) The hell you (Measuring up similarly) The hell we did : (The smile fading gradually) Want to (Eyes steady) Itching for it, my friend,
(Conversation switches over to the women.)
JENNIE (Mac’s wife): We really
we?
should pull
did ! ! have another try ? Hugh. Call any time.
ourselves
up,
shouldn’t
I mean...everything seems to be,. fading. Couldn’t we bring
some life to this Club 7
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ACT I
241
SALLY (Hugh’s wife) : It takes a lot of energy, my dear. see the children growing,
I think...I’m not
be...(Then cutting herself short) weren’t you, Jen ?
as young as I used
You were
JENNIE : (Lays down the cake she was
And when I
a model
about to eat,
at one
to
time,
looking at herself
in the glass; pensively) Could make it again...could Not too late. I keep saying, not too late yet.
make it again.
SALLY: Oh, the mad things we did, Jen. Remember when we first came here? Slim, pretty brides of twenty, marrying the oh so-
romantic outdoor
place. JENNIE: (Musing)
white
planters...the long
Yes, we
Memsahibs
were
of the
authority. (Voice hardening seems a sham, Sally.
queens
fearful
sea voyage to in
planters
to reality)
these
who
Twenty
this far-away
plantations.
held
years
The
absolute
later
it
all
SALLY : You...you don’t regret it, do you, Jen ? JENNIE: (A bitter-sweet smile) Regret? Oh, my dear, who does not regret loss of youth...even if one were really queen. And the men
there, Sally, ours, the very best he-men in the world, somehow seem pathetically outdated today. And us, Sally, we sit and wait, drying up inside, getting older, unable to face this horrible
loneliness any further...
SALLY : (Reproachfully) Jen sometimes I just don’t understand you ! (Conversation shifts to Marwari and young man.)
YOUNG MAN ;: There’s a new breed replacing
the white Sahibs...
MARWARI: ... Yes ? YOUNG MAN:
...the brown ones.
(Marwari looks at him questioningly)
Managing Agency houses can’t afford expensive expatriates any more. So they’re recruiting the local prototype: Indians who've studied abroad, and are quite
pucca...(Fat man
They pay them twice as much as me.
laughs
(Laughter stops.)
purringly)
MARWARI : (Coldly) It’s not what they’re paid that matters. It’s what they’re
double
worth.
For
example,
set of books?
bungalow...they’re
And
do
as
they
for
palaces...why I could
know
the
how
Garden
keep three
to
keep...a
Manager’s
of you
in
a
mansion like that, Besides, I don’t see why Assistant Managers are necessary. If you spend less time at the Club, you'll have
more time
for the gardens,
Google
(y.M.
stil]
silent)
Does
that
answer
242
DARJEELING TEA
your question? (y.M. bites his lips.) (Enters young man in early twenties, Bhupendra, “Bunty” for short, typical product of Indo-anglian British public school, the inimitable
“Brown
Sahib,”
so
often
seen in former colonies, culturally
oriented to a class system where the privileged adopted a way of life and values that often became “more British than the British”. Bunty, however, is no caricature.
He is very real, very cocky, full of
vitality and, in his own way, rather individualistic. Typically dressed with muffler—or is it a blazer, or the old Oxford tie ?—and a tin of 555.
Like the lone stranger, the gun-slinger of bad romantic
western days, he enters the portals of the Club dramatically, gives a
mild cough so that everyone turns around, and looks at him, then with
an impeccable British accent says :) What ho ! What ho ! (Looking around) This Club’s going to pot. Where’s the manager ? Why it’s in shambles ? Disgraceful. And as for the people...(Looking around again) Zombies, zombies, my dear friends. (Scrape of a chair, and Bunty with
caution and
agility jumps
up to
add)
Ah, but
what
potential for life...and fun. The same gentlemen, the very same ladies too. (Calling out) I appeal : THIS CLUB NEEDS SOME LIFE AROUND HERE! Bearer! Bearer! Drinks around the house. And it’s all on me. Why, this is the tea country, and we’ve never had it so good. Darjeeling Tea? The very best chai in the world. Two leaves and a bud. Ah, what adventure. Look out, see through the window, the coolie women picking the shrubs, the blue of the hills, the sudden sunshine breaking through the clouds. It gives me a thrill. Doesn’t it you ?...(A slight start. A contained
thunderbolt effect. Some with their mouths open, wondering at this stranger, this mad-man messiah, doubting whether one should laugh or not, for he
is more than funny, since
tie, etcetera.
Yes, I’m the new
he has
away
of touching
the heart, and giving life to a sterile situation. Bunty goes up to the bar, swaggeringly, still acting the lone ranger-stranger, thumps on the table.) Double. Double scotch. (Straight gulps it down, turns blue, coughs, covers up) P...p...put it on the bill. Membership ? a mere formality. (Extending his hand, starting with the bartender, goes around) My name’s Bhupendra, but call me “Bunty” for short. That’s what I was called in college. You know, old school the top.
Covenanted cadre,
leave, expense
account
in
Google
recruit.
and all that.
glittering
I believe in starting from
Three months “home”
Calcutta.
Booze
all
night,
ACT I
243
work out in the Club, rest in the Nursing Home. Drive these goddamn Assistant Managers to drive those goddamn coolies. Hard work, that. Besides, all expats leaving. Got to fill the vacuum at the top ..not that they had much brains.
Big responsi-
bility, that.’ It makes me weak with fatigue, just thinking about it. Bearer, or aik double. (A bristling anger growing around the place. Bunty seems to ignore it with cool indifference, or else is totally ignorant of it.)
BARTENDER : Sahib, which garden are you going to work in ? BUNTY
: Garden?
Garden?
Hmmn,
let’s see.
Scot name that,I
forget. I was told a big bear of a man was in charge of it. You know, all brawn but nothing up there (Tapping his head and nudging the bartender.)
Oh,
well, it
will be...(Yawning)...tiresome
while, but we’ve got to carry the white man’s burden.
for
a
Enchanting
wife he has, I hear...(Big Mac eases over to him.) (Bunty BIG MAC: Couldn’t be his name is Macneil?
turns
around
relapses.
(Jennie
for the first time fully realizes the presence of the big man, almost bumps into his chest which is level with Bunty’s full height, looks up high at the face of the rugged planter...)
BUNTY : Hmmm...could be.
I’ve got a weak memory.
BIG MAC : Couldn’t be his name is Big Mac...for short. BUNTY:
Hmmm...might
be.
I also
suffer
from
comes over, and holds Big Mac with a restraining hand.)
JENNIE: (To Bunty)
Couldn’t be...his wife is as enchanting...as
(Bunty bows adroitly, and, in the best hand, and kisses it with a flourish.)
BUNTY: (Eyes
brimming
Enchanté Madame.
respectfully) 'm breaks
out
in
with
(Then
your new
husband’s hand.)
warm
life and
turning to
recruit, Sir,
laughter,
alive
JENNIE : Oh, isn’t he cute, Big Mac!
(There will be
The sets are already (The next
scene
Mac,
there, and
is
The
snapping
Bunty
once
very
to
reporting.
again,
of scenes
the tea estates, before
through play of lights.) 2.
laughter)
takes
her
same.
attention
(Jennie
squeezing
her
(Darkness, end of scene)
continuous switches
house, the Club and
French mannerism,
me.
between
this act comes to an end.
quick transitions
the living
room
the planter’s
should
be made ,
of the Garden Manager's
bungalow, presumably a few days later, with Mac, Jennie and Bunty.
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244 Mac’s got
DARJEELING TEA
look at one
hearth.
his reading
glasses on, smoking a pipe, and is taking
of the air-flown
Jennie’s making
British papers.
a dress,
and
talking
The fire’s on to
a
in the
Bunty.
Bnnty’s
sitting on the carpet. It is evident that with the usual planter’s hospitality Bunty’s been accepted in the family fold.) BUNTY: (Light catches him in the midst of his conversation)...and there I was, Mrs. Macneil, caught in the Piccadilly rush with cars and lights and crowds, just out of the West End theatre, with the London cold smacking my face, pub around the comer, and me full of excitement, Mrs. Macneil...(Jennie smiles with trace of reminiscence in her eyes.) MAC : (Looking over the papers) There’s a new play in the papers here.
Asmash hit. Revival of a Noel have liked that, Jennie...
Coward
BUNTY : It’s “Hair’’; that’s the craze now.
comedy.
You
I even saw that.
T also like Noel Coward, Mrs. Macneil.
would
Though
More in keeping with the
times here. His comedies are so...sophisticated, aren’t they 7 We could do with a bit of excitement here. (Springing up) Say, why
don’t we put it on Macneil.
at the Club?
Give it a shot
JENNIE : (Amused, slightly thrilled) Do
you
really
in the arm, Mrs.
mean...to get things moving...all the arrangements... BUNTY : (Bouncing) Nothing to it. Nothing to it, Mrs. JENNIE : Oh, it would be too much. Really... BUNTY: (Catching enthusiasm)
Oh,
I'd do it all...with your help. JENNIE : (Amused, amazed) Mine ? BUNTY : I’d do the sets, the lights.
no,
it
wouldn’t,
think
so?
Macneil... Mrs.
Macneil.
Did a Jot of it in college.
could do...the costumes and design...
I
You
JENNIE : (Slight air of distraction)...costumes, design...? : BUNTY: Yes, yes, Mrs. Macneil, you were a model, weren’t you? From one of the finest London fashion houses. Ieven saw the play, you know, the life of the Paris designer. Coco. It thrilled me. You are like that... JENNIE: ...meé... 7 BUNTY: Ob, we'll bring life back to the fuddy-buddy Club. You'll act in it too, Mrs. Macneil. We'll get everyone around a couple of hundred miles from here. You'll star in it, Mrs. Macneil,
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Act i
245
JENNIE : (Back to reality, laughing) Oh, stop it, Bunty ! BUNTY : We’ll even put the old man in the play...
MAC : (Closing the paper) What’s that ! BUNTY : (Retreating, eyes laughing) Sorry, Sir, got carried away.
MAC : (Mumbling, going back to the paper) hike around the gardens with me. BUNTY: Anytime, Sir, anytime. mac: And stop sirring me, laddie.
BUNTY: Yes, Sir.
What you need is a long
(Turning around) Mrs. Macneil, oh Mrs.
Macneil,
you’re not going to let us down, are you? Mr. Macneil, Sir, will not allow you to. I, Bunty Bhupendra, will not allow it either. JENNIE : (Laughing) Stop it, Bunty. I’ll get the hiccups soon. BUNTY : (Pleadingly; acting on his knees) Won’t you? Won’t you please, for my sake, Mrs. Macneil, for my sake ? (Jennie exchanges an amused glance with Mac.)
JENNIE : Alright, Bunty.
For your sake.
3. (Darkness, switch of scene to the Club) (Humming and activity around the Club; people rushing around hither and thither, carrying buckets and paints, mops and what-haveyou. The old depressing atmosphere is gone: there seems to be more life and gaiety around, laughter and brightness.) YOUNG PEOPLE : This costume...(With bundle of clothes) ANOTHER : ...colour...(Tin of paint and brush in hand) ANOTHER : ...this design and music... FOURTH : ...will it do? TOGETHER : Ask the Boss. Oh, Mrs. Macneil, will it do ? YOUNG PEOPLE : This light... ANOTHER:
...these sets...
ANOTHER : ...the direction... FOURTH: ...the diction... FIFTH : Will it do? ALL TOGETHER : Ask the Boss. ONE : He’s a slavedriver. ANOTHER : He’s a saviour. ANOTHER : He’s a crazy. ANOTHER : I’m cuckoo too.
SECOND : She’s young.
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Oh, Bunty-Bhupy, will it do ?
246
DARJEELING TEA
ANOTHER: She’s fresh. ANOTHER : She’s alive again. ANOTHER: Like old times. (There’s a choreography to this scene; it can be danced and sung.) NOW IN CHORUS : Darjeeling Darjeeling Drink up, (Whisper)
tea tea it’s free Where can I take a pee ?
A planter’s life No place for a wife It’s wilderness and work With wenches as perk
It’s not romantic ' It drives me frantic
The rattle of the snakes
(Whisper) Don’t they make lovely steaks ? But it gets in your blood This chai-patta mud Not all the jinn can wash it out (Omar
Khayyamish) Nor the old dypso bout (Chorus breaks into two)
(One side) Mclouds ahoy (Other side) -
’ Jenkins ahead Says who? (One side aggressively) Says we! (Other side belligerently) We could wipe the pants off you any time Lay your bets down the line A planter’s gamble always pays off
We play to win and never get soft
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Act t
247 (Face to face) Oh Yeah ? Ob Yeah ! (Sleeves rolled up; fists poised)
(Bunty breezes through, cigar in mouth, tie loose, coat in hand, bottle
of beer swinging in hand.)
BUNTY: (Real commander) Break it up! Cut it out, boys. We got work to do. Changes to make. A new life. So let’s get down to it, fellers, will you! (Electric effect. Everyone breaks up. Stands to attention.
forgotten.
executive.)
Disperse, busy as bees; their fight and rivalry momentarily
Bunty himself breezes right through like the commanding
(Same scene, but this with Commander Jennie, pencil in mouth, sheaf
of papers in hand, hair dishevelled, touches of paint over her, full of animation, occasionally brushing stage with broom, directing others, working herself, a new Jennie.) JENNIE: (To one of the girls) No, no, not like that. This is no model walk. You've got to swing. Listen to the music. See the colours. (To another) Yes, the chair goes there. The flowers near the window. The drapes...must fall this way. Wish we could have had green to match with...Ronnie, don’t you have green curtains at your house.!.
(Sets are coming up. There is the usual disorder and excitement : nothing as group activity is ever so catching. Yelling) Watch out ! Watch out, Raghu ! That set’s going to fall. Secure it. Imagine what would happen...(Rest of her words can’t be heard through the general din. Boys and girls running up to her for advice. It’s like a creative canvas for her, the entire organic development with artistic immersion. Sometimes she feels tired, more as a reminiscence, a
Flashback of the past, rather than fatigue, and occasionally lapses into dreaming.)
ONE OF THEM : Jennie! Jennie! Where are you? Suddenly you’re everywhere, and suddenly you’re gone. No, you’re not dreaming,
are you, Jen ?
‘
JENNIE: (Embarrassed, confused, at suddenly oh...no, I was just...well, just...
discovered)
Oh...
ANOTHER : Come on. We’ve got work to do. And without you lost, Jen. Like old times, huh ?
we’re
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being
248
DARJEELING TEA
JENNIE : (Stretching, trying to break out of the reverie) times... (Blackout) 4. (Scene shifts to planter’s livingroom.) (Big Mac and Jennie) BIG MAC: (Expression of pleasure and humour) changed, Jennie. I don’t need to tell you that.
Yes...like
Of course
old
you're
JENNIE : I don’t believe it, Mac. People don’t change like that.
mac: Well, what would you call it? The old Jennie, the real Jennie ? JENNIE : (Analysing herself, stammering self-consciously) Of course the play and all has brought back some of the old excitement. I mean, it’s quite natural. MAC : It’s given you something to do, Jen. JENNIE : (Stung for no apparent reason) Mac, I don’t believe in occupying
myself
like
other
women
do
with
(Changes the word, and says)...parties... MAC : (Cautiously) JENNIE:
(Again
self-conscious,
nervous
am...somewhat different.
(Absently)...as a woman... you might say. Mac
house
and...and...
Whatever it is, I like to see you like this.
aggressive,
reason) | mean...I
the
Not
for
no apparent
fully realized...
: (Sharply) Nobody says it !
JENNIE : (Equally sharp) women
who
are
all
But
I feelit!
I feel cut off from the
other
the time talking about the house and... And
then I think I’m different. I was, of course. As a model in one of the...(Saying with almost a bitter laugh)...leading fashion houses of London, I—I had to be different...Not that I regret it, of course. Unlike most women, I could always go back to modelling...you
see, my hips...have remained slender...
MAC : (Looks at her quietly, says softly) Yes, dear. JENNIE : (Alternating between being appeased and provoked) The play... by itself means nothing...but asa trigger, a release, a memory, a promise . everything ! (Bursting out) Mac, you've given me the most wonderful life there is...open-door, wholesome, warm...like you (Almost crying, clutching to her throat) Is there something wrong with me, with me, Mac? (Mac goes up to her, this immence
powerful man, holds her very tenderly.)
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ACT
I
.
249
MAC : (Softly) No. (She buries her head in his chest.)
(Blackout) 5. (Conversation in darkness, presumably with change in scene, or perhaps with outline of Mac and Bunty) mac : Come on, laddie, it’s time you got down to work. BUNTY : You mean there’s more, Sir. MAC : (Laughing quietly) I’m afraid so. BUNTY : Sir 7 MAC: Yes. BUNTY : I'd like to be a real planter...like you. MAC : I hope you would. Bunty : Why don’t you break me in? You know...run me through the mill. Right from the start. Like the old days. mac: Hmmm... BUNTY : Real tough routine. In college... mac : (Interrupting humorously)... Yes, I know.
BUNTY : What about the long hike you promised me ? mac: Alright, laddie. We start tomorrow break of dawn. Ran-Ting gardens. It’s inaccessible by jeep. Do you ride ? BUNTY : Can try. MAC: Do you walk ?
The
BUNTY : Can do.
mac: Crack of dawn. BUNTY: Yes, Sir, MAC : Stop sirring me, laddie. BUNTY : Yes, Sir. 6. (Next day, crack of dawn. Now the majestic beauty of the rolling hills with miles and miles of tea bushes evenly planted. A projected screen would be necessary. Shadow of man and boy. The early morning silhouette of the man plucking two leaves and a bud, cupping it in his hand, talking to the boy... Heard are only a few words now and then.. ) MAC’S VOICE :
...the leaves and bud grow
fast...plucked
every week
for most of the year...but a lot of work and care goes into it...it’s
something living and growing, laddie, the tender
Google
plant... (Shadows
250
DARJEELING TEA
and clouds and the rays of the morning sun, the passage of time
the leading of life...) gives rise to
the
sturdy
bush...full
and
seventy
years of life with roots that go deep into the soil...comes time one day to remove them for new transplant...and then the tree that protected it in the early years is also felled... (fan and boy walk, with haversacks on their back, till the sun sets, the campfires are lit, and the stars shine in the sky) No easy way to planter’s life, boy, because it’s one way all the way through, no turning back even if you wanted to, no return home no regrets... (The night over, the
stars
melting
into
another dawn, the return and eternal turnover...)
It’s fire and pride, an unknown brand of loyalty, that ties soit and
people alike, the hill people, the finest and loveliest creatures in this
world... (Screen should catch a view of the pluckers, the coolie women with baskets behind, the inscrutable face of the Nepalese Gurkha, their simplicity and child-like charm.) 7. (Blackout, scene shifts back to planter’s home) (Mac and Jennie)
JENNIE : That was a long hike. MAC: Ran-Ting and back. JENNIE: But that’s miles and miles away, Mac.
must be on his last legs.
MAC : (Smiling, removing his pipe) He was.
bit.
Poor boy Bunty, he
But didn’t show
it one
JENNIE : You’re not being tough on him, are you, Mac ? mac: No. Matter of fact, he wanted it himself. He wants to be a planter, Jennie. JENNIE: I expect that’s why he joined. Mac: No, I don’t mean that way. Underneath that...that exterior, I suspect...there’s
much...that’s
real...
You
know,
Jen, I think
I’ve been neglecting the gardens a bit. Taking things for granted. Some of the gardens we passed through weren’t quite up to the mark... (More of animation and enthusiasm creeping into his talk) I kept talking, he kept questioning, and suddenly I felt...planter
once again, a half-of-a-big job to be done there, a quality Mcloud stamp to grow on every leaf, labour to be activated... You know
...the whole lot...like old times... JENNIE ; (Trace of the bitter-sweet) Like
old
times.
the only one who suffered from that nostalgia.
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I thought I was
ACT I
. 251
Mac: No, Jen, not dreaming of the old times with regret, but facing the now—one that only needs to be revitalized. JENNIE : (With a trace of amazement) And...and little Bunty did all that ? mac: Of course not. He did no more than...what did you call it... trigger the situation. (Pause) How’s the play coming along ? JENNIE: Hillarious...can’t make out whether it will be
a
tremendous
hit or a flop. Never been so busy or worried all my life. Do you know, we're putting it up at the Annual Darjeeling do! I’m scared to death. MAC : Don’t (Smiling) leave it all to Bunty. (Blackout)
8.
(Again screen-shots in the open of the tea-estates, this time jungle
too, again with man and boy; they’re out on a shoot.) MAC: (Hushed voice; one imagines they're approaching the prey) Careful, now, careful, laddie, Don’t scare the game. You're breathing too hard! BUNTY: (Squeaking) Can’t hold it any longer, Sir, mac : (Calling out) There she goes! Shoot, shoot! (No bang) Release
the catch, you idiot ! (Great flurry of birds flying off) BUNTY : (A few long seconds later) Sorry, Sir. (The planter curses under his breath.) (Scene changes to golf course.)
(Passage of time)
MAC: Laddie, we'll be playing you to put up a good show. BUNTY : (Bright and smart)
against
Jenkins next week.
I want
Yes, Sir !
Now T-off. Remember the swing I showed you. mac: Good. That’s the style! Great! Now bring it down and smack the ball hard ! (Sound of terrific swish of the club; long seconds of awkward silence; quietly) Laddie, you just laid an egg.
(Rapid change of scene—at the bar with on it)
both
Mac : Well, son, your apprenticeship’s over.
of five gardens tomorrow.
their
elbows
I’m giving you
charge
up.
(Both
leaning
BUNTY: (Raising his glass) Drink to that, Sir. Bottoms down the drink. Bunty looks stone-cold sober.)
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252
DARJEELING TEA
mac: Your play comes up tomorrow night. Let’s celebrate. BUNTY: Drink to that, Sir. Bottoms up (But drink it downina gulp. Bunty still stone-cold sober.) MAC : (Looking at him closely) Not bad. after all.
a planter
Bearer, another double ! (Filling up the glass) Now, as I
was saying... Laddie ! Laddie, where fallen flat.) , 9.
You may make
the
hell
are you! (Laddie’s
(Blackout)
(Jennie and her friend Sally in the Club)
SALLY : (Looking around) My, how this place’s changed.
believe it. JENNIE: It’s all the excitement of the play. what will happen when it’s all over. SALLY : It’s done wonders to you, Jennie. JENNIE : (Absently)
Has it?
In a
way
I can’t
it’s made
than ever. SALLY : (Brightly) Mac seems full of beans too. JENNIE: Does he ? Pretty infectious, I must say.
SALLY : I remember the way
he used to drink.
I can hardly
help
me
wondering
more
You know
restless
when he
and Hugh would get together for these all night bouts. They’re neither as young as they used to be. I keep saying it to Hugh. How’s Mac keeping now? Scared the daylights out of me when he had that . that...accident...
JENNIE : He still does pretty much what he likes, Sally.
SALLY : He seems...calmer. JENNIE : Never know about him, Sal. Suddenly, he’s capable of exploding. (Absently) Doc told him to take it easy. The next one may be his last, he said. SALLY : He’s suddenly taken the garden in hand again. Everybody’s in top form. Gave Hugh quite a jolt. He can’t see the Jenkin group sliding behind. JENNIE : It’s childish, this rivalry. SALLY: It’s real. Do you know.they almost had a fight again the other day. JENNIE : (coastly to herself) No. SALLY : Some silly feeling that they can’t be friendly unless they fight. Like children...Jennie silent)...word’s getting around
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ACT
I
253
they’re itching for another fight...(Jennie looks up anxiously)...at the Darjeeling Annual do. JENNIE : No! SALLY : Your play comes on the same night, doesn’t it ? That means alot of drinking and dancing and celebration. You know what that means. JENNIE : (Nervously) They wouldn’t do that. SALLY : Wouldn’t they 7? They’re the only two left now. The only two real upcountry expats...the last ones. JENNIE : (Whispering apprehensively)...for old times’ sake. (Darkness) 10. (The next scene is mostly a sole pantomime of Bunty. He is walking over to Macneil’s house. Bunty is part dreamer (visionary 7),
part activist. First he walks bandy-legged as though getting over the effects of the long horse-ride...Then he imagines himself as the
Lone Ranger...He whistles.. He swings the empty haversack over his back and pretends to collapse under it... Next he is aiming the gun and scoring, swishing the club, and saying ‘‘fore’’, drinking and reeling
like a “he-man” ?...all imaginary, but speaking the story. Macneil’s house.
In the moonlight (2) and darkness
Reaches
is the romantic
Sigure of someone near the window behind the curtain, small and unmoving...Bunty immediately gets on his knees and recites from the play.) BUNTY : (As though on stage) “No, don’t move, don’t move, Mrs Mac (...stops, corrects himself) Mrs Robinson. I’ve always imagined you,
this way, lovely in the moonlight, never had the courage to speak, speak, to say...[ love you... Elope we must, Mrs Robinson, alas live in sin too, for that monster will not release you, and we have promises to keep... Courage, Mrs Robinson, it’s time to leave!
I
kiss your hand and take you away...” (He reaches out for the hand
behind the curtain, and kisses it... Snap of lights, and of course it’s not Mrs Macneil, but a small, impassive Gurkha...the Gurkha does not bat an eyelid. His face isa mask of leathery lined creases, his
oblique eyes stretched under absorbing face.
His figure,
mongoloid features,
like that
of most
a_
Gurkhas,
startlingly
is small
and lithe; these ferocious and beautiful people, finest fighters on earth, with the traditional Kukri curved knife in the sheath. The
light should be froma
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single beam, shot from an angle, so as to
254
DARJEELING TEA
show the intricate furrows
of the face.
foot in the air.)
BUNTY : T...Th...Thapa!
(Swallowing)
Bunty
literally jumps
:
Thapa,
what
the
hell
a are
you doing here...and in the place of Mrs. Macneil too ! Where's your mistress! Why the hell didn’t you tell me earlier she wasn’t at home ! (Thapa looks at him impassively, turns around, and leaves without saying
a word.
Making
sure he’s
gone,
Bunty
swings
a
punch at him in the air, kicks the door-post, yells out in pain, hops on one leg massaging his toes with other and, out of balance, falls.) (Blackout)
11.
(The “Darjeeling do”.
of function,
before
behind
curtain,
the drinking
Macneil or rather Mrs. the
limping a bit...)
Last scene, end of the play, main item gets going
Robinson on
Bunty,
and families who really
around)
“No,
don’t
Robinson...(Titter in
the balcony
Romeo-like
BUNTY : (Shaky voice, in front of the
on
Mrs.
the audience)
his
a big
way.
Mrs:
in the moonlight
knees,
distracted,
big Darjeeling audience, planters
have come froma
move,
in
couple of hundred miles
Mac...(Kicking
I’ve
always
herself)
imagined
Mrs.
you...
imagined you...imagined you...[Prompter: “this way, lovely...”] .. . (Looking more distracted than ever) this way, lovely in the moonlight, had the courage to speak, to say...to say...[Mrs. Macneil
prompts angrily
through her
teeth: “I love you,
I love you,
you
idiot’’}...I love you...I love you...you idiot...” (Audience bursts out in laughter; applauds. Bunty snapping out of it, a perfect second sentence) ‘“‘Elope we must, Mrs. Robinson, alas live in sin too, for
that monster will not release you, and we have promises to keep...” (Anda third) ‘Courage Mrs. Robinson, it’s time to leave. I...I... (Cloud
of distraction
passes
over
him
once
again,
a frightening
reminder of the night before) [Prompter : “kiss” ‘“kiss’’]...kiss your hand...” (He stands immobile, frozen, forgetting everything, petrified) [Prompter, sweating, cursing, “Kiss her hand, you fool!
No, don’t say it! Act it, you nitwit, kiss it. Kiss her hand, you S.0.B.{ NO. DON’T REPEAT ME!”] (Prompter says it too loud,
audience in splits of hysterical laughter. Eventually, Jennie puts out her hand, and reassured, he kisses it...curtain falls, audience cheer madly, it’s a big success.)
(Partial blackout)
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ACT I 12.
255
(Group breaks into two : the menfolk move into one of the rooms
of the Club, the women and children into another. Chairman of the Tea Board]/Association, a pompous, slightly funny, but extremely versatile Englishman with a subtle sense of humour and a definite
intellectual capacity, probably a Managing Director of one of the Managing Agency houses, middle-aged now, but risen from having been planter himself with a plus that made him supreme in politics and commerce, to be elected honorary Chairman of the Tea Association, addresses the men.)
CHAIRMAN: (He
is of course from Calcutta,
and has
come for
the
function, in a soft, persuasive and sneaky voice, néutral in viewpoint, and influential with Managing Agency houses and planters. A man of some weight, both ways.) Gentlemen...(Surveying the audience to make sure they’re all paying attention)...we tend to forget, if I
may indulgently say so, that the annual Darjeeling “do” is really our Annual General Meeting, and the “do” really comes after... (Polite laughter and applause) Before hitting the bottle I’d like you to know a few facts, my planter friends. (Steeliness creeping into his voice, all business now) The proprietary gardens, who
be our members, are stealing
a march over us.
choose not to
They’re buying us
out, one by one...(General consternation and concern in the group, the Chairman raises his hand for silence) We've got to cut our costs and compete. But at the same time we must maintain our high standards of research and plan for the future. This
is
in
the
our
traditions...of
dealings...(Cheers)
obligation cheers)
honesty,
And
we owe to the I would
cipation breaking
“do”...(Continues
good
We
must
industry
assure
quality
you,
maintain
and
to the
gentlemen...(A
and_
our
integrity business
country...(More smile
of anti-
into his face)...that.,.the...Darjeeling...annual... to
emphasize
stay...till...kingdom...come. the planters and knows ity A be realistic...(Pindrop silence; a swing of the pendulum...in
each
word)...will...be...bere...to...
(Wild cheers; he’s caught the heart. of word of caution now, gentlemen, let’s he’s got the crowd by the tail) There’s the affairs of men and fortune. We’re
at the extreme end now; it’s this : labour’s explosive this moment. Let us admit frankly that we...er...er...used them to advantage
in the
able. old
past.
Don’t
But
reaction
underestimate
sentimentality.
terrifying...
their
They’re
Google
now
them,
capable
is quite,
and
be
quite
carried
of violence,
unreason-
away
sudden
by
and
256
DARJEELING TEA
13. (Scene fades to the women side; Sally, Jennie, group of women and children)
SALLY : (Enthusiastic) Jen! Jen! were wonderful ! I laughed
Just
like...(Stops)...no,
It really
till the
was
wonderful.
