~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
“The trapping of the story The
Castaway has magnificently abrupt my mind when I get to depict the story from
the tremendous genius work of Rabindranath Tagore on the emotional journey of
the protagonist of the story of the young orphan Nilkanta who seeks to win over
the undivided affection of Kiran, the lady of the house in which he has been
given shelter. On that day when the storm was at its height and inside a closed
room an earthen lamp was burning……………….
The Castaway is an apt title for
the story which depicts how Nilkanta becomes ‘a castaway’, both physically and
emotionally. `````````````
………..But Kiran with her innocent
mind said determinedly: ‘Never’. ……She, with flushed face, sat down helplessly
with the inkstand in her hand, puzzled and wondering.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--------?
Towards evening, I found the storm was
quite at its height. From the terrific downpour of rain, the crash of thunder,
and the repeated flashes of lightning, you might think that a battle of the
gods and demons was raging in the skies. Black clouds waved like the Flags of
Doom. The Ganges was lashed into a fury, and the trees of the gardens on either
bank swayed from side to side with sighs and groans.
In a closed room of one of the
riverside houses at Chandernagore, a husband and his wife were seated on a bed
spread on the floor, intently discussing. An
earthen lamp burned beside them.
The husband Sharat, was saying:
“I wish you would stay on a few days more; you would then be able to return
home quite strong again.”
The wife, Kiran, was saying: “I
have quite recovered already. It will not, cannot possibly, do me any harm to
go home now.”
Every married person will at once
understand that the conversation was not quite so brief as I have reported it. The
matter was not difficult, but the arguments for and against did not advance it
towards a solution. Like a rudderless boat, the discussion kept
turning round and round the same point; and at last it threatened to be
overwhelmed in a flood of tears!
Sharat said: “The doctor thinks
you should stop here a few days longer.’’
Kiran replied: “Your doctor knows
everything!”
“Well”, said Sharat, “you know
that just now all kinds of illnesses are abroad. You would do well to stop here
a month or two more.”
“And at this moment I suppose
everyone in this place is perfectly well!”
After getting married to Sharat, Kiran,
their little darling became a universal favourite with Sharat’s family and
neighbours. However, when she fell seriously ill, they were all anxious. Sharat
and his mother decided to shift the family for some time to Chandernagore, to
enable Kiran to recover from her illness. The village wiseacres thought it
shameless for her husband to make so much fuss about a mere wife and even to
suggest a change of air, and asked if Sharat supposed that no woman had ever
been ill before, or whether he had found out that the folk of the place to which he meant to take her
were immortal. Did he imagine that the writ of Fate did not run there? But at,
Sharat and his mother turned a deaf ear to them, thinking the little life was
of greater importance than the united wisdom of a village. People are wont to
reason thus when danger threatens their loved ones. Kiran, on the other hand,
was an extrovert by nature; she was fond of people and amusement. Therefore,
the only loneliness in the riverside villa did not suit her. There was nothing
to do and she hated to be busy all day with medicine and dieting. Such was the subject discussed in their
closed room on this stormy evening.
So long as Kiran deigned to
argue, there was a chance of a fair fight. When she ceased to reply, and with a
toss of her head disconsolately looked the other way, the poor man was
disarmed. There was a pinched look on her face which filled the beholder with
pity, and made his heart tremble, as he thought how narrowly she had escaped
death. He was on the point of surrendering unconditionally to Kiran, who
recovered though she was still weak, when one night a servant shouted a message
through the closed door. Sharat went out and came to know that a rudderless boat
had capsized in the storm and a young Brahmin had succeeded in swimming ashore
in their garden.
Kiran, was however at once her
own sweet self, was quick to show her generousity. She took out some dry
clothes for the boy. She then warmed a cup of milk and invited him to her room.
