Three Laughing
Children
Anup had got himself busy. He carried the bucket on his head. The man
nearby thought that the kid was helping him to clean his shop but the kid was
having fun. Anup had invented more than half a dozen interesting methods of
carrying a bucket and more than a dozen funny ways to cover the twenty steps
that it took to reach the shop from the water source. He ran carrying
bucketfuls of water, laughing at jokes he saw within himself or without. Only
he could see those funny faces that he spotted in the clouds above or in things
around him.
Then his eyes fell on the
toddy shop down below the road. He saw his father. He too was laughing.
Everyone around him too was laughing. The kid looked at this scene wistfully.
Like the mother cow is conned
into yielding milk by being presented with its stuffed up dead calf, the toddy
seller brought out the phantom child in their customers and milked their purse
strings.
Anup watched the scenes of
laughter as well as their occasional brawls equally intrigued.
A hackney carriage appeared
on the road. The Paramahamsa was in there. He too was laughing. As the carriage
came near the toddy shop the man-child called out to the people there. It
looked as if he wanted to dance with them. But some others held him.
Anup saw that smile. He ran
behind the carriage.
‘Go back to your father’ the
Paramahamsa said, ‘come afterwards’.
The smile lodged indelibly
in Anup’s heart as the carriage disappeared into the horizon.
Does Anup’s way up lie a
long way down?
Swami Sampurnananda,Genre 273, No. 40, on Lalgarh bed, 22 Jan – 23 Jan 2003, 3.35 a.m.