Sie sind auf Seite 1von 2

http://indianreview.

in/the-little-toe-mahim-bora-assamese-short-storiestranslated-by-lalit-saikia/
Page 1 of 2 Apr 08, 2014 01:36:40AM MDT
Indian Review:Assamese Literature Short Stories: The Little Toe : Mahim
Bora (Translated by Lalit Saikia)
indianreview.in
People pour in like a stream to see a newlywed bride. The impact of a marriage seems doubled in the
aftermath than in the wake of it From far-off villages relatives, old and young, thronged in, with a
passionate desire to dine together and see the bride. The newlywed bride is Jogeswari. the consort of
Someswar.
Something, other than her usual bashfulness, seemed to make her uneasy even in the midst of the
giggling and jocoserious hilarities of the virgins and the marrieds all around her.
When would this crowd disperse and shall I become old in this house? I would not mind if somebody
breaks the secret after I settle down, but how shameful it would be if people can discover so early a their
very first visit. She argued with herself. But Night fell where tigers infest, as the saying goes. All her
efforts have gone in vain and in no time the lynx-eyed women-folk. who gathered there to see her. made
the discovery. A puny little girl suddenly screamed, Ah! how look the little toes of our new sisterin-law7
The words wrought an electric shock as it were, in her heart and logeswari tried to tum in the little toes as
much as possible. But once discovered, it would be meaningless to hide it. Among those present, some
giggled or chuckled, some exchanged something through the eyes and this titter went on. Stopping only at
the glum looks of the middle-aged ladies.
Right since the time of negotiation, the people of the bridal house took all caution to keep the matter a
secret, so that it might not tall into the ears of the men of the grooms house. They look utmost care when
men from the grooms house came to see the bride, lest they do not blunder as on the previous
occasions. For, on this score earlier, several parties had shrunk back. They came, had a pleasant dinner
and returned. Then the reply came the would-be bride is not bad; not one to run away with on throw to
the gutter, but... Jogeswaris parents felt dead at the point. They knew that all other young maids of the
village had been married one by one, but only Jogeswari had to rot in her home on account of this
handicap. This apart, Jogeswari, no less beautiful than others, was sufficiently adept in all domestic
chores. But alas! Fortune decreed otherwise.
Someswar, the only surviving member of his poor family, had bettered his pecuniary position through toil
and labour and with a zealous gusto he arranged for his wedding. There was plenty of matrimonial offers,
but the marriage was finally settled with Jogeswari. All factors. namely, star-position, genealogical relation
and position of the same religious head required as fundamentals to cement a matrimonial alliance
between two families, have been found favourable. The wedding was also duly solemnised. Entire
responsibility of the house had now devolved upon Jogeswari who was to put up with everything, be it a
slander or repute. She thought how helpless she was. Her other traits and accomplishments had been
blurred by what everybody thought it to be a defect in her, much in the same way as a stray whit of dung
spoils the milk. Her little toes are longer than usual and the source of all troubles.
When Kadamis mother, a pretty old woman, was about to take leave, she said to Someswar How
could you marry her? Could it not be noticed by anybody? His face grew dark and pale and no wonder,
that he performed his wedding with a heart full of hopes and aspirations and if others now start speaking ill
http://indianreview.in/the-little-toe-mahim-bora-assamese-short-storiestranslated-by-lalit-saikia/
Page 2 of 2 Apr 08, 2014 01:36:40AM MDT
of it, everything seemed to fizzle out. He almost gasped and asked her Whats the matter? Look at her
little toes, you wretched? Get a vermillion mark on your forehead. Damn those people you engaged to sec
her. You could not remember people like us lest we may play the first fiddle. She hurled the invective at
Someswar and jolted oft`. Someswar stood motionless, his heart ruffled and burning.
The episode did not end there. The two little toes of the wedded bride are longer than usual an ominous
sign. Someone laughed at, someone joked. There was fuss and flurry about amongst the people present
and before long the matter became known to all. Those who could not notice it earlier through oversight
drew nearer again with renewed curiosity.
And what about the wretched bride? She grew pale and again turned red. The young damsels earlier
managed to unveil the bride partially but she now fully drew the veil again to her waistline.
The matter must have reached the ears of her husband by now. What is he thinking of? Know not, what
his nature is. Fuh, Fuh, the matter ought to have been intimated much earlier to the people of grooms
house. If it embitters their mind now, it may as well strain their relation with her family and bring about a
dislocation in all matters. Her parents or other members of her family might be ill-treated either by the
brothers of her husband or by the husband himself. Alas! what an inauspicious moment she was born at
!. Thus began Jogeswari to contemplate and curse herself under her veil. Unconsciously, she tried to turn
in the two little toes, just as the tortoise does its limbs. May God either destroy them there on the spot or
make them commensurate, she felt.
Meanwhile, inside the house, the crowd of women began to increase. Other villagers also assembled
outside. It was but natural that large numbers of people collect in a house in the post nuptial period. The
newlywed bride is the cynosure of all eyes. Besides, people also pay visits immediately after the
ceremony to partake a cup of merry tea or tobacco or betel-nut. Someswar had no interest in all these
rejoicings now that he was in a predicament. He felt, he could escape, if he could go out of the mess. He
would rather sit somewhere else in , complete seclusion. He felt as if the words of Kadamis mother still
rang in his ears, other voices all being inaudible.
Then he must have been deceived. He knew that quite a number of marriages had been performed in his
village and other villages in the neighbourhood over the year, but his was doubtless the most successful in
all respects in ostentation, reception, entertainment etc. People, who saw his bride, said in her praise
Someswars consort is perhaps the best of the lot in the locality. Other brides were not without a defect,
someone with crisp hair, someone obese, someone having the foot-palms resembling the shape of
wooden chappals, someone cock-eyed and someone again with a dark complexion and so and so forth.
Under such circumstances it was Someswar alone who could realise the condition of his mind best. As if
the jocose rejoicings, laughs and merriments, all have died down. The cause of all these was
apprehended by all, but nobody could divulge it.
Author: Mahim Bora Translator(s): Lalit Saikia Genre: Short Story

Das könnte Ihnen auch gefallen