The boy was fairly young; he had long curly hair, big expressive eyes, but had
no beard. He told her that his name was Nilkanta and that he belonged to a
theatrical group. When the boat of the group had suddenly capsized terribly in
the storm, he had managed to swim ashore. Being castaway in the storm, he
became helpless but Kiran’s family gave him shelter. Sharat thought the boy’s
appearance at this moment rather a good thing, as his wife would now have
something to amuse her, and might be persuaded to stay on for some time longer.
The mother-in-law, too, at the prospect of profiting their ‘Brahmin’
guest, Nilkanta by her kindness into her house. And Nilkanta himself was
delighted at his double escape from his master and from the other world, as
well as at finding a home in this wealthy family.
But-in a very short while, Sharat
and his mother changed their opinion. Sharat was extremely class-conscious and
as such disapproved of Nilkanta’s uncultured behaviour. The boy found a secret
pleasure in smoking Sharat’s hookahs; he would calmly go off in a pouring rain
with Sharat’s best silk umbrella for a stroll through the village, and make
friends with all whom he met. Moreover, he had got hold of a mongrel village
dog which he petted so recklessly that it came indoors with muddy paws, and
left tokens of its visit on Sharat’s spotless bed. Then he gathered about
him a devoted band of boys of all sorts and sizes, and the result was that not
a solitary mango in the neighbourhood had a chance of ripening that season.
There is no doubt that Kiran had
a hand in spoiling the boy. Sharat often warned her about it, but she would not
listen to him. She made a dandy of him with Sharat’s cast-off clothes, and gave
him new ones too. And because she felt drawn towards him, and also had a
curiosity to know more about him, she was constantly calling him to own room.
After, her bath and mid-day meal Kiran would be seated on the bedstead with her
betel-leaf box by her side; and while her maid combed and dried her hair,
Nilkanta would stand in front and recite pieces out of his repertory with
appropriate gesture and song, his elf-locks waving wildly. Thus the long
afternoon hours passed merrily. Kiran
would often try to persuade Sharat to sit with her as one of the audience, but
Sharat, who had taken a cordial dislike to the boy, refused, nor could Nilkanta
do his part half so well when Sharat was there. His mother would sometimes be
lured by the hope of hearing sacred names in the recitation; but love of her
mid-day sleep speedily overcame devotion, and she lay lapped in dreams.
It was hard to tell Nilkanta’s
age. He had joined theatrical group when he was young… and circumstances had
trapped him in a half-boy, half- man state. Sharat , was contemptuous of
Nilkanta’s free access to his treasured possessions and warned his wife against
indulging him too much. He was distressful of Nilkanta but gave in thus to the
affections of beloved wife. A thoughtful providence so arranged things that
Nilkanta grew to the exact stature that his manager required, and then growth
ceased. Since everyone saw how small he
was, and he himself felt small, he did not receive due respect for his years.
These causes, natural and artificial, combined to make him sometimes seem immature for seventeen
years, and at other times a lad of fourteen
but far too knowing for seventeen. And as no sign of hair appeared on
his face, the confusion became greater…. but innocence and youth shone in his
large eyes. I, fancy that his heart
remained young but the hot glare of publicity had been a forcing –house that ripened untimely his outward aspect.
His seventeen or eighteen years came to
adequate revelation. No one observed the change, and its first sign was this,
that when Kiran treated him like a boy, he felt ashamed. When the gay Kiran one
day proposed that he should play the part of a lady’s companion, the idea of woman’s
dress hurt him, though he could not say why. So now, when she called for him to
act over again his old characters, he disappeared. He even made up his mind to
pick up a little education from Sharat’s factor. But for, Nilkanta as was the pet
of his master’s wife, the factor could not endure the sight of him. He wanted to read and write but did not have
the patience for it. He would sit long enough with an open book on his lap,
leaning against a champak bush beside the Ganges. He never advanced from one
word to another, but the glorious thought that he was actually reading a book
filled with exultation. Whenever a boat
went by, he lifted his book, and pretended to be reading hard, shouting at the
top of his voice. But of, his energy dropped as soon as the audience was gone. Formerly
he sang his songs automatically, but now their tunes stirred in his mind... even
the little meaning they had was beyond his comprehension; yet when he sang
“Twice-born bird, ah! Wherefore
stirred
To wrong our royal lady?
