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Malladi
Ramakrishna Sastri
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New
moon day. In the Munsif’s[1] cattle
shed, Karanamgari’s[2]
cow is in labor. The whole village assembles there.
In
fact, on hearing the news about Karanamgari’s white cow’s
pregnancy, the villagers put their fingers on their
noses—muttering ‘what a wonder!’ After collecting dime
charges, Sahadevudu, coming from a neighboring village, examines
the cow, holding this and that side, percussing on the belly, and
finally, by around noon, says—it could be pregnancy. No sooner
does the Karanam hear it than he jumps into air with pleasure and
gets rudrabhishekam[3]
performed in the temple.
There
is, of course, a reason behind the celebration! It is almost three
decades since Karanamgari’s wife came to live with her husband!
In a year or two, she may attain menopause, and so the need for
the man to lay the fire in the hearth during even daytime for
those ‘three days’[4]
in every month would cease. Which means, for the past thirty
years, as though cursed, she has been regularly spreading the hem
of her sari in the veranda and lying down those ‘three days’
of every month—never missed her periods; the routine has not
deviated even by three or four days either side. In which
Ganga
have all their prayers and vows drowned?
And
even the she-calf nurtured by them appeared to have inherited the
tradition of the mistress of the house. All the calves of her age
have by now even seen grandchildren. This one has, however, not
bothered. It doesn’t even appear to have had that salasala—‘heat’.
And
all of a sudden this preternatural event…
Labor
pains are advancing. The poor dumb creature! Somehow bears the
unbearable pains. Once in a while, it stops winking. Karanamgaru
starts praying to all the gods. He restlessly strolls to and fro.
Whenever the cow bellows “Ambaa![5]”—that
great man makes an enormous effort to hold back his tears.
Finally,
all his prayers have been answered—the crisis passes off.
Karanamgaru gets all the rituals associated with the birth of a
child meticulously performed. He baptizes the new-born he-calf
after his father, Narasayya. He distributes jaggery and almonds to
the whole village. After celebrating the completion of the first
month of delivery, he purchases national savings certificates
worth hundred rupees. He gets the insignia of Anjaneyaswamy and a
tiger’s claw charm prepared for adorning his neck. Day-by-day
the he-calf grows—physically and mentally—healthy and hale.
With
the passing of a year, one day, when a girl from the ‘Alla’
family, tying her hair round, instead of walking on the road that
everyone takes, ambles around the elephant-foot yam fields, one
end of her sari is blown aside by the wind, and it becomes a red
rag for Narasayya; seeing which Narasayya gets panicky, jumps up
at once and tries to butt her with his just sprouting horns.
Shocked by it, the lass, somehow gathers her courage, runs back to
the village. Many assemble. Shouting, “Who is that?” everyone
takes a shaft in hand. The lass, recovering from the shock by
then, says, “Narasayya”. On hearing her reply, some laugh,
while others jeer.
The
lass’s father pleadingly complains to Karanamgaru. After
listening coolly, he sends him back satisfied, saying, “A
childish act! Won’t you let it off, bava![6]”
Thereafter, he spanks Narasayya, left and right, on the face,
saying—“Why would the inheritance go wrong!”—and in
disgust, chiding his father—“Though born differently, the
mindset has not changed!”—cajolingly reprimands Narasayya,
“This is no good for us! Shouldn’t you be accepted by others!
You have to be honorably married off. But if you behave like this,
who would give you bride?” Then on, as Appayya, the priest, has
said, “Bad habits seldom die hard”; one complaint or the other
is piling at the door.
One
day, in the very morning, Narasayya has eaten away half of Avadhanulu’s[7]
madi dhovathi[8]. Yesterday it
was the turn of Venkammatta’s step daughter: the wig that she
had been protecting from the sight of every living being for all
these days by hiding it somewhere in the seventh floor of a
building, when put under the sun, in front of the kitchen doorway,
for drying, Narasayya, attracted by it, somehow, jumped over the
bare wall and holding the wig in the mouth ran away, despite the
poor lady was crying from behind, “What have you got to do with
it!” Are these deeds meant for those who want to live and
prosper! Fearing Narasayya’s deeds, no lady could dare come on
the main road!
Wouldn’t
it frustrate Karanamgaru too? When he already looks like a bull,
is it appropriate either to beat or scold! In utter disgust,
Karanamgaru curses Narasayya’s mother in anger, “To which
rascal-bull did you bear this fellow!” Hearing it, the poor
mother doesn’t pick to mouth even a blade of grass.
“A
bad guy being anyway bad, why don’t you leave him stamping as
‘Bull’ for the good of villages,” suggests Munsif, who is
otherwise not known to intervene in any matter. But Karanamgaru
does not have the heart for it.
Though
not given birth to him, nor carried him on the hip—after all he
has reared him all these days! However, realizing that this way it
is no longer good, on an auspicious day, Karanamgaru engages the
blacksmith for making a cart with a low base—sufficient enough
for one man to sit—so that he can ride it alone. One day, he
drags Narasayya under the yoke and placing himself in the cart
hurls the whip. That’s all! Narasayya’s feet are no longer on
the ground! Pulling away the cart with deadly speed, he climbs the
river bank. At the very first hurdle, Karanamgaru is thrown off
the cart, and somersaulting thrice, of course without his nose
getting soiled, he rolls down almost ten feet, and settles down
finally on a thorny bush.