You
tears streamed down my
face.
The v. R’s and M. D’s
wives
Jen, I won’t say it...it was new times, and
you made it so.
JENNIE : (Quite overcome) Oh, Sally ! SALLY : Oh! Oh, !... Don’t look now. are coming over.
VISITING
REPRESENTATIVES
WIFE
&
MANAGING
DIRECTOR’S
WIFE
(Both English ladies) : (One of them says it, the other repeats more or less the same) Oh, my dear ! You were won—der—ful! I was
reminded of...but never mind...You really
out to you, and I felt I was...a
young
were.
My
heart
went
planter’s, wife once
again.
(They leave; Jennie takes out her handkerchief, and cries.)
JENNIE : (Jn between sobs) ...And...I always thought...they were...so hard and artificial. (Another greying woman comes over.) GREYING WOMAN : (Comes over and sits down,
offers Jennie her hand-
kerchief ) Have a good cry, Jennie dear, it’s the
only
thing
worth
remembering that one can look back upon, the things that were so
wonderful that they made you cry... JENNIE : (Trying to stop it) You’ll make me cry more, Elizabeth.
ELIZABETH : This is our last journey to Darjeeling, Jennie. We leave, for good. John’s retiring, you know. He says it’s been a good inning. JENNIE: (Laughs, almost hysterically) ...“‘a all he has to say for a lifetime of tea...? ELIZABETH : (Quietly)
Can
one
say
good
more?
inning”.
Is
that
Anyone:..anywhere ?
(Gets up) Goodbye, my dear...(kisses her, leaves)
14,
(Partial blackout;
in sheer contrast to the busyness of the
and the sentimentality of the women, if one can call
it that,
men
breaks
the blare of rock/soul/call-it-what-you-will music. A band. Group of young Hill musicians. Guitars, drums, amplifier, occasional incidentals, beat songs. Bright, vivacious, talented youngsters, with
music
in their blood.
Long straight black hair, lean and clean as q
Google
ACT I
257
whistle, flexible as a kite, the slant features capture the beauty and air of the Darjeeling Hills, Bartenders grin. They know through long years of experience exactly what’s going to happen. The men
swoop
down
in a rush.
The
women
wait expectantly.
Gaiety,
excitement breaking through, the once-in-a-year wild abandon, the planter’s release. Attractive women, saris and dresses, bell-bottoms and hot-pants, hipster saris showing cute belly-bottons, and revealing cholis that leave nothing to imagination.) BUNTY: (Yelling, drinking, frugging | watching | what-have-you) YYYYYYYYYYEEEEEEEEEEOOOOOOOODOW W WWWwwwwW lt LeT’s GO, MAN, Go!!!
HARE RAM HARE KRISHNA! HO!
HO!
(Mixture
of
expressions, catchy, original, fun-loving; dances around madly, with himself, others, deafening beat, getting them all crazy, thoroughly
enjoying himself, and as usual, infecting others too. Big Mac and Big Hugh, big giants, face each other across the bar, trace of a
smile and a challenge, raise their tumbler-full drinks in honour acknowledgement of forthcoming battle. Music starts to dim, the voices of people begin to die out : everyone knows.) BIG HUGH : (Caswal-like) Big gardens.
Mac,
I hear
you’re
toning
up
and and
your
BIG MAC : (Equally cool) That’s right, Big Hugh.
BIG HUGH : About time.
We
Jenkins were beginning to feel left out.
(Crowd starts to split, two camps, the women
BIG MAC : You were never in, Hugh.
retreating.)
We had you
beat right
from
the start. (Jennie tries to stop them, but is stopped by Bunty, who steps forward cockily, right up to Hugh, eyes focused up and afar at Hugh’s granite face.)
BUNTY : (Calling out) In case you beat right from the start. (Big Bunty tossed around, but gamely looking around for the opponent
didn’t hear, Big Hugh, we had you Hugh brushes him aside like a fly, up with fists in classic boxing style, he’s too drunk to see.)
BIG MAC : THIS IS IT, HUGH! LET’S FIGHT! (The giants are at it, Bunty in and out, pushed, falling, getting up like a jack-in-a-box, the others at it too, the Mclouds, the Jenkins. It’s uproarious. Suddenly midway through the fight, Bunty calls out commandingly.) BUNTY: STOP! stop!
(Everybody too amazed
ANOTHER DRINK, AND START AGAIN!
Google
to go
on) LETS
HAVE
(Crowd cheers, “Have another
258
DARJEELING TEA
drink, and start again \” It goes on and on, drinking and fighting, till everything is in shambles, furniture broken, fighters swaggeringly drunk, most of them taken home by their wives and girl-friends, the last three at the crack of dawn being...Hugh, Mac and Bunty, with a friendly arm around each other’s neck, black-eyed, drunk and asleep.) CURTAIN
Google
FALLS
ACT II
1.
Scene in Macneil’s
SCENE
bungalow.
I
Tea for four.
Present are Mac
and Jennie, Hugh and Sally. A few days later, but the band-aids, black-eyes and swollen/blue patches are still there on the planters’ faces. General air of gloom. HUGH: ...So that’s the story, Mac-me-friend. You could have knocked me down with a feather when the M.D. told me we were selling out. Selling out! Jenkins group! No, it couldn’t happen to us, I said. We’re one of the biggest. No goddam Marwari is going to buy us out. He smiled, you know, the cat-who’s-eatenthe-canary smile.
and separation
Said I needn’t
benefits
and
Post me elsewhere, Ceylon,
worry.
all that.
New
There’d be
Why,
the
if 1 wanted,
Guinea, Africa,
pension
they'd
since the Jenkins
group was Sterling and always looked after its overseas planters. Just like that, Mac. You and I have had three generations of life in India,.and they wind us up just like that! (Mac takes a breath, says nothing, pours out a drink for his friend.)
deep
mac : Shakes me, I admit. HUGH : (Looking into the drink, stirring it self-consciously) That leaves you...sort of alone, doesn’t it 2? (Mac doesn’t reply.) SALLY: (To Jennie) It hit me bad when I first heard it, Jen, but you know how one gets used to an idea. In fact... JENNIE : (Completes her thought) ...you’re now rather looking forward to it, aren’t you ?
SALLY: Yes. That’s right. Children growing up. I hate to be separated for long. I long for home, Jennie, never could accept India as my own. I’m persuading Hugh up. No more planter.
JENINE: (Smiling
hard) Yes,
we
each
reasons for wanting to return home. HuGH : (To Mac) Mac-me-friend..,
mac: Yes?
Google
to retire, and
give
it
all
have our reasons, don’t we...
260 HUGH;
DARJEELING TEA I’ve been
thinking...(Mac
going to miss you. MAC : Same here. HUGH : Wish it could continue.
looks up,
his
eyes
smiling)...’'m
MAC : Don’t see how it’s possible.
HUGH : Mac, things are changing here. MAC : Bound to. HUGH : No place for a foreigner ! MAC : (Shot of anger) I’m no goddam foreigner. Three generations, you’ve just said. HUGH: You're still a foreigner, Mac, whether you like it or
not.
:
MAC : (Coldly) I don’t look at things the way you do, Hugh. HUGH : (Controlling himself) Y'll pass that, Mac, because I have more
important things to tell you. (Mac looks up. So also does Jennie.) Sally...we...thinking of retiring, going back home. There are lots of planters like us drifting around, wanting to settle down. In fact there’s quite a sizable community in London...
MAC : Go on. HUGH : Well...I was thinking...seeing that you and I get on so well... (Grinning
crookedly through
damaged
especially
for
give up.
It’s fine with a garden,
something together there...boarding the
lips)...that
we
might
start
house, hotel, pub, anything...
planter-types...that
is
if you’re
interested
in
leaving...(Long pause, Jennie looks enquiringly at Mac.) MAC : (Quietly and steadily) Thank you, Hugh. No go. HUGH : (Getting up, smiling, offering his hand for a shake) Well...1 sort of expected it. Trouble with you, Mac, is that you never offer’s open, Mac,
any
time...any
but difficult with life.
But my
time at all (Mac takes his hand,
and shakes it, says nothing. Sally and Hugh, say goodbye, leave. A long silence between Mac and Jennie.) MAC: (Quietly) You would have liked me to have taken that offer, wouldn’t you 7
JENNIE : (Wearily) Yes. mac : It’s not as simple as all that.
JENNIE: Nothing is.
MAC:
The...the
supervisors,
garden
the
depends
managers,
Google
all.
upon
We're
me.
The
the only
workers,
the
large _ Agency
“Aer
It SCENE I
house left.
261
People
I’ve
worked
with...have
the last forty years...ever since I was a boy.
been
with
me...for
JENNIB :. (Anger bursting out) And you've never grown up, Mac ! This garden became your hobby, and you’ve lived it the way you wanted to. Now things are changing, and you're resisting it. MAC:
No, Jen.
It’s the only
It goes deep.
I...it’s all...part of me.
life I know. JENNIE : The only life you have too, Mac, mine included. Oh, Mac, Mac, I’m not going to quarrel: with you. Mac, you're killing yourself here : one more of those “‘do’s” and you’ve had it! Doc said you must take it easy. Retire, more for your sake than mine, Mac. MAC ; (Slowly) No. (Blackout) 2. Bunty in riding breeches, horsewhip in hand, whistling, and bouncing up the steps to Mcneil’s house. At the porch he stops, and calls out “Mrs. Macneil...Oh, Mrs. Macneil...?” (No reply) “Sir...Sir... Mr. Macneil...?’ (No reply) “Th...Thapa 7...0h, Mr. Thapa...?”
(No reply or movement) ‘Anybody there?
Shrugs his shoulders, romps
a garden manager...”, onus
pipe and His
Nobody 7’
(No reply.
into the living room, singing
imitating Mac,
sitting on
glasses...calling out)
You're
home 7” (No reply, feels reassured, stretches out
‘‘Oh, to be
wis chair, putting
sure nobody’s at
his
riding
snuggles into the high backed chair till only the riding cap, and pipe smoke is visible. Closes his eyes and relaxes.)
(Through the bay window, facing
steps
in
a Nepalese
looking
girl
the back
of about
of the
shoes, shoes
chair, silently
nineteen, pretty,
well-
dressed, with an overnight bag in hand, which she quietly puts on the floor, then on tip-toe goes up to the back of the chair, shoots her hands over Bunty's eyes, and kisses him on the cheek.) BUNTY : (Awakened, squeaking with delight and alarm) Oh, Mrs. Macneil! (Turns around, both see each other, and spring back in consternation.) GIRL : (Colouring) oH ! BUNTY : (Stumbling out of the chair) Who...who the hell are you !
GIRL : (Blurting equally confused) Didi. BUNTY: (Drawing
Macneil.
himself erect)
Google
Imposter.
Pretending
to
be
Mrs.
262
DARJEELING
GIRL: (Drawing herself too) 1 could
say
the
same
for
TEA
you...taking
the place of Mr. Macneil, that is. BUNTY : Oh. (Narrowing his eyes, surveying the situation, walking around the girl, looking her up and down, he-man planter, smacking the whip on his hand, curling his lips into a handsome cruel smile) Pretty smart, are you ..Where did you learn to speak English like that...(She remains mute...) Won’t talk, huh? Another Thapa! Wearing your Sunday best, aren’t you...not quite used to it, I'd say...(He’s fishing around, but she won’t help him, and remains silent) Should be out on the hill ..plucking away...who gave you leave, girl ? GirRL: Didi. BUNTY: Oh, you want me to be on first-name terms, do you? Well, I won’t tell you my name. GIRL: Why...don’t you have one 7 BUNTY : I don’t give names away...my own or of girls who kiss
me.
GIRL: Oh ! BUNTY : (Gloating victoriously) Got you. GIRL : But you did give it away. BUNTY: Huh? GIRL: You said...Mrs. Macneil. BUNTY : (Jumping up) Sbhh...Don’t say it so loud.
GIRL: MRS. MACNEIL! BUNTY : (Panicky) sHH.. (Yelling) DON’T SAY MRS. MACNE...(Stops himself halfway, realizing; looking at her, eyes narrowing) Smart cookie, huh? Well, I caught you too. _ GIRL : Meaning ? BUNTY : I caught you kissing Mr. Macneil.
GIRL: Wrong.
You caught me kissing you.
BUNTY: (Dumbfounded) Huh.
(Both circle each
other silently for a
while, like wrestlers) You’ve got a funny face, Didi. pip1 : Ever seen yourself in the mirror... BUNTY
: ...Bunty.
DIDI: ...Bunty. Sweet name, I like it. BUNTY : Thank you.
pip! : But I don’t like you. BUNTY : Oh. (Circling her again, trying to make his look as lascivious
Google
ACT II SCENE I
263.
as possible...and of course failing miserably) So you think you’ve got one over me, huh ? (Leeringly) Well, I’m a planter. Fullblooded and hot-blooded. You know what that means...(She pretends to shrink. Bunty smacking the whip-stick on his hand)
Must say I thought Mr. Macneil
had left his wild
days
behind.
Just goes to show what evil thoughts men have. (She looks at him with innocent wide eyes, full of mischief and fun) Now you'll have to contend with me, young lady, new generation planter, as rough and ready as the old. (Clumsily tries to make a grab for her whereupon Didi takes an aim, punches him) Oh!
(Holding on
to his
jaw) on !! THAT HURT, DIDI! (Groaning) I think you broke my tooth. DipI : (Concerned) Oh, I’m sorry. Let me see. BUNTY: (Winces, as she touches him tenderly on the face) Aww! See, my wisdom tooth’s shaking. Dipi : (Sympathetically) 1 said I was sorry. BUNTY : (Grumbling) Is that how you pluck leaves 7 Should put you on a dentist’s chair. Divi: (Caressing his face) Feeling better now 7 BUNTY : (Brightening a Mrs. Macneil standing there for some time. and Didi springs into and a kiss.)
bit) Don’t stop. (Mild cough. Mr. and at doorway, and looking as though they were Didi looks up with joy...Bunty with alarm... Mac’s huge arms, which lift her into a hug
pipi: Daddy! BUNTY : (Jaw dropping, turning around with amazement)
DaDpy...!!!
(Blackout) 3.
(Same scene, few hours
later or maybe next day.
Mac, Jennie
and Didi. Mac reading papers with glasses and pipe, Jennie knitting or sewing and Didi just fidling restlessly around the house.) JENNIE : Gave us quite a surprise, that. mac: Yes, a welcome one. JENNIE : Didn’t the
just like that?
Convent object
you
did, just
to your
dropping
in like
taking off from school
I must say the least that Mother could have done
would have been to inform us in advance.
Google
DARJEELING TEA
264
mac: Not that father’s lap.) DIDI:
mac:
we go
(Didi jumps
anywhere, Didi-love.
into her
(Pouting) I got bored.
(Kissing her) Best reason in the world.
DIDI : I want to be a planter, Dad.
MAC: You...what: pipi : I want to be a planter, Dad. Roam those hills, breathe the air...put flowers in my hair... MAC : (Smiling) There’s a rhyme somewhere...a beautiful Scottish rhyme that speaks of...love and beauty. pip1 : What’s Scotland like, Daddy ?
Mac :
(Distantly) Oh...it’s...it’s
beautiful.
Like poetry
ona
spring
day. DIDI : But you come from here, don’t you ? MAC : Yes, though my father took me to Scotland for all my holidays when I was young. pip1: Oh, why don’t you take me to Scotland too, Dad ? mac : (Vaguely) It...it’s very far away. And cold and lonely. You
wouldn’t like it there.
DIDI: JENNIE DIDI: JENNIE
But you just said... : (Interrupting) Your father doesn’t like going back home. But his home is here, Mrs. Macneil. :Is it ?
Dib! : For as long
these hills.
back as I can
JENNIE : (Snapping slightly) No
remember father
has been
part
of
doubt, though my memories reach
a
bit further than yours . (Her eyes meet Mac’s) 1 remember him... more as a young Scot than a planter...energetic, romantic...a bit
irresponsible of course...(Looking coldly at Mac then at Didi)...but then we all make our mistake in life, don’t we...(Didi’s bewildered.) MAC : (Saying fast, turning light of it) Didi wouldn’t know. remembers is...(Looking out of the window)...the little hut.
Div : (Enthusiastically) My little house, Daddy. you
?
It’s
a...doll’s
house,
remember...having lived in it too.
MAC
: (Laughing
memory.
selfconsciously) A
Google
isn’t
little
All she
You built it, didn’t
it ..though
girl...with
sometimes...I
such
a
long
ACT
265
I
It SCENE
JENNIE : (Trace of acidness) Oh, but it’s a woman’s privilege to have a long memory, Mac. And Didi isn’ta little girl any more, I'll have you know. MAC : (Laughing artificially) Indeed not. pipi: (Youthfully unconscious, a small hop and turning around so that her long straight hair flies in a.circle, her youthful figure seems to open like a flower) I’ve grown, haven’t 1, Dad. Look ! (Mac looks at her, and despite himself, seems lost in memories. A long silence, which seems to irritate Jennie as she sees Mac lost in thought.) JENNIE : (Unable to contain herself, snaps out) Enough ! (Didi’s surprised, stops mid-way.) mac : Jennie ! .
JENNIE: No, that’s enough, Didi. father.
DIDI:
Didi,
Can you leave us alone please ?
Certainly, Mrs. Macneil.
JENNIE: (Turning to Mac) Yes, “That wasn’t necessary !””
I want
to talk
to your
(She leaves.)
know
what
you're
going
to
say.
MAC : (Quietly, but with anger) It wasn’t. JENNIE : (Imitating) Mrs. Macneil. Mrs. Macneil.
tone)
That
girl
knows
F don’t
accusingly)...and why
should
uncontrollable
and
like
I?
(Then in her normal
her...(Mac
(Hard,
looks
steely
and
at
her
belligerent)
Why should I like a child that’s not my own, Mac? (Mac continues to look accusingly) Don’t look at me accusingly, Mac. (Viciously) I'm not to blame that she’s a bastard! (Mac shouts in hysterically)
anger,
That...that
strikes
did
it,
her.
Jennie
Mac!
That
laughs,
really
and
did
cries
it!
Really broke your patience and understanding, didn't it! (Mac puts his head in his hands in shame) 1 provoked you, Mac. Deliberately. Something perverse, isn’t it. You never told me.
What was Didi’s mother like...? (Mac speechless in pain and compassion) Did she look like me 7 No, there must have been a contrast. That attracts a man, doesn’t it? (No reply, silence) That’s why you want to remain here, don’t you?
not the garden, nor your three
HER.
Mac : (Looks at her with an died nineteen years ago.
Go
sale
You swine.
generations, it’s plain
indescribable
expression)
It’s
and
simple
Didi’s
mother
266
DARJBELING TEA
JENNIE : (Artificially, sarcastically wide-eyed amazement) Is that so? Childbirth, I seem to remember your saying. She must have had narrow hips like me, poor woman. Not childbearing. How tragic! (She’s tormenting herself too much to stop) It’s an old planter’s custom, isn’t it? Fuck them, and leave them,
Why didn’t
you leave that coolie woman, Mac? Too softhearted, I'd say. Not the hardstuff planters are made of. (Mac looks at her, the anger drained out, unable to find a way to soothe her pain.) MAC : (Softly) Enough,
Jennie, enough.
You're
hurting yourself.
’ JENNIE: Been hurting myself for ninetéen years, Mac. Anybody would think I'd be insensitive by now. But no. It keeps growing and growing...(Looks at him)...like her...(Beseechingly) like her... you understand, don’t you, Mac. Oh, say that you do, or else I'll kill myself... You understand why I want you to leave, my dear. Anywhere, anywhere...it need not be England or Scotland. Away from
looks
here,
that’s
at her,
lost
all
I
between
reproach, confused, guilty,
want.
anger
Away...from...her...HER.
and pity,
too much for him.
walking in the direction of the gardens. dims. Gradual darkness.)
understanding
He
(Mac
and
leaves the house
Jennie’s
head
bows,
light
4. (Next scene is optional, but it strengthens the play to the extent that it can be done. Mac alone at night, sitting in the living room, looking into the fire. He might have been there for hours, the cinders almost extinguished, but still glowing. A long silence, and
almost as
furrowed
though at his
over
the years
Features show concern as
beside him silently.
mute call
of age
Thapa
appears.
and generally
he approaches
close to
His lined face,
impassive Mac,
and
Gurkha
stands
Mac looks up, and after a long while nods...)
MAC : (Quietly) We leave for the Kanchenjunga tomorrow. (The trek on horseback to the base of the Kanchenjunga mountains, part of the Himalayan range, is long, arduous, and stirringly magniSicent; these must be projected on the screen to show the gigantic eruption of nature, an immense panorama of white-capped mountains, that dwarfs all humanity underneath, casts its spell of the unreachable and obsesses the lives and imagination of hill people into its worship as a deity manifestation of Lord Krishna. The Himalayan range is often known as “the abode of the goods” : ‘‘Kang-chen-zod-Nga’’, Kanchenjunga’s five summits towering around 29,000 feet beyond
Google
ACT Wi SCENEI
267
Darjeeling’s 7,000 feet are “‘the house of five treasures.” The trek is of course functional to the story. It takes them days and nights of journeying to reach there. Slides/shots/cuts of campfires at night, Mac lying in sleeping bag, the Gurkha sitting, and guarding him against the evils of the night, the predators that roam. At last they reach the spot of his pilgrimage. It is a grave at the base of the great mountain, simple and unnoticeable...) MAC : (Whispering) Remember...Thapa...we brought her here...you and I...she wanted to be buried here...her spirit...to take flight... to the Kanchenjunga...(Mac kneels, and bows his head, Thapa standing next to him, touching his head lightly, while Mac prays... the light gradually, very gradually, fading...) (Darkness, change of scene)
5. (Planter’s home again. Mac and Didi.) Dip! : (Excitedly) Won’t you come to my doll’s house, Daddy ? MAC : (Hesitating, looking upstairs self-consciously, then looking at her
smiling) 1...I thought you would have out-grown it, Didi. DIDI : It’s not really a doll’s house, is it, Dad? It’s home. Mac : (Again half-joking, half-serious) But this is your home,
(Didi silent.
girl.
Mac holds her face up in his hands.) What’s wrong,
baby ? BABY : N...nothing. MAC : You won’t tell me. DIDI:
There’s nothing to say.
(Mac nods to himself.)
MAC : The doll’s house. Why do you like it ? pint: I dream. I find reality.
MAC : (Smiling) But these are opposites, child. DIDI : (Close her eyes) No, I don’t escape. I remember...you.
mac : (Slight frown, but still smiling) Me ? pip: You're a different man there. (Mac doesn’t reply) It’s also my secret. My treasure. No one else will ever step into my house. (Mac too overcome to reply) You built it, didn’t you? Near the tall betel trees, you dug the earth...with reverence...(Mac looks at her, and wonders) Took four mighty trunks of the oak and built the foundation...all for the little fragile...doll’s house ?
MAC : (Moved by the revelation,
your young years, Didi.
Google
apprehensive too) You're too wise for
268
DARJEELING TEA
DIDI: (Like a young woman now) No, let me finish, Dad; there are things I have to find out for myself too...This you did make...the little hill people’s wooden hut...sturdy at the base to resist
avalanches, the beasts of night... Then you taught me a game, as a. child, like the Japanese tea ceremony, almost religious, conipletely pure...In the hollow of bamboo I was to give you the fermented
juice, sit across from you, and see the change within... MAC : (Softly) Enough, Didi, enough. DIDI: One more thing, Dad;
,
you never did tell me about
Mother.
(Sudden blackout, darkness) 6.
(Sometime
Bunty)
later: few
hours perhaps—night time;
Jennie
and
BUNTY : I was a bit worried when you called for me. JENNIE : (Jn a strange mood)...not delighted.
BUNTY : JENNIE : BuNTY : JENNIE : BUNTY : JENNIE : BUNTY:
(Smiling) Well, delighted too. I wanted to show you something. Yes? What? Do you see that little hut on stilts in the compound... Yes, I often wondered about that. Can you see through? The kerosene lamp’s burning there. Y...Yes. But what...
JENNIE: (Interrupting)
Shh...(Moment’s
deep silence, shadows of the
people climbing the rope ladder to the hut) BUNTY: Why, that’s Didi and Mr. Macneil!
JENNIE: They’re playing a game, Bunty.
BUNTY: So? JENNIE: So watch...(They’ve
entered
Quite a game.
the
hut.
Mac’s
in planter’s
khaki, and Didi in the hill-tribe woman’s dress, long and graceful.) BUNTY : (Whistle of astonishment) Why, look at Didi’s dress. It...it’s
beautiful...like...like her. JENNIE : Wouldn’t suit me, would it 7 BUNTY : (Looking at her, not knowing not) Well...it’s a tribal dress.
whether
she’s
being funny or
JENNIE : And she’s a tribal girl. BUNTY: Y...yes,
(Mac lies down,
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his large frame occupying most
of
269
ACT II SCENE I the hut; Didi takes a hollow
What’s that ?
bamboo shoot, and pours in it the brew)
JENNIE: A strong local brew. (Didi then sits across from Mac on her haunches, like the local women, watching and waiting on Mac, occasionally talking. Bunty watches silently.)
JENNIE: (Hard, sardonic smile) Quite a game, huh? (Bunty, with serious face, gets the hang of the situation, raises his hand, and shuts the curtain with a snap) Why, don’t you want to see ?
BUNTY : (Hard voice) There’s nothing
private affair. JENNIE: Oh! You're
catching
on
fact...quite tough in his own way.
more
fast.
to
see.
It’s
a man’s
Not-so-stupid-Bunty.
BUNTY : (Looking at her) I wish...you’d forget about it.
JENNIE : Forget it? Forget it? Don’t tell as you’re another gooder like Mac. Forget it...while that’s going on ! BUNTY : There’s nothing more to it !
In
do-
JENNIE : My dear, you listen to me. Didi’s come’from the Kalimpong school, subsidised by planters, who sowed their wild oats... Her mother, as you will no doubt have guessed, was a coolie woman...
BUNTY : It’s happened before, Jennie. thing. JENNIE : Not to a planter, it wouldn’t. who comes here...humiliating...
It doesn’t mean a goddam But to a woman, a foreigner
BUNTY : Why? You haven’t asked yourself why ! JENNIE : (Surprised) What do you mean ? It’s obvious... BUNTY : No, it isn’t.
You’re not
humiliated because
he had a fling
with a local woman... (...she looks at him enquiringly, afraid for the first time at meeting this new man within Bunty) ...you’re humiliated because you’re barren ! (She slaps him; he stands steady unaffected.)
JENNIE:
(In
shock
and
self-realization)
H...how
dare
you!
You
damned wog ! BUNTY: (Suddenly quiet, almost sympathetic) Strange, isn’t it, you come to my country, and call mea wog. I goto yours, I go to yours, and call you Madam. (Jennie still speechless) Why? Because Icome out witha harsh truth. Because I do not want you to hurt yourself any more. Because I do want you to face yourself.
(Jennie’s face’ turns to him, more possessed now)
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And...
270
DARJEELING TEA
and because, Jennie, you are...a fine woman.
deserve better of yourself, being as you
JENNIE : (Almost in tears) Oh, Bunty, Bunty, you still don’t understand. It’s more than what you say... Look there, Bunty, as Mac drinks that brew, who do you think he’s seeing: not Didi, but her mother! Who do you think he’s remembering, or trying to forget 2? No, Bunty, it wasn’t a planter’s roll in the hay with a coolie woman. Mac’s not built that way. It was a lifetime’s love affair...with a dead woman. His...infidelity, and I call it that, is repeated over again, every time they go through that...innocent ceremony. (Bunty’s silent, helpless, for the first time at a loss himself.) BUNTY : (Softy) I’m sorry, Jennie. (A long silence) JENNIE: BUNTY: JENNIE:
(Comes forward, touches him) Are you...really...? Y...yes. You meant that...about my being a fine woman ?
BUNTY: (Slightly apprehensive) Of course. JENNIE: (Finding it difficult, but driving herself, demonically; embarrassed) I’ve never...never before.. BUNTY: (Jnterrupting) I think you should take a rest, Jennie. You’re tired ...overwrought. JENNIE: (Coming closer to him) Yes,1 am tired. I need to relax. T’ve been holding out for many many years. BUNTY: (Backing up almost imperceptibly) Y...Yes ? JENNIE:
(Almost in a dream) My,
these
words
of
the
play
almost
come true. (Laughing hysterically) Ridiculously true. Should I continue ? BUNTY: (Laughing artificially) Yes, quite an act, wasn’t it ? JENNIE: (Joking/serious/laughing/crying) When you at last kissed
my
hand...it tickled me.
BUNTY : (Laughing louder) Did it ? JENNIE: (Suddenly serious : laughter, crying all gone) what it would feel like if you really kissed me ? BUNTY:
(Swallowing) You did ?
BUNTY:
(Scarlet)
1
JENNIE: (Coming closer, holding him, her lips close to his) (Shutting her eyes) Kiss me.
JENNIE ;
Now
?¢ Here...?
Of course. No better time.
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wondered
Kiss
me.
.
Mac will be gone a long
time,
ACT II SCENE I
271
BUNTY:
(Fidgeting) Shouldn’t we close the curtain...or something 7?
BUNTY:
So it is.
JENNIE:
(Trace of impatience, exasperation) Don’t tell me this
JENNIE : (Closing her eyes) It’s closed.
(Giggles, and swallows hard) is the
first time, Bunty dear. BUNTY: Well, in college... JENNIE: (Cutting him short) 1 know ! BUNTY: ...you do ? How could you know ? I just made it up myself. JENNIE: Bunty, are you, or are you not...interested in being a _ Planter? BUNTY: (Heroically) 1 am. JENNIE: Well, then, start with the planter’s wife. BUNTY: Oh, I say... JENNIE: Not the same as a coolie woman, I admit, but then I suppose
I am rather different compared to you.
BUNTY :
I should hope
so.
JENNIE:
Opposites
BUNTY: JENNIE:
So they say. Why don’t you...discover ?
attract.
BUNTY : (Trumpeting) Mclouds ahead ! (She kisses him; He is stunned, serious, she is too; long moment of silence, both do nothing,
the half-bantering joke’s all gone,
hysteria.)
2
so also
is her nervousness
JENNIE:
(Quietly) We did a beautiful final act, didn’t we, Bunty ?
BUNTY :
(Looks back, equally soberly) We certainly did.