Goose, ah! Say why wilt thou slay
Her in forest shady?”, made him
to be transported to another world and even to other folk. When with evening
the child of want lies down, dirty and hungry, in his squalid home, and hears
of prince and princess and fabled gold, then in the park hovel with its dim
flickering candle, his mind springs free from her bonds of poverty and misery,
and walks in fresh beauty and glowing raiment, strong beyond all fear of
hindrance, through that fairy realm where all is possible. When the singing ended,
the mirage faded, and Nilkanta of the stage appeared again, with his wild
elf-locks. Fresh from the complaints of his neighbour, the owner of the
despoiled mango-orchard, Sharat would come and box his ears, and cuff him. The
boy Nilkanta, the misleader of adoring youths, went forth once more, to make
even new mischief by land and water and in the branches that are above the
earth.
The lapping water, rustling
leaves, and calling birds; the goddess who had given shelter to him, the
helpless, the God-forsaken; her gracious, lovely face, her exquisite arms with
their shining bangles, her rosy feet as soft as flower petals; all these by some magic
became one with the music of his
song.
Thus, the tale of goose and
king’s daughter flung upon the mirror of his
mind a picture of surpassing beauty. It is impossible to say what he
imagined he himself was, but the destitute little slave of the theatrical
troupe faded from his memory.
“What thoughts passed through
his mind as he looked down on that book he alone knew, if indeed he did not
know.”
**********************************
Shortly after the advent of
Nilkanta……………………….The story, thus ends, in a misunderstanding. Satish was the
source of Nilkanta’s bitterness and was irritated with his petty ways of
causing him annoyance. Satish did not trust the boy at all and like everybody
else, he did not take kindly to Kiran’s excessive indulgence on Nilkanta. He
felt that the boy was taking undue advantage of Kiran’s affection and was
annoyed by it.
Nilkanta and Kiran had a tie of
affection, but unfortunately it could not be permanent. Due to his mischievous
behavior, Nilkanta as seen lost favour with the rest of the family. His whole
world revolved around Kiran, about whom he had become very possessive. With the
arrival of Satish, Kiran’s brother-in-law, shortly after the advent of
Nilkanta, came to spend his college vacation with them. Nilkanta was filled
with bitterness that made him vengeful towards everybody. He felt miserable at Kiran’s
lack of attention to him.
As such.., ‘Heaven’ only knows
what possessed poor Nilkanta that he became extremely bitter towards Satish. Nilkanta
therein experienced emotional insecurity and developed a vengeful attitude.
Kiran had become more occupied with her brother-in-law and Nilkanta thought
that he was poisoning her mind against him. Both, Kiran and Satish were of the
same age, and the time passed pleasantly in games and quarrels and makings-up
and laughter and even tears. Suddenly she would clasp him over the eyes, from
behind with vermillion-stained hands, she would write ‘monkey’ on his back, and
sometimes bolt the door on him from outside amidst peals of laughter. Satish in
turn, did not take things lying down; he would take her key and rings, he would
put pepper among her betel; he would tie her to the bed when she was not
looking.
Nilkanta, on the other hand could
not show his enmity outright and so he devised a thousand petty ways to annoy
him. He had an idea that a Brahmin’s wrath could never be in vain and the more
he tried to consume Satish with the fire of his curses, the more did his own heart
burn within him. He took to praying to the gods, with all the fervor of his
hate, to make him at the next rebirth Satish, and Satish him. And upstairs he
would hear Satish laughing and joking with his sister-in-law. Nilkanta thought
that he was castaway from Kiran’s favour.
When Satish went for a swim in
the river, and left his soap on the steps of the bathing place, on coming back
for it he would find that it had disappeared. Once he found his favourite
striped tunic floating past him on the water, and thought it had been blown
away by the wind.