With
it, Karanamgaru’s head reels. Of course, with that fall, he
could not come again in public!
Thereafter,
Narasayya, recovering, runs away from there.
Narasayya
keeps on moving, moving and moving, grazing whenever he wants,
staggering now and then, running till the hooves wear out, with no
destination—crossing fields—crossing rivulets and
orchids—finally settling down in a manyam[9],
wandering towards a corner of it, scared…
One
day, sometime in the morning, from a little away, there comes a
rumbling sound. Some creature moves. Hears a cry, “Ammo![10]”
Narasayya, bellowing suddenly, jumps up. There, a lass, shaking
like a tall, thin stem of a reed, trembling like a dry leaf in the
blowing wind stands with an averted face, like a sunflower. Right
in front of her is a butcher holding her firmly—tightly holding
the upper part of foreleg. She droops her neck. As he jumps,
Narasayya gores the butcher’s belly, and in one stroke throws
him off somewhere.
“Ambaa!”
bellowed Narasayya!
“Anna!—Basavanna!”[11]—cries
the lass. Throws arms around the neck. Resting her head on
hump, she crying incessantly, caresses the dewlap.
The
lass starts moving forward—Narasayya with an erect tail,
shuddering at every sound, follows her like an escort.
As
he ambles along the alley, there comes a palm grove; crossing the
grove he sees a canal bank, beside it is a blinking light, behind
it is a hut.
In
front of that hut, an old man, Munsif’s look-alike, staring all
around, holding a hand over his forehead, sensing the coming of
the lass from a distance, shouts, “Ammei![12]”
The lass—galloping to him—saying “thata[13]”,
cries at once. Hearing—hearing the cry, the old man goes to
Narasayya and holding his chin in his hand kisses his forehead.
Without
tethering him, the old man brings hay and puts before him. He
gives him bellyful of bran-water. That night Narasayya has a wink
there.
It
is dawn. Sunrays hit the eyes. Narasayya opens his eyes. The eyes
are filled with light—right before him the lass, tied to a post,
stares in confusion.
Narasayya—suddenly
gets up. Putting one step behind another, moves towards that side.
All of a sudden—the body of the lass trembles. Jumping and
hopping, she untethers herself and runs far away, stops for a
while and looks back leeringly. Narasayya starts running.
Running
and running, till the sun becomes hot, she stops at an orchid
under the shade of a tree. As they stand, the grass under their
feet crushes down a foot below.
By
eventide, the lass starts walking towards home. But—Narasayya—doesn’t allow a step forward towards home.
The
couple moves away beyond the sight of human beings.
After
a long time, one day, at dawn, before the darkness is decimated
fully—after the first crow of the cock and before its second—Narasayya
is blessed with a son.
Seeing
the newly born infant—Narasayya remembers his birth. He
remembers the ecstasy that his father had experienced. Father
reflected in his eyeballs. As soon as the infant can stand on his
feet, taking mother and child along with him, Narasayya, without
letting his feet touch the ground, in one go, comes to his
village.
As
they reach the outskirts of the village, the sun sets. Taking bath
in the tank beside the temple, bowing before the temple, and
leaving the mother and child there itself, Narasayya goes all
alone in search of his mother.
She
is not where she is supposed to be—not even the remnants of
tying-post; moving from that side, he comes to the front yard of
the house. There is no front door, nor is there the roof
above a wider patch.
Narasayya
goes inside the house. The cart on which his father used to sleep
is placed along the wall, full of dust and cobwebs. There on one
side of the cart are termites—the whole house is covered with
weeds, gigantic swallow worts and thorn apple twigs. In disgust,
Narasayya hits his head against the wall.
From
there he comes to Munsif’s house. Snoring is audible from the
pyol. “Yes! That’s Munsifnaidu.” Conforming to childhood
intimacy, felt like greeting him by scratching with his horn. As
he bends his head forward, on the ground there is a pair of chappalls[14]—the
eye that sees them just freezes—the leather is of his
mother’s!
Without
letting any sound out of his mouth, grinding his teeth, Narasayya
bows to his mother by touching the chappalls with his
forehead, and moving away a little farther by dragging his feet,
bellows, “Ambaa!” that reverberates all around.
That
bellowing is greeted by two more bellows. Narasayya jumps towards
the side from which the bellows are heard, that is the border of
the village—where the members of his family are supposed to
be—where are they?
There
are again echoes of bellows! Narasayya runs to that side! Mother
and child—bodies are there—no life. The spotted wild cats
sitting there snarl.
The
first jump is of Narasayya’s—three become one lump in their
fight; each lump, getting reddened, falls separately.
Two
horns, in their last gasp—from that reddened heap—rise a
little and bellow, “Ambaa!”—fall to the ground!
2
Karanamgari’s—Karanam is a village revenue record keeper and
garu is suffixed to indicate respect.
3
Rudrabhishekam—a kind of prayer offered to Lord Siva.
4
‘Three days’—traditionally, women folk used to stay away
from daily cores for the three days during the menstrual period.
5
Ambaa!—bellow of a bull.
7
Avadhanulu—a Brahmin well-versed with Vedas.
8
Madi Dhovathi—A man’s wet garment worn round the loin
while performing prayer and its associated rituals.
9
Manyam—land given as grant to a priest.
11
Anna—way of addressing elder brother; Basavanna—
a revered way of addressing a bull; basava means bull and
anna means elder brother, together it means—Oh! Brother
bull!
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