JENNIE :
(Controlling herself) Goodnight, Bunty.
door, hesitates, turns around.)
and
(Bunty goes to the
BUNTY: (Softly) Jennie... JENNIE: (Breaking out, unable to control herself any further) Go, BUNTY. PLEASE...LEAVE ME ALONE. (Bunty leaves, Jennie bursts out shamefully in tears closing her face with her handkerchief.) CURTAIN
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FALLS
ACT II
SCENE
II
1. (Next morning. Jennie and Mac. Jennie’s packed her clothes.) JENNIE: ...and please don’t say ‘“‘You’re not serious”. MAC: Ido think it’s too importanta decision to be made on the spur of the moment. JENNIE: Spur of the moment?
MAC:
reply)
I’ve been wrestling with it for years.
Then what’s made you decide so suddenly Nothing’s
changed...
7
(Jennie
doesn’t
JENNIE: That’s exactly what I mean. mac: IT don’t understand. JENNIE: Nothing’s changed, Mac, nothing’s changed. You’ve gone on and on just the way you started, your own way, always your
own way...
MAC : (Defensively) I don’t see anything wrong with that. JENNIE: You wouldn’t. You’re too much man to understand. much planter to see over the tea shrubs. Mac: You chose that way of life when you married me. JENNIE:
I chose a man, Mac, not a way of life.
MAC: I’m the same. JENNIE: But I’ve changed. Women do, you know. every year, find a vacuum within. MAC:
JENNIE:
ous.
MAc:
JENNIE:
Too
(Mumbling)
True.
That’s not
my
older
fault.
So like you to say it.
That’s not fair.
They grow
You're twisting
Self-contained and self-rightemy
words.
(Emphasising) Fair. Ah, now we're talking about being fair.
I suppose you’ve been fair to me all along...having had a on the wrong side of the blanket. (Slight silence)
child...
mac: (Heavily) I was wondering when you’d come out with it. JENNIE: Did you expect me to keep silent ? Suffer in silence, isn’t
that
mac:
so, like the true hill woman ?
(Angrily) At least they don’t go snapping around the place,
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ACT II SCENB II JENNIE:
who
273
You're not a hill man to know
wasn’t
a shrew.
(Before
!
Never
knew
a woman
Mac can say it) And I’m judging
by their standards now. mac: (Wearily) So what does it prove ? JENNIE: It proves...that when a man does something that’s wrong, he conceals it. mac: You mean Didi. I should not have...adopted, or recognized her. JENNIE: No, I don’t mean that. There’s many a planter who left his child at Kalimpong. All they missed was a name. mac:
Is that how you look
at
it
?
JENNIE: Ido. For very good reasons, Mac. Mac: I don’t. She needed a father. Her own. Me. JENNIE: Oh, you did it out of generosity, did you? (Suggestively) I always
gave it...a selfish motive.
MAC: (Hurt, angry) What do you mean? JENNIE: Since we’re bent on hurting each other, I'll tell you. (Pause)
You
kept
deep second)
Didi to remind you of her mother.
mac: (Slowly) That’s a rotten JENNIE: (Laughing hard) Look may I remind you. mac: If it had been, if you there’d be no problem. JENNIE: You never allowed me difficult,
Mac:
thing to say. who’s talking. had
been
(Dead silence for a .
It’s not
prepared
my
to...accept
to, Mac. I agree it would
but you never allowed me to, Mac.
child, her,
have
been
me,
how
me
that
(Jncredulously) I never allowed you to accept Didi !
JENNIE : (Almost pleading) How could I, Mac ? Oh, believe
could I? When...when...(Her face darkening) you took her up to that hut...taught her to play...that game...you made it impossible for me... MAC: (Breathing heavily) 1 see.
JENNIE:
you
mac:
I hope you do, Mac.
do.
It’s terribly
important
for
Because there’s something else I’m going to say.
(Wondering at himself, searching for explanation, too honest to
deny to himself; slowly) Go on.
'
JENNIE:
went
(Falters, then goes on determinedly)
up
Last
with Didi...it was too much for me.
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night...when
you
It was...as though
274
DARJEELING
TEA
...you had gone with her mother...in front of my very eyes...(Mac closes his eyes)1 was...if you remember...overwrought. And what tipped me over was not only that you saw in Didi her mother... but that you really wanted it so.in rejection of me...(Mac’s head remains bent) 1 called...Bunty over. A total outsider to witness my pain. And when...I took your act as being one of infidelity... a lifetime’s frustration rushed back...and I made a play for the young boy. (Mac looks up at her incredulously.) Don’t look so tion,
a
surprised,
punishment...?
Is
Mac.
this
Was
there
how
one
a perverse...justifica-
destroys oneself, Mac...
Through no reason or fault of one’s own ? I don’t know. When he ran away, poor lad, I felt equally...ashamed...as if he had... stayed. MAC:
(Softly, in an anguish too much to bear) Jennie...
JENNIE: me.
(Looking away) No, don’t say anything, Mac. Don’t weaken
I can’t look at myself in the face.
Let me go, Mac.
MAC: (Pathetically) Jennie darling... JENNIE: (Still looking away, crying) ’m not leaving you, Mac, I’m just going away to Scotland. Like Hugh said, my offer’s open... anytime. J’ll be waiting there, Mac. I'll be waiting there...for you .. No, don’t say a word, Mac. Just look after yourself, will you please. You’re the most precious thing I have...and I'll never forget you... Goodbye, love...(She leaves; Mac covers his face in his hands, his shoulders shaking.)
(Darkness)
2. (Few weeks later—evening; Mac at home; table.
BUNTY : MAC:
Bunty comes rushing in.)
(Panting) Sir, trouble again.
(Gets up cursing) Can’t
whisky
bottle
on
the
The Goom gardens this time.
understand
it.
Labour
was
peaceful
one minute...now they’re creating hell all over the place. Anyone hurt 7 BUNTY: Roby’s been beaten up. Nothing serious. I think they meant it as a warning.
mac: (Calling out) Thapa! with me. BUNTY :
mac:
Thapa, get
Shall I call the police, Sir 7
No, they'll just mess it up.
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the jeep
out.
And
come
ACT
11 SCENE
Il
275
BUNTY: There are three thousand hands there. pretty nasty mood. MAC: All the more reason not to call the police.
And
they’re
in a
Tell me, are
they
all our people? Or are they outsiders 2: BUNTY: I did’nt get much time. Had to rush Roby
out.
But my
guess is there are a lot of outsiders. MAC: Thapa and I know each one by name and face and family.
BUNTY : can
MAC:
be
You're over-estimating loyalty, Sir. influenced by them.
We'll see.
Even
the hill people
There’s nothing I wouldn’t do for them—short of
selling out this garden. BUNTY: That’s what they want...no, not selling out, but surrendering. It’s all political, of course. MAC: We'll talk terms. BUNTY: With your permission, Sir... MAC: ...Yes, laddies, but be quick... BUNTY: I don’t think you understand. MAC : (Reddening) What! Are you trying to teach me, boy ! BUNTY : A new political movement is growing not far from here...in Naxalbari. Mao is their ideological leader. They don’t...talk terms, as you putit. They believe in revolution: overthrow of the present order. Chaos. The method is simple, but effective :
kill.
MAC
: (Smiling)
You didn’t learn that in college, did you, laddie ?
BUNTY: (Serious) No, Sir.
: Well, me-lad, the old planter’s commonsense says it’s nonsense. BUNTY: The old planter’s commonsense won’t work any more, Sir. MAC : (Reddening again) Are you being serious, boy !
BUNTY : It’s difficulty...for anyone not from here...to understand. mac : (Exploding) Not coming from here! Not coming from here ! I came from here long before you were born ! ‘
BUNTY : (Still cool and deferential) That’s the trouble, Sir.
MAC : (Exasperated, not
sure he understands Bunty)
stand here and argue with you, laddie.
you there!
Where’s that bottle?
I’m not going to
(Calling out) Thapa!
(Grabs it) Ah!
Are
More like old
times! Revolutionaries, huh ? (Takes a whip out) Vill take the skin off their backs ! (Takes a swig; Bunty shakes head and follows)
Where do you think you're going, laddie !
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276
DARJEELING TEA
BUNTY : With you, Sir. mac : (Enthusiastically slaps him on the back) Ah! Keep the old flag flying! Come on then, laddie ! BUNTY: (Stops momentarily) Go ahead. I'll be with you in a
minute.
(As Mac goes out of sight, Bunty picks up the phone.) (Darkness)
3. (Evening goes deep sound of jeep returning... has finished the bottle of out another bottle : both Bunty who declines. Mac on the chair...)
MAC : (Heavily,
depressed,
hadn’t seen it myself.
BUNTY : (Nodding) It’s
into night...same scene : planter’s house... Mac and Bunty trudge in wearily... Mac whisky. Mac opens the cabinet and takes don’t speak for a long while...offers to pours himself another, and slumps down .
tired)
Wouldn’t
something new.
have
But it’s
believed
it...if I
been brewing for a
long time. (Mac looks at him sharply.) mac: We wouldn't be alive now...if the police hadn’t come on time. (Mac continues to look at Bunty.) BUNTY : (Trace of smile) Yes...I did phone them. (Short silence) MAC : What’s been brewing, laddie 7 BUNTY : It’s what the Chairman of the Tea Board said...“‘swing of the pendulum”... mac : Didn’t know they had any sense in H.O.
BUNTY : We should try to consolidate one union on our gardens...a
single one...with whom we can negotiate. They'll stave off the others. . mac : I don’t believe in any bloody unions. BUNTY : We should also learn some tricks-of-the-trade from the proprietary gardens. mac : Say whose side are you on, laddie? Proprietary gardens are nothing, but a bunch of crooks. BUNTY: No, Sir. They’re growing. Maturing. They have to accept...responsibility, and they’re doing it. It’s no longer Mclouds versus Jenkins.
the individual
It’s
the
gardens, and we
rivalry to keep us on our toes.
MAC: Hey,
laddie,
where
did you
Google
Managing Agency group
should pick
have
that
the same
up from...?
verses
friendly (Face
277
ACT II SCENE if
breaking into a smile) Though you might just be right...(Nodding
his head thoughtfully)...just be right.
(Thapa comes in silently,
and
stands in the shadows behind Mac.)
Bunty : Another thing, Sir...
mac: Yes, me-lad.
BunTY: I think you
to do is to get one
should be careful...after
today.
All they want
man...one man...no matter who...as
breaks the bourgeois top.
long as it
MAC : (Waves his hand) Doubt if it will happen again, huh, Thapa...
(Thapa touches his knife in the sheath) Laddie, once that kukri leaves its sheath it means blood...that’s the Gurkha code... Thapa never makes a mistake. And I’m quite safe as long as he’s around...safe from assassins...(Taking a drink, his eyes after)...the eagles that gather...and the spirits that take flight...to the abode of the gods... Drink ? Will you have a drink, laddie, I have a long way to...(Bunty declines, looks at him with concern, then leaves silently) ...the choice before me ? (Drinking) Either Scotland...or the Kanchenjunga...they both await... Thapa, dim the lights, will you please... I feel tired...(Gradual darkness until pitch black) 4. (Few days/weeks later... Morning, bright and cheerful... Bunty in tea garden, sunlight, busy concentrating on notebook in which he’s writing something... Picker woman with basket on back supported by strap on head bumps into him...)
BUNTY : (Angrily) Hey!
at him with a big smile.
jumps up in
Watch it!
(Woman
turns around and looks
It’s Didi, dressed in coolie clothes.
surprise.)
pip1!
in these clothes !
Didi, what
the hell are you
Bunty doing
Divi: (Mischievous grin, then pouting) That’s what you told me when I wore the other clothes. BUNTY : Take them off.
(Didi starts
to remove clothes; shouting with
alarm) Not Now! (Whispering) Not now, Shhh! What will they think of me !
silly (Looking
around)
pip: (Continues to remove them) There’s nobody around. BUNTY : (Shoving the clothes back on her as fast as she removes them) Put it back ! (Panicky) Put it back! (Looking around furtively) DIDI: (Continues)
You told me to remove them !
Bunty : I did not !
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278
DARJEELING TEA
DIDI: (Continues) You did ! BUNTY : (Pushes back her clothes with finality) 1 didn’t mean here and
now.
DIDI : (Stops) Then when ? BUNTY : (Wiping his brew) Later, girl, later. (Under his breath) Hill women. (Muttering under his breath) Promiscuous. DIDI: (Aroused) What did you say ? BUNTY : (Frightened) N...nothing. DIDI : (Raising voice, sternly) You did say something. BUNTY : (Like a mouse) 1...I said precious. Precious Didi. DIDI : (Face changing into sweet smile) You did ? BUNTY: (Confident, smiling back) Yes. See. I'll repeat it: precious
Didi.
DIDI: (Changing shoes on him)
back, and shouting furiously,
You said promiscuous!
throwing
Oh, you
dirty
clothes and scoundrel,
you said promiscuous ! BUNTY : (Shrinking back) You pretended not to hear.. Dwi : (Crying, or pretending to cry) I...1...come to you...dressed like you want me to...and...and you call me dirty names. BUNTY : (Distressed, going upto her comfortingly) I'm sorry, Didi. I didn’t mean it. . DIDI: (Loving it, continues cry) I...1 make you feel...like a big heman planter...with me, poor little defenceless coolie girl...and you say (gesturing)...“later’’...“later’”’... BUNTY : (Putting his arms around her, comforting her) There now. There now.. (Taking out his handkerchief which she blows into healthily...she looks up, he kisses her, innocently and beautifully.) DIDI : (Swooning with her eyes closed) Ob, Bunty-Bhupendra... BUNTY : (Swooning back, cooing like two doves) Didi, darling.
(Fadeout) 5. (Few days/weeks later. Mac’s bungalow...Didi sitting on steps outside, weeping silently...Bunty rushes up... On seeing him, Didi runs over to him...)
BUNTY : (Panting, worried) How’s he?
What happened ?
pmvt: (Still in tears) It...it was all so sudden.
(Bunty tries to go past
her) No, wait...(Stops him)...he’s under sedative...
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\
ACT II SCENE It
279
BUNTY: What happened? : He just slumped...with a heart attack. BUNTY : But... but how... Dip1: He’s been drinking...hard, you know.
Driving himself...beyond
all endurance.
The second For
It had
Couldn’t stop him. Tried all I could...(Burying arms)...Oh, it was horrible, Bunty... BUNTY: Mrs. Macneil...
one...
several
weeks.
her face
in his
to give way...
IDI: He said no. Not to call her. Said that the next move was his and not hers... Sometimes...in his delirium...1 can’t make out...but he seems to be calling out.«my mother’s name...and
then...Jennie...too. He’s become obsessive...as though bearing a guilt...even avoids me sometimes... Talks only to Thapa...in a hill
dialect...that even I don’t
What’s happening ?
know... What’s
BUNTY: (Comforting her, still worried) Don’t rest, he’ll be fit once again. Don’t worry...
happening,
worry,
Didi.
Bunty? With
(Blackout)
6. (Few days|weeks later Mac’s bungalow again...he is reclining on his chair with his feet up on which there is a blanket... It’s raining outside...the heavy rains of tea-growing areas... Thapa, as ever, silently standing besides him... It’s late evening going into night, twilight hours...in the evening shadows, the kerosene lamp in the
little hut is lit...
Mac: Thapa...is the lamp in the hut burning...or am I imagining... (Shadows of two people in the hut : Bunty and Didi) ah...it’s Didi... with laddie...(Nodding)...as it should be...as it should be...(Speaking to himself[Thapa as he sees them)...and yet not...and yet not... for wasn’t it a secret, a treasure reserved only for me...(After Didi’s shown Bunty the ‘Doll’s House’, she proceeds to make him lie down while she prepares the drink for him)...it hurts, Thapa, though I try to conceal...is this how...Jennie felt...? Only more...1’m sure...for hers was the natural longing...and jealousy... Give me a drink, Thapa...I said give it to me! (Drinks slowly; as though relishing the local intoxicant)...1 remember her, it was raining like
this, and we lay together in the little hut...dark hair flowed over her nakedness...she never left me,
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Thapa, never...and I was drawn
280
,
to her...my whole
DARJEELING TEA
being...in an emotion
that surpassed love
the beyond of these hills...how can I ever leave it...her... _ a
into
(Fadeout)
7. (Few days/weeks later...about the same time as previous scene... Mac and Thapa, same as before...) Mac: Thapa...has the light in the hut come on yet...(Thapa looks out, shakes his head)...which day is it...’ve lost count...(Sipping the local intoxicant) Remember her...the day she died, Thapa... her cry of pain merged with the first sound of her child...echoed through the hills and valleys...of the tea country...(Raising himself Sbhh...I hear it now...(Thapa listens: silence. Then gradually sounds grow, sounds of thousands of voices, shouts, a thousand lights across the valley below, like fireflies... Mac looks out, smiles...) They’ve come to get me...Thapa. A single life...that’s all they want...(Tries to get up: it’s an effort) Thapa...help me...Thapa... where are you, Thapa ? (Notices the empty sheath lying on the floor, picks it up. Shouting, poignantly, completely broken.) THAPA... THAPAAAAA...(Echoes roll the name, and send it back many times...flicker of lights; the ‘Doll’s House’ on fire. Mac falls clutching on
to his heart.
Silence
again silence and shadows,
and
shadows;
a
the thousand fire-flies retreating into
darkness. Bunty comes rushing in, goes over to breathing his last... Mac whispers) Thapa...Thapa...
BUNTY : (Softly) He’s dead.
scream : then
the
man
(Silence)
mac : The...the . little hut is burnt down, isn’t it? All BUNTY : (Softly) Yes, Sir. (Mac nods his head slowly.)
mac : (The last whisper)
big
Will.,.will you
‘over...
stop...sirring me...laddie.
BUNTY : (Hardly audible) Yes...Sir...(Bunty kneels over the man, and cries; holding him, he cfies.)
(Fadeout) 8.
(Last scene... Same as the first... Several weeks later... An
air
of lassitude, of gloominess, of boredom, in the bar-lounge of the Club, which has again fallen into disrepair... There are the same
groups as before : the proprietary
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garden owner
and his manager,
ACT II SCENE It
281
but none of the old-school expatriates. Instead there is Bunty sitting all alone, sipping a drink, on the same table that Mac and Hugh occupied in the first scene... The silence is broken by the dramatic
entry of a young army type, a cocky young recruit, smart-uniformed, with army stick in hand... He enters, knowing that all eyes are on
him, looks over the people and Club, and says :‘‘What ho! What ho! What ho! There are going to be some changes made around here \’’)
[CURTAIN
Google
CLOSES]
Digitized by Google
Original from
INDIANA UNIVERSITY
SONAR A HISTORICAL
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BANGLA PLAY
IN FOUR
ACTS
Act Act
I: 25th March ’71—The Slaughter II : Exodus—The Refugees
Act III : Liberation Force—The Mukti Bahini
Act IV : The Final War
CHARACTERS
MAIN Hussain
Sumita
Ray
Anderson Maya Bihari
Elizabeth Prof. Aziz Hari
Colonel Student Mahmood Farok
Old Woman
Child OTHERS
Arun
Mother
Ali
Mad Molla
Yahya
Bhutto
Niazi Students Refugees
Google
Mujib Tikka
Farman Ali
Governor Malik
Army Officers
Jawans
Diplomats
Hospital Staff
Yusuf
Mukti Fauj
Reporters
.
ACT I
SCENE
25th March’71. The slaughter PLACE : A village outside Dacca. A white marble grave surrounded by roses peaceful and well-to-do country home. A
man
dressed
in unostentatious
I
and acacia
trees
of a
muslim clothes lays a chaddar, a
sheet of tied mogra flowers, over the four corners of the engraved tomb. A village woman comes to the stream nearby and begins to wash clothes. There is the usual sound and movements of daily routine. The man retreats slightly, the prayer on his lips changing toa distant look in his eyes as he sees the tomb, the woman washing clothes, against the evening glow of earth and sky.
A girl’s voice calling out to her mother. looks up, with fondness and expectation, to embrace each other. The man (HUSSAIN) stands on the porch of his both till they leave and darkness closes in, evening Star...
,
The woman (suMITA) her daughter. They house watching them punctuated by the lone
2. The scene changes to within the house. A few hours later. There is a calender somewhere within showing 25th March 1971, the
fateful day when genocide began in East Pakistan and the seeds of resistance for Bangla Desh was sown. The pace quickens. Present are Hussain, the Professor and student from Dacca University, the
Colonel of the East Pakistan Rifles. ~ Curtains are drawn and a hush falls around the room.
HUSSAIN: This is goingto be the last of our meetings here. The situation has taken a turn for the worse. The Mujib-Yahya talks are
breaking
we haven’t
up.
been
have you to report ?
COLONEL;
Our
able
movements are suspected.
Unfortunately
to build up resistance fast enough.
(Looking to the
There are planeloads
Google
Colonel)
Colonel ?
of West Pakistan
troops
What
being
.
286
SONAR
BANGLA
flown in under the guise of civilians. They’re preparing a big military build-up. : HUSSAIN: (Under his breath) ...while the talks carry on and on and on. I warned Mujib. PROFESSOR: He couldn’t break it off on his own. There was still hope while the negotiations were going on. Was’nt he called “‘the next Prime Minister” by Yahya himself ? STUDENT:
Eyewash.
PROFESSOR : No, Mahmood. I’m sure they were earnest when it all started. For the first time we had a ‘one man one vote’ election. STUDENT: Yes, with unpredictable results for the military dictatorship that is. : HUSSAIN : Right. There was’nt a chance of Yahya being prepared ‘for a transfer of power. PROFESSOR : So we protested. What better form of protest than the Gandhian civil disobedience movement. We’ve brought this nation to a halt.
COLONEL : (Dryly) Not quite, Professor. look at it that way.
PROFESSOR :
But we’ve got you.
I’m sure the Army does’nt
If the West Pak army
we could balance it off with your Bengali para military.
gets tough,
COLONEL: (Laughing bitterly) In matters of violence you should your student, Professor. Hub, Mahmood ?
ask
STUDENT: (To Prof.) Sir, it is a matter of common knowledge the East Bengal Regiment and Rifies are being broken up.
that Sent
on false missions.
tions.
Told to surrender their rifles,
without explana-
PROFESSOR : (Astonished, turning to the Colonel) Is that true ? COLONEL: (Dry humour again in his eyes) Go on, Mahmood. STUDENT: It is mot a matter of common knowledge, Sir, that is
an
underground
resistance
force
being
formed,
with
there some
commanders of the East Pak Rifles, peasants...and students... COLONEL: (Looking from the Professor to Hussain) ....backed by, if I may say so, a highly efficient spy system organized by one of the leading Pakistani diplomats.
(The Prof. looks with a surprised expression to all three.) HUSSAIN :
(Laughing) I’m sorry, Professor.
in the dark,
You
We kept you
somewhat
see, being an Awami League sympathiser isn’t
Google
ACT
I SCENE I
‘enough for us.
way...
287
We belong to an action
force,
each
in
our
own
PROFESSOR : Wh...why did you choose on me. I’m no hawk. HUSSAIN: You're the most widely respected. Beyond reproach. Known for your objectivity and balance. A loyal Pakistani, but more than that, a loyal Bengali. PROFESSOR : (Uncomfortably) I...I admit...’ve been having difficulty
...in being loyal to both sides.
In...in the face of insurmountable
evidence of West Pakistan repression, terror and persecution, I have found it necessary to speak out... HUSSAIN: ...Which is why you’re here. We've read your speeches. . It took a lot of courage to say what you did. If you were prepared to operate under cover, you could be more effective. PROFESSOR :. Meaning?
HUSSAIN: our
new
We’re setting up liberation
a clandestine
radio.
The
Mukti-Fauj,
force, needs every form of moral and material
support. Then there are the papers of course, the Patriot and the Ittefaq, publicly circulated, many more privately...there is also international opinion that needs to be aroused. There’s a lot of work you could do, Professor, active work. PROFESSOR: (Shaking his head) I...1 don’t know, Hussain. I was never...physically...a very courageous man. The risks...my family... (He is interrupted by the arrival of Hari, caretaker of the house— husband of Sumita—who goes over to Hussain quickly.) HUSSAIN : (Alert) What is it, Hari? A visitor, Babu. I told him you were’nt in. But he MARI: insists.
HUSSAIN: HARI:
Who’s he ?
I’ve seen him before.
of him, Babu.
He’s the Bihari from here.
Be
careful
:
(Hussain is silent for a minute.)
COLONEL:
Shall we go into the other room.
HUSSAIN : No, it could only arouse more suspicion. seen you all come in.
STUDENT: HUSSAIN:
He could be a collaborator.
We'll have to take the chance.
(Hari shakes his head, going out.)
Google
He
may
Let him in, Hari.
have
288
SONAR BANGLA
(The Bihari comes in.)
(The Bihari enters. sides.) HUSSAIN:
There is a long moment’s
Would you like to see me
appraisal
on
both
alone.
BIHARI ; No. What I have to say is intended for all of you. HUSSAIN: What is it ? BIHARI: I’m a Bihari, new to your village. Hussain: SoTI understand. BIHARI: Do I need to say more by way of introduction ? COLONEL: What are you driving at ?
BIHARI:
You're the commander of the East Pak Rifles, aren’t you
COLONEL:
BIHARI: have
COLONEL:
(Irritated) Come on.
What do you have to say.
The police aren’t giving us,
Biharis,
any protection.
to look to the army to do so, Commander.
What do ‘you
mean
? We
?
BIHARI: Ever since the Awami League won the elections every Bihari has become the target of Bengali hate. PROFESSOR : It was a free election. You could vote as you wanted. The East Bengali has been long deprived. BIHARI: True, Professor. You are the eminent Professor Aziz from Dacca University, aren’t you? Yes, we had a free election. And now you want a democratic government. (Soft/y) But I hope you don’t get it ! STUDENT: (Hissing with hate) Collaborator ! BIHARI: (Angrily, without fear) Yes, that’s the point I wanted to make,
rebel
student Mahmood
Bihari killers !
HUSSAIN: BIHARI:
!
I know you all! Extremists and
Enough ! Make your point quick, and then leave
Look, Hussain.
I’ve got nothing against
protected by your diplomatic Is my family safe ?
standing.
But
you.
!
You’re well
where do I stand?
(Turning around to the Professor) Professor, Professor, I hope you don’t get your own civil government because you’re not ready forit! Do you know how many
Biharis have been killed merely because we were pathisers.
STUDENT:
And you call this a free election.
(Standing up in uncontrollable anger) You
Google
West
Pak
sym-
sucked us dry,
ACT I SCENE I you
Bihari
289
swine
{
Then you act as informers and quizzlings for
the Military Junta! Traitor! BIHARI: (Quietly) Who’s the traitor? you’re the traitor to Pakistan, not I.
Me?
Or
you
?
I think
(The student comes forward threateningly, but Hussain stops him.) HUSSAIN: No, Mahmood. You're playing into his hands. Let’s wait and hear him out. He came here for something. (To the Bihari) Well 2 BIHARI: Wise of you, Hussain. Calling each other names will not get us anywhere. In a way we're in this together. HUSSAIN: Meaning ? BIHARI: Whether you believe it or not, thefact isi that I believe in Mujib. He is the only moderate leader we have. If he survives, he may be able to control...the Mukti Bahini...and other extremists
in his own Awami party. HUSSAIN : (Softly) Go on. BIHARI: As a Bihari...I get know
who
you
all
sorts
of information.
Just
all were without being introduced to you.
like I When
I come here to see you I expose myself as much to risk as you do. HUSSAIN: Come to the point. BIHARI: Mujib’s going to be assassinated tonight the moment he leaves his home. (It comes as a thunderbolt.
STUDENT: Who’s going to do (The Bihari ignores him.)
Dead silence.)
it. You
?
BIHARI: He’s in the meeting with Yahya now. Then he returns home. You must warn him Hussain not to leave the house. HussAIN: How do I know you’re not lying. That he won’t be killed after the meeting. Or that he won’t be arrested at home. Or that this is not a trick to stop him from going underground... where he could lead the revolution. (The Bihari shrugs his shoulders.) BIHARI: Apparently he still has faith that something will come out of his meeting with Yahya. That is the stuff that moderates and politicians are made of, Hussain, unless you don’t believe in them yourself...
(Silence)
Google
290
SONAR BANGLA
(The Bihari turns around and leaves. Heavy breathing in the room. Light starts to dim as Hussain goes over to the window and stares out beyond the porch ..) HUSSAIN : (Almost to himself but not caring whether others hear him or not.) I swear loyalty to you—Mujib—but the fact is that I don’t believe in moderates or politicians or both. I believe only in my
Sonar Bangla.
(Blackout) 3.
Scene opens with Yahya and Mujib sitting on two
the final
discussion
with
each
other.
Yahya
audience, and Mujib is in partial darkness. YAHYA:
Bhutto
My hands are tied, Mujib. there
chairs
has
having
his back to the
Unless you come to terms with
can be no meeting of the National Assembly.
munB: I don’t need to come to terms with anybody. I have a majority in the National Assembly and with or without Bhutto Ican frame the constitution. YAHYA: (Wearily) We've gone through that before Mujib. I have the responsibility as the President and the Chief Martial Law Administrator to see that there is peaceful transfer of power. MusIB : YAHYA:
What’s stopping you, Yahya. Frankly, two things.
Bhutto’s threatened
to boycott
the
National Assembly and I can’t afford to have a revolt in the West on
my hands...
mums:
(Sarcastically)...but you can on the East,
YAHYA: No party can afford to revolt against Til have you remember that ! Besides, his is the largest... MuyIB : YAHYA:
huh
7
the military,
Mujib.
(Interrupting)...the second-largest... The largest, I was going to say, in the West...
muyiB: (Emphatically) The second largest in Pakistan, Yahya. Let’s not lose sight of that. Unless, of course, you admit to the existence of two separate...entities. YAHYA:
(With cold anger) Careful, Mujib.
me to the second point.
I warn you. This brings
I must admit...I see...ah...Bhutto’s point
Google
ACT I SCENE I
291
of view that your six-point autonomy plan for
Bengal...cannot
be
granted. It would mean an eventual break-up of the country. MuNB: (Obliquely) It would mean less defence expenditure and free foreign trade. Defence and foreign affairs would still be at the Centre. As Chief Executive I could ensure...fairness and unity. YAHYA:
(Throwing out his hands
in
a
conciliatory
gesture)
That’s
what I say. Why don’t you politicians get together and sort things out. I’m merely a military Pathan. Do you think I enjoy ruling this country. I have a duty to do, that’s all. (Beyond Mujib, in the shadow, is the frame of Hussain,
spirit with whom Mujib communicates.) HUSSAIN:
He’s playing for time.
the
abstract
Believe me, he’s playing for
time,
Mujib. He has no intention to transfer power. You can’t play politics with him. He’s building up the army...fast. He'll crush us. That’s his military answer.
mMuyip : Slow, Hussain, slow. There are thousands of lives at stake. Peaceful non-cooperation is the answer. Not direct action. I'll
bring him around. I'll bring Bhutto around. Ours is s great country. It has a destiny. 1 don’t want to break it up.