One day, Kiran to her innocence,
desiring to entertain Satish, sent for Nilkanta to recite as usual, but he stood there in a gloomy silence. Quite
surprised at, Kiran asked him what was the matter. But at, Nilkanta remained
silent. And when again pressed by her to repeat some particular favourite piece
of hers, he answered: ‘I don’t remember,’ and walked away.
…Nothing therefore, tasted right
to Nilkanta. If Kiran was not present to ask him to try this and that, he was
miserable. He would get up without eating much, and say to the serving maid in
a chocking voice: “I am not hungry.” He thought in imagination that the news of
his repeated refusal would soon reach to Kiran, and he pictured her concern and
hoped that she would send for him and press him to eat. However, Kiran on the other hand never knew
of it and never sent for him; and the maid finished whatever he left.
*****************************
At last the time came for return
home--------------
Everybody hence was busy packing
up. Satish was going with them. But of, to Nilkanta nobody said a word. The
question whether he was to go or not seemed not to have occurred to anybody
except Kiran, who had proposed to take him along with them. Unfortunate to her,
her husband and his mother and his brother had all objected her decision very
strenuously that she let the matter drop. A couple of days before they were to
start, she sent the boy, and with kind words advised him to go back to his own
home. “So many days had he felt neglected that this touch of kindness was too
much for him; he burst into tears.” …..
Kiran’s eyes were also brimming
over at the thought that she had created a tie of affection, which could not be
permanent. But at, Satish was much annoyed at the blubbering of this overgrown
boy. When Kiran scolded him for an unfeeling creature, he said ‘’Sister mine,
you do not understand. You are too good and trustful. The fellow turns up from
the Lord knows where, and is treated like a king. Naturally the tiger has no
wish to become a mouse again. And he was evidently discovered that there is nothing
like a tear or two to soften your heart.”
“In the quiet shelter of Sharat’s
house and garden at Chandernagore, Nature had leisure to work her way
unimpeded.”
Nilkanta, but on the other side being
unbearable to tolerate those words hurriedly would leave the spot. He felt to cut
Satish to pieces, a needle to pierce him through and through; a fire to burn
him to ashes, but Satish was not even scarred. It
was only his heart that bled and bled. ---- What was his grievance? Against
whom? And from whom did he expect redress?
*********************************
Satish had a fondness for exquisite things and
had brought with himself from Calcutta, a grand inkstand. It was his favourite
article, and he diligently cleaned it everyday. He flew into a rage when it
went missing. He was sure that Nilkanta had stolen it and confronted him about
the missing inkstand. He was not convinced
when Kiran came to Nilkanta’s rescue. He had the accused brought before him. Kiran was also there.
‘You have stolen my inkstand, you thief!’ he blurted out. ‘Bring it back at
once.’
Nilkanta had always taken
punishment from Sharat, deserved or undeserved, with perfect equanimity, but
of, when he was called a thief in Kiran’s presence, his eyes blazed with a fierce
anger, his breast swelled, and his throat choked. If Satish had said another
word he would have flown at him like a wild cat, and used his nails like claws.
“He was either a man too early or
a boy too late. The fact was that, joining the theatrical band when very young,
he had played the parts of Radhika, Damayantani, Sita and Bidya’s companion.”
Kiran was greatly distressed at
the scene, and taking the boy into another room said in her sweet, kind way:
‘Nilu, if you really have taken that inkstand give it to me quietly, and I
shall see that no one says another word to you about it.’ big tears coursed
down the boy’s cheeks, till at last he hid his face in his hands, and wept
bitterly. Kiran came back from the room and said: ‘I am sure Nilkana has not
taken the inkstand.’ Sharat and Satish were equally positive that no other than
Nilkanta could have done it.
BUT
KIRAN SAID DETERMINEDLY: ‘Never.’
------------------------.
Satish wanted his room and box
searched but Kiran was adamant not to let this happen. Satish cared for Kiran
and could not see her in tears and so he dropped the matter for her sake. He
decided to forego his treasured inkstand for the happiness of his
sister-in-law. Satish saw Nilkanta as a freeloader, who was taking advantage
only of Kiran’s trustful nature. She said to Satish,” If you dare do such a
thing I will never, never forgive you. You shall not spy on the poor innocent
boy.’’ And as spoke, her wonderful eyes filled with tears. That settled the
matter, and effectually prevented any further molestation of Nilkanta! ………
When the family now decided to
return home for Calcutta, Nilkanta was therefore and thereafter devastated at
the thought of being left behind, just as he had begun to think that he had a
home. On the other hand, Kiran’s heart
overflowed with pity at this attempted outrage on a homeless lad. With her
kindness and generosity as she treated each person as individual, unmindful of
his class or standing, she showered the same warmth and affection on Nilkanta
as on her brother-in-law. With Satish, she had a harmless playful relationship
and Nilkanta, she was very kind and indulgent. Being pitied therefore, she got for
him two new suits of clothes, and a pair of shoes and with these and a banknote
in her hand; she quietly went into Nilkanta’s room in the evening! She intended to put these parting presents into his
box as a surprise. The box itself had been her gift. -------------
FROM HER BUNCH OF KEYS SHE SELECTED ONE THAT
FITTED, AND NOISELESSLY OPENED THE BOX. IT WAS SO
JUMBLED UP WITH ODDS AND ENDS THAT THE NEW CLOTHES WOULD NOT GO IN. SO SHE
THOUGHT SHE HAD BETTER TAKE EVERYTHING OUT AND PACK THE BOX FOR HIM. AT FIRST
KNIVES, TOPS, KITE-FLYING REELS, BAMBOO TWIGS, POLISHED SHELLS FOR PEELING
GREEN MANGOES, BOTTOMS OF BROKEN TUMBLERS AND SUCH LIKE THINGS DEAR TO A BOY’S
HEART WAS DISCOVERED. THEN THERE CAME A LAYER OF
LINEN, CLEAN AND OTHERWISE. AND FROM UNDER THE LINEN THERE EMERGED THE MISSING
INKSTAND, GOOSE AND ALL! -------------------------________
Having been castaway by the entire family,
Kiran had now cast him away as well. -----Nilkanta
acted recklessly and stole Satish’s favourite inkstand. --------He
had willingly taken all deserved or undeserved punishment meted out to him but
could not bear the thought of Kiran thinking him to be a thief.
He fled. Nobody knew about his
whereabouts. The police also failed to trace him. Without allowing her husband
to have a look into the box, she had it brought up to her own room. Said Sharat, “Now, as a matter of curiosity,
let us have a look at his box.’’ Kiran was obstinate in her refusal to allow
that to be done. She had the box brought up to her own room; and taking out the
inkstand alone, threw it into the river.-----When Nilkanta entered Kiran’s
home he was a castaway and when he left it, thus he was once again, a castaway….!
“The waves sighed below, boats
floated past, birds flitted and twittered restlessly above.”
Thus, this poignant story ends in
a misunderstanding. The tie of affection that once had bound them was lost
forever. -----In a day the garden became desolate. The whole family went home.
***************************************
The story has powerfully captured
the turbulent emotional upheaval in the psyche of a growing youth. It also
conveys the nature of fantasy hopes and desires of a teenager and the resultant
despair at their unfulfilment.
Nilkanta was heart broken and
ashamed that his deed was out. He did not want Kiran to think that he was a
thief; it was, as imitates merely a moment of weakness prompted by revenge. He
misunderstood Kiran’s kind intentions and was debased at letting her down.
He felt that all was lost and thus decided to
run away.
In this manner, the
misunderstanding abruptly brought to an end a sweet endearing relationship.
Kiran went home with her family, while Nilkanta had become a castaway again.