(Beyond Yahya, the shadow of Lt. Gen.
as
“the butcher from Baluchistan’’)
Tikka Khan, formerly
known
TIKKA : (Laughing) Let’s have another drink to that, Yahya. We've worked together before to crush incipient revolt. Remember what
we did in Baluchistan. It’s 7th March now. I need 18 days more. Use the Sindhi snake the same way he tries to use you. You'll
have no difficulty with Mujib. yAHyA: given
Do you think
the
Bengalis
a
I enjoy raw
this, Tikka.
deal in the
blighters are asking for too much now. it a quick job later.
(Back to Hussain
Zindabad’’)
and Mujib~Dim
past.
Let’s face
it we’ve
But the black little
I'll stall, Tikka. But make
roar
of crowds “‘Bangabandhu
HUSSAIN: (Urgency in his voice) There are crowds out there, Mujib. A million strong at the race-course grounds. Students, trade unionists, peasants, workers. It’s only 7th March. There’s
crowds)
still
time.
They’re
Hear
waiting
Google
to
them,
hear
Mujib,
one
hear
word
them.
from
(Roar
you.
of
One
292
SONAR BANGLA
word only. Independence. revolution. Now. NOW !
Independence
for Bengal.
Lead
the
munB: They'll have to wait, Hussain. A little longer. A little more patience. Alright I'll say... self-determination. Isn’t that enough. That was my election manifesto. I have never once...breathed a
word...of treason.
4. Office of the Martial Law Administrator. An imposing desk with an empty chair. Lt. Gen. Tikka Khan standing and looking out of the window. Drone of plane. Drone of plane. OFFICER : Message coming through, Sir. TIKKA: Flash it.
“THURSDAY TWENTY-FIFTH MARCH NINETEEN HUNDRED AND SEVENTY ONE MESSAGE FROM GEN. YAHYA KHAN TO LT. GEN. TIKKA KHAN TALKS BROKEN...TALKS BROKEN...FLYING TO KARACHI MUJIB TRAITOR...GUILTY OF TREASON...REPEAT TREASON...ARREST HIM... IF HE TRIES TO ESCAPE, SHOOT HIM... APPOINTING YOU MARTIAL LAW ADMINISTRATOR FOR EAST PAKISTAN ... SORT THEM OUT...SORT OUT ALL TRAITORS THE FINAL SOLUTION...APPLY...THE FINAL SOLUTION...THE CLEANSING PROCESS... (Tikka goes over to the chair, sits on it, and spreads out his hands over the table firmly.)
5.
He and his wife.
Prof. Aziz’s house.
wire: Be
careful.
That’s
all
I say.
I don’t
want
to shake your
convictions. But I don’t want you to forget your family either. Leave that to politicians.. and martyrs. PROFESSOR : Yes, my dear. wire : Why must you get mixed up in it all. The rewards of office always go to...manipulators. Never to professors. PROFESSOR : True, my dear.
wire: No, false. Even professors get it if they their
way
through.
You,
my
dear,...(fondly
too naive. PROFESSOR : (Aroused) I’m not. wire : (Persuasively but with authority)
(He is silent and glum.)
Google
know
You are.
how
to politik
touching him)...are
ACT 1 SCENE I
293
But you are... (Cooing affectionately to make up)...quite remarkable in your own way, love. Only when people will learn to recognize greatness, will they recognize you. (He actually blushes.) PROFESSOR : Now you are making fun of me. wikE : If you don’t believe me, ask your children. PROFESSOR : Hmmm...(Starts to write again whilst his wife busies herself) Where are they ? wire:
Aslam’s gone back to school.
tration or the other. PROFESSOR: What’s that. wit : I said...(Then worried) why ?
PROFESSOR : He’s to be stopped.
They’re holding some demons-
No more going out.
They...
(Knock on the door. Heavy knock again. Wife stands paralyzed. Slowly the Prof. goes and opens it. There’s an army officer framed on the doorway)
OFFICER : (Officiously) Prof. Aziz? PROFESSOR : (Stammering) Y...yes.
wire : (Aggressively) What do you want with my husband. OFFICER : (Ignores
her)
Prof. Aziz, you’re wanted...for questioning.
PROFESSOR : But...but...I have nothing to say.
OFFICER : You've said enough. wire : Those silly classroom speeches.
(Officer silent) OFFICER : ... Immediately.
It doesn’t mean a thing.
WIFE : He’s not going. (Officer looks at her coldly.) PROFESSOR : No, no my dear.
sure.
I must go.
It won’t
take
long...I’m
(Officer takes out a diary and thumbs through it.) OFFICER: (Casually) It’s going to be an _ impressive...meeting. Near the river. Would you like to know who’s attending...? Prof. Nirmal
Bose
Ittefaq paper. administrator.
from
your
University.
Nakee
Yes, even Mr. Ahmed, your He’s friend, philosopher
Google
Chowdhry
all important and guide,
of the
civil is'nt
294
/
SONAR
BANGLA
he,...from East Bengal. Oh, I almost forget Dr....what’s his name ...the physician who dabbles in politics. Fine job he did for the Awami during elections, I’m told. (Spits out) Indian stooges. PROFESSOR : Is this a meeting or is it “questioning”? OFFICER : (Expansive) Ah...good question. But I’m no match for the intellectuals, am I Professor. I merely obey my orders. PROFESSOR : (Dryly) I’ve heard of that before. OFFICER : It’s going to be an impressive meeting, Professor. Thirty... maybe
of life.
forty...eminent personalities of this town...from
(Laughing) It could be a Rotary gathering.
PROFESSOR : (Tight-lipped, an inner courage showing)
all
walks
1 hope...you all
know...what you’re doing. May I have a word with my wife...alone...before I leave.
OFFICER : I would never decline that wish. (He goes outside, stands near doorway.)
WIFE : (Weeping silently) Ob Aziz...Aziz... PROFESSOR : (Consoling her) Hush...hush...my dear... WIFE : (Tears) Wh...what... PROFESSOR : (Holding himself together) Courage woman. for long...
It won’t be
WIFE : A...are you sure ? been wrong?...There are too (Trying to make light of it)
PROFESSOR: Of course. Have I ever many of us. At worst...detention.
Isn...Isn’t that the stuff martyrs are made of ?
wire : (Tries to put on a brave smile)
tician...but a great man... (He leaves.)
You are always
a
poor...poli-
(She whispers collapsing on the chair)...and a wonderful husband. (Light dims, suggesting passage of time and distance, as the Officer and Professor emerge on the other side of the stage, presumably near the river, where a group of people in bunches of six’s or seven’s are standing.)
OFFICER : (Stopping) Prof. Ill wait here. Why ‘don’t you join them. Near the Take a look. (Prof.
Gocloser.
hesitates.
Knows
Your river.
friends are there. The sun’s setting.
You can’t see from here.
he
Google
has
no
choice.
His mind a whirl of
ACT I SCENE tf confusion,
doubt,
unbelievingly.)
295 fear.
He
shambles
PROFESSOR : (Calling out) Nirmal.
Nirmal.
ahead, What’s
stops,
peers
wrong ? (Comes
closer, runs to them, falling, stumbling, running over to them) Doctor...my friend...you too. (Closer) Ashok...(Crying out) Ashok
why have they tied your hands. (Groups of men, with tied hands, like sheep bound together) WHY HAVE THEY TIED YOU TOGETHER. (Crying himself) MY GOD. WHAT ARE THEY GOING TO DO !!_ (Others pale and silent and trembling. Some tight-lipped and impassive, a mask of determination) (He goes on his knees, fumbles to untie them. Then this mild man turns around in savage anger, face streaked with tears) YOU BARBARIANS ! you !! YOU...
(Rattle of machine-guns catches him in a spray ‘on the chest, pinpoint staccatos of blood blotting the white pairan, collapses before he
can
scream. Further spurts mows down the others, some hideously wounded, crying in agony, till a further volley of bullets stamps out their life completely.) (Sudden change from screams to dead silence. throw bodies in the river.) (The red glow of the sun having set. and quiet.) 6.
The soldiers start to
A faint tremor of solemn peace : )
Scene switches to Tikka at table with
the palms
of his hands
Spread out flat on the smooth felt with nearly arranged family photos, inkwell, etc. and baton.
TIKKA : Ah, Come in. Come
in.
(The Bihari Muslim enters.) Sit down.:
Nice of you to come.
BIHARI : I had no choice. Your men brought me here. For questioning, they told me. (Tikka smiles.) I didn’t know what kind of questioning they meant. (Tikka laughs.)
_
TIKKA: For
a
town
that
fast. Is it your business. BIHARI: No.
Google
has
curfew you certainly get information
296
SONAR BANGLA
TIKKA : 1 was hoping it might be. I believe...you have lot of information. I could buy it.
access to
a
BIHARI: No.
TIKKA : (Flicker in his eyes) Yow admit we... BIHARI: ...We...7 . TIKKA : ...we can’t trust the Bengali.
I need
strong, unafraid, men.
I could put you in a position of power.
BIHARI : No.
TIKKA: (Losing control) Take care! knees if I wanted to. (Bihari tight-lipped and silent.)
I could
have
you
on your
(Forcing himself to cool down) (Musing) Perhaps I’ve approached you the wrong way. Tell me, my Bihari friend. Do you have any friends here. OhI don’t mean fellow-Biharis. I mean Bengalis. (Bihari does not reply.) No, well that’s my point. Your people...quite correctly...have allied themselves with us in the West. This makes you suspect ’ with the East. Loyalty should have rewards...which you so proudly decline. Well equally loyalty must pay its price...of sacrifice, BIHARI : (Hoarsely) What do you mean.
TIKKA: You can’t remain neutral. You have to take sides. You're already committed to us. And we’re the side that will win. BIHARI: Go
on.
TIKKA: No more playing games. This is it. How safe are your family and friends from the Bengalis. You could be rulers instead of slaves. Today you live in fear of Bengali reprisals. BIHARI : I’m listening.
TIKKA : Many of your people have been killed. too.
You
need
protection.
The
police
Women
and children
can’t...or won’t
The BSF and Bengali Rifles ignore your pleas. (Bihari says nothing.)
In
the
next
24 hours I’m going to have Bengal in the grip of my
hand...(clenches his palm into a fist) With
going
to
be
give it.
our jehad.
those mixed blooded types.
And
Google
you’re
We’re pure.
a
sword
and
mussalman
fire, this
is
too, not like
We're Pakistanis.
ACT J SCENE I
297
(The Bihari starts to sweat for the first time.) But there is only so much the military can do. I must havea facade of the civil. You know this part of the country and the people. Iwant to build a razakar and a...(Laughing harshly)... “peace committee” organization...to sort out all Bengali traitors... Who are they? Oh, almost anyone. Students, Professors, all Hindus, and Awami League leaders of course. I’ll take care of the Bengalis in the Eastern Regiment and the police. I know the Bengali nature. They’re cowards at heart. Killa few and you cow them all. We’ll just have to sort them out...and liquidate them.
BIHARI: (A whisper now) What makes you think I’ll join you. Give you information. : TIKKA: (Getting up, the tall man, fair, huge and powerful) I’m the only one who can give you and your people...protection. (Softly) Or equally...leave you unprotected.
BIHARI : (Pale) What do you want to know. :
(Blackout)
7. Night street scene in Dacca with lamp and barricade being built by students. Anything in sight is used for the barricade: trees, tables,
rubbish
Mahmood is there. MAHMOOD
dumps,
: Shhh...quiet.
etc.
Hectic
but
quiet.
(Directing) Out there.
for long but it will give us time. ANOTHER : (Grinning) Yeah one
for
the
road.
Student
leader
It won’t hold them
Would you like a molotov cocktail. ANOTHER : (Winking) Guaranteed to blow you high. MAHMOOD : Stop it.
(Offering a bomb)
(All light-hearted but damned serious.) FiRST : Do you think it will stop them. SECOND : Ghosh ! I
feel like taking a leak.
THIRD : May be you’re scared.
What a time !
It makes you feel leaky.
FOURTH : (Pushing him) Go on !
AYY: (Standing on soap-box) Do you realize gentlemen, we're creating revolutionary history. True to our traditions of Iqbal and Jagannath Hall. We'll take over Government.
Google
298
SONAR BANGLA
BEE: As
long
as
you don’t get stale, friend.
Then we'll create
new revolution to topple you.
a
cee: Healthy state of affairs, isn’t it. EE : Look, let’s be serious. We’ve had all types of imperialists in the past, but none as bad as our people from the Western Wing. EEE: No more.
We're
going
to
When they shot the dock-workers
be
the blood sealed their doom.
for
independent. not
The die is cast.
unloading armaments,
MAHMOOD: I’m not sure there won’t be more, (All look at him.) I’m worried, We haven’t spread out sufficiently. What have we got to defend ourselves? Sticks and stones ? Oh yes and a few bombs made at the labs and an old sten rifle. ANOTHER : (Fearfully) They won’t actually shoot us, would they. ANOTHER : Would’nt dare. THIRD : Why don’t you call their bluff. FOURTH : What do you think we’re doing. AYY : Becoming martyrs. CEE: You give me a pain in the neck. GIRL :
(Touching up her hair, straightening her dress) How do I look,
Rafiq ?
RAFIQ: GIRL:
(Mouth open) Like a true revolutionary. (Pulls out a gun from the folds of her dress)
RAFIQ : (Looking her over lasciviously) I don’t doubt (Others laugh, till she cockes the hammer.)
It’s loaded. it.
MAHMOOD: There’s something wrong. I can feel it in the air. We should have told the boys in the dorms to be on the look out. ANOTHER : No sense in involving all of them. We can handle trouble if it comes along. MAHMOOD : (Raising his finger) Shh...I hear something...
(Pin-drop silence. Slowly a mechanical rumble, growing in volume.) ONE OF THEM : Tanks ! ANOTHER: What’s it doing here? We only expected a few jeeps, MAHMOOD : Quiet. Take cover. We want to see what they’re doing.
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ACT I SCENE I
299
(They break up for cover on all sides.)
M’S FRIEND : (Whispering) opposite to Iqbal Hall.
They’re
going
to
the British
Council
MAHMOOD: (Unable to conceal the anxiety from his voice) What
are
they up to?
M’S FRIEND: (Looking out and giving a slow commentary to the others behind) The tanks are turning around...as though to take position...with their cannons...FACING THE DORMS OF IQBAL HALL! (Sound of fire and explosion) (A scream) THEY'RE FIRING ! THEY’RE FIRING. OH MY GOD ! THEYRE
BLOWING OPEN THE DORMS WHERE THE STUDENTS ARE SLEEPING ! MURDERERS, YOU GOD-DAMM MURDERERS !
(The students come out in a rush, shouting and screaming, throwing whatever they can get their hands on, bombs aud knives and sticks and stones.) (Tanks turn around like lurching monsters, and one hears the crunch of barricades being crushed, and now the rattle of machineguns) (Shouts, screams) THBY’RE COMING, THEY’RE COMING, FIRING BAZOO-
KAS, MACHINEGUNS, CRUSHING BARRICADES, IT’S A WAR. Now. .
CIVIL WAR
(Above it all, Mahmood’s voice) DISPERSE. DISPERSE.
(Students turn around and flee, dragging injured comrades, until only Mahmood and his friend are left together.) MAHMOOD : (Pulling his friend) Come Arun. ARUN:
No
time.
(Crying) No. No. They’re demolishing Jagannath
All my brothers...
MAHMOOD
here.
aruN:
:
(Urgently, dragging, pulling him) Come on!
We'll
regroup...fight
later.
Hall
now.
No
chance
(Breaking away, picking up a bloody stone, running
the direction
supreme act
of the approaching
of desperation
tanks,
and hate)
YOU
throwing
SWINES!
madly
in
the stone in a YOU
BLOODY
SWINES ! ! { (Blackout)
8. There is the clickti-click sound of the typewriter. A foreign correspondent is typing his despatch in one of the rooms of the Intercontinental Hotel in Dacca, Late night/early morning.
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300
SONAR BANGLA
A.M. FRIDAY
TWENTYSIXTH
ONE UNTRANSMITTED
MARCH
NEWS
NINETEEN HUNDRED
DESPATCH FOR REUTERS
OUT HERE, ON ONE OF THE TOP FLOORS HOTEL,
THE
NEWSMEN
TRAGEDY.
CONFINED
TARY,
BURNING
THE
SEEMS LIKE SOME MAD
HAVE
NERO’S
THE SKY
IS ABLAZE
OVER
AS
BREEDING
PLACE
THE
TANKS
LURCH
HOMEGROUND FIRE OVER
KILLING
BY
THE
IN
AWAMI
ENTIRE BLOCKS
WEST
TO A GRIM
PAKISTAN
MILI-
FEAT. ALL
LEAGUE
UNIVERSITY
REVOLUTIONARY
LIKE PRE-HISTORIC MONSTERS OF
INTERCONTINENTAL
DACCA FROM THIS DISTANCE
IQBAL HALL AT DACCA OF
SEVENTY
FROM ANDERSON.
BECOME SILENT SPECTATORS
TO THE HOTEL AND
OF DACCA’S
AND
KNOWN
ACTIVITY
HERE.
THB OLD
CITY,
THROUGH
ACTIVITY, COUGHING
THAT ARE SURROUNDED AND
DEATH
SET
AND
ABLAZE.
THERE IS A CLOUD OF SMOKE OVER THE OFFICES OF THE PRO-MUJIB PAPER, THE PEOPLE, AND THE SOUND OF MORTARS AND MACHINE GUNS CAN BE HEARD EVEN NOW. BLACK FLAGS THAT HAVE BEEN SYMBOLS OF THE NON-COOPERATION MOVEMENT ARE BEING TORN DOWN FROM ROOF TOPS OF HOUSES THAT ARE BEING SYSTEMATICALLY DEMOLISHED. THE EXTENT OF DAMAGE AND WANTON SLAUGHTER WILL ONLY BE KNOWN IN THE NEXT 24 HOURS, MEANWHILE THE CITY HAS BEEN TAKEN COMPLETELY UNPREPARED. THE ONLY RESISTANCE THERE IS SEEMS TO BE COMING FROM THE HEADQUARTERS OF THE EAST PAK REGIMENT, SECTION OF THE ARMY AND THE MILITIA COMPOSED MAINLY OF BENGALIS. I WONDER WHAT IS HAPPENING THERE... (Light dims on the correspondent, and scene switches to one of the camps of the East Pak Regiment/East Bengal Rifles.) (Barracks. Forms of men asleep in their bed. Faint light. Whispers. West Pak commandos their position.)
pour
in a
silent, active stream.
They take
(Fire : rifles and recoilless sten guns open up spraying the beds before anyone can reach for their rifles. But...strangely there are no screams.)
(It’s a double trap. The Commander of the East Pak Regiment, suspecting that this was afoot, has placed dummies in the beds, and he and his men have taken positions in hiding. They open up fire on the Commandoes, dropping them.)
(It’s all over in a few minutes.
The Colonel goes over
to the dying
CAPTAIN: (Panting, coughing, dying) I...1...salute you The...the...old military decoy...a double, double
Commander. cross. Re...
Captain.)
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.
.
ACT I SCENE I
301
remember, we...we learnt it to...together. we'd have...have to k...kill each other... (The lips.)
Commander
looks
at
him
gravely,
N...never t...thought puts
water
to his
But...but you'll 1...lose out...Co...Commander. The...the East Pak. Re...Regiment...is virtually...de...destroyed. J...just a few...few survivors...like you. N...not enough...to form ...any resistance. C.. Civil W...war over. W...we did our.. jobs ...did
«didn’t we...?
COLONEL:
you now.
(Steel-like) You poor fool.
If you weren’t dying, I’d kill
(Blackout, back to correspondent Anderson) (Typewriter) THERE CAN BE NO MORE ARMY CODE
OR
BROTHERS
LEFT
AFTER THIS TREACHERY. FROM THIS POGROM, THIS GENOCIDE, WILL SPRING THE SEEDS OF NEW RESISTANCE. IT HAS BECOME THE PERFECT ‘CAUSE CELEBRE.” WILL THE LEADERS SURVIVE TO TAKE THIS NATION TO LIBERTY ? IS A BANGLA DESH POSSIBLE ? (Knock on the door.
Hussain comes in.)
ANDERSON: (Springs up from his seat and hand.) Hussain ! Long-time-no-see.
warmly
clasps
Hussain’s
HUSSAIN :. (Smiling) Didn’t take you time to come here, Andy. ANDERSON : (Tapping his nose) You know me. the news is where the trouble is.
Nose for news.
HUSSAIN: You haven’t you were in College.
the
changed.
Remained
And
trouble-shooter
ANDERSON : (Zwinkle in his eye) Let’s see how much you remember...
(Fishing out a bottle of burbon) HUSSAIN: ANDERSON:
(Yelping) Burbon Ah ! My friend.
! Where are those glasses.
(Pours out a couple of stiff ones, clinks it with
ice.)
HUSSAIN: (Sniffing and relishing it) Nicest thing your country ever produced...(Listening to the rumble of tanks below) except for
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302
SONAR BANGLA
those tanks...(/ooking out, his voice hardening)...why do always back the wrong horse. ANDERSON : (Hitting back) Those tanks were part of arrangement, or don’t you remember. You were party yourself in the old days from the Foreign Office. You
you fellows the SEATO to the deal can’t hold
us responsible now for using it against your own people. HUSSAIN: (Sighing) True, that’s one part of the story.
ANDERSON : What’s the other ? newspaperman first...
I'd like to know.
After
all
I'm
a
HUSSAIN : ...and an American afterwards ? ANDERSON : Depends on what you
have
to
tell
me,
Hussain.
I’m
here to make revelations to the American people, even if it means showing the hand of the White House.
LHUSSAIN: (Looking steadily at his friend) Let’s wait, more to come. ANDERSON
Andy.
Let’s have
: (Pouring out another) Aw, heck !
There’s
another.
(Both drink it down.) It’s a confidential call.
HUSSAIN : Andy, I want to use your phone. You haven’t heard me...unless I say so.
ANDERSON : O.K. (Hussain dials a number.)
HUSSAIN : (Softly) Mujib ? (Light on other side of the stage.)
(Mujib on the phone at his home.) This is Hussain. MUJIB: Looks bad,
Hussain.
I can’t’ make
We might have another round of talks. HUSSAIN: Too late. The bird’s flown. My flown back to Rawalpindi.
headway
with
information
Yahya.
is that
he’s
(Momentary silence) You know
mun
what
that
means.
: We must mobilize right way for direct action
HUSSAIN:
Intercont. country.
Too
late.
You
at
They’ve
your
Google
got
home,
us
surrounded.
Bengal
and resistance.
within
Me
its
at
the
own
ACT I SCENE I
303
Muyip : Meaning ? HUSSAIN : From what I hear they’ve already wiped out half of the intelligentsia and most of your active Awami Leaguers—at least in this city. (Heavily
breathing from other end.)
muss : A guerilla mobilization then. Our only hope is the Mukti Fauj. We have no, choice now but to fight for an independent Bangla Desh. (Hussain doesn’t reply) Do you think the Colonel has made it safely ? HUSSAIN : If I know him, I’m sure he’s got through
MusiB : I’m depending on him for field action;
organize the political arresting me soon.
and
diplomatic
end.
on
HUSSAIN : If they don’t assassinate you, Mujib. go underground.
their
you,
I think
Hussain,
they'll
I think
muyiB : No. They won’t harm me with 75 million people
If I go me.
net.
you
to
be
should
behind
me.
underground, they'll slaughter everyone in their search for
(Hussain silence)
You disagree 7 I’ve been to jail before, Hussain. This thing will die down soon. It’s happened before. HUSSAIN: This time they’ll
Myjib.
try
you
for
treason
and
execute
you,
(Silence)
MusIB : (Quietly) As Allah wishes it, my brother. HUSSAIN : (Ringing off) Vl call you every half hour, Mujib. "Bye.
(Turns
around and looks
breathing hard.)
at
Anderson,
HUSSAIN : This is not for the papers, Andy.
both
men
silent
As soon as we
of this hotel, you blow the rest of the news sky high.
get
and out
ANDERSON : (Shaking his head) Won’t work. The army are sending all of us newsmen out of the country by plane tonight...under escort. We won’t get to see anything.
HUSSAIN: I'll have
you
smuggled.
Maybe
by
plane
to
Bangkok.
We'll try and get you to see things here for a couple of days.
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304 ANDERSON: influence
SONAR BANGLA I hope so. Though I think with the Pak authorities.
you're overplaying
HussAIN: Another thing Andy, in case we don’t
your
get the chance
to
see each other later. If you meant what you said about revealing news to the American people, I’ve got a source in Washington. Someone I...cultivated during my stay there. I don’t know how things will shape out in future, but he might be of some use.
ANDERSON : (Smiling) I must remember to have you on my time.
side
next ,
(Door bangs open. Senior Pak military officer at the doorway.) Oh, oh, don’t look now. visit.
Big brother has come here to
OFFICER: (Glowering at Anderson) You. exactly five minutes.
pay
us
I want you out from here
a in
HUSSAIN : Hold it, Major. MAJOR : (To Hussain) I'll come to you soon.. (To Anderson) The newsmen are assembling in the hall downstairs. You're all going to be searched. (Goes over to the typewriter, looks at the paper on the machine, rips it out and tears it) And then flown out to Karachi. ANDERSON : (Tapping his head) I’ve got a good memory. (Major ignores him, turns to Hussain.) MAJOR : And now you loudmouth. HuSSAIN: Ambassador Anwar Hussain. Secretary rank in External Affairs Ministry. Presently stationed in Calcutta. MAJOR : Does’nt impress me. I know about you. What are you doing here. HUSSAIN : On leave. Dacca is my home-town. MAJOR : Well, you’re going back. HUSSAIN : The army may be ruling the country, but I still get my orders from the Foreign Office. MAJOR : You won't for long.
HUSSAIN : What’s that ? MAJOR : You're being recalled...(sarcastically)...your Excellency.
HUSSAIN : Under whose orders ?
Yours ?
MAJOR: The Chief Martial Law Administrator. also the President. You'll come with me.
HUSSAIN : Do you have a warrant for my arrest 7
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Who
is incidentally
ACT 1. SCENE I
305
MAJOR: I’m not arresting you. HUSSAIN : Or papers concerning my transfer orders ? MAJOR : I don’t need any papers. HUSSAIN: So you want
to
do
this
by
the
authority
of
your
gun.
(Softly) My dear Major, you’re exceeding your authority...at least with me. MAJor: (Hesitating slightly for the first time) What makes you so special. HUSSAIN:
I have
a witness
here,
Major.
Mr. Anderson writes for
an important chain of papers the world over.
breathes
a
word
that
you’ve
detained
have
brought
evidence, every Bengali in foreign will
defect.
You
will
sufficient preparation. practice to the Army
service
me
and
If-he
without
about
so
much
as
supporting
the administration
a crisis without
1 suggest you restrict your strong arm and the East Pak regiment. There is still
a civilian and diplomatic arm to your services and you will personally be brought to blame for jeopardizing it. The people of West Pakistan are still
ignorant
of all
that’s
happening
here
under the strict censorship of your command. Lay a finger on your...loyal civil servants, and the Andersons of this world won’t be silenced. The civil war will spread from the East to the West. And it will all have been started by small acts of indiscretion. Are you prepared for this Major ?
MAJOR : (Flushed, confused) (Turns around and leaves) with papers ! (Anderson lets out a long sigh.
I'll be back...
Hussain turns around and grins.)
HUSSAIN: Pass me that bottle of Burbon, friend. And lets work out the strategy of getting out of this goddamn hotel... Wait... let me make a phone call. (Phones Mujib. Light on phone ringing on the other side. No one picks up the phone.
9.
Time 1,10a.m.
Blackout)
The Dhanmandi home of Sheikh
Mujib.
One
tank, an armoured car and trucks loaded with troops drive down to the house and surround it. A Special Security Group commandos
get out from the armoured car and stand in front of the house with small arms in their hands. Meanwhile inside the house :
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SONAR BANGLA
306
Wife covers the mosquito net carefully over the cot where little son is asleep. The blder son, in his twentiee, is helping the father with
papers. mun : All these are to be destroyed...fast. lot Kamal.
That completes
their some
the
SON (KAMAL) : You expect some trouble...tonight.
a holocast in town, they’re not going to leave me : KAMAL : Then why wait here? We're sitting ducks. MunB : More dangerous to run. (Looking at his wife and child) After all, we’re not alone. : (Then to himself) Either way, it’s taking a chance. I think it’s
Mune : If there’s alone.
better that we stay.
(Wife’s gone to the other room.) Take a look and see what your mother’s doing. KAMAL : I know. She’s packing your clothes. musiB : (Wry smile) Almost thirty years of marrige. in jail.
With look KAMAL MusIB:
knows
She
Over ten years
the routine...of waiting and worrying silently.
one difference : You’re grown up now, Kamal. You must after her. : Will it be a long detention. (Thoughtful) I don’t know. We should be prepared for
the worst.
KAMAL : (Frowning) How do you mean ? (Wife comes in the room; she looks at her husband.) MUNB ; (To son) I'll talk to you later.
(She
continues
to
look
at him.
She lays it down on the floor.)
The
suitcase
is in her hands.
wire : I’ve remembered...your pipe and tobacoo too. (The thought is too much to bear; she weeps silently.) MUJIB : (Consolingly) No...no, my dear. It won’t be for long. wire : (Bursting out) It will be forever. I know it. I feel it. MusiB ; One has to take a chance...for one’s people. wire : Who are the people? It’s me...and my sons there. We're
the people who should be nearest and dearest to you.
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ACT I SCENE I
307
MUJIB ; You are.
WIFE: (Shaking her head, crying) No...no. It’s the people...out there. You care more for them. It started small. Politics in college.
Jail.
issue. Jail. forever.
The
Provincial
Assembly.
And now its freedom
for
the
Jail.
whole
The
language
country.
Jail
MUJIB : (Guilty, moved, touched) Hush, hush, my dear. wire: (Near hysterical) No, no, let me finish.
I should
never
have
started it, but nowI must finish. From politics...to martyrdom is a big gap. I don’t want my husband to fill it.