Nilkanta stole Satish’s inkstand and Kiran came to know the truth, “Towards
evening the storm was at its height.” --- You might think that a battle of the
gods and demons was raging in the skies. Black clouds waved like the Flags of
Doom. The Ganges was lashed into a fury, and the trees of the gardens on either
bank swayed from side to side with sighs and groans with the terrific downpour
of rain, the crash of thunder, and the repeated flashes of lightning.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~````````````````
Desperate revenge against Satish;
Nilkanta stole his favourite inkstand. All fingers were pointed at him. Kiran
was distressed at the accusations made on Nilkanta. She was filled with pity
for him. She was positive that he had not stolen Satish’s inkstand and refused
to allow the boy to be cross-examined. She got two new suits of clothes and a
pair of shoes for the homeless lad. She wanted to give them as a gift to him,
along with a banknote.
Holdover, when she opened the box
she found it to be in a mess. She decided then to take out the contents from
the box… Kiran was puzzled and did not know how to react! In the meantime
Nilkanta, who had come into the room without Kiran noticing, saw the whole
thing and thought that she had come to spy on him. HOW COULD HE EVER HOPE TO
CONVINCE HER THAT HE WAS NOT A THIEF, AND THAT ONLY REVENGE HAD PROMPTED HIM TO
TAKE THE INKSTAND, WHICH HE MEANT TO THROW INTO THE RIVER AT FIRST CHANCE? In
a weak moment he had put it in his box instead. ‘He was not a thief’, his heart
cried out, ‘not a thief!’ then what was he? What could he say? He had stolen,
and yet he was not thief! HE COULD NEVER EXPLAIN TO KIRAN HOW GRIEVOUSLY WRONG
SHE WAS IN TAKING HIM FOR A THIEF; HOW COULD HE BEAR THE THOUGHT THAT SHE HAD
TRIED TO SPY ON HIM!||||
***********************************
The Castaway by Rabindranath
Tagore is a brilliant depiction of an adolescent’s psyche. Tagore has very beautifully and sensitively
captured the emotional turbulence that the young orphan Nilkanta undergoes
while craving for the affection of Kiran, the woman who gives him shelter. The
story is a skilful description of the upper-class Bengali lifestyle.
Before joining Kiran’s family,
Nilkanta lived an unorganized life. The lack of physical and emotional security
had not allowed his personality to develop to its fullest. Due to his short
stature, he was not given the respect due to a seventeen-year-old boy. The
vitality, kindness and generosity of Kiran aroused emotions in Nilkanta and he
responded with feelings to it. He began to fantasise about Kiran and defied her
husband by stealing mangoes despite his beatings. He became extremely
possessive of Kiran and here forth craved for her undivided attention. In his
jealousy, however, he forgot his place and over-raced himself by stealing the
inkstand. He was ashamed at becoming a thief in her eyes and could not bear the
thought of letting her down and so he ran away, the story skillfully depicts
how class-consciousness or absence of it can affect people’s nature, their
thought processes and behavoiur towards others.
The Castaway is a story on human
nature, feelings and emotions. It has a moving portrayal of an orphan who
literally became castaway, had lost his companions in the storm and had come to
live with a family. The boy had led an unsettled life due to which he was in a
state of underdevelopment. He was an opportunist and mischievous. He had found shelter with a wealthy family in
a riverside villa and began to take advantage of it. He delved deep into the
luxuries that the house offered and often got his ears boxed and pulled by
Sharat. He, however, did not mind it, as harsh experiences had taught him that
life was made of “eatings and beatings.” Thus, not only Nilkanta was a castaway
in the world but also emotionally castaway from his host.
Kiran, on the other hand, was not
bothered about such things. Kiran and Satish were of the same age; and between
them, time passed pleasantly in games and quarrels. They would play pranks on
each other and share a good laughter. They had a typical sister and
brother-in-law relationship. It was not as if she had forgotten about Nilkanta
but, being the one to enjoy good company, she wanted to make the most of
Satish’s stay for the vacations. She was oblivious to Nilkanta’s suffering
while she engaged most of her time with Satish in harmless playfulness.