MUJIB: (Getting up, looking afar) 1 don’t it even if I tried. WIFE
: (Stops crying, now looks at her
did you say ?
know
husband
whether I can with
concern)
What
musiB : As you know, my dear, I’m- really a very ordinary I...I just happened to be...at a particular time and place... wire : Don’t say that!
fill
man.
You're the hero of the people...
MusIB : (Smiling wryly) I thought you said... wiFE: ...and of the family too. What would
he were to come in now.
your
son
think
if
MuJIB : (Shaking his head) Y’ll never understand you, dear wife. wire: Listen to me. You...are...the...man...of...destiny. Never forget it. Ithas my faith, and my will. Because it is you, timing or no timing, jail now or jail forever. MUNIB : (Too filled with emotion to speak) My love... WIFE: (Hiding her face, busying herself with the house) Now you go back to your work.
I have things to do.
(Kamal rushing in.) KAMAL:
Father!
to shoot.
Father!
Army
men
(Sound of voice outside : the order FIRE)
outside.
(Bullets tearing through the house, around them (Tagore’s picture is shattered by a bullet.)
With
and
near
guns
the
ready
cot.)
MUJIB: DOWN! DOWN! UNDER THE BED ! (Mother runs to the cot, lifts the child and all scamper to the floor.)
(The shooting continues for a while.
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Then there is lull.)
308
SONAR BANGLA
(Immediately
Mujib
gets
up,
and
runs
to
the lower
varandah
outside.)
(Call from the Mother or Son: NO...NO) MUJIB: (Out in the open now) stop! stop iT! There’s for shooting. HereI am. Take me. (An officer walks into the garden of the house.) OFFICER : You are under arrest. (Darkness. The time is 1.30 a.m. The phone keeps Nobody picks it up.) 10.
Faint candle-light.
Hideout of Colonel.
no
need
ringing.
Hussain joins him.
HUSSAIN: (Clasping him) It’s good to see you alive. I almost feared the worst. Not to me, but to a lot of my Regiment COLONEL : It did happen. in different parts of Bengal. It was the worst form of treachery, Hussain. That’s all I can say.
It’s madness.
HUSSAIN : (Nodding gravely)
COLONEL : What’s happened to Mujib. I don’t think
HussaIN: Arrested. time...if at all.
we'll
be
seeing
for
him
a long
COLONEL : Then we are leaderless. HUSSAIN: Not quite. a cause to fight. COLONEL : (Bitterly)
He remains the With
what?
A
leader few
in absentia. bolt-action
It gives rifles?
A
bedraggled army made up of pitchfork peasants, slogan-shouting workers and stone-throwing students ? We have no army or paramilitary left except for a few survivors like me.
HUSSAIN : Then train them!
It’s Mujib’s command !
(Colonel is silent and remorseful.) Aw, come on, Colonel. We'll build from scratch. There’s a lot of hate and fury. Control it and you have the potential of the finest guerilla liberation force. Our people know every inch of
greenery
and
rivers and pitfalls and hideouts.
monsoon isn’t far.
the occupation of them.
Most important of all:
army.
The blinding
the people are against
The people, Colonel ! The people, millions
COLONEL : ...unarmed...
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ACT I SCENE t
309
HUSSAIN: (Trying to pass on his enthusiasm and morale) Not for long. That’s where I come in. I return to Calcutta. India is going to have stake in this too. I'll see to it that you get the armaments. More than that I'll see to it that you get undercover military support and training for the Mukti-Fauj. I’ve been developing this with my West Bengali brothers. They'll help us to the hilt. COLONEL: (Looking at him closely)
1s it possible,
my life a thousand times over for it.
Hussain.
I'd
give
HUSSAIN : Trust me.
COLONEL : And do you think Pakistan will leave you to operate in Calcutta or Delhi? They’ll recall you immediately. HUSSAIN: They probably already have. My transfer orders must be waiting me in Calcutta. COLONEL : Well then ? HUSSAIN: Simple.
I won’t go.
I have
a few tricks
Colonel. Leave that side to me. I’m build a full-scale underground resistance with the support I promised you ?
up
my
sleeves,
depending upon you to force. Can you do it
COLONEL : (Looking at him steadily) Yes. HUSSAIN: Fine. Now we break up. We'll be in touch usual channels.
through
the
COLONEL : When do you leave for Calcutta ? HUSSAIN : Soon.
There’s
just
one
thing
left.
(Looking
voice turning introspective, as in the very first scene, his
own
out,
his
private
prayer and belief.) One...basic...anxiety. And to see my mother’s grave before I leave...and also someone I remember there... (Fadeout) 11,
Door bangs open and the frame of Pakistan
stands poised at the entrance.
fearfully.
The Jawan enters in, looking around...
JAWAN : You live here woman ! SUMITA: Y...yes.
JAWAN : Is that your daughter.
(Sumita clasps her daughter, remains silent)
I said, is that your daughter !
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Jawan
with
rifle
Sumita and her daughter cow back
310
SONAR
BANGLA
SUMITA: Yes. : JAWAN : Where’s your husband.
sumiTa : I don’t know.
JAWAN : When is he coming back. sumITA : I don’t know. JAWAN : (Grinning cruelly) Is he coming back ? (Sumita is silent.) You're Hindu, aren’t you ? (He sees the murti
earthen pots.
With
with
vermilion
sudden
rifle and smashes the mutti.)
garlands
and
burning
vicks
in
and total fury, he takes the butt of his
(Both women recoil with fear.) That’s what I think of your god... or gods. (Under his breath) Infidels ! (Prowls around the house, still looking for something.) JAWAN : Your husband looks after that big house there, doesn’t he ? SUMITA : Yes, he’s the caretaker to Babu Hussain’s house. JAWAN : (Nodding) Babu Hussain. else does he do ?
Yes...
I’ve heard
of him.
What
suMITA : He cultivates his own land...a small plot. JAWAN : Doesn’t he help Hussain...in political work ? Carry his... papers, perhaps to his friends...other Hindus. Well, doesn’t he ? sumiTA : I don’t know. JAWAN : You don’t know much, do you?
stone.
Except to pray to
that...
(She is silent)
What do you do ? (Looking at her desirously) Ever go to the city... to have some
fun.
(Silence) (He sits down restlessly, trying to make up his mind, looking at her-and her daughter from time to time, starting slightly to sweat,
time bothering him, the buzzing flies bothering him, the stillness of it all oppressing, looking up guiltily, defiantly, now with animalism and
an intent so clear that no words are necessary.)
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ACT I SCENE
I
That’s your her years.
311 daughter,
isn’t
she ? She looks more grown up than
(Sumita clutches on tightly.) (Screaming) WHY
DON’T YOU LET GO OF HER.
SUMITA : (Spitting out with unexpected ferociousness) NBVER ! (For a moment he is taken aback, than he smiles, then he roars with laughter.) JAaWAN : Lioness.
A real lioness with her cub.
(Sumita whispers something in her daughters ear.) SUMITA : (To Jawan) Wait. (She leads her daughter to the other room.
it from the inside, faces the Jawan.)
Sumita from
the
The daughter goes, bolt,
outside,
then turns around and
(Closing her eyes, alone in the room with him now.) I'm ready.
'
(Something breaks within the Jawan.
He slaps her.)
JAWAN : DO YOU THINK I’M A BARBARIAN ! (Turns around and leaves, the noise of his boots still audible, then returns tugging a weight, the body of Sumita’s husband which he’s
bayoneted earlier.)
(Throwing the body) A present for you, woman ! (Spits and leaves.
Sumita collapses over the body of her husband.) (Fadeout)
12,
Hussain in Sumita’s house.
Calling out...
House empty...no reply. Notices destruction of murti
Stumbles
over
a
and general disarray around the house.
roughly made grave.
the cold body of Hari. Desperate now, and her daughter. Echoes but no reply.
Removes the mud and finds
he
calls
out for
Sumita
Tired, he returns to his home near-by, to find it completely ransacked,
his papers destroyed.
strewn
all
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over
the
place,
books burnt, possessions
312
SONAR BANGLA
Goes over to his mother’s grave. Even the marble tomb has been damaged, the precious inlaid work pilfered, and the fine carvings broken. Around is all desolation and loneliness and destruction, charred remains which stand out in sheer contrast of the first scene of peace and plenty only 34 hours earlier. He goes back to the tomb, and prays, the tears at last sufusing from his eyes. HUSSAIN: Oh, God, Oh God. I swear equally...that by fire and sword...I shall avenge...all who desecrated the tomb...and took from me...my Sonar Bangla.
FADEOUT
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ACT II
Pakistan Consulate in Calcutta.
SCENE I
President Yahya’s picture etc.
Hussain sitting at the table. Across from him is a man he is talking to. They have finished their conversation and are about to leave. HUSSAIN: Thank you, Ray. That’s all I can say at the moment. Perhaps there’ll be a better way for me to show you our appreciation one day. Meanwhile we'll be asking for more...and more... * and more. But will come the day when we'll be as self-sufficient and proud.,..as your country. RAY: (Getting up to leave) I hope we live up to your expectations, Hussain. (Smiling ruefully) There’ s little alturism in politics, you
know.
HUSSAIN: (Getting up, leading the other on his shoulder) True.
man
out, with a friendly hand
RAY: Except that we’re both Bengalis, you from the East, me from the West. Two separate countries so artifically created. HussaIN : And the big Chief from West Pakistan (Glancing at Yahya’s picture) is determined to stamp out every trace of what he calls Bengali culture.
ray: Did you know I Before partition.
originally
came
From
Khulna.
from
East
Bengal myself.
HUSSAIN : No ?
RAY : (Nodding
his head)
recall that poem of Tagore.
What was
My
first love.
it...? Ah...yes...
I always
Come Spring, O mother mine !
Your
mango groves are
heady with fragrance,
The air intoxicates like wine.
Come autumn, O mother mine !
I see the honeyed smile of your harvest-laden fields. (Hussain lost in reverie. Both men silent for a long while.) Hussain ?
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314
SONAR
BANGLA
HUSSAIN : Huh ? RAY : What was so new about the poem ? You must often. HUSSAIN : I was thinking of someone.
heard
it
I was also thinking of another
poem Tagore wrote :
Man’s body is so small, His strength of suffering so immense. afar) Abh...yes. (Zhen snapping out
RAY : (Eyes
have
winsomely once again.)
of
it,
smiling
Here we are swapping poetry like two Bengalis in the old days and to think that we’ve just had a hard headed business discussion. HUSSAIN : (Smiling) Yes. Though it does give me comfort to know... . that we speak the same language. Literally too.
RAY: Remember, Hussain, I'll try my best. I’ll never cross you, you know that. ButI can’t promise what may lie beyond my control. HUSSAIN : You have the lady’s ear in Delhi Ray. That’s all that matters. Goodbye... (They’re
shaking
hands
outside,
when
the
office boy comes with a
card and gives it to Hussain.) (Hussain looking at the card and frowning.) HUSSAIN : (Under his breath) Farok Khan. That arrogant bastard from the Pak Foreign Ministry. RAY : (Raising his eyebrows) Company ? Already ? HUSSAIN : (To the boy) Tell him to sit in my room. I’m coming. (Boy leaves)
:
(To Ray) T expected it. it, Ray.
The chips are down.
This is going to be
RAY : We’re behind you...all the way. Go ahead. (Brisk farewell and both men leave.) (Hussain thoughtfully returns to his room. Finds
sprawling on his and easy.)
office
chair
(Hussain turns red in anger.)
with legs on the table, self-confident .
HUSSAIN : You’re sitting on my chair, Farok. FAROK : (Superciliously) So I am. HUSSAIN : Get out before I throw you out !
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Farok Khan
ACT H SC8NE I
315
FAROK : I don’t see how you can do it. “Firstly, than
you.
Secondly...
(Takes
I’m
man
a slim envelope sealed in red and
throws it across to Hussain.) (Hussain tears it up without opening it.)
Ah, you know what it isthen ?
a bigger
Transfer orders.
Back to Rawal-
pindichum. I’d hate to face what you’re going to have to face there. And as you will have gathered...(Slowly booting the things off the table where he’s planted his feet)...’ve come here to take your place. HUSSAIN : (Clenching his teeth) You're still on my chair, Farok. FAROK : I’m here by order of the President, Hussain.
have diplomatic relations throw me out of this chair.
HUSSAIN : Wrong.
with
,
India,
(Presses the general intercom button for all Gentlemen, will you all come in my room (Presses another button.) Service room 7 Go ahead with what I told (Goes to a chair and sits down silently. frown on Farok Khan’s brow as the seconds
there’s
As long
nobody who
as we
can
officers of the Embassy.) please. Immediately. you earlier. Slight trace of a puzzling tick by.)
(And now one by one the officers start to troop in, take the situation in at a glance, all stand silently.) (At last Hussain gets up to speak.) HUSSAIN : Gentlemen, Mr. Farok Khan has come
here by
order
and
authority of the President of Pakistan’ to take charge of the Pakistan Consulate. Is there anyone here who can deny him that right ?
(Nobody dissents. Farok starts to feel slightly uncomfortable, slightly self-conscious of his feet on top of the table, more and
more puzzled by Hussain.)
Fact number two, gentlemen, is that all of you with the exception of one or two are Bengalis. In fact almost 90% of our total staff here in Calcutta are Bengali... FAROK : (Putting his’ feet down suddenly) What are you getting at Hussain !
HUSSAIN: (Ignoring him coolly) Mr. Khan. says he has a right to that chair. I say he has not. Gentlemen...(Pin-drop silence while
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316
.
SONAR BANGLA
Hussain speaks ‘softly)...I1 admit he has a right to the Pakistan representative’s office, but not to that chair ! FAROK: (Stands up in bewilderment and anger) What Hussain! What do you mean ! HUSSAIN : (Coolly, quietly) Take a look outside, Farok. You'll understand.
do
you
mean,
To the flag.
(Farok rushes up to the window, sees the hoisting up of the green, red and gold flag of Bangla Desh. He gasps.) FAROK : What’s that flag doing there! There...there’s...no Bangla Desh. Just...just a few traitors in the East...waving it around... No...no Pakistan Consulate...can fly that flag. Take it down. TAKE IT DOWN, I SAY ! (The officers around remain grave and silent.) ” HUSSAIN : (To the senior-most) Tell him, Ashraf. ASHRAF: (Respectfully to Farok) Sir, you’re on foreign territory as of now. FAROK : (Taken aback) Wh...what are you saying ! Traitors ! TRAITORS ALL ! (Looking around, appealing, almost pleading.) Surely there are some within you who owe loyalty...to Pakistan. You cannot all be defecting. So what if you’re Bengalis. Have’nt we all lived together for 24 years ? As one Muslim nation. The recent trouble? It’s all propaganda. Take my word for it. If you don’t believe me, Ill show you the papers. Pak papers that is. . ASHRAF : (Shaking his head negatively) No, Sir. FAROK : (Shouting) You'll be shot, Court-martialled. I swear to you you'll all be shot. The Indian Government has no right to allow you to fly that flag. They have not given you diplomatic recognition.
HUSSAIN : Not yet. But they will. Meanwhile they’ve allowed us to operate as a Bangla Desh mission here. Where’s your FAROK : You're lying! Where’s your authority! Government ! (Hussain takes out an envelope from his pocket; and flings it to Farok the same way that the latter did earlier.)
(Looks at it mesmerized.) You're
lying !
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ACT Ii SCENE I
317
HUSSAIN: Why don’t before you came in.
you
take
a
look
at it.
It was sealed just
(Farok picks it up, his hands trembling, and as he tears open the envelope, the light dims and there is fadeout.) 2. Sumita and daughter trudging the endless road with their pitiful belongings. Beginnings of the mass exodus evident. An unending stream of tragic tableaus. Each telling its own story of horror and bestiality. The creeping feeling of fear and death, Despair too.
An
existence
devoid
of hope,
a past
too terrible to
remember, a future of further futility. Knowing not where they’re going, but just following, for it must lead somewhere, to escape and safety. So begins the story of the Refugees... sumiTa: (To daughter) There.
to Kustia village. to help.
I know
We'll break
some
friends
away
for
there who
a
while.
Go
might be able
(The girl nods hopelessly, the dried tears leaving furrows through the dust on the face.) (The mother cups her face in her hands.) Don’t despair, Maya. I'll always be near you. Don’t fear. I'll always be there.
(The girl clutches on to the mother, as they reach near the village.)
(An eerie sight : the village is in smoke and ruins, ghost-like, empty, except for afew vultures and dogs picking on the remains of dead bodies.) (Calling out) Sarla...Sarla...
(Emptiness, and hollow
mother.)
echoes,
the girl clutching fearfully on to the
She...she used to live here...with her family... (They approach a partially burnt hut, push back the creakimg door. Sudden wail that is part-way like a terror-scream and in part like sigh of relief at being discovered.) OLD WOMAN
: (Partly
who’s there.
blind, bent
Who’s there.
have you come back.
Google
with age,
leaning on
Haven’t you done enough.
stick)
Wh...
Wh.,.why
318
SONAR BANGLA
SUMITA: (Going up to her) It’s me, mother. Mée,...Sumita. near Dacca. Where’s Sarla. Where are the others ?
From
OLD WOMAN : (Puzzled, trying to remember) Sumita. Sumita did you say? From near Dacca? That was so...So...long ago...and so... far away. I...I can’t remember. sumira: (Holding her
the others.
hand) Mother,
where’s Sarla.
Where
are all
OLD WOMAN : Gone. suMITA : Gone where. OLD WOMAN: Gone to where...everyone goes. Out there...(Pointing to the stream of refugees)...up there...(Pointing to the smoke curling up to the heavens)...who knows... ? SUMITA : What happened, mother 2? What happened ? OLD womaN : I...I. can’t remember. It...it seemed so long ago. Yet ...it may have...must have...been yesterday. Yes, yes...it comes back to me clearly now...
It was last night...(The light fades, flashback)...the army came... (Sound of jeeps)...they were searching for a fugitive...(Sounds, occasional
words)...they
thought
(Sounds accompanying her electrifying and personal.)
our
narration,
village
was
hiding
till it becomes
vivid
him...
and
...they couldn’t find him...(Sounds, voices, “where is he ?”’, “he was
hidden there’’, “‘he escaped”’, etc.) ...then
they
became
very
angry...(Undertones,
shouts,
depicting
movement, anger) ..and decided to burn the village...(woosh of flame-throwers, screams, timber burning, smoke.) (Sumita and daughter listen wide-eyed, not saying a word, not interrupting, while the half-blind woman lives through it again, with recall that is vivid and total.) «later they talked about reprisals...(Sounds of revenge, punishment, military orders...) ...the village must be punished...(duplicate) ...80 they tied up the men, women and children, packed them in crowded army trucks, and sent them away...never to return... (sound of trucks, supplication, departure, silence.) ...I alone remained...(No repeat, back to present) and
can’t remember any more,.,
Google
now
I
just
ACT II SCENE I
319
Sumita and daughter don’t know what to say. They just look at her...in pity, in horror...) (Comes the cry of a child, a lone child stumbling through the debris.) (The old woman goes out, the child nears her, each coming closer to
the other, till
they embrace,
lone survivors,
being there...) (Sumita goes over, picks up the child, hand, helped by the daughter.)
sumiTA : Come, mother. It’s a
long
way.
reassured once again of
leads the old woman
I have the child.
But
we’re
by the
We'll all go...together.
together...we’ll
go
come back one day. (They join the stream of refugees)
now...but
we'll
(Fadeout) 3.
Pakistan
Division.
Officers
conference
room.
The
G2
Ops
of the
9th
The Major General gets up to speak to his fellow officers.
MAJOR GEN. : I’ll once again say what has been said before : We’re determined to cleanse East Pakistan once and for all of the threat of secession, even if it means killing of two million people and ruling the province as a colony for 30 years. (Mental
flashes,
reflected
in
army
code,
reflecting:
BURN MISSION...KILL AND BURN MISSION FINAL SOLUTION...CLEANING PROCESS...SORTING
OUT
K\LL AND
MISCREANTS
AND INFILTRATORS...) Let’s face it the Bengalis have proved themselves ‘unreliable’ and must be ruled by West Pakistanis. The Bengalis will have to be re-educated along proper Islamic lines... (Flashes, flashes ; ISLAMISATION OF THE MASSES...
ISLAMISATION OF THE MASSES...)
When the Hindus have been eliminated by death and flight, their property will be used as a golden carrot to win over the underprivileged Muslim middle-class...
KILL AND BURN MISSION...PUNITIVE ACTION...
REHABILITATION EFFOT) (Break-up for drinks. Informality and mess-talk.) . MAJOR GEN : (Passing on the drink and slapping a fellow-officer on the back) Well, Captain Azgar. Did you bag anything. How many
did you get on the “kill and burn” ?
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320
SONAR
BANGLA
CAPT. AZGAR : (Reciprocating semi-formally as expected) Sir 1 MAJOR GEN. : Oh come now. (Others group around, share the jokes.) We know you've been slightly left out. It’s always difficult the first time. CaPT. : Yes. MAJOR : But the comb-out
operation is a must,
you
know.
That’s
why I assigned you to clean-up Kushtia village. Did you get that bloody miscreant. capt: No, Sir. He escaped. We had’ to resort to punitive action. It was a predominantly Hindu village...the brain-washing Awami
type.
MAJOR: Good arranged. (Conversation
show.
Good
carries
on,
show. but
within
How
was
Captain
the...er...disposal Azgar
there
is
a
soliloquy, the light dims...) CAPTAIN AZGAR : ...you mean did 1 send them out for “disposal” by truck-loads, or did I just shoot them in this “kill and burn mission” ? (Sounds, voices, as with the old woman, memory recall.) ...After it was all over, the flamethrowers, the cleaning process, after it was all over...I shut my eyes and returned to the village...
(Scene moves over
to the village now, the same eerie scene of smoke
and death and desolation as when Sumita entered it.)
1t was all quiet...terribly still and quiet...and I was all alone, An eerie feeling overcame me. Nothing moved. Everything was still, even the gnawing vultures and dogs... (Smoke and ruins, and in the desolation, the lone figure of Capt.
Azgar...)
Suddenly, out of the smoke and debris, emerged a child, a strange, lovely, lonely creature. It came as a horror to me that he was the only living thing there beside me, and that the rest of the world had come to an end. (In a frenzy of disgust he smashes the rifle, then picks up the child to his lips.) In his lips there was the bitterness of tears, and his eyes hollow blacks surrounded by a bloodshot melancholy white crying for hunger, supplicating for life. (Leaves the child.)
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were ball,
ACT Il SCENE I
321
T left the child and went away... (Blackout) 4.
Guerilla hideout.
Somewhere in the greens : the jute, the paddy,
the mango grove. Beauty, torn with violence.
There is a ragged Mukti Fauj incipient force,
disorganized and ill-
trained, but with a thirst for revenge and raw courage.
They're there.
training,
under
the
COLONEL: (Watching them, have to organize better.
Colonel.
Student
Mahmood
is
also
shaking his head) This won’t do. We'll Get the right equipment. Train them.
STUDENT : What do we do. COLONEL : I’ll have to coordinate all the field units. Be my contact for this one, Mahmood. I'll give you the help of some of my men from the Bengal Rifles or Police. MAHMOOD: (Looking at the loongi clad guerillas) There’s a lot of good material for fighters there. COLONEL : Too much hate, Mahmood. Each one has lost someone near and dear to them. You'll have to regulate them, discipline them. By the way how much do you know yourself...outside of
making bombs in labs. MAHMOOD : (Grinning) Oh, I studied Bengali revolutionary history. Read Mao’s red book. That much for theory. On the practical side...well...outside of
throwinga few
rocks at
advancing
tanks,
there was’nt very much. COLONEL: (Smiling back) I thought so. On second thoughts I’d better send you my Regiment Sergeant. He’ll also be a help on military movements : knows every manoeuvre of 9th and
16th
Divisions. MAHMOOD : What about equipment and a training base. COLONEL: I’m waiting to hear from Hussain. He’s making
arrangements across the border. up whatever we can from
Meanwhile,
the enemy.
we'll have
COLONEL : Who’s he?
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some
to pick
(Suddenly grinning boyishly
himself) You must have read about Che Guevra.
MAHMOOD : (Laughing) Who hasn’t ! (Colonel sees a guerilla join the others.)
Pak
322
SONAR
BANGLA
MAHMOOD : That’s Gulam. He’s just returned from Kushtia village. Got refuge there after blowing up the bridge. Military supplies came to a dead halt. COLONEL: So did the food. (Scratching his chin Kushtia village? Huh ? I’d like to talk to him. (Mahmood calls out to Gulam who comes.) Gulam, tell me what happened ? (Gulam is slightly, very slightly nervous and agitated.) GULAM : I was sent out...alone...on
bridge.
I did
it...successfully.
village...and came here.
thoughtfully)
this mission to blow up
Then
stayed
overnight
Kushtia
in
the
COLONEL : (Casually) Were the villagers...cooperative. GULAM : Wh...why, yes, of course. They gave me food and shelter. At first I didn’t tell them I was going to blow up the bridge. You know one has to be careful of collaborators. But I could make out afterwards that they were glad I did. COLONEL : (Softly) Is that all ? GULAM : (Shaking slightly) Y...yes...of course. (Before he knows it, the Colonel has slapped him face that sends
twists his head.)
Gulam ina
spin, then
catches him
heavily across the by the hair
and
COLONEL : (Hissing) You know as well as I do that that village was wiped out! For harbouring you. Now tell me the whole story... truthfully !
(Light dims on Gulam as he tells the story,
by
sound
and
voices,
sometimes
by
sometimes
visions
of
the
accompanied
dead
village
projected. beyond into which he enters for action. Whichever way it’s done, the pattern should be the same as that of the old woman, the Pak Captain, and now the “‘miscreant”’ or rebel.)
GULAM: The...the bridge
was
only
not stop the army from coming in...
partially damaged.
It...it did
(Sound of bomb, bridge, then armoured vehicles and jeeps crossing) I knew they were after me. Then all the revenge I had...turned to fear. I hid, I hid, in the Hindu household in Kushtia... (Panting, sound of the chase, knocking frantically on the door, first indecision of the occupants, then refuge given.)
Pretty soon I heard the sound
Google
of jeeps.
I slipped out of the
ACT II SCENE I
323
house, hid in the knee deep waters of the paddy fields covered with
green.
:
(Splash of water, the chase again, heavy breathing, and water as he sinks out of sight.) The captain threatened
punitive action.
But no
mud and green one would speak.
First they burnt the village. Then they started to like sheeps in trucks sent to the slaughterhouse.
flock them up
(Sounds of the Kill and Burn Mission) I wanted to shout out “I did it! at their feet, plead for mercy. But
my legs wouldn’t
move.
...drained...out...of...me. (Face of shame and tear)
I wanted to throw myself my legs would’nt move...but
Something...more...than...courage...had
When it was all over, all over, I went back, and searched all through the village. I found a lonely child wailing like a stray dog...anda half-blind old woman. I threw myself at their feet asking for forgiveness. (The blind old woman touching his head) (Fadeout) 5.
Scene between the Bihari and ‘an underprivileged Muslim middle-
class’ from Kushtia village.
BIHARI: The military must have a administrative and political support.
my Muslim friend
civilian infra-structure...for That’s our function. Tell me,
from Kushtia village,
do you own any land ?
FRIEND : No.
BIHARI : Why ? FRIEND : Kushtia was always a Hindu-based most of the land. , BIHARI:
majority.
They
owned
What a shame...in your own country to be deprived of land.
(Friend shrugs his shoulders.) (The Bihari continues) Woulda’t you like to have...some land of your own there. These Hindus come from India, or at least have
their loyalties there. your own town.
The rich marwaris of Calcutta exploit you in
FRIEND ; (Mouth open) Qo you really think so ?
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324
SONAR
BANGLA
BIHARI : (Sighing, under his breath) So I’m told by the military. And the military in Pakistan are always right. FRIEND : In that case who am I to argue. BIHAR! : Right. Now the army want your...cooperation. FRIEND : Name it. BIHARI : They’re bringing over some newsmen and T.V. operators... West Pakistani that is, since they don’t allow any foreign spies...to show...a model village. Rumours are floating back to the West that there’s...carnage here. The army want to disprove it. In fact they want to show
of the West.
that the civilians here
FRIEND: (Frowning stupidly) How (Looking up questioningly)
are by and large friends
are they going to
do it. I mean...
BIHARI : Simple, my brilliant friend, in fact it was your idea... FRIEND : Mine ? BIHARI: You want Jand, don’t you. The army will give it to you. Now
all
they want you to do is
to pose before the camera.
Get
some Muslim Leaguers and Jamat-i-Islam who lost in the elections, and get them to say good things about the Western Army. We'll
switch the film over, and say it was shot in Kushtia. FRIEND : Brilliant.
BIHARI : Yes, isn’t it. Then it’s done ? FRIEND : Done.
.
(Fadeout, and then re-emergence, later of Kushtia village) BIHARI: There! you want
yourself.
The army
there is yours.
in time after
the destruction
always keeps its promise. Infact
you can have
Now tell me, what happened there.
All the land
the whole village
FRIEND : (Licking his lips, a little frightened, a little greedy) 1...1 had no idea...the army would do such a thorough job. The...the village was empty...a little...singed of course. deserted ...except for a child and an old woman...
The
(Thought of him wandering alone, in the village, going taking whatever he
likes, then
letting his eyes
paddy, which would yield him the harvest.)
Google
roam over
roads
into
were
shops,
the green
ACT Il SCENE i
325
The fields were green...the paddy ready. arms
open,
ZINDABAD.
calling
PAKISTAN
All this land...mine ?
All mine?
ZINDABAD,
THE
I ran out, my WESTERN
ARMY
(The Bihari laughs cynically as the scene fades out.) (Each of the above scenes, i.e. the Pak Major, the rebel, the collaborator Bihari’s friend, should all end or center or zero on the same
note viz. a deserted burnt out village, the child...)
surviving
old
woman,
and
6. The refugee trudge of scene 2 continues, swollen by the ranks survivors from villages such as Kushtia. They struggle on and on, trying
each
morsel
to help
each
other
along,
of
sharing
of food and travelling by bullock-cart, rickshaws, pull-
carts, mostly by foot, the stragglers falling by the way-side. Amongst them are Sumita carrying the child, her daughter helping the feeble old woman.
Maya
Somehow, through desperate courage,
through hope, or through sheer tenacity for survival, they have trudged maybe a couple of hundred miles, and are now near Jessore, close to the borders of West Bengal. It is evening. They stop to rest under an old empty barn with a palm covered roof and open sides. As it grows darker, more and more refugees move in, sick, maimed, in want and despair. They grow in numbers, getting warmth and comfort from each other; until the whole barn is full of a mass of crowded, dunuded humanity. Each one is almost lying over the other, partly out of lack
of space,
mostly to clutch on to someone real and protecting. Fathers, mothers, sons, daughters, young, old, everyone, including domestic animals
like goats
and
cows.
Each relate a story to the other,
(Overheard) “They raped my daughter... my
wife...
incredible,
nightmarish...
...they have special curved knives to cut off breasts... ...forced the son to rape the mother before the family... «bit off her nipple... «over and over and over again, one by one, like brutes...” “They shot my husband...
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326
SONAR BANGLA
...carried him off, crowded like sheep marked with the fatal red die in a truck... ...tortured him with bamboo splinters until...merciful death... ..-made him reveal...the hideout...of his brothers... ...made him beg for mercy, over and over again...” “They caught my son... ...barely sixteen... ...With a knife... ...what they did to him I will not say... ...except that they did it over and over again...”
“She was a beautiful, proud mother... ...the picture of Bengal lush with gold and ...now she lies in her
green...
grave...
...desecrated by their brute force and tyranny... ...Oh mother of ours, will you ever rise again...?”” (It starts to rain. A continuous, monotonous downpour,
that
leaks
through the matted roof and falls in the enclosure below, where the water starts to rise, inching them out from sleep to waking, from
lying to sitting/to standing, as the water rises, in the deep of the night.) “Now we're refugees, one and all... ...something, someone’s missing... ...our homes, belongings, someone from our family, our house and village... ...do you know what it means to be a refugee... ...to be torn away from your mother’s breast...” “We trudge on...night and day...day and night... +..to God knows where ? -.someone told us there was safety and protection beyond... ...but beyond where...? ...where will this end...?” ‘‘Hunger consumes us...
...Monsoon brings floods...
...cyclones strike us...
...we’ve endured before... .- we'll survive again... “We re not beggars...
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327
ACT 11 SCENB i
...we, the proud people of Bengal. “The occupation army won’t hold us down we shall fight...and rise again.” (It’s come to the break of dawn and anew hope, the limp darkness fading, a red glow catching the disappearing clouds in the sky.) (Suddenly...)
CHOLLRA (A whisper...as shattering as a scream.)
(The crowd shrinks away, the sick child vomits, and
get
up
wearily,
some fearfully but
Everyone
dies.
others beyond caring, and they
all leave, to carry on the trudge. The child is burried, others ing, a dry cough, dehydrated of all energy and hope in life.
.
they leave too.)
weepThen
(Only Sumita, the child, her daughter Maya, aud the old woman remain, the last, as they were the first.) SUMITA : (Tired, but concealing) Come on, old woman, we go. (Carries the child)
OLD WOMAN: No, I’m tired, I’m old.
I’m hungry. The
weariness...
of life...overcomes. Leave me behind. It’s torture for me to continue. SUMITA : No. I will not leave you here. (Child starts to cry, cough, sputter) MAYA : What’s wrong. SUMITA : (Puts her breast to the child’s mouth) 1 think
night through. (Nobody dare mention the dread word.) (Sumita wipes the dry sweat off her tired face.)
he’s
sick...all
The
border’s
OLD WOMAN : (Pleading) Leave me...and the child. sumiTA: No. It’s not far off now. close by. ~
We’re
at
Jessore.
OLD woMAN : I have some relations in Jessore. I’ll go SUMITA : (Shaking her head) You can’t go alone. OLD WOMAN : You can’t come with the child. (Pause) MAYA:
I'll go. I'll go
with
Google
her.
there.
328
SONAR BANGLA
suMITA : No. No, Maya. No, my dear. I won’t let you go.
OLD WoMAN : Then let me go alone. (She gets up, sways.
Maya catches her.)
(Without a word Maya takes her, and they go.)
MAYA : (Calling back to her mother who looks on helplessly) Y\l be back, mother. Don’t worry. Ill be back soon. Wait for me.
Wait with the child.
(She leaves, the child cries again, coughs, the mouth as it leaves the nipple.)
the
spittle
coming from
(Fadeout) 7.
Shift to Hussain and Ray on the West Bengal side at one of the
several refugee camps mushrooming alongside the border. Fora long time there is no conversation between the two, and one sees the
sights and sounds of refugee camps in the same way that one experienced the exodus and plight of the refugees earlier. There is frantic activity all around the place as streams and streams of refugees pour in. Hastily put up tents, families living in large drain-pipes, temporary structures of tin and mud, palm leaf and bamboo, sometimes just a matting for individual cover, from the sun
and rain and all else.
Overcrowded hospitals, red-cross workers, OXFAM volunteers, local helpers, planeloads of rescue material, food, milk, medicine, tarpaulain, Government and army and municipal help, everything being geared
in spurts
and
starts to meet the gigantic problem, that over-
comes. all, through sheer numbers and need.
RAY : It’s incredible.
The sheer weight of numbers
and
need
over-
whelms. We can’t keep pace with it, Hussain. HUSSAIN : We must. There is no choice. (Turning to his friend) Is’nt that so? RAY : (Slight confused, guilty) Wh...what do you mean ? HUSSAIN: I mean...you wouldn’t think of stopping them from coming in, would you ? RAY : (Flushing) Of course not. Whatever gave you that idea ? HUSSAIN : Nothing. I just noticed...(His voice hardens slightly with bitterness)...from your people...a slight change...in hospitality.
RAY : (Angry) I take exception to that remark, deserve an explanation.
Google
Hussain.
I think I
ACT II SCENE 1
329
HUSSAIN : Sorry, my friend. I mean it. In a way I don’t blame you all, You’ve given more than anyone else would. But you'll admit a few thousand refugees is quite different from a few million. RAY : (Cooling, forgetting his anger) So you’ve been hearing It’s
true.
We're
getting...apprehensive.
If we
keep
stories.
supporting
these gigantic numbers from across the border, we'll go under selves...
our-
You know the kind of problems we have in West
Cal-
cutta.
Bengal...in
Unemployment, Naxal threats, inter-party warfare, poverty,
violence, disregard for law and order. We're sitting on here, our hospitality being...strained... When the hell will this stream of refugees end...?
HUSSAIN : It will never end, Ray. .. of intellectuals,
Hindus,
It started as a minority persecution
political
leaders.
It’s developing into
mass slaughter now, which will mean more and more
There’s
a volcano
only
of refugees.
one way of stopping it...only one way. (Ray looks at him questioningly.) Build up, support, train, militarize the liberation force
in
East
Bengal. That’s the root ofit all. Arm them, recruit volunteers, cross borders, build logistical military support for the Mukti Fauj.
That’s the only way, the only way: a total liberation, an independent Bangla Desh. RAY : Do you know what you're saying Hussain. You're asking us to take a hell-of-a-chance. What if you lose ? What if you involv e us ina war?
I’m not prepared to'take HUSSAIN : You have to |
that
risk.
RAY : (Angry again) I don’t have to doa thing, Hussain ! I’m here in my national interest, not yours. You want temporary refuge, we'll give it. We’re Bengali brothers after all. You want war, we won’t give it. It will mean economic ruination for my country and permanent enemity with a neighbour we have to live with. HUSSAIN: (Quietly) As the refugees grow, the Pressures will grow. They'll
be forcing your hand, not I.
Pakistan will use the refugees
as a pawn...till you reach breaking point. RAY : (Cooling, thinking, quiet) What will you have me do.
HUSSAIN : (Taking his friend by the arm and walking, talking confiden-
tially
and persuasively) I’m
Google
not
saying
go to war with Pakistan,
380
SONAR BANGLA
I’m merely saying it’s no use giving help to the refugees unless you give help at the same time to the Mukti Fauj... , We're in need of basis for training. We're in need of armaments. It might be a war of attrition, it might not. But if you give us no help on the guerilla side, there’s not a chance for East Bengal to’ survive. You might as well then close the gates for all refugees ...if you can physically do so. So we come back to the same thing. Feed us, but arm us at the same time. Reach that delicate balance of aid that is both com-
passionate and affords self-help.
ingless.
RAY : (Smiling ruefully)
You can
One without the other
talk
anyone
into
you? HUSSAIN : If you don’t agree, I’ll be sprouting Bengali
is
mean-
anything,
can’t
poetry
before
RAY : (Laughing, slapping him on the back) Agreed, within There will be clandestine training camps...and weapons.
reason.
long.
Shall I try ?
(One of the Red Cross voluntary workers, a lissome blond English woman with a tired face and deep blue eyes, comes over to Ray.) ELIZABETH : Oh...Mr. Ray... (Ray turns around with a pleasuresome smile.) Ray : Ah, Elizabeth, I’d like you to meet my friend. Mr. Anwar Hussain, head of the Bangla Desh Mission. ELIZABETH : (Looks with him with interest) Hello.
RAY : (To Hussain) And this is our Florence She’s looking after the Red Cross here. (Elizabeth laughs easily. Hussain smiles.) HUSSAIN : You’ve taken on quite a job.
Nightingale,
Hussain.
ELIZABETH : (Her blue eyes sobering as quickly as they smile) Mr. Ray
I need money, and...
and
medicines,
and
food,
and
milk
RAY : (Feighning defence) Hold on, hold on, one at a time. got through with Hussain, and now you...
and
tents,
I’ve just
ELIZABETH: (Continues as though uninterrupted)...and more doctors, and more nurses, and better administrative controls... Ray : Why don’t you ask the Red
Google
Cross H.Q.,
my
dear.
May
be
ACT II SCENE 1
331
there should be some other countries too who should be prepared to bear part of the burden. ELIZABETH : Do you think I have'nt tried, Mr. Ray ? . They think I’m crazy the way I’matthem. The problem here straggers all imagination. They can’t believe it. HUSSAIN : (Looking at her closely with interest) Why ? ELIZABETH : (Looking back
tragedies
have
always
straight
into
his
eyes) Because
Bengal’s
been in millions : cyclones, famines, floods,
plagues, name what you will. It does not take on a Western count. People there do not get sufficiently aroused.
HUSSAIN : (Trace of smile in his eyes) But you do. Possibly you and make up for the others from your part of the world. ELIZABETH: (Tough herself) Mr. Hussain, I’m no
Florence
try
Nightin-
gale. We’re a small, a very small part, of the total effort required here. That’s why we have to push hard. RAY : (Laughing) Touché. Elizabeth, my dear, I have to go. Sita’s been enquiring after you. Why don’t you have dinner with us Sunday ? You too, Hussain ? Tl see you both.
(She nods.
They say goodbye.)
ELIZABETH : (To Hussain)
I heard what took place at the Bangla Desh
Mission. You should feel pleased. HuSsSAIN : (Walking with her) Not so simple. Elizabeth...if I may call you that. Well in a way it was easier for us. Here in Calcutta the majority of the Pakistan Consulate was easier to make a mass defection.
staff were Bengalis. It I worry about the few
Bengalis in other Embassies of the world. It must be a very cult decision for them whether they should defect or not.
diffi-
ELIZABETH : Yet you would not hesitate, would you ? HUSSAIN : No.
The same way you did not hesitate
spite of the general apathy abroad.
to
come
ELIZABATH ; (With humour in her eyes) Maybe I have a spirit after all. You wouldn’t like that, would you ?
here
in
missionary
HUSSAIN : Why ? ELIZABETH :
It’s a traditional Western concept : Religion,
scelitization, tingalism.
Conscience,
Google
Colonization,
Reformation,
God,
Pro-
even Nigh-
332
SONAR BANGLA
HUSSAIN: Isn’t that why you
came
?
ELIZABETH : No, I came plainly and simply because there was a need, and it didn’t matter to me whether it was in my country or in any other. Because the need seemed greater here, I was drawn to it.
HUSSAIN : That’s nice. of anyone
Though I must admit I for one cannot
think
or anything more at the moment than my own country.
ELIZABETH : Then surely it must be your greatest HUSSAIN : (Looking at her seriously)
need.
Do something for me,
Elizabeth.
Look for a needle ina haystack for me. There must be millions of refugees and dozens of camps. I’m trying to find a woman and her daughter.
They look very much like anyone here...
(Fadeout 8.
and darkness)
Shift back to Sumita and child, alone, waiting for
her
daughter
to return,
One gets the
impression
she has waited
long, riddled with anxiety,
while the condition of the child worsens, and she feels
through fever.
herself going
The rain comes again, this time asa cyclonic storm. She covers herself and the child using a discarded straw mat, praying, while the howling wind and rain rips through the flimsy protection. One imagines this goes on for a long time until the movement under the mat ceases altogether, while other stragglers of refugees either continue forging their way or collapse and die in the muddy fields and road.
For just a moment the bullock-cart stops near her.
In it is a weary
form of a man and his mother. The bullocks have panicked with the lightening and rain. The man gets out to steady them. MOTHER : Arun...under that mat I see a woman and child... ARUN : The storm’s lessening. The bullocks are quieter now. We'll be on our way soon.
MOTHER : The mother and child there, Arun... ARUN : (Continues ignoring what Across the river. No bridges. not to worry, mother.
she’s saying). We're not far now. I’ll hold the cart steady. You're
MOTHER: (Calling out) Arun, forget them for heavens dead. That woman and child there are still alive.
Google
sake.
They’re
ACT If SCENE I
333
ARUN : (Bursting out) So are tons and tons of people living and dying on this road, mother. What do you expect me to do. MOTHER : (Pleading) Go and see. Go and see, my son. (Arun goes underneath.
over to the matting. Goes back to the cart.)
Lifts
it.
Examines
ARUN : The child’s dead. The mother still alive. calling out ‘“Maya...child”’...
the two
She’s in a delirium
(Mother silent)
What shall I do, mother ? You'd like me to take them, wouldn’t you ? Why?
One
Why should we do it ? Why not someone else ?
more
everywhere.
mouth
to
feed.
Food’s
getting
short.
Besides, we don’t know what the child’s died of. sick. If it’s cholera, we’re risking exposure. What do you want me to do, mother ?
Hunger
The mother's
(The mother is torn between anxiety, the wish to do what must and would like to, but afraid nevertheless.)
everyone
MOTHER : Go and see her once again, and decide for yourself. (Arun goes over. Sees Sumita still clutching on to the child, held toher breast. Something about her look, her tenderness, her anxiety, catches him by the throat, reminds him ..) (He carefully detaches the child from her breast. Lifts Sumita to the cart. She crying out for “Maya”, ‘child’, but too weak and exhausted to resist...)
(He gets
a
spade out from
the
cart,
digs a hole, buries the child,
then returns to the cart, which moves on...)
9. Ray’s Hussain.
home with his wife Sita, They’re having dinner.
with
SITA: (Passing over the food) Come, Elizabeth.
guests
Elizabeth
and
Another helping.
ELIZABETH : (Jn two minds) I don’t know whether I should.
sita : Dieting ? You don’t need it.
ELIZABETH : (Smiling) Famous last words. siTa: Oh, where ?
Been eating out every day.
ELIZABETH : (Says without realizing it) Oh, Hussain’s quite a connaisseur...of food.
Google
334
SONAR BANGLA
(Everyone laughs, Elizabeth blushes slightly, as they get up.) (Women get together; men sit down for a smoke and chat.) RAY: Can’t tell you Centre, Hussain.
the amount of politiking that goes on at the Before you know it you become part of the
very system you set out to break.
HUSSAIN : That’s not what bothers me, Ray. It’s the power in politics that frightens. The immeasurable harm it’s capable of doing : to the people, the innocents in all this game. RAY:
You talk as though it
Surely
the
weren’t
reverse
can
also
a
premise,
capable
apply.
big
Ray.
any
good.
I'm assuming of course the
basis of democracy and socialism. HUSSAIN: It’s
of doing
That’s
what
we
have been
fighting for all along. Nothing is possible before independence. The free voice of the people. (Phone rings; it’s for Hussain.) HUSSAIN : (Jmmediately alert) Colonel? When did you come in. Yes, youcan speak. What’s happening. COLONEL : Bad. Bad news, Hussain. We’re being routed all over the place in spite of the propaganda we’re putting up through the Mukti Fauj radio and the A.ILR. HUSSAIN: Can’t you hold out alittle longer. We’re making the break-through here. COLONEL:
Sure.
But
it’s
costing
Pak army have system and hate and primitive weapons.
HUSSAIN: We'll
put
them
us
training.
through
a
hell-of-a-lot of lives.
the
Our
guerillas
drill
here.
only
The
have
I've just been
assured...(Looking at’ Ray)...that sophisticated armoury will be available. What about the peasant hinterland support ? COLONEL: They’re frightened, Hussain. Can’t tell you the type of wholesale slaughter the army are indulging in. But the more they kill, the greater are the volunteers we get.
HUSSAIN: (Hard) We come back to the same thing. You can’t kill freedom with greater oppression. The army still has to learn that. COLONEL: Meanwhile, they’re learning to exterminate...scientifically. A war machine, that’s what they are.
point of all judgement and sanity, fegimenting ‘through sheer terror,
Google
Hussain, they’ve passed
What
the
if they do succeed in
ACT II SCENE I
335
HUSSAIN: (Sweating, Not as long as
trying to convince himself) Never! people like us...can...reason and
Never! Fevolt.
Fundamentally. The Mukti Favj will grow...because it expresses a basic need...even if they kill over a million.
COLONEL : (With chilling reality) Ym afraid they're doing just that.
(Rings off ) (Hussain pale and drawn.) (The others just look at him, guessing the mood and trouble.) HUSSAIN : We'll have to step it up, Ray. RAY:
O.K,
(Elizabeth picking up her shaw!)
ELIZABETH: I’m afraid I have to go. There were afew cases of cholera and we’re fearing a general epidemic. I’m going to the hospital near the refugee camp.
HUSSAIN: (Shaking hands with the Rays) Goodnight Ray...(nodding to Sita)...Sita. We'll meet tomorrow. The Colonel will be there.
(Elizabeth and Hussain leave.)
(They approach the hospital, near the refugee camp.
It isa hospital
set-up by the International Red Cross. It is jam-packed with patients, lying on beds, lying on the floor, lying on the verandah outside, depending upon the seriousness of their condition. It’sa heart-rendering sight. Overworked hospital staff.) THE NURSE IN CHARGE : (On seeing Elizabeth) Oh, thank God, you're here. The cholera’s spreading. Most of the new Tefugees are bringing it in. ELIZABETH: (Changing
patients have
into
all been
uniform,
getting
down
to
work)
Our
innoculated? (Nurse nods) (To Hussain)
They’re also being inoculated before it’s too late by them.
they
cross
the
border...but
NuRSE: There isn’t enough saline. We'll run out in the next three days. ELIZABETH : I hope to God the consignment will come in time. (Hussain looking around, visibly torn at the sight of his own people in such distress.)
Hussain, there is no sense work to do tonight,
Google
in your staying here,
J have a lot of
336
SONAR BANGLA
(Hussain shakes his head negatively, starts to help, giving water here, saline there.) (It begins to rain. The awful stench of defecation pervades the hospital room.) ELIZABETH : There are no proper sanitary arrangements at the refugee
camp. With this rain, the water and dirt infect further people.
HUSSAIN : (Under his breath)
No end to if.
overflow.
It will
No end to it all.
beth, for every person they kill, there are out for yourself. Numbers. here...the real people.
will
ten
Numbers.
who
(Looking,
flee.
Eliza-
Work
it
helping) And
ELIZABETH : What did you say about...need...earlier. The realization comes...with the need, Hussain. (They work, throughout the night along with the hospital staff, admitting more refugees, caring for the sick, trying to get moments respite from the grief around whenever they can, until the early hours of dawn.) (Elizabeth and Hussain go each other, the moments
exhausted, and crying silently.
outside, close to each other, touching warmth and need. Elizabeth is
Neither exchange a word for a long
time.)
ELIZABETH : (Turning
her face, resting her tired head on his shoulders,
whispers) Hussain...I need...you.
(They leave.) (A few minutes later, a bullock-cart draws np near man carries a woman and goes up to the nurse.) ARUN : (To the
nurse)
You'll
take
her?
She’s
the
hospital.
unconscious.
A
Look
after her, I'll come back and see her. (He puts her down gently, then turns around and leads the bullock cart in the direction of the refugee camp.) (END OF ACT 11)
Google
ACT III SCENE I
The Liberation Force : Mukti Bahini A few months later 1.
Refugee camp.
MOTHER:
...You
Sumita and Arun’s mother.
were
lucky
to have
time it was a matter of touch and go.
pulled through.
You kept calling
For a out
Maya. I think it was the thought of her that kept you alive... SUMITA : (Eyes distant and sad)...Maya...
long to...
MOTHER : ...Naturally we thought the child who died was yours. SUMITA: Maya must have come and searched for me. I wish you
had left me there. MOTHER : What if she had eventually come to find you very sick or dying. It would have been worse. SUMITA : It’s worse...just not knowing, mother. Is she alive ? Is she dead ? Is she safe 7 I also think of my husband who was killed but
never mention his name.
One lives for the living.
MOTHER : I keep telling my son the same thing. SUMITA: Arun...
MOTHER :
I have another theory about your
survival.
(Sumita looks at her questioningly.)
Arun used to go to see you every day at the hospital.
change
in him.
The
will to live once again.
I noticed
a
It has a...strange
effect on others. SUMITA : (Smiling sadly, reproachfully) Mother... MOTHER: No, no, I have the unerring instinct of an old woman... (Arun comes in. It stops the conversation with the women.) Oh, Arun, there you are. I think of you and you come. (His eyes smile as he sees his mother. He also looks at Sumita and
there’s a shy acknowledgement with each other.) ARUN : I’m getting fed-up with this refugee camp.
and waiting in queues to be doled out the food.
MOTHER : Arun ! That’s being ungrateful.
Google
Nothing but stink
Where would we be...
338
SONAR
BANGLA
ARUN: I know. Iknow. In fact we're better looked after than some of the unemployed in the big city. But that still doesn’t change the position. MOTHER : Nobody’s stopping
you from
going out to work.
And we
won’t be here forever. ARUN : (Looking at his mother) Mother, you always did have alot of spirit, didn’t you. (Looking at Sumita) It runs in the Bengali women. MOTHER : (Grumbling, mumbling) (Getting out, going out to cook) I don’t know whether you’re making fun of me or not. The curse of being old. (Arun smiles as his mother leaves.) SUMITA : I haven’t seen you smile for a long time.
ARUN;
Nor I you.
(Both silent for
a
while,
dreaming
their own
private thoughts, not
Speaking it, but understanding each others’ feelings.) SUMITA : (Whispering, almost to herself) Perhaps my alive.
child
is still
ARUN : (Almost to himself) The past burns...but one can’t live in it all the time. There were others too... suMITA : (Aloud) You didn’t answer your mother’s question, Arun. (He looks at her.) ..about work...and living here forever. I suspect you have thought of something. ARUN : Yes, Sumita. SUMITA : Then why don’t you tell me. ARUN : (Silent for a few seconds, and then speaks) Do you know of the
Mukti Babini ?
SUMITA : (Hand going to her heart) Of course.
ARUN:
Do
border ?
you
know
that
they
SUMITA: I suspected it.
have training camps all along the
ARUN : Do you know that they are recruiting who are willing to fight ?
able
bodied
refugees
(She doesn’t answer.) Most of us have...lost someone.
Google
We’re thirsting for revenge.
We
ACT II
SCENE
I
also want...freedom.
339
This is the way to get it.
to avoid staying here forever.
This
is the
way
(Sumita still silent.) Mother doesn’t know. And I don’t want her to. I’ve been going out on small missions. Now I'll be away for a while. Let her think I’ve gone out somewhere on work. SUMITA : Where do you go out on your missions ? ARUN : Initially just across the border...later in the interior after having had sufficient guerilla experience.
SUMITA : Where...across the border...? ARUN : Could be anywhere...? SUMITA : ...Jessore...? ARUN : Yes. (Pause)
sumiTa : Arun, would you take me to your training camp.
(Blackout) (At the training camp : Yusuf and Arun) ARUN : You can’t possibly take her.
yusur : ARUN : What yusur : ARUN : yusur : ARUN : yusuF : ARUN :
(Shrugging his shoulders) Why did you bring her ? She insisted on it. use isa woman? She can’t possibly fight. A woman’s very useful for guerilla work. The least suspect. She won’t kill. What did you say happened to her husband? He was killed. (Nodding) She'll kill. She wants to go on any mission that'll take her to Jessore.
yusuF : Not until she’s trained, Arun. wanting something and getting it. ARUN: I told her so. yusuF: But she’s determined...?
(Arun nods.) Then she’ll make it... (Arun still unconvinced, worried...)
Google
It’s a long way
between
340
SONAR
BANALG
Oh, and Arun... ARUN: ... YeS...? YusuF: She'll accompany you,
of course.
(Both smile)
2. Hussain and Elizabeth. There is an air of softness and satiation. She’s lying naked in bed, the blond of her hair, the tan of her skin, glowing with the colour of youth and fulfilment. Hussain is partially clad, smoking, looking at her, dreaming, through the smoke. ELIZABETH:
(Stretching
out
her
limbs,
yawning,
Hussain...Oh, Hussain.. (Hussain continues tolook at her silently.) I...I can’t make out whether you’re violent...or you’re searching...without being able to find. Hussain, and I ask no more of you.
HUSSAIN: (Touching Elizabeth.
her
blond hair,
her
skin)
smiling)
(softly)
tender. Whether But you fulfil, You're
beautiful,
ELIZABETH : I tanned myself the other day. Felt the sun seep into my bones. It was a lazy...Jovely feeling...like now. I forgot everything. Everything else. That I was a foreigner...and that one day...I would have to leave. (Hussain doesn’t reply.) Wouldn’t 1? HUSSAIN : It depends on what you want out of life. ELIZABETH: I have no promises to keep, Hussain, like you.
where the need is greatest.
HUSSAIN: (Trying
to
make
light of it) (Smiling)
I 80...
In that case you’ve
come to the right person. ELIZABETH: (Serious) Have I ? Have I, Hussain? I sometimes think... you’re rather self-contained.
Or at least there’s
do not understand.
HUSSAIN: (Frowning)
a reach...
:
thatI
Meaning?
ELIZABETH : Who’s Sumita ? HUSSAIN : (For a moment taken aback, then recovers) I told
women...who
looks
like
Google
any
you.
other Bengali village woman.
A
She
ACT Iil SCENE i
341
grew up with me as a child...was part of the landscape...the soil... ELIZABETH : The first day we met you asked me to find her.
HUSSAIN : One out of millions of refugees.
She and her daughter.
ELIZABETH: Is she as beautiful as me? HUSSAIN : No. BLIZABETH : Have you ever made love to her ? HUSSAIN: Of course not ! ELIZABETH : Sorry, Hussain. 1 felt...slightly jealous, shall always
seemed
to
Difficult to explain.
sense
her
I say?
presence...somewhere...with
I
you.
Hussain says nothing.) Well, I found the needle in the haystack.
HUSSAIN : (Stiffens, alert) You found her 7
ELIZABETH : By a strange coincidence, she came to the very hospital I was looking after. When she recovered, she left for one of the refugee camps.
HUSSAIN : Which one ?
ELIZABETH : I don’t know.
But I was told by someone who came to
know her that she had gone back to East her daughter.
You could check on it.
Bengal.
To
search for
HUSSAIN : I see !
(Looking out through the windows, afar, beyond the green and gold.) (The sun streams into the room ; it touches the lissome bare figure lying on the bed, that stirs and responds...)
ELIZABETH: (Throwing aside the bedsheet, him,
the
sun
bathing
the
exposing
gold of her body...)
herself fully
Look!
to
Hussain,
look...am I not sonar too...?
(In her voice there is pride and defiance, yet a touch
Sorrow...) 3.
Sabotage
:
scene.
Rail
tracks
somewhere
near
of sadness
and
Jessore.
Two
men are desperately and with feverish haste trying to remove the fishplates and break the lines with crowbars (Yusuf and Ali). On
either side, keeping a watchout and helping out whenever possible, are
Arun and Sumita. They are looking around the sharp curve presumably for the train, or equally for Pak soldiers.
Google
SONAR BANGLA
342
ALI: (Boy in his teens) (Panting) This is hard work. yusur : What did you expect ? ALI: Just fasten the time-bomb and see it blow up a train-full of soldiers. YUSUF : (Stopping for a second) Ali?
ALI : (Looks up) Yes ?
yusur : Have you ever seen a time-bomb ? ALI: No.
yusuF ALI: yusuF ALI: YusuF
: Would you know how to set it ? No. : Do you know what time the train arrives 7 (Shaking his head desperately) No. : Then stop shaking your head and get back to work !
ALI: Y...yes.
Yes Sir. yusurF : (Grumbling as he’s working) Been seeing too many movies... (Looking at the boy again, tousling his hair) You should be in school, Ali. ALI : (Grinning) Yes.
yusur : A regular training school for sabotage. slick sophisticated explosives. Not petrol cocktails. Precision timed instruments.
With some of those bombs and molotov
ALI: It will come soon, Yusuf. I’m sure it will. are being supplied Indian army stuff.
Already the camps
yusur : We should also have the right field intelligence. other things what time the train comes in.
Amongst
ALL: I’d love to have a watch. (A little further off) (Arun and Sumita meet for a few minutes.) ARUN: Keep
a
watch-out,
Sumita.
There’s
Could be soldiers...could be train coming up.
a sharp
bend
there.
sumita : Could be both. ARUN: I’Il go the other way. But I'll be looking at you all the time. If you see anything, just signal and dash away...hide in the place I showed you. SuMITA : Yes.
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343
ACY fir SCENE t It’s just around that...
ARUN : You remember it, don’t you?
Don’t
suMITA : (Cutting it coolly) Yes, I remember, don’t worry. worry for me. ARUN : (Holding her hand) A...are you...afraid ?
SUMITA : Yes, but I know what’s happening. I know what I’m doing. ARUN : If...if the soldiers ever catch you... SUMITA : They won’t. (Something in her voice inspires confidence.) ARUN: We...we’re not going as far as Jessore this time. But we will the next. SuMITA : I know. ARUN : By then we'll be all better trained. And we'll have more help too. The Mukti Bahini is growing. We'll find your daughter.
SuMITA : (Nodding
slowly, almost
reassuring
the man
crowbar,
and heaves
so concerned
about her) Yes, Arun. Now go. I feel a faint...tremor on the tracks. Quickly...(Pointing)...get up there and see. I'll tell Yusuf
to
hurry.
(She runs to Yusuf, picks up
the
the other two, her will giving the others strength. ‘Arun runs up panting.)