Nilkanta thought that he was castaway from Kiran’s favour.
-----------He would then put out
the lamp in his room and throw himself on his bed in the darkness, burying his
head in the pillow in a paroxysm sobs. What was his grievance? Against whom?
And from whom did he expect redress? At last, when none else came, Mother Sleep
soothed with her soft caresses the WOUNDED HEART OF THE MOTHERLESS LAD.
………………………………..’’Kiran, with flushed face, sat down helplessly with
the inkstand in her hand, puzzled and wondering.”
Sharat punished Nilkanta
for his undesirable behavior, especially when the neighbours complained against
him. Sharat did not want his name and stature to be spoilt among the neighbourhood.
When Satish’s inkstand was stolen, he immediately pointed his finger at
Nilkanta because he thought that being poverty-stricken and unbalanced; he must
have been tempted to steal. Sharat would have cross-examined him, had his wife
was not interfered. Nilkanta took advantage of Kiran’s affections and delved
deep in the riches of the family. This made Nilkanta emotionally also castaway
from the rest of her family. ----------When none else came, Mother Sleep
soothed with her soft caresses the WOUNDED HEART OF THE MOTHERLESS LAD.
Like
a rudderless boat, the discussion kept turning round and round the same point;
and at last it threatened to be overwhelmed in a flood of tears__________------
What was his grievance? Against whom? And from whom did he expect redress?
“AND
ONLY THAT STARVING DESOLATE MONGREL OF
NILKANTA’S REMAINED PROWLING RECKLESSLY ALONG THE RIVER-BANK, WHINING AND
WHINING AS IF ITS HEART WOULD BREAK- At last, when none else came,
Mother Sleep soothed with her soft caresses the WOUNDED HEART OF THE MOTHERLESS
LAD.”
:
Original Story-Rabindranath
Tagore-
[Except Setting,
and Additional of a few words and autobiographical word, Ideas, Decorum and Irony,
Style, Circumstantial Metaphors;]- Words and sentences and chronological
pattern with magnanimous beauty and decorum of the story from the original
story of Tagore with reference to also Xavier Pinto and an anthology of short
stories.
“I wonder, am
afraid to find out what happened really to Nilkanta.
Life is such, also
sometimes a complete mirage of an exploration to an adolescent’s psyche, a
mirror of mind that oscillates to be broken in perhaps more than a thousand
pieces that are full of emotional themes, and the depiction of a rural or an
urban life. The train would hault a full ten minutes and then a bell would
sound, the guard would blow his whistle, and presently a small railway station ‘Deoli’
while on way to ‘Dehra’ would be left behind and forgotten.” (Ideas and Self-thought from Anthology
and Ruskin Bond’s ‘The Night Train At Deoli’.)
.
My Personal Thought:
I was highly been ousted when I led myself to be settled nowhere what could be happened
to this homeless young lad ‘Nilkanta’. The depiction of the sketch of this
protagonist-boy by the author Rabindranath Tagore through his wonderful
pen-picture therefore left upon the readers. The story has far enough a
gracious touch to the encountered beauty of an adolescent’s psyche, on a
journey of life… There are on the outskirts of the story in the social outlook enough-such
categorical -adolescents’ psyche be noted perhaps to whom do we not understand,
as such making number of mistakes in life from bothsides, ‘but upon whom in an
unnecessary way therefore we are showing our grievances?’ What is to be done?
|||
…………
‘The Castaway’ is an apt
title therefore, for the story depicts how the reckless stormy Nilkanta delved
into the Flags of Doom swaying from side to side with sighs and groans in the
repeated crashes and flashes of lightening in his own abstract exploring life becomes
ultimately ‘a castaway’, both physically and, as well as emotionally.
–
Rituparna Ray Chaudhuri
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