In
along
afew
with
minutes,
ARUN : (Breathless) It...Its both. SuMiTA : (Coolly ‘straining away at the crowbar) Both what,
ARUN : The train and the soldiers.
Arun.
SUMITA : (Continues working) Good.
ARUN : (Catching her) Come on. suMITA : Give me a hand,
Let’s run.
Arun, quick.
Yusuf and Ali on the other
side. Now all together. (As they heave, sound of the blast of the whistle, until it seems almost on them)
train
nears,
(Sumita’s voice) THAT’S IT. NOW RUN. (All scamper. As blackout takes place, the rear of the train, like some dinosar, screams on the tracks, lurches, crashes, the train-full
of soldiers toppling like crushed match-boxes.) 4.
Another incident, presumably a few months
later.
Same
group
his new
watch,
of four, but with another four who have joined them.
modern arms and equipment. 4li keeps admiring and putting it to his ear every now and again.
Google
All carrying
344
SONAR BANGLA
YUSUF: Stop putting that watch to your ear
Ali.
every
ALL: Can’t they attach a radio transmitter to it? fashioned to me.
now Looks
and a
again, bit
old-
with
my
(Others laugh.) YusUE : I bet you can’t read the time yet. ALI: I bet Ican. Who cares anyway ? I’ve got more kills sten gun than anyone here. (Yusuf doesn’t reply.) SUMITA : True, Ali, but were they all necessary.
ARUN: war.
Yes, they were. Nobody ever kept a guerilla as a prisoner-ofA guerilla can’t afford it either.
YUSUF : It’s all hit and run with us, Sumita.
Yes, we’ve
:
learn’t
the
hard way, haven’t we. ALI: No other way. And our numbers have increased. (Holding on to his weapon confidently) And our weapons have increased. ARUN : We’ve come a long way...from crowbars...months
...I can even see in the dark now.
SUMITA : (Alert) But you can’t hear.
of training
Shhh...someone’s coming.
(All hide. Along comes a Mulla with a red (fez) cap, an impressive beard tinged with red mhendi—to cover the white hairs—a carpet in one hand together with the religious book, and a_ giggling, blushing, sexy-looking girl with the other.) MULLA: Abhh...my sweet beautiful creature. God made you so lovely...(Squeezing her hand)...that I must...ah...touch, to find if you’re real, fearful...fearful all the time, that its all a dream, and that you’ll disappear...
(Girl giggles in reply.) Abbh...what a lovely laugh.
Ah, gorgeous
maiden,
Like the gurgling...of virgin
let us sit here,
springs.
like Omar Khayyam, his
carpet...(Lets it drop)...his book, though this be religious verse... and thou, besides me, in this wilderness... GIRL : (Gurgling) Oh Mullaji... MULLA : (Looking around guiltily) Shhh...not so loud. (Looking up to heaven) Though we be in paradise, it’s wise not to disturb Him too much. Perhaps if we sit under this tree, we may not be
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ACT III SCENE I
345
directly under His gaze... GIRL : (Hesitating) But I thought... MULLA : (Pulling her hand persuasively) Don’t think my wise girl. Just listen to me. Ofcourse He sees all, and knows all. But knowing human frailty, He (Raising his loongi) Haven’t
gives me you seen
special...er...dispensation. the callouses on my knees.
(The girl squeeks ‘Oh’ and turns her face, now the Mulla caught up in his own passion
and oratory.)
My soul.. such as I would reveal to you...has the same callouses, For it has traversed the tortuous paths of heaven and hell several times.
(Shaking his head) He will not let me be.
He will
not
let
me be. I torment myself, thirst, wander through the desert, whip my body till the blood erupts, for I... too ..would suffer like the Prophet. (His breast heaving with passion and intensity, while the girl watches breathlessly) (Then taking her hand softly) «then comes the time for softness, sweetness and joy. That which He endowed us with, cannot be deprived.
Ahh...( Trembling,
looking her over lasciviously, starting to caress her, subtly unfastening : an experienced hand) ...and you have...such bontiful
nature... (Her flesh quivering at his touch...)
GIRL : (Almost swooning) Abh...Mulla sahib... MULLA : (Besides
himself
with joy,
almost
swooning
himself,
more
Frantic, less subtle now, knowing the time for action has come...) Keep saying it, keep saying it, my dear...Ahbh...let me close my eyes. It’s too much... (While he closes it for a moment, the Mukti Bahini people come from their hideout and stand in front, the girl sees them and bolts, the Mulla with his eyes closed unsuspectingly.) ...too much. Keep saying it. You're real; you’re not a dream... (One eye opening.)
(His voice dropping.) ...you’re not a dream; you're real... (Both eyes opening, he looks around, tears in his eyes, takes
in his hand,
and beats it on the rock till it bleeds.)
(The Mukti Bahini are in roars of laughter.)
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his head
346
SONAR BANGLA
YUSUF: (Amidst gasps Mullah from Mala. MULLA : Since
you
of laughter) At last...we meet...the You're quite a legend Mulla sahib.
give me no chance
Mad
to be real, you must contend
with my legendry. Pray was there ever a girl in my arms just now.
yusur : You were asleep, Mulla, MULLA: (Shaking his head; dream that was too real.
It was all a dream.
sorrowfully
sumITA: (Not unsympathetically) alone and let’s go.
but
Leave
wisely
too)
him alone.
MULLA: (Awakening, looking araund, looking ling again) Abbh...voices from heaven.
Alas,
the
Leave the man
at her,
his eyes
spark-
(Looking above) God-sent,
(Approaching her while others laugh in pleasantry) Mature...(Looks at her admiringly, but withdraws in fright the moment she fiddles with the gun trigger) Dangerous too...(others all laugh). sumiTa : Get on your way, Mullaji. MULLA : (Struck by her, some unknown mind) My way is your way, woman.
quality, in his own peculiar Lead and I shall go there. I
" shall follow thee to the ends of the earth. hear me men...hear me you woman ...that is...divinity.
all...for
For there’s something...
there’s something
about this
SUMITA : Are you out to convert me, Maulviji. I’m a Hindu woman. MULLA : Ah...I knew it. it.
From the moment I set eyes on you, I knew
You have given me an added mission
in
life,
Yes, I shall
propolytize,
shall try
to
convert
you
to them,
there
out you, heaven would not be complele. not by the sword, but by my love. sumiTa: (Glint in her eyes) AndI devout Hindu. (Laughter and cheers.
of 3 Pak behind.)
soldiers
Unknown
who have surrounded them.
LEADER: Drop your arms.
(Before anyone
irisay!! You're surrourded. (Everybody freezes.) (One of the soldiers comes around
and
woman.
is a
a
They emerge from
can swing
around)
takes
weapons from
the
You certainly kept them engaged.
Google
into
small petrol
them.)
Well done, Maulvi.
With-
DROP
ACT
HI SCENE
347
I
yusur: So he’s one of your quizzlings,
is he?
I took
him
for
a
buffoon.
LEADER: Good idea. He might be useful to us in future too. He’s the crazy Mulla who’s crazy about women, isn’t he? (Looking at Sumita)
Would be
interesting
to
see
how
he
(Nudging his companions) Yes, it might be fun.
works
you
over.
ARUN : You swines...(Gets a backhanded swipe from the soldier) MULLA : (Catching on fast) Of course it was an act.
Do you
think I
Make it fast.
Time’s
like to be interrupted during my...celestial meetings. (Pak soldiers laugh.) So Vil have to make it up otherwise...(going over to Sumita.) 1 knew the soldiers were behind you. Why do you think I did all that talking... (Yusuf is shoved back before he can make a lunge for him.)
LEADER: What do you have in mind, running out.
MULLA: (Picking up You'll wait.
the
Mulla.
rolled carpet) First
I must
pray.
Alone.
(Goes behind the tree, away from the irsight, presumably opens the carpet there, and one hears a few words of prayer...then...without
warning, he appears from behind the tree, carrying an old-fashioned rifle, steady and well aimed.) Drop it. I could pick all three of you before you could bat an eyelid. (One of them goes for his gun which the Mulla expertly shoots out.) I’ve always shot to eat before. Let me not shoot to kill now. Throw down your arms, men.
(They
throw
it down.
The
:
tables
Mulla is surrounded by the cheering over, he goes over to Sumita)
are Mukti
once again reversed. Bahini
men.
After
The
its
MULLA: (To her in earnestness, the jocularity all gone) Woman, I was tempted. You were offered to me. But I’ve never takena woman against her will. I’ve shall follow you...forever.
always
seduced her.
suMITA : (Folding her hands together) Namaste, Mullaji.
come to join our group.
(Blackout)
Google
And
now...I
You're wel-
348 5.
SONAR BANGLA A meeting of the Bangla Desh
Colonel, Hussain and Ray.
H.Q.
in Calcutta
between
the
COLONEL : The worst is over. There’s a new confidence growing. We’re receiving more and more volunteers, people who want to
fight more for freedom than revenge.
RAY : That's the stuff that new nations are built of. HUSSAIN : We'll never get there, Ray, at the rate going.
RAY : What do you mean ?
HUSSAIN: (Turns
to
the Colonel)
at which
we're
Colonel, would you like to
that. COLONEL : What we’re getting is fine but it’s not enough. Ray: Not enough man! Why we’re arming you to the
answer
teeth.
no secret we’re aiding and abetting you all over the place.
-
It’s
COLONEL: You don’t understand, Ray. I’m not saying you're not giving enough arms. In military terms what I need is logistical
backing...the kind that only an army can give. RAY : (Carefully, seriously) Are you implying that the Indian
army...
should cross the border into Pakistan...in order to support a hand-
ful of guerillas.
COLONEL : I’m saying that in order to win an outright victory guerilla action by itself is not enough. If your army could keep the Pakistan troops occupied on the border areas, my guerillas could attack the interior areas more effectively. RAY : (Angrily) The
kind
of border
skirmishes
Colonel, could escalate us into war ! (Colonel shrugs his shoulders, doesn’t answer.)
you're
suggesting,
HUSSAIN: Ray, you wanted to know how a victory is won and he told you.. Leaving the action on a guerilla level would mean a war"
of attrition that would go on and on. ‘You know what that would mean to your country in terms of looking after the refugees.
RAY : (His shoulders slumping) It would be ruinous. (Neither of the other two men work itself through.)
say anything;
they
let
Ray’s
worries
(Ray continuing, almost talking to himself) 1...1 get nightmares. Of ten million people crying for food in a hungry land. Everything
on
the
brink
of
a holocast.
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80%
Hindu refugees on
the
ACT III SCENE
I
349
verge of setting off a communal explosion. Towns in Bengal with more refugees than local residents, breeding resentment and hate.
Revolutionary
politicians exploiting
the situation
to
bring
about
HUSSAIN : (Winking at Colonel) It’s not as bad as that, all pastmasters at...““border skirmishes”. Just give push with tanks and military hardware.
Ray. it an
We’re added
chaos, The national budget going down the head, Hussain tapping him on the shoulder)
drain...(shaking
Ray : (Waking up, almost shouting) Just give it a “push”,
with tanks and infantry! That’s...brinkmanship! take me for...John Foster Dulles ! (Hussain and Colonel can’t contain their laughter.)
you
his
say !
What do you
HUSSAIN : Not to worry, Ray. You're well protected. RAY : (Smelling a rat) What do you mean ?
HUSSAIN : (Almost innocently) That Russian mutual defence pact was a marvellous bit of diplomacy. RAY: True, the lady’s smart. (Then suspiciously) What are you getting at ? HussAIN : We're approaching winter. You don’t need Colonel to tell you that a snow-bound Himalayas would effectively cut off the Chinese from attempting any...attack into India.
RAY: ...S0... 2 HUSSAIN : ...So that just leaves India and Pakistan to fight it out with a double military superiority of India over Pakistan, both men
and equipmentwise. . RAY ; (Sarcastically) While Bangla Desh goes its own way.
HUSSAIN : Correction. While Bangla Desh fights on the side of India for her liberation. : RAY : (Shaking his head) Sorry. No go. India is a peaceful country. HUSSAIN: (Angrily) Don’t give me that Gandhian stuff, Ray. Let’s face it: It’s in your interest to have Pakistan...dismembered. RAY : (Furious) Watch your words, Hussain! ‘You’re pushing me too far! First it was a little help to guerillas; now you want a fullscale border provocation which will invite nothing short of a declaration of war from Pakistan ! HUSSAIN: (Getting up, excited, almost embracing Ray) You've got it, Ray! Hit the nail right on the head! That’s the right way to do it: provoke them sufficiently so that they declare war on you !
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350
SONAR
BANGLA
RAY : (Too taken aback to speak) You...you’re crazy... HUSSAIN:
(Softly, appeasingly)
My Bengali brother, Ray,
what
alter-
native do we have? We have learnt from bitter experience that international pressures for a peaceful solution did not work out. And now we all don’t want to suffer from refugee nightmares forever. (Fadeout) 6.
Switch back to the same band of guerillas, except that
now
have a bearded, turbaned, Sardarji Brigadier of the Indian (14th Punjab Regiment) with them.
YOUNG ALI : (Looking at the Sardarji and shaking his
used to it.
they
Army
head) Can’t
get
yusuF : Can’t get used to what ? ALI: We’ve been fighting Punjabi to help us.
Punjabis
all
along,
and
here
comes
a
(All laugh.) SARDARII : It’s not always easy I assure you. we've been in the same military academy.
Often, before partition, Now we’re Indo-Pak
enemies.
ALI: I can’t imagine a Bengali ever fighting a Bengali. Why we have Muslims and Hindus fighting together for Bangla Desh. MULLA:
No
Sumita)
war
makes
any
sense.
Sumita dear, why don’t you
for the permanent heavens above. Islam.
But
love
forsake
does.
your
(Turning
to
reincarnations
Embrace me and you
embrace
sumiTa : Mulla sahib, think how amorous the pursuit would be if you followed me from life to life. (All laugh.) SARDARJI: To business now. First let’s be clear on my terms of reference. I can’t go beyond a certain point without risking an
open violation of foreign territory.
border
incursion
moral mandate.
ARUN
under
: In brass tacts this
the guise of “self-defence”.
means
Jessore brigade but not beyond.
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Mine has to be a temporary
that
you
__!
will
go
That’s...my
as
far
as
the
ee
ACT
IM SCENE 1
351
SARDARJI: That’s right. My army will There will be no Pak encirclement.
protect
you
YusuF: Field reports have shown me
points
of
the
from Pak
behind,
concentra-
tions on both sides of the bridge. If you can keep them off our backs from behind, we can demolish the bridge in exactly... (looking to Ali...)
yusur : (Watch, detonators, and expert handling by now)...10 minutes.
SARDARII: We’ll have practice rehearsals on every move. Minute by minute. (To the boy Ali) Are you sure you know how to handle explosives, boy. yusur : Like James Bond. (All laugh; fadeout)
(Scene at the bridge; a far cry from there
is expertise
and training now.
the old rail-derailment
Everything goes according to
clockwork. The Indian army have contained any behind.
The
guerillas
are feverishly
days;
at work.
encirclement from
Ali and Mulla are
sweating it out with the explosives. Arun and Sumita are on watchout with guns.) ARUN : (Looking at his watch) I wish they’d hurry. Difficult on both sides. The Sardarji Brigadier said exactly 10 minutes. Yusuf’s taking a hell-of-a-chance on the other side of the bridge. suMITA : I think I see Yusuf running now. (Shots and cries) He’s over to Ali and Mulla.
What’s holding them up.
(Yusuf comes
over,
running,
The Pak reserve have
spotted
(Shouting) YUSUF...COME OVER!
them.
panting.)
yusur : Th...they...Ali...Mulla...won’t come. M...matter of few minutes now. Touch and go. Explosives almost ready. So also Pak reserve. (Pointing) There they are... Fire...hold them off little longer...
(All three level their rifles and keep firing.) (At the bridge centre Ali and Mulla working frantically.)
MULLA: (Cool as cucumber) How’s it going, boy 7 ALL: (Equally steady, courage coming from somewhere fine, only few seconds now, then run for life... (His hand trembles, Mulla’s firm grip steadies.) MULLA :
Steady.
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deep)...All’s
352
SONAR
BANGLA
ALI: (Sweating) Mulla sahib, there may not be enough time. Why don’t you go ? MULLA : I always pray before sunset. ALI: (Shouting) GO, YOU FUCKING BASTARD ! THERE ISN’T ENOUGH
TIME
!
NO SENSE IN BOTH OF US BEING BLOWN SKY HIGH !
MULLA : (Helping him) They won’t allow this kind heaven, brother. (One of the Pak
shots
hits
Ali,
who
of vocabulary
staggers
back
in
mortally
wounded.) (Shaking him) Ali. aur! ! ALI: F...fuse set. You...ou’ve...got...60...seconds more... (Mulla dragging him, but the load too much, Mulla crying, feeling the boy who’s dead now, turning savagely, raising first to heaven.) MULLA : (Shouting like a madman, above, below, around) YOU FUCKING
BASTARD
!|
YOU
FUCKING BASTARD !
(Standing in the midst of the bridge, raised to heaven, weeping, shouting) YOU FUCKING BASTARD ! ! |
heedless
of fire
around, fist
(Back on other side of the bridge)
yusuF : The Mulla’s gone mad.
Stark, raving mad.
SUMITA : (Shouting) MULLA, COME OVER ! OVER!
(Yusuf gets up to.go to him.
stops her.)
Sumita stops him.
She gets up.
Arun
ARUN : No, no Sumita.
He’s finished. The bridge will blow up any
sumITA: He will to me
!
second.
He.won’t listen to anyone. He’s gone mad.
(She dashes out: runs over to him, pleads, catches him
drags
him,
by
barely to safety, before the bridge blows up.)
the
hand,
(Blackout) 7. Switch to Eastern Command Pak Army Bengal. Three senior officers discussing. Isr:
The pressure’s
2nD : 1st : 3RD : Isr:
What do you mean ? Mukti Bahini enlarging in numbers... We can handle them. Not when they’re supported by the Indian
somewhere
growing...
Google
army.
in
East
ACT
III SCENE
I
353
2np : Yes, that’s serious. 3RD : Why don’t they come out and fight. Nibbling on us time... Ist: That’s what they want us to do. Attack them...
all
the
3rD : Not a bad idea.
2np: Hold on. We're at a disadvantage here. We could be cut off in the East, if the Indian Army comes in totak conflict... 1st : But the squeeze is on anyway, The Mukti Bahini are...let’s face it...gaining fast in the countryside. 2Nnpv : We could hold out at the town cantonments...but how long ? 3RD : I think the top brass are thinking of sudden attack. Damn good idea. 1st : Do you think we'll catch them napping ? 3rD : Why not ?
1st : Surely they’d be expecting it.
intended
2NnD:
to invite attack.
Their provocations are probably
They outnumber us by two to
one.
3rD: One Pakistan jewan can outfight ten. Indians. lst: No doubt. But remember we’ll have two enemies here in the East. The Indian Army and the Bengali people. Wecan handle both. Tikka did a thorough job of the 3rD: Abh! Bengalis. Too bad he’s being replaced by Niazi. 2nD: He’ll follow the same policy, I’m sure. Push more refugees out. It'll equalize thé two popula3RD: Yeah. tions
in
majority.
East
and
West.
Who
knows
we
may
end
up witha
1st : For arguments sake of course, it could be said that we pushed them too far. 3D : (Laughing) Yes...right into India. Saddled her good and well with those
useless people.
1st: Not quite. The worms turned, friend. She’s risking a war now by incursions into Pakistan on the flimsy ground of self-defence. 2np : Aren’t we between the...devil and the deep. If we stay out, the Mukti Bahini will overrun us. If we retaliate across the border, we invite war. 3rp : If the choice were left to me...and I think the top brass in
Pindi share my opinion,..it’s war !
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354 2nD:
* SONAR BANGLA If it’s going to come, let’s get it over with soon. s This
eating
tension’ 8
into my nerves.
1st: The pressures growing... 3RD: ...it’s war then. (Blackout) 8. Refugee camp.., Arun and Sumita, She is sewing some ‘orn clothes. Arun ooking at her.
ARUN: Can’t.believe you’re
the same, woman...the helpless ‘village
refugee, .lying under the straw-mat...a few months ago.
(Sumita looks up and smiles.) Now you're virtual leader
of
our
guerilla
group,
the ‘bravest
.of
them all. sumita : Ob, Arun... : Doe : ARUN : No, no, it’s true. Your name is feared and respected. You’ve almost become a legend of the rebellion. SUMITA : (Simply) I only want my daughter. . .
ARUN : And you'll find her, Sumita:
Only, it’s too dangerous
to go
in the heart of Jessore town. You'll have to wait until Jessore falls.to the Mukti Bahini. . a SUMITA; But that may be months and months. Meanwhile I don’t
know how Maya is..
ARUN
;
: It might be quicker if India gets
Jessore
into
a
war ‘with
will be one of the first towns to be freed,
Pakistan.
SUMITA: One hopes...and hopes...and hopes but I can’t wait.
wait, Arun.
ARUN : It would be suicidal for the guerillas to go there.
The town
is swarming with informers. sumita: But I could get by alone. ARUN: What do you mean !_
SUMITA: Nobody
Ic can’rt
would suspect a lone helpless village woman.
ARUN : (Going up holding her) No!
You're too well known
now’ to
escape attention. Lite SUMITA : Let me go ! Don’t touch me ! I...I swore over my husband’s
dead body that I would protect Maya with my life.
ARUN : (Leaves her) (With finality) I won’t let you go alone.
(Mother comes hobbling in.)
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.
.
:
ACT III SCENE I
355
MoTHER : Ah...fighting. That’s good. two of you never fought. ARUN: Mother, you have a very large MOTHER: I also have eyes. They may but they’re still there to see. ARUN: (Putting out the kerosene lamp) (Turns over and goes
I was getting worried why imagination. _ not be as good as Goto
they
the
were,
sleep, mother...
to sleep.)
(After a while one sees the silent form of Sumita getting up, and leaving...) (The next day at Jessore, One imagines she must have made enquiries, and is. now being taken to a small, dark, dingy neighbourhood by an old man...) OLD MAN: You're lucky to have found me. I’m one of the few... survivors. This happened...you said...towards end March. A
young girl, accompanied an old woman,
came
Sen family...
here...to
the
Sunil
SUMITA: Yes. OLD MAN: Alas that family was no more. But there were others who gave them refuge. ‘The girl...what did you say her name was..
Maya...
SUMITA: (Anxiously) Yes...yes... OLD MAN: ...is safe and being well
and died.
fell sick
suITA : The girl.:
looked
~
.
The girl. Where’s she. Take me
OLD MAN: Patience...patience, woman.
me.
after.
there.
mother, did you say ? . suMITA: (Suddenly alert, through instinct) No, 1 didn’t (Stopping, as they walk)
?
OLD MAN: Where you want to go ‘2 Don’t
you
want
how she was..
survived.
And yon’re the say.
Or don’t you want to go
there.
to see the Hindu girl, Maya, for whom you came
all this way ? sumiTa: I didn’t come from far. OLD MAN:
woman
You're lucky to have found
The girl...she’s about 14, did you say ?
Where are you taking me
old
The
oo -A relation of hers wanted to ‘know on
True, ‘true, how am I concerned
7-P?m just lucky to have
There were not many like me who did, Take you : you
must have been
lucky
too,
Google
356
SONAR BANGLA
SUMITA : What do you mean ? OLD MAN : I mean a woman...single like you...would preferred to remain...in the refugee camp.
normally
have
SUMITA: (Stopping) I’m not from there ! OLD MAN : You bear the mark! All those who wait for rations at the refugee camp across the border have the mark. (Pointing to the mark on her hand) SUMITA : Where are you taking me ? OLD MAN : (Stopping, pointing toa room)
To
the
girl.
Do you want to come...or don’t you ? (Sumita undecided, torn between caution and anxiety.)
She’s
there.
(Man turns around to go.)
...the Army make enquiries. every day.
She may not be here
time you come,
(She
stops
SUMITA: Take
OLD MAN
next
him, gives money.) me
there.
: (Mumbling) You're
lucky...
(Knocks on the door; opened; furtive talks; Sumita asked to go in; door immediately bolted; elderly man and keeper turn the lock; Sumita bangs on the door, screams, then darkness
(The
barred
only
visible
windows
on
light
is outside,
and
and silence.)
it streams
through
the
which one sees portion of the matressed floor...)
(Darkness continues; form of a large man entering the room; Sumita in the corner.) MAN : Old men are never lucky; they’re just greedy. That’s how they survive. By giving information. SUMITA : He...he was an informer. MAN :
Planted.
We were expecting you.
SUMITA : I don’t know who are you. MAN: But I know who you are. You're
whom you’re searching.
You're
the
SUMITA : Wh...who’re you ? MAN ; I remain...unknown.
Google
of the
also the most wanted member
the Mukti Bahini... SUMITA : I’m a poor village woman... MAN : (Interrupting) You were.
mother
Not any more.
girl
of.
ACT If SCENE 1
357
suMITA : Are you with the Pakistan Army ?.
too.
Or are you an informer
MAN : Neither. But I belong to their group. suMITA : Wh...who then ? MAN: Tam...the liquidator. Ido the dirty jobs for them. Oh, initially they didn’t need me. They did it themselves. Now they want to be careful...and clean. So they send me out to do...their cleansing job...(Laughs chillingly) SUMITA : Y...you're mistaken.
You’ve made a mistake.
MAN: Who cares. You might be What’s one life, more or less.
the right
one.
You
might
not.
SUMITA : Then...there’s nothing I can do...to appeal 7 MAN : No, but you could
make it...easier.
SuMITA : How... ? (The man catches hold of her clothes, and tears it.) MAN : THIS WAY! THE WAY OF THE BEAST! (She strikes out at him, but he’s huge and powerful, and he knocks her down. She screams, struggles, while he plants her, lower and lower, underneath him...) (The light from outside. faint suggestive rays, continues to pour in the corner of the otherwise darkened room. All that is visible is the upper portion of Sumita’s body, bare, bathed in sweat and pain and shame, while the man’s
enormous, hairy, bare shoulders, tears at her
Flesh, her breasts, lugging inner mourns,
deeper and deeper, her screams turning to
till in an unbearable
spasm he
hugs her to crushing
Point, then releases, she too exhausted too repelled too faint to even tear herself apart, but lies there, with the alien, hateful beast still within her...)
(The door is crushed open,
off makes a plunge for
the
with
gun,
Arun-Yusuf-Mulla, but
is pinned,
the man
Sumita
rolls
covering
herself with what's left of her clothes. Arun cries out viciously in pain and hate, picks up the gun and is about to riddle the man...) sumiTA: (Hardly Maya...
audibley
N...nn...no.
F...find
ARUN: (The tears streaming down his eyes) happened to me. No more. No more... Yusuf hold him by the arms. Mulla..by tight...very tight.
Google
out
Twice! the
legs.
first...about
Twice
it’s
Hold
him
358
SONAR BANGLA
(The naked man is spreadeagled.) (Arun takes out ‘his long knife, approaches the man who knows what’ 's going to happen,
gurgling, hoarse,
and
screams
while
the
and
knife
screams,
till his
swoops
throat
turns
between’ the | legs,
.
decapitating, portion by portion, _dismembering with trembling precision, twisting and cutting...not allowing him to faint...)
Where’s she’?
Where’s the girl ...?
(Arun puts his head nearer as the man whispers, and.when its over, with a cry, the knife disembowels the man completely.) (Blackout) 9. Hussain looking out of the window. Something sadness, anger, longing written.all over his face. Ray dashes : in RAY:
disturbing him:
°
Put on the radio !
(Switches on.)
Voice of the Prime Minister : : “I speak to you ata moment of ‘great peril to | our country and our people... “Some hours ago, soon after 5.30 pm, onthe 3rd of December. Pakistan suddenly launched a full-scale war against us.. RAY: (Intercepting) I’ve just got news that the Pakistan air a force has
struck eight ‘Indian air-fields, and that, ground forces are shelling Indian defence Positions in several sectors along the © Western’ border... HUSSAIN: Shh... Voice of the Prime Minister: ‘ “T have no doubt that it is the united will of our people that this wanton and unprovoked aggression of Pakistan should. ‘be decisively and finally repelled... : (Hussain shuts off the receiver.) Ray : We were expecting it of course, but still it has come as a bit of
a surprise.
HUSSAIN:. ...the Indian air-force...? RAY: Virtually
unharmed.
An
doubt, intended to wipe us out. like a squib.
Israel-type
blitzkring
no
thin
that
But instead of a bang its gone off
The poor military fools spread
Google
attack
it
out so
.
ACT Ii SCENE i
359
there were hardlya few
going single have Navy West,
planes
attacking
each
air-field.
We're
into action now. I promise you, Hussain, there won’t be a Pak plane left in the East within the next week. The Army already started to move in. What’s more, we have the in this time too. They’re on the way to Karachi on the Chittagong
in
them in our grip at last.
(Hussain smiles,
the
East.
It’s total war now.
almost sadly,
the green and gold.)
and looks out
Hussain...Htissdin.:.what’s wrong
it more than anyone else. wanted all along HUSSAIN :
(Tightening
with you.
And .we shall win.
(Turning aroundgravely) ‘Yes.
his fist)
We've
of the window beyond You had a
hand
Google
in
Isn’t this what you
Yes, my friend.
But I was
just thinking...of the pain and scars that’s going ‘to tear my Bangla once again... FADEOUT
got
Sonar
ACT
IV
SCENE
I
The Final War. 1.
News Broadcast, froglike-drone from All-India Radio :
...this sums up the news over the last few days... After the abortive pre-emptive strike on December 3rd by Pakistan, India struck back with 500 sorties and within two days had total airsupremacy in Bangla Desh...
There is a Naval blockade on all East Bengal ports, and in concert
with the Mukti Bahini, Indian forces. in Bangla Desh... In an Union
have liberated
some
territory
emergency meeting at the U.N. Security Council, the Soviet vetoed an American resolution calling for cease-fire and
military withdrawal...
Today, December 7th, Jessore has been liberated by Indian forces... (Mukti Bahini mixed with Indian Army forces being cheered by the
liberated people of Jessore.) (The Arun-Yusuf-Mulla-Sumita moment they have cornered
group
are
there
too,
but
a quivering man in one of the
ARUN : (Striking him) Where’s she...where’s the girl ! (Pain and anxiety over Sumita’s face. There’s something
at
alleys.)
the
quiet and
withdrawn about her now, not the same active spark she had earlier.) (The man is terror-stricken.)
MAN : (Shaking) She...she was unharmed. 1...I swear it. in Jessore...and with friends...she escaped...to Dacca. ARUN: You're lying! MAN : (Blubbering) No...no...no.
I swear, it’s true.
ARUN: (Under a whisper to Sumita) It checks with
man said. Dacca
now.
Your
daughter
was
unharmed,
and
suMITA : (Weary, tired, relieved, whispers) Thank God.
Google
S...she hid
what the other
safe.
She’s
in
ACT IV SCENE i
361
(Shouts outside : “Traitor ! “Collaborators!” ‘“Quizzlings” “Informers !” “‘RAZAKARS |’ (A group of three people try to run through the alley, being chased by the Mukti Bahini and local people.) (Yusuf hold up the rifle and they stop. Pretty soon all the people
are on them, Spitting...)
hitting
them
yusuF : (Shouting) Wait!
blows,
stamping
on
them,
cursing,
Let’s finish them the right way...
(Crowd accept what he says with cheers.) (The quivering,
those in
pleading men
are tied,
much in
the same
way
that
on their face,
and then
slow piercing
with
THEM!
KILL
the initial massacre were,
cigarettes torture-marks
thén thrown
to the ground,
lit
bayonets, in all areas outside of the heart, with slow death creeping and screaming, the crowd cheering wildly, while Yusuf and Arun fanatically and systematically keep driving the bayonets...) CROWD:
BIHARI
TRAITORS!
THEM ! !
RAZAKARS!
KILL
ONE CRYING : They tortured my husband and child. ANOTHER : They didn’t give my son a chance. ANOTHER : THE SWINES ! THAT’S RIGHT! MAKE MORE ! MAKE THEM SCREAM BEFORE THEY DIE !
THEM
SCREAM
ANOTHER CRYING : They exterminated a whole village. ANOTHER : He stole my land, my property.
THIRD : He took my home, my self-respect.
(Child,
obviously one of the men’s children,
himself over crowd)
the father,
is trampled
to death
dashes by
the
over, flings
infuriated
(Sumita agast, cowering in the corner, shaking, completely shattered) sumiTA: (Holding
Mulla
by
them...they’ve gone mad...
the
MULLA : (Looking at her) My dear.
hand)
Mulla...Mulla
sahib...stop
They call me mad already.
they listen to me if I try to stop them.
Will
sumita : Is this what victory means ? They...they’ve become beasts. All. Just like that man who...who...Mulla, Oh, Mulla, won’t we ever learn to...
MULLA : ...forgive...?
forgive...? (shaking his head negatively)
Google
362
SONAR BANGLA,
SUMITA :...become... become human, once again. we,
MULLA : T don’t know. Perhaps. Perhaps over...and.the fire is gone... sumiTA : Go, Mulla. Try and stop them.
after all
the
They may
insanity
is.
’
listen to you.
(Mulla goes over...)
MULLA : In the name of Allah... (Crowd roars at him to get away. They are in a murderous mood, Even when Yusuf and Arun stop; others take up ‘the weapons .and continue to plough it into the dying prisoners.) MULLA : (Screaming) JEHAD! THERE IS NOTHING LIKE JEHAD ! There should
not
on
be no
one
wars...no
reprisals.
To
war...is
or both sides of those who fight.
And you shame Him now. (Crowd screams
and surges.
In
the guns
unholy.!
God is
God is on neither.
‘
that shoot
around,
the
changing of bayonets, the vast confusion, a bullet hits the Mulla,
perhaps from
dying now.)
an assassin-unknown, perhaps nobody’s Sault.
:
Mulla”
(Sumita rushes over to him. Crowd in a hush now. The Yusuf-Arun band surrounding the bearded holy man, held in Sumita’s arms.) -* =:
MULLA : (Smiling weakly at Sumita who's crying) Tears 7 Tears, my dear. Does it matter that we shall meet in my one heaven, or in your never-ending lives...Sumita my love...Hold me.. (Sumita buries the bearded old man’s face within her breasts and cries, rocking him in grief and death-ecstacy, she cries...) 2.
The U.N. Security Council..
Ray is sitting next to the Indian Permanent Delegate. Hussain comes and joins them. They talk in undertones while a formal resolution is being drawn for cease-fire and withdrawal of troops.
up
RAY: (In undertones to Hussain) Things going wrong, Hussain, They’re ganging up against us. The Americans are behind it all. Can’t understand why they're leaning so heavily in favour of Pak. HUSSAIN:
Is
there
a
resolution
withdrawal of troops 7”
coming
uP
for cease-fire
and
RAY: Yes. The Americans have done a hell-of-a-lot-of“lobbying. They just can’t forget acting the world’s Policeman.
Google
:
AGT IV SCENE J
363
HUSSAIN : What happens if they get it through ? RAY
: It’s going to be very difficult.
both
Desh.
in the debate
HUSSAIN:
here,
and
What we need is time.
The
British
a
crucial
stage
now,
our near break-through at Bangla
Time.
Can’t
:
The
:
PRESIDENT: ...found it necessary to call an emergency session...to
°
you swing them over?
and
We’re at
yy
the French
The Russians...
seems fairly neutral.
RAY: Yes, we're depending on them now. resolution is coming up for vote. © ' (Microphone
Shh...listen.
voices of the President putting up the resolution...)
consider.. ithe deteriorating situation which has led to armed clashes
between India and Pakistan...
RAY
*
“
: (Jn undertones) The Communist Chinese delegate
Huang
‘
Hua
and American delegate George Bush” have “branded | India as the ‘ aggressor... : SAMAR SEN: (India’s Permanent Delegate butting in) (To Hussain, Pointing
to
the
Soviet
Delegate)
MHussain...there’s
the’ Soviet
Delegate Yakov Malik. Let’s keep our fingers crossed | now...'° “ PRESIDENT: ...tabled the resolution for immediate cease-fire and withdrawal of troops... SAMAR SEN
: Pakistan’s banking on this.
—
too if we can kill'it.
HUSSAIN: (Praying as he’s never prayed
It is her only hope.
.
before,
slowly
table with a closed fist, whispering to himself) Kilt a strong whisper) KILL 1T!
it.
banging
Killit!
SOVIET DELEGATE YAKOV MALIK : (Getting up; the hall in a hush)
Ours
:
the
—
(one
.
(Gn :
word) NYET
(Fadeout) (From the impressive hall of the Security Council, to the bathreom for the delegates...) RAY : (Talking while he’s pissing near the white marbled container) That was a close shave. : HUSSAIN : (Pissing too)-Yes.
(The British and French delegates come in. :
piss-pot.)
RAY : Hellow, Andre.
ANDRE: Liberté.
.
:
They stand astride the
Good of you to be neutral.
Google
: .
364
SONAR BANGLA
(British Delegate unzipping his fly) SIR JOHN : Ob I
say have you any
idea
how
long this thing will last.
Better make it quick, you know. It’s getting dashed uncomfortable with the Americans doing the war dance.
RAY : (Introducing) This is Hussain from the SIR JOHN : No local standi, what ?
HUSSAIN: Right, Sir John. dent
nation
we
Bangla
But not for long.
pledge to
look
And
after all British
Desh
as
Mission,
an
indepen-
trading interests
there... SIR JOHN: (Gives a guffaw and zips up his fly) That’s the kind of diplomacy I like. Money and a sense of balance. (Washing their hands, straightening out their tie, etc.) (Pak Delegate comes in together with the American.) PAK DELEGATE : (Sourly to Hussain) What are you doing here, Hussain. Looking for more defectors. (Bathroom door opens and another Russian “NYET” comes through clearly.) HUSSAIN: (Grinning) Don’t need to. (The American's zip is stuck.) Why don’t you unzip your friend, Zubair.
knots. (Ray and Hussain laugh. Others leave. ANDERSON : (Extended hand) Hussain !
He
seems
tied
up
in
Anderson comes in.)
HUSSAIN: (Taking it) Andy! What the hell you doing here. what the fucking hell is your government up to.
And
ANDERSON : (Clucking
bad
his
tongue)
Cluck,
cluck,
cluck,
cluck,
words won’t get you anywhere, Hussain. Actually, like the American people, you don’t really have a clue as to what’s really going on. That’s why I followed you and Ray here. RAY : (Quizzically) Here ? In the bathroom ? ANDERSON : (Grinning)
Only
place
that
isn’t bugged.
I should
know about bugging. Come, there’s one bathroom that’s closed on all four sides. I’ve gota little tape here I want you both to
hear...
(They crowd over to the bath room, close the toilet seat, sit on it or
stand, while Anderson plays his tape from the match-box.)
HENRY KISSINGER’S
VOICE : I’m getting hell every half hour
Google
from
the
ACT IV SCENE I
365
President that we’re not being tough enough on India, He has just called me again. He does not believe we’re carrying out his wishes. He wants to tilt in favour of Pakistan. He feels everything we do comes out otherwise. ANDERSON: That’s
Special
Action
Henry
Kissinger
Group...an
at
adhoc
a
group
meeting of the American
of foreign policy crises
managers...called at a top secret/sensitive meeting... (Amused at the surprised expressions on Ray’s and Hussain’s faces,
continues...)
HELMS : Yahya’s speech today referred to the ‘final’ war with India. Moscow is supporting Delhi throughout. SAMUEL DE PALMA (Assistant Secretary of State): Both Yahya and Mrs. Gandhi are making bellicose statements. It we refer to Mrs. Gandhi in our statements, do we also have to refer to
KISSINGER : The President says either the out
the
bureaucracy
Yahya’s ?
should
put
right statements on this, or the White House will do it.
DE PALMA : We will have difficulty in the U.N. because most of the countries who might go with us do not want to tilt towards
Pakistan to the extent we do.
KISSINGER : Whoever is doing the backgrounding at State’ is invoking the President’s wrath. Please try to follow the President’s wishes...Nothing will happen at the Security Council because of Soviet vetoes. The whole thing is a farce... On Agency (for International Development) matters, the President wants to proceed against
India
only.
We
need
public statement to explain our action... (Tape over. Hussain lets out a long low whistle.)
to
develop
a
HUSSAIN : What do you propose to do with this,
ANDERSON: Publish it.
HUSSAIN : You’re crazy. They'll throw you in jail. ANDERSON : They might...though I doubt it. You see, the public statements being made by the White House are a blind on actual events.
That’s concealing things from the people.
how conscious we are about our rights.
HUSSAIN : 1’m glad there are some who
are
prepared
And you know to
accept
responsibility too. ANDERSON : I don’t think you’ll sound so pleased when you hear
next
one.
(Both men
look
Google
at him
anxiously)
the
the
1 have reason to
366
‘SONAR BANGLA
believe that American arms are being supplied to Pakistan through third countries in the middle-east. I also have reason to believe that the 7th Fleet is going to move in soon to the Bay of Bengal and
that
the
Chinese
are
contemplating
an imminent
The only way to avoid this is by capturing Dacca
claiming
a
friends...
new
Republic.
But
you
don’t
invasion.
immediately and
have much time left,
(Blackout)
3.
call
Broadcaster announces: ‘This being
Manekshaw...
given
SAM MANEKSHAW
by Indian
Army
is a ‘soldier to soldier’ radio Chief of Staff Generat
: “...Dacca is surrounded in a
pincer
Sam
movement.
Stop fighting and surtender. Should you not heed my advice and try to escape, I assure you certain death escapes you. If you surrender, you will be treated as honourable Prisoners-of- war according to the Geneva Convention...
(Gen A. A. K. Niazi, Commander of the ‘Pakistan Forces Desh, shuts off the radio.) -
in Bangla
NIAZI: Never! We will fight to the last even if it means the destruction of Dacca. In the persuit of jihad, nobody dies. He lives forever. As Bhutto said, “If necessary Pakistan will wage a 1,000-
year war”
(He is talking to Maj.-Gen. Farman Ali and civilian governor, Dr. A.N. Malik. Major General Farman Ali, who was Pakistan’s Chief Military Representative in East Bengal, has been replaced by Niazi.) FARMAN ALI: (Dryly) At the moment’ its doubtful if we cai 1 Wage a . 1,000-minute war. NIAZI:
I am here commanding my troops by the will of Allah:
I will never desert ‘them. FARMAN ALI: Meaning ? NIAZI: (Who has reswitched the increases the volume) Listen :
And
. transistor,
and
listening
softly,
SAM MANEKSHAW: “I know you have planned an escape, Farman
Ali. I know ‘that five of your merchant ships are disguised and the pilot for RK623 will be ready. to leave by 18 hours, I
have
instructed
all my forces to deal with this situation.’
Google
You
“ACT: IV SCENE I
367
will be getting your merchant ships and armed forces destroyed '
if you do this. military lives.”
I have
warned
you
because I want to spare
(Farman Ali keeps silent.)
Niazi: Furthermore I am also aware that ‘to U.N. Secretary General U Thant Mailitary and civilian personnel to West FARMAN ALI: (Defiantly) Well? NIAZI: (Softly) Your message has been ‘personally at Islamabad... FARMAN ALI : It’s madness to continue. NIAZI: (Continues softly)...and ordered ‘Eastern Command. GOVERNOR MALIK: Gentlemen, gentlemen, be fighting amongst ourselves...(Dabs ‘my...er...position
as
E.
Bengal
delicate. My...er...Ministers ‘resignation : NIAZI: What 7 Rats, you all. FARMAN ALI:
you have directly pleaded for aid to evacuate the Pakistan... : countermanded ‘by Yahya
me to
civilian
are...en
replace you as GOC
this is hardly the time to his sweating forehead)...
os
governor
is...er...most
masse...considering...er...
I’ve never seen such speedy advancement before.
Their
infantry took on an “outflanking operation” and surrounded us whilst ours dug in with trenches and bunkers. The Navy’s completely blockaded the Bay of Bengal ports, and the Air-Force are dropping Indian paratroopers this very moment into Dacca. GOVERNOR MALIK: Perhaps...er...there’s something to the saying... that...er,..that the Pakistan...er...Generals have ‘become. -politicians instead of fighters. NIAZI: (Reddening) The Americans will intervene. is on the way. The Chinese will also intervene..
FARMAN ALI: So also are the Russians.
Their
7th
Fleet
About 20 of their warships
are moving rapidly to the Bay. They’re also prepared for a border conflict with China. In other words there'll be'an armed stalemate
here...the
same
way
that
there’s
a verbal stalemate in the U.N.
That leaves just...India and Pakistan to fight it out. Correction: that leaves just East Pakistan to fight it out without any help from the West. Are you, General Niazi, prepared to sacrifice ‘a 100,000 or more of your troops to satisfy your own. vanity.
NIAZI : (Paleirig, sweating, to himself) Yahya has betrayed us.
Google
¢
368
SONAR BANGLA
FARMAN ALI: Certainly I planned the escape, not only for myself but for all of us including our troops. Have you ever thought, gentlemen...(His
voice
coming
down
to
a chilling
note)
what
become if we were all ever tried...as war criminals...
(Governor Malik scurries home.
Indian
aircraft,
and he
seeks
would
The Governor’s house is strafed by
shelter
in
a
bunker along with his
family. The first air-strike had pocked the Government building only slightly and set fire to the rooftop fuel supply for the diesel generator...)
MALIK : (A balding bespectacled Bengali, sitting on the bed, with his German wife and daughter) Should I resign ? Should I not ? What should I do? (Suddenly the air-raid sirens sound again and the Indian jets start another rocket attack. The deafening burst of shells and bombs visibly shakes him.
He nervously takes out a
ball-point pen,
writes
out his resignation, passes it to a journalist to check. Then with sudden cool and calm...having gone through the worst, he removes
his shoes and socks, carefully washes his feet, puts a clean handkerchief on his head and kneels down to pray in the corner of the
bunker...)
,
(Then through pre-arrangement with the Red Cross, Dr. Malik and his family and a dozen Cabinet Ministers...who have resigned en masse...seek the protection and shelter of the Hotal Intercontinental which has been made into a neutral zone.) 4.
There is a quite drama taking place at the
Hotel
Intercontinen-
tal. Swarms of people are running over there to take to refuge. As the city begins to fall, different nationalities scramble to take the last plane out, fearing new violence. (There are Red Cross workers, and journalists who have now volunteered to screen all people coming in.) , HARASSED OFFICIAL : Passports please. Passports, please. 1 WON'T LET ANYONE IN WHO HAS NO7 IDENTIFIED HIMSELF AS A FOREIGNER LEAVING THE COUNTRY. voice : When does the plane leave 2?
Will they take me ?
ANOTHER : Landing permission for foreign evacuees was given... now there has been some mix-up.
ANOTHER: Please Jet me in . please...they’re out to kill me.
Google
But
I...1...
ACT IV SCENE I
369
gave some information...once. ANOTHER: Here...take this money. I have thick. Only get me out from here.
wards
of it...2
inches
ANOTHER : Some quizzlings tried to worm their way out through false passports.
away.
They
were
(Along comes the hated quizzling)
caught
Chairman
at
the
last
of the Dacca
moment
Peace
and
turned
Committee,
a
SOMEONE POINTING TO HIM : He’s responsible for the murder of 3,000 Bengalis over the last 9 months. CHAIRMAN : Shut up!
Let mein.
LET MEIN!
OFFICIAL/REPORTER : Sorry, Sir. CHAIRMAN : Let mein.
I order you.
OR ILL
BLOW
MY
WAY
INTO
THIS HOTEL ! DO YOU KNOW WHO! AM ! I AM THE CHAIRMAN OF THE DACCA PEACE COMMITTEE ! OFFICIAL : (Harassed, not caring, but worried for everyone, women and children and all) Precisely, Sir. Now go away...otherwise I'll have yon thrown out.
CHAIRMAN : Ill call...’ call...the army ! OFFICIAL : Which one ? (Chairman fumes, turns around, leaves hurriedly, hiding, hiding.) UN DIPLOMAT : (Announcing) Last flight leaving in half an hour. Let’s go ! (Rush to air-port) Where’s John Kelly ? ANSWER : He said to go ahead. He’s in a pow-wow with the Pakistan Commanders about General’s offer of unconditional surrender...
,
(Partial blackout)
5. Another part of Dacca. Arun and Sumita along with the Mukti Bahini, advancing, they tangenting off to the address of the person who’s supposed to know about Maya.
ARUN: (Frantically catching hold of the person) We
would know, friend. her mother...
Where’s the girl?
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were
Where’s Maya.
told
you
This’ is
SONAR BANGLA
PERSON: No time now. there { Let’s go. Take ARUN: The girl, the girl, PERSON: Maya? Did remember her. She’s mother ?
(Zo Sumita)
Dacca’s falling...is it surrendering ? Look over the city. Free our people at last. where is she ! you say her name was Maya? Yes, I escaped harm miraculously. You’re the She’s safe.
Where’s she ? suMITA : Thank God. PERSON: As soon as she heard that Dacca was being liberated, she left, ran like a deer... SUMITA : Where 7? Where ? PERSON: To her home. I believe it’s not too far from here. A few miles. In the other direction. It’s a safe area. You don’t have to worry for her now. (Sumita turning around and about to run herself.) (Arun catches her.)
ARUN : Where are you going ? SuMITA : To her. To her...and home. A few hours more won’t matter. ARUN : But she’s safe, Sumita. If they won’t surrender, We’re on the outskirts of Dacca now. we will invade. I don’t care for your war. SUMITA : No, I go the other direction. ARUN : What are you saying, Sumita ? Dacca’s a stone’s throw from Yusuf’s dead. I can’t leave here. Everything we ever wanted. our group now. You can’t either. SuMITA : I will.
I will.
ARUN : Sumita listen. leave forever. (Sumita looks up at
Let go of me. For the last time. him for
Leave me
a fractional
suddenly between them, her heart torn,
but
second:
her
struggles, frees herself, and runs a like deer...)
SUMITA: (Voice
Maya...
going
faint
as
she
mind
now...and a wide
decided.
you chasm
She
disappears...) Maya...Maya...
(Fadeout) 6.
United Nations Radio relays Niazi’s surrender :
PLEASE INFORM THE INDIAN HIGH COMMAND SURRENDER MY ARMY UNCONDITIONALLY...
Google
THAT I AM PREPARED
TO
Cah
370
ACT Iv SCENE 1
371
TIME : 4.31 P. M. DECEMBER 16TH.
LT. GEN. NIAZI, COMMANDER OF PAKISTAN FORCES IN BANGLA DESH Less than an hour later, Indian troops rode triumphantly into Dacca as Bengalis went delirious with joy.
From the Intercontinental Hotel, time
Correspondent,
Dan
Coggin,
reported :
(This action to be shown.) IT WAS LIBERATION DAY! DACCA EXPLODED IN AN -ECSTACY OF HARD-WON HAPPINESS. THERE WAS WILD GUNFIRE IN THE AIR, IMPROMPTU PARADES, MILITARY AND HORN HONKING, AND PROCESSIONS OF JAMMED TRUCKS AND CARS, ALL MOUNTED WITH THE GREEN, RED AND GOLD FLAG OF BANGLA DESH. BENGALIS HUGGED AND KISSED INDIAN JAWANS, STUCK MARIGOLDS IN THEIR GUN BARRELS AND
SHOWERED
THEM WITH
GARLANDS
OF
JASMINE.
IF
‘JAI
BANGLA’ WAS SCREAMED ONCE, IT WAS SCREAMED A MILLION TIMES... (Then came the ceremony of the surrender.) Bowing to the inevitable, Niazi divested himself of his epaulette of rank, unloaded his revolver and finally pressed his forehead to that of Lt.-Gen. Aurora as an act of submission and surrender.
Niazi was on the verge of tears; his face pale and haggard.
(This action to be shown.) The thump of field artillery and the crackle
of
small
arms
faded
into silence in Dacca as news reached that the battle had ended in surrender. Four hours later, India announced a unilateral cease-fire. Prime Minister Indira Gandhi said: “In order to stop further bloodshed and unnecessary loss of lives we have ordered our armed forces to cease
8 pm”
fire
everywhere
on
the
7.
Back to Intercontinental Hotel.
the
lounge
with high-backed chairs.
western
front
from
tomorrow
Hussain enters it, goes
over
to
He looks very tired and drawn,
though considerably relieved. His meditative face breaks as he sees a bottle of burbon on the table.
into smile
HUSSAIN : (Stretching out his hand to take the bottle) Burbon ! (From the high-backed chair springs out
outstretched hand)
Google
Anderson,
takes
Hussain’s
372
SONAR
BANGLA
ANDERSON : The name is Anderson. (Warm and affectionate greetings) ANDERSON : So you made it, Hussain. HUSSAIN: In a way the task is just way to go...in nationbuilding.
My congratulations.
starting.
ANDERSON : You look very tired.
We
still have
a long
Is there something wrong ?
HUSSAIN : (Brushing his hand over his face) Possibly just...exhaustion.
ANDERSON: You kept pushing yourself all the time. You should be pleased and relieved at having got there. HUSSAIN : (Distantly) Not till I reach...home. ANDERSON : Home ? HUSSAIN : ...only a few miles from here. My home, where my mother
was buried...and where...the life exists... ANDeRSON: Your attachments were
of
‘always
personal and national.
(Hussain’s
wry,
my
country... deep,
my
feeling
Hussain...both
tired smile)
ANDERSON: (Raising the glasses) Drink to that. Well, Hussain, be seeing you. Where there’s trouble, I’ll always be there. long... HUSSAIN : Bye. (He leaves. One of the red cross officers comes over...) R.C. OFFICER : Mr. Anwer Hussain ? (Hussain nobs.)
Chief would like to see you in the HUSSAIN : (Puzzled)
Chief
(Taken to the room,
perfection (Smiling)
I'll So
office.
?
left there.
of Elizabeth)
Hint
of perfume,
and
the
blond
I always
told
you.
Elizabeth...
(They embrace, but with a distant sense of separation.) ELIZABETH: Oh
Hussain...Hussain...
HUSSAIN : You...here ? ELIZABETH : ...where I’m needed most, Hussain.
(Hussain
coughs. Sways slightly)
What’s wrong, Hussain. You don’t look at all well. HUSSAIN : (Again the tired rueful smile) I guess I need looking after.
ELIZABETH : But not by
me
?
Google
ACT IV SCENE I
373
(Hussain’s eyes smile sadly in reply.) HussAIN : (At
last)
You’re
the
most
beautiful
woman
I’ve
ever
known. You’re the most lovely woman I ever made love to. ELIZABETH : You're still not saying what I want to hear most. HUSSAIN : Is there anything more ? : ELIZABETH : There is an old saying that says...if only it had been... place...even another life...
time...another
another
(Tears in her eyes, softly...) Goodbye, Hussain, goodbye, my love... (Hussain turns around and leaves, walking slowly, carefully, in
pain, while the crowd outside roars : MUSIB
MUJIB
! WE
Scene in solitary confinement in Minawali where Mujib has
been
WANT
8.
BANGABANDHU
|! WHERE’S
MUJIB REHMAN...)
imprisonment for nine long months...
musIB: (Jn soliloquy; to himself) Alone...and alone...and alone...and alone...for nine long months...no one to talk to...to know what’s
become of my family...and
home...
It didn’t matter...the earlier imprisonments...they weren’t solitary .. and the nation didn’t depend on me...nor was I ever under sentence of execution... (Sound of warden outside with spade, digging Mujib’s grave) court: (Judge) The trial has lasted for 6 months, Mujib. Have you anything to say for yourself7 mujiB ; Yabya is the Chief Martial Law Administrator, and he has ordered this trial. The question of my defence does not arise. Tell Yahya to do what he likes.
JuDGe : The verdict of this Military Court is that and that you are going to be hanged. And so I wait...and wait...and wait.
you
are
guilty
Even fear, my companion,
is tired. I feel a change within. It matters less to me, my own life, for the first time, than the life of my nation... JAILER : (Enters) You are to follow me.
Not a sound.
MUMB : Does it matter if I am shot escaping. me anyway. I'll follow... (Gradual darkness and then partial light:
taken far
away,
and now
Google
sees
They’re going to hang passage
of time.
He
is
sitting on the chair, a man in mufti
374
SONAR BANGLA
smoking a cigar, but with the
semi-darkness,
military
stick
on
the
table.
In
the
he cannot see who it is, then recognizes Bhutto.)
muiiB : (Surprised) Bhutto ! What on earth are you
doing here.
BHUTTO : (Grinning)
I am now the Chief Martial Law
BHUTTO : (Gripping
the
Administrator
and the President. Your savior too. Muli : But I thought you did not believe in martial law authority. army
baton)
A
temporary
expendiency.
Marvellous how fast you can get things done with it. Best of both worlds. But I have promised civilian rule before long, and now we have a little chat.
MUJIB : First tell me whether or not I am free and
to talk—otherwise not. BHUTTO: You'll be free to go, but I’d like to time.
MUJIB:
talk
then
I am
to you
That’s the least I can do for a man who’s saved
BHUTTO : It wasn’t easy, I assure you.
for
my
Yahya wanted
ready
to
some
life. hang
you
the same day as the fall of Bengal...yes, Bengal has been occupied by Hindu India...but 1 was able to get you out in the nick of time. MuuiB : Tell me more about...Bengal having fallen .. BHUTIO: (Waving his hand) Well, you’!! come to know about it all pretty
soon.
Yahya made a
mess of things, as the military always
do, and has left a number of Pakistani prisoners in Indians. MusIB : So if anything had happened to me, you might those prisoners. BHUTTO : Right. Now Mujib, I’d like to make a deal muyiB : No deals, even if you make me a prisoner like BHUTTO : I’d like the West and East
together. If you want to give it to you. the
hands
of
never get back with you. Yahya did.
of Pakistan
to
hold
on
some autonomy in the East. I’m prepared
MusIB : (Laughing bitterly) You were
wings
the
know
very
well,
Bhutto,
one to scuttle the talks in the first place.
that
you
You’ve turned
full circle in wanting to give me now what you refused earlier. Only a number of my people have been killed in the meanwhile, and now there can be no retreat
from
full
independence.
BHUTTO : It wasn’t entirely my fault, Mujib.
We
would
have
Yahya was blind:
found he
a way
could
Google
only
We're both
politicians.
out...a way to compromise. see
black
and
white.
For
But
a
ACT
IV SCENE
I
375
politician there is nothing greater than power. MusiB : (Quietly) I’m not a politician any more, Bhutto.
BHUTTO: (Laughing cynically) Oh...I see. A statesman? A martyr ? The blood of martyrs has made you great, has it. But only dead martyrs survive. Living one’s don’t. People get disillusioned soon. Only the politician learns to survive. MUJIB : We shall
see.
BHUTTO : So we shall. Meanwhile...glory awaits you, Mujib, the once
in a lifetime... (Putting out his hand and shaking it with Mujib)
(Sound of his countrymen’s
voices
: “Joi Bangla”
“Joi Bangla’, “Joi Mujib”...the roar of millions return home.)
(Also comes the sound of his voice in
munis:
the
on
‘Joi Mujib”
his
victorious
last soliloquy...)
“Till December 27th, when I met Bhutto, I did not know
what had happened...
But I knew, I understood what had been happening in my even during my months of solitary confinement. I always knew my people were behind me.
help me. That’s what kept me
country
I knew that God would
going.
I never wept during all those months in solitary confinement. I never wept when they put me on trial; But I wept when I arrived back here and saw my wonderful Sonar Bangla.”
9. Last scene: Hussain’s house. Hussain recuperating, walking heavily on the stick, looking over the ruins of his house, walking to the grave of his mother...
(Sound of Tagore’s
Golden
Bengal)
“‘My golden Bengal, thou art my love Thy heavens and thy atmosphere
!
In my heart ever play the flute.
In Falgun month thy
mango
woods
With fragrant honey make me mad,... (Hussain walks back painfully to his home, sits on the chair in the
varandah, and reflects beyond...)
“Oh how glorious !
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376
SONAR
BANGLA
When Aghran’s plenty strikes thy fields What sweet smiles have my eyes not seen ! O grace, O shade, O love, O charm,— What a scarf have thy hands laid out At Banyan roots, at river-banks ! The words, O mother, of thy lips Appear balsamic to my ears... (Out of the shadows in the distance the form of Sumita still calling out, still running, breathlessly, “Maya” “Maya”. Maya
Srom the other end, running, calling out “Mother”. each
other,
clasp
tears, too much
each
other
Till they reach
in their arms...the love, longing, and
to bear...)
“Oh how glorious !
When grief they face of freshness I float away in streams of tears. In cattle grazing
pastures
robs
thine,
In ferry-landing of thy streams, In village-cots with shade be-cooled Where birds are singing morn till eve And in house yards with paddy spread The days of my life have their round... Hussain stands up, leaning on the stick, the wan smile and soft peace reflecting on his face... ““My golden Bengal, thou art my
love...”
[T nH E—E ND